LECTURE XIII
Berlin, 8th October 1905
The present lecture is inserted into this course to shed light on many
things spoken of in the other lectures. It will deal with the activity
and the nature of the Devas.
At the present time it is very difficult to speak about the Gods or
Devas because even those people who still have a positive attitude
towards religion and still believe in the Gods, no longer have any
living relationship to divine spiritual beings. This living
relationship to the Gods, to beings, that is to say, who are exalted
far above human beings, has disappeared in the course of the age of
materialism. Especially during the materialistic age, which developed
from the turning point of the 15th and 16th centuries on into our own
time, this living connection with the Gods has been lost. It makes
little difference whether a person takes his stand on Darwinian
materialism or whether he speaks about the Gods in a more or less
religious sense. It is much more to the point to become livingly aware
that we ourselves have ascended from lower stages of existence and
have yet to ascend to higher stages. We must realise that we have a
relationship both with what is below and what is above.
Instruction about the Gods was first systematised by Dionysius the
Areopagite,
(42)
the pupil of the apostle Paul. It was however not
written down until the 6th century. This is why scholars deny the
existence of Dionysius the Areopagite and speak about the writings of
the Pseudo-Dionysius, as though it was in the 6th century that old
traditions were first put together. The truth of the matter can only
be substantiated by reading in the Akashic Chronicle. The Akashic
Chronicle does however teach that Dionysius actually lived in Athens,
that he was initiated by Paul and was commissioned by him to lay the
foundation of the teaching about the higher spiritual beings and to
impart this knowledge to special initiates. At that time certain lofty
teachings were never written down but only communicated as tradition
by word of mouth. The teaching about the Gods was also given in this
way by Dionysius to his pupils, who then passed it on further. These
pupils in direct succession were intentionally called Dionysius, so
that the last of these, who wrote down this teaching was one of those
who was given this name.
This teaching about the Gods, as given by Dionysius, encompasses three
times three ranks of divine beings. The three highest are: Seraphim,
Cherubim, Thrones. The next degree: Dominions, Mights, Powers. The
third degree: Primal Beginnings, Archangels and Angels.
In the Bible the words In the Beginning often occur. They refer to
the Primal Beginnings or Archai. In the Beginning God created the
heavens and the earth. This means: The God of the Beginnings, who
stands at this stage, created heaven and earth. It was one of the
Archai belonging to the Third Rank of the Hierarchies.
Above the Seraphim stand divine Beings whose nature is so exalted that
the human power of understanding is not able to comprehend them. After
the Third Rank follows the Fourth Hierarchy: Man, as the tenth in the
entire sequence.
The names of the Hierarchies do not refer to individuals but to
certain stages of consciousness of the great universe, and the Beings
move from one stage to another. Eliphas Levi perceived this clearly
and laid stress on the fact that with these names one has to do with
stages of development, with Hierarchies.
The basis of the Organisation of the Church goes back also to the same
Dionysius who formulated the teaching about the Gods. The Church
Hierarchy was to be an outer image of the inner Hierarchy of the
World. This grandiose thought could only have been carried through if
the time had been ripe for an understanding of all this in its true
form. Dionysius had bequeathed to his pupils such a teaching in regard
to the Church, so that, could it have been realised, a powerful and
magnificent Organisation would have come into being. At that time the
attempt was made to promulgate the teachings in such a way that the
thread was never broken from one teacher to the next, who then also
carried on the name. It is therefore not so astonishing that as late
as the 6th century a Dionysius committed the teachings to writing.
These teachings however could not find general understanding because
for this humanity was not yet ripe. They therefore remain as a kind of
testament.
(43)
The further we go back the more living are the concepts man had about
Beings standing above humanity.
Now let us develop certain concepts as to how man the ordinary
person in the average cultural environment of our time meets
the Gods. After death the human being first goes through Kamaloka, the
condition in which he gradually gets rid of the habits of earthly life
and frees himself from his desires. It is actually only in its first
stages that the sojourn in Kamaloka is often frightening and terrible.
Later man goes through that period of Kamaloka when he has to purify
himself from the more delicate connections with the earthly world.
This sojourn in Kamaloka is not only important for the person in
question; as we shall see, the activity of human beings in the higher
conditions of Kamaloka can also be made use of in the world outside
them. After Kamaloka man enters into the Devachan condition, where,
using the faculties he has won for himself, he works over everything
which is necessary in order to build up a new etheric body. On the
Arupa Plane of Devachan he has to lay aside everything that he gained
by his experiences on the Physical Plane. This is why in esotericism
the Greek priests called the soul a bee, the Arupa Plane a beehive and
the Physical Plane the flowering meadow.
There is however no need for man to be inactive in the higher regions.
During the time he is passing through Kamaloka and the lower
Devachanic Planes it might appear that he has nothing else to do than
to allow what he began earlier to come to fruition. But man is not
inactive there; what he experiences in these conditions is significant
for the whole world.
The new incarnation of the human being only has a purpose if he meets
conditions which are totally different from the earlier ones. In
normal circumstances he returns when the whole situation is so
different that what he finds around him is entirely new, so that what
he adds to his previous achievement is entirely new. This happens in
that period of cosmic time when the sun has progressed from one
constellation of the Zodiac to the next. For instance, about 800 BC
the sun in spring entered the constellation of the Ram or Lamb and
this continued until 1800 AD. Now, at the beginning of spring, it
stands in the constellation of the Fishes. Two thousand, six hundred
years
(30)
elapse before the sun passes from one constellation of the
zodiac to the next. During this time conditions undergo a fundamental
change.
Reincarnation is connected with these epochs, during which the human
being is usually incarnated once as a masculine and once as a feminine
individuality. In any particular incarnation one is in fact only half
a human being. A masculine and a feminine incarnation belong together.
Owing to the entirely different physical conditions on the earth a new
incarnation is not without purpose. If for example someone was
incarnated at the time of Homer (in the sign of the Ram or Lamb,
Jason, the Golden Fleece) he would have experienced something quite
different from what he would experience now.
These incarnations taken by themselves might appear to be part of a
completely mechanical process. There is however nothing outward that
is not brought about from within. One must accustom oneself to speak
everywhere of a real spirit, to seek for it, and to perceive what is
actually happening.
When one looks at the flora and fauna of Europe in our epoch one has
to differentiate three zones: a western, a central and an eastern
zone. The eastern zone coincides with the Slavonic peoples, the
central with the Germanic and the western with the Latin peoples. The
materialist believes that human beings have adapted themselves to
their circumstances, but this is not so. The different peoples have
themselves created their physical conditions. The Folk Spirit works
first on the earth, on the plants and the animals into which he
enters. The Western European territory has been prepared by the Latin
peoples, the Central European by the Germanic, the Eastern European by
the Slavonic peoples. Thus human beings first build themselves the
house in which they later reside. Now let us ask: When does man work
upon the external configuration of the earth? As with everything else
in the earthly world, destiny too is prepared by man for himself, and
this is partially the case here.
In Kamaloka man is actually engaged in collaborating with work on the
animal kingdom, in the transformation of species. The force which
brings this about is called by natural scientists adaptability.
Everything however that is called adaptability conceals human activity
on the other side of existence. Everything which appears as
metamorphosis in the animal kingdom, influencing and altering animal
instincts so that animals undergo transformation, takes place through
human beings in Kamaloka who are preparing for their next incarnation.
There man works on his own house in preparation for his next life. In
Kamaloka man works on the fauna and in Devachan on the flora. The
transformation of the plant world is the result of Devachanic forces.
And the physical world which also changes, the outer conditions of
Nature, are influenced from the Arupa Plane, (Higher Devachan). There,
man is a co-worker on the rocks, on the mineral kingdom of the earth.
It is certainly necessary to have some measure of occult powers in
order to make such observations in the appropriate place. It is not by
chance that miners [Steiner refers to miners of metals and minerals,
not coal] in particular make such observations underground. Novalis's
(44)
famous occult faculties are connected with the fact that he was a
mining engineer.
When one considers that in the super-sensible regions man is developing
certain forces, although while there he has not as yet his full
consciousness, one understands that these forces are guided by higher
beings, by the Devas. We distinguish different stages of Devas:
astral, Rupa-mental and Arupa-mental. Astral Devas have as their
lowest member the astral body, just as we have the physical body. Like
man, the astral Deva consists of seven members. He possesses
therefore, as the seventh, yet another member which is higher than
Atma. The Devas are all constituted according to the same principles
as man. As development progresses to higher planes a being gains
conscious mastery over the corresponding lower planes. On the physical
plane today man is only master of the mineral kingdom. There he
himself can construct something, but he cannot yet construct a plant
or an animal. In the mineral kingdom he has the component parts
clearly before him. On the next stage he consciously brings forth the
plants (Fifth Round) and then the animals (Sixth Round) and finally he
consciously brings forth himself (Seventh Round).
The beings whom we call Devas can do much more than human beings of
the Seventh Round. They can make use of regions that lie below their
own world. They can, for a particular purpose, form for a short time
the body that they need. Thus an astral Deva, if he so wish, can
incarnate physically at a definite time.
We can only form definite ideas about the Devas when we take our start
from human activity. Up to a certain point, man is free, able to do as
he pleases. People however do not work harmoniously together, and
therefore the various forces which proceed from human beings must be
brought into harmony. What people do must have a general effect, and
this must be made to serve a useful purpose in the world. The beings
who bring this about are the Devas. They also regulate collective
karma. As soon as people unite in a common purpose they have a
collective karma which binds them together and leads them on their
way, weaving a common karmic thread.
Thus in Russia there existed the sect of the Dukhobors
(45)
(warriors of the spirit) who were deeply religious. In naive, but in very
beautiful, form they possessed the teachings of Theosophy. These
people were banished and apparently no longer had any visible
influence. Materialists will say: What purpose could this have
served? The Dukhobors perished. But all those who were united in this
sect will in their next incarnation be united by a common tie, in
order later to pour into humanity what they have learned. In such a
way groups which have come together work on humanity in subsequent
incarnations. The idea that was embodied in their lives then flows out
again into the world. One finds the same idea in a deeper form in
another such group.
Thus there existed for instance in the Middle Ages the sect of the
Manicheans.
(46)
The secret of the Manicheans was that they realised
that in the future there would be two groups of human beings, the good
and the bad. In the Fifth Round there will no longer be a mineral
kingdom, but instead a kingdom of evil. The Manicheans knew this. They
therefore made it their task already then so to educate people that
later they might become educators of the evil men. Again and again a
deeper profundity is seen in the sect of the Manicheans.
We have to distinguish the separate wills of individual human beings
from the powers which stand behind them in order to unite these
individual wills into a common will. In this way we have a collective
Karma.
The Rosicrucians spoke about Beings who are connected with groups of
people. The physical body belongs to the single human being; the
astral body on the other hand already belongs to a group. In one part
of his astral body man is connected with a Group Soul. What he cannot
yet do for himself is today done for him by a Deva. They are still
working on man's astral body. The Devