VIII
During the past weeks we have been seeking
to understand more and more what it means to say that the present age
stands in the sign of the dominion of Michael. Thus we were led last
time to show how the karma of a human being may work itself out in
reality. We showed how difficulties of karma may even go so far that a
human being cannot find the way between death and a new birth to live
through all that is necessary for the weaving of karma by partaking in
the events of the starry world.
So long as our conception is really limited
to what happens here in the physical life on earth it is of course
difficult for us to receive what we must receive if we are to take the
idea of karma in real earnest. But we are living in the age of great
decisions and great decisions must take place to begin with in the
spiritual field. And in the spiritual field they will be rightly
prepared, if out of the deeper anthroposophical spirit, single human
beings have the courage to take their study of the spiritual world in
real earnest — so much so that they can receive what is
brought from the spiritual world and make use of it to understand the
phenomena of the outer, physical life.
Hence for a number of months past I have not
recoiled from bringing to you detailed facts out of the spiritual life,
facts well fitted to enable you to understand the spiritual
configuration of the present time.
To-day I will bring forward a few more
things as it were to illustrate what I shall then have to say next
Sunday, probably in conclusion, showing the whole karma of the spiritual
life of the present time in its connection with the tasks and aims of
the Anthroposophical Movement.
To begin with, however, I shall bring
forward to-day certain facts whose connection with our main subject you
will not at once perceive. Nevertheless you will recognise at once how
deeply they characterise the spiritual life of the past. Many of these
things will seem strange and far-fetched, but life in its totality bears
many a paradox, seen from an earthly point of view.
The examples I shall choose to-day are not
ordinary ones. For as a rule, a succession of earthly lives is not a
continuous succession of historic personalities. It is not generally
such that the continuous chain would be visible at all to superficial
observation. Nevertheless there are certain successive earthly lives
such that if we describe them one after another, we are at the same time
giving descriptions of history.
It is seldom the case in such a high degree.
But if we do find individualities for whom it is the case, if we can
point to the several incarnations as to historic personalities, such an
individuality enables us to learn a very great deal about karma. I have
already given isolated cases of this kind as you know.
To-day I will tell you about a personality
who lived at the end of the first Christian century. Already at that
time he was a philosopher. As a philosopher he was most evidently one of
the Sceptics, that is to say, he was one of those who really think
nothing in the world is certain.
He belonged to that sceptical School which
though it already saw the dawn of Christianity, stood altogether on the
ground that it is impossible to gain certain knowledge, and above all
that it is quite impossible to say with certainty whether a Divine Being
could assume a human form or the like.
This individuality — his name
in that incarnation is of no great importance, he was a certain
“Agrippa” — this individuality in his incarnation in
that time, gathered up into himself as it were, the whole of Greek
Scepticism. Indeed if we use the word not in a contemptuous sense, but
as a technical term, he was one whom we should even call a Cynic. I mean
a Cynic not in his conception of life, for in that he was a Sceptic, but
a Cynic in his way of taking things. For he was really very fond of
making light and joking about most important things that met him in the
world. In that life Christianity passed him by, leaving no trace. But a
certain mood remained with him as he passed through the gate of death.
This mood was not so much a result of his scepticism, for that was his
philosophic conviction, a thing that one does not carry very far after
one's death. But it lay in the deeper habits of his soul and spirit as
an easy-going way of taking important events of life, a certain
mischievous delight when things in the world which look important turn
out to be not quite so important. This fundamental mood he carried with
him into the life after death. Now as I told you yesterday, having
passed through the gate of death, man first enters a sphere which leads
him by and by into the region of the Moon, where there is the colony of
the primeval wise Teachers of mankind. They had once lived on Earth
though not in a physical body, nor had they taught in the way we
conceive the teaching of later times. They had wandered over the Earth
in an etheric body only. And their teaching was such that one man or
another who was to receive instruction from them in the Mysteries felt
it like an indwelling of these wise Beings of primeval times. He had the
feeling: the wise Being has been with me just now. And as an outcome of
this indwelling he then felt an inner inspiration. Such was the manner
of the teaching given to a human being in those times.
We are referring to the most ancient time of
earthly evolution, when the great primeval Teachers wandered upon Earth
in their etheric bodies. Then, if we may put it so, they followed the
Moon which had already separated as a heavenly body from the Earth. And
it is their region which the human being passes, like the first station
in his cosmic path of evolution after death. It is they who explain the
laws of karma to him, for they have to do with all the wisdom of the
past.
Now when the above-mentioned personality,
the philosopher“Agrippa,” came into that region, it
happened that there dawned upon him most intensely, the meaning of a
former incarnation. The characteristic of that former incarnation which
now made so great an impression on him as he looked back after death,
was this, that in it he had still been able to see a very great deal of
how the cults of Asia Minor and Africa proceeded out of the ancient
Mysteries.
Now in this Christian time in his
super-sensible life, this individuality went once more, with great
intensity, through all that he had once undergone on earth in connection
with many a decadent system of the Mysteries in Asia Minor. And so it
came about that he now saw supersensibly, how in the ancient Mysteries
the Christ had been expected (you must remember what I said,
that in his life on earth he had not been touched by Christianity).
Now the Mysteries which he had
witnessed — I mean the cults that proceeded from the
Mysteries — had already grown external. He had in fact received
the impressions of cults and religious institutions which were
transmitted in the first centuries
A.D.,
in a Christianised metamorphosis of course, to Roman Christianity. Please
observe very carefully what I now mean. The point is that in this region
after his death, there was prepared in this individuality an
understanding for the external features of the cults and clerical
institutions which had formerly been Pagan but were arising again in the
first Christian centuries and passing over into the clearly defined
Roman cult and ceremony with all the ecclesiastical conceptions that
were connected with it.
Now this brought about in him a very
peculiar spiritual configuration. In the further course of the life
between death and a new birth we see him again, elaborating his karma
most especially in the region of Mercury, so that he is able to see many
things, not in an inward sense but in the sense of being gifted with
outward intelligence. He gains a wide sweep of vision for many facts and
relationships.
As we follow this individuality further, we
find him again on earth. We find him as the Cardinal who carried on the
Government of Louis XIV when Louis XIV was still a child,
Cardinal Mazarini. We may study the Cardinal in all his greatness
and splendour and with the external conception of Christianity into
which he finds his way so readily, so naturally, under the woman who was
Louis XIV's guardian.
He absorbs of Christianity all the external
institutions, the Christian cult, the Christian pomp and grandeur. For
him all these things are surrounded, as it were, with an Eastern glamour
as of Asia Minor. Indeed we may say he rules Europe like one who in a
former incarnation had strongly absorbed the character of Asia
Minor.
But in this life Cardinal Mazarini did
indeed have occasion to be more powerfully touched by the facts and
circumstances. You need only remember that it was the time of the Thirty
Years' War. Remember all the things that took place proceeding from
Louis XIV. There was indeed a peculiar quality in this Cardinal
Mazarini. He was a great statesman with a wide sweep of vision, yet on
the other hand in the midst of a certain noise and confusion. We might
say that he was intoxicated by his own deeds so that they seemed deeds
of magnificent skill, but not coming out of the depths of the heart.
Now this life took a peculiar course in
passing through the time between death and a new birth. We can actually
see how in passing again through the region of Mercury, all that this
personality had done was dissolved as in a cloud of mist. But there
remained with him the ideas he had absorbed about Christianity and all
he had undergone by way of scepticism in relation to knowledge. These
things were transformed in his life between death and a new
birth.“Science can never lead us to the final
truths.” An intense feeling for knowledge of which there was a
suggestion already in his former passage through Mercury, came and
passed away again. And there was karmically developed in his life a
peculiar mentality. It was a mentality which held fast with great
tenacity to penetrating ideas which he had passed through before. But
while he held fast to them, he could evolve for his next life on earth
very few concepts with which to master and express them. As this
personality passes through the life between death and a new birth one
has the feeling: Whatever will he try to do in his next incarnation? Is
there anything with which he is really united? One has the feeling: he
may be more or less intensely united with all kinds of things and yet
again with nothing. All the antecedents are there: the preceding life of
scepticism, followed by his intense life in a Christianity with all its
external details along the paths by which one becomes a Cardinal. All
these things are deeply embedded in him. He will become a man rich in
knowledge, yet able to come forward with concepts by no means profound.
Moreover the map of Europe which he once ruled over is as though blotted
out. One does not know how he will find his way to it again. What will
he do with it? He will be altogether at a loss with it.
Yes, my dear friends, we have to enter into
such things as these; we have to study what was undergone in passing
through the life between death and a new birth in order that we may not
err; in order that at length exact and true knowledge may be the
outcome.
This personality is re-born in the
approaching age of Michael, showing, if I may put it so, a strangely
double countenance. He cannot be quite a statesman, nor quite a cleric,
but is drawn strongly in both directions. I am referring to
Hertling, who became Chancellor of the German Reich at a
great age. In karmic sequence he had to use up in this way the remnants
of his Mazarini nature. All the peculiar qualities with which he came to
Christianity, and entered into it, came forth again in his Christian
professorship at the present time.
By this example you may see in what strange
ways the men of the present time built up their present individualities
in past existences.
Anyone who did not research, but merely
thought things out, would of course come to absolutely different
conclusions. But we only understand karma when we can take these most
extreme cases and connections, seeming almost paradoxical in the world
of sense. They are there none the less in the spiritual world, even as
that other fact is there, which I have often mentioned — I mean that
Ernst Haeckel, who so violently fought against the Church, is
the re-incarnation of Abbot Hildebrand, who became
Pope Gregory the Great.
Here we see how indifferent a matter is the external content
of a man's belief or theory in earthly life, for all these things are
his thoughts. But if you study Haeckel, especially in connection with
what he was as Abbot Hildebrand, as Gregory — (I believe he too is
included among these pictures from Chartres) — you will see that
there is in fact a real dynamic sequence.
I chose the
above example in order that you might see how present individualities
carry the past into this present time.
If you will afterwards observe the features
of the Monk Hildebrand, who became Gregory the Great and whom you know
from history, you will see how wonderfully the soul-configuration
of Haeckel is contained in this countenance of Hildebrand, of Gregory
the Great.
I will now take another example, which will
probably be of great and deep value to you all. Though I almost shudder
to speak of it in any easy way, yet I cannot but choose it, for it leads
so infinitely deeply into the whole spiritual texture of the present
time.
I will now mention another personality, of
whom as I said, I almost shudder to speak in this way. And yet he is
infinitely characteristic of all that is carried from the past into the
present and of the way in which this happens. I have often
referred — and it will be known to you from external
history — to the
Council of Nicæa,
which was held in the 4th century, where the decision was made for
Western Europe as between Aryanism and Athanasianism, and Aryanism
was condemned.
It was a Council in which the important
personalities were imbued with all the high scholarship of the first
Christian centuries, and brought it forth. They did indeed dispute with
deep and far-reaching ideas. For in that time the human soul still had
quite a different mood and constitution. It was as a matter of course
for the human soul to live directly within the spiritual world. And they
were well able to dispute with real content and meaning as to whether
Christ was the Son, of the same essence with the Father, or only of like
essence with the Father. The latter was the standpoint of
Aryanism. To-day we will not go into the dogmatic differences of the
question. We will only bear in mind that it was a question of immensely
deep and sharp-witted controversies, which were, however, fought out
with the peculiar intellectualism of that time. When we to-day are
clever and sharp-witted we are so as human beings. Indeed to-day, as I
have often said, almost all men are clever. They are really dreadfully
clever — that is to say, they can think. Is it not so? It is not
saying much, but it is a fact that they can think: I may indeed be very
stupid and still be able to think ... but the fact is the men of to-day
can think. In those times it was not so. It was not that men could
simply think, but they felt their thoughts as inspiration.
He who was sharp-witted felt himself gifted by the grace of God, and
his thinking was a kind of clairvoyance. It was still so even in the
4th century
A.D.,
and those who listened to a thinker
still had some feeling of the living evolution of his thought. Now there
was present at the Council of Nicæa a certain personality who took
an active part in these discussions, but at the end of the Council he
was in a high degree disappointed and depressed. His main effort had
been to bring forward the arguments for both sides. He brought forward
weighty reasons both for Aryanism and for Athanasianism. And if things
had gone as he wished, undoubtedly the result would have been quite
different. Not a wretched compromise, but a kind of synthesis of
Aryanism and Athanasianism would have been the outcome. — One
should not construct history in thought, but this may be said by way of
explanation. — It would probably have been a very much more
intimate way of relating the divine in the inner being of man to the
divine in the universe. For, in the way in which Athanasianism
afterwards evolved these things, the human soul was very largely
separated from its divine origin. Indeed, it was thought heretical to
speak of the god in the inner being of man.
If, on the other hand, Aryanism alone
had won the day, there would of course have been much talk of this god
in the inner being of man. But it would not have been spoken of with the
necessary depth of reverence, and above all, not with the necessary
inward dignity. Aryanism alone would indeed have come to regard man at
every stage as an incarnation of the god who dwells within him. But the
same may be said of any animal, indeed of the whole world, of every
plant, of every stone. This conception only has real value if it
contains at the same time the active impulse to rise ever higher and
higher in spiritual development, for then only do we find the god
within. The statement that there is a divine within us at any and every
stage of life can have a meaning only if we take hold of this divine in
a perpetual upward striving of the self, by whom it is not yet
attained.
But a synthesis of the two conceptions would
undoubtedly have been the outcome if the personality to whom I now refer
had been able to gain any decisive influence at the Council of
Nicæa. He failed. Deeply dissatisfied, he withdrew into a
kind of Egyptian hermitage, lived a most ascetic life, and was deeply
imbued at that time in the 5th century with all that was the real
spiritual substance of Christianity during that age. Indeed he was
probably one of the best informed of Christians in his time, but he was
not a wrangler. This is evident from the very way in which he came
forward at the Council. He spoke as a man who quietly weighs and judges
all aspects of the question, and is yet deeply enthusiastic for his
cause, though not for this or that one-sided detail. He spoke as a man
who — I cannot say was disgusted, that would not be the true
expression — but as a man who felt his failure with extraordinary
bitterness, for he was deeply convinced that good would only come for
Christianity if the view for which he stood won its way through.
Thus he withdrew into a kind of hermitage.
For the rest of his life he became a hermit, following however, in
response to the inner impulses of his soul, a quite definite course of
the inner life. It was that of investigating the origin of the
inspiration of thought. His mystic penetration was in the effort to
perceive whence thinking receives its inspiration. It became one great
longing in him to find the source of thinking in the spiritual world,
until at length he was filled through and through with this longing. And
with this longing he died, without having reached any real conclusion,
any concrete answer during that earthly life. No answer was forthcoming.
The time was after all unfavourable.
Then, passing through the gate of death, he
underwent a peculiar experience. For several decades after his death he
could still look back upon his earthly life, and he saw it forever
coloured by that element to which he had come at last. He saw it forever
in the atmosphere of that which, looking backwards, came immediately
next his death. He saw the human being thinking.
Still this was no fulfilment of the
question. And this is most important. There was as yet no thought in
answer to the question. But though there was no answer, he was able,
after his death, to look, in marvellously clear imaginations, into the
cosmic intelligence of the universe. The thoughts of the universe he did
not see. He would have seen them if his longing had reached fulfilment.
He did not see the thoughts of the universe, but he saw
in pictures the Thinking of the universe.
Thus there lived through the journey between
death and a new birth an individuality who was as in a state of
equilibrium between mystic imaginative vision and his former
sharp-witted thinking — a thinking, however, in perpetual flow,
that had not reached its conclusion.
In the elaboration of the karma, his mystic
tendency won the day to begin with. He was born again in the Middle Ages
as a visionary, a woman, who unfolded truly wonderful insight
into the spiritual world. For a time, the tendency of the thinker fell
entirely into the background; the quality of spiritual vision was in the
foreground. For this woman had wonderful visions, while at the same time
she gave herself up mystically to the Christ. Her soul was penetrated,
with infinite depth, by a visionary Christianity. They were visions in
which the Christ appeared as the leader of peaceful hosts, not
quarrelsome or contentious, but like the hosts of peace, who would
spread Christianity abroad by their very gentleness — a thing
which had never yet been realised on earth. It was there in the visions
of this nun. It was a deep, intensive Christianity, but it found no
place at all in what afterwards evolved as Christianity in its more
modern form. Nevertheless during her life this nun, the seeress, came
into no conflict with positive dogmatic Christianity. She herself grew
out of it and grew into a deeply personal Christianity, which was
afterwards simply non-existent on the earth. And thus, if I might put it
so, the whole universe then faced her with the question: how should this
Christianity be realised in a physical body in a new incarnation? And at
the same time, long after the seeress had passed through the gate of
death, there came over her again the echoes of the old intellectualism,
the inspired intellectualism. The after-echoes of her visions were now,
if I might put it so, idealised through and through, filled with
ideas.
Then, seeking for a new human body, this
individual became the individuality of Solovioff,
Vladimir Solovioff.
Read the writings of Solovioff!
— I have frequently described the impression they make upon a
modern man and have said it again in my introduction to the German
edition of his works. You may well try to feel it in his writing. You
will feel how much there lies between the lines, how much of a mysticism
which we may often feel even sultry and oppressive. It is a Christianity
quite individual in its forms of expression. It shows quite clearly how
it had to seek for a pliable, in all directions supple body, such as can
be obtained only out of the Russian people.
Looking at these examples, I think
one may indeed preserve the holy awe and reverence before the truths of
karma, which should indeed be held sacred and virginal in the inmost
depths of life. For one who has a true feeling for the contemplation of
the spiritual world, these deep truths are, verily, not unworthily
unveiled. I mean this in the sense of what is so often said about the
sacred veils of truth, of which people say that they should never be
drawn aside.
Anthroposophy has been reproached again and
again, notably in theological circles, for drawing aside the veil of
sacred mystery from secret and mysterious truths, and thus making them
profane. But the more deeply we enter into the esoteric portions of the
anthroposophical conception, the more do we feel that there can truly be
no talk of profanation. On the contrary the world itself will fill us
with a holy awe when we behold the lives of man one after another in the
marvellous working of former into later lives. We must only not be
profane in our inner life or in our way of thinking and then we shall
not make such objections.
Read the writings of Solovioff against the
background of the previous nun, with her wonderful visions and infinite
devotion to the Being of Christ. See that ancient personality going
forth with deep and bitter feelings from the Council where he had
brought forward such great and important things. Discover in the soul
and in the heart of this individual what I may call the twofold
background of Christianity, now in its rationalistic, but inspired
rationalistic form, and now again in its visionary form of seership. See
all this in the background, and of a truth the lifting of the veil will
not profane the secret.
A German romanticist once had the courage to
think differently from all others about the famous saying of
Isis:“I am that which was, that which is, and that which is
to come, and my veil has no mortal yet lifted.” — To which
the German romanticist replied: Then we must become immortal, that we
may lift the veil! — While others all took the saying as it
stood.
When we discover the truly immortal within
us, the divine and spiritual, then may we draw near to many a secret
without profaning it, to many a secret to which, with a lesser faith in
the divine in our own being, we might indeed not draw near.
And this indicates the spirit which should
go abroad ever more and more under the influence of such studies as our
last and as this present one. For these spiritual studies are meant to
work upon the life and action of those who bear their karma, in the way
I have described, into the Anthroposophical Society.
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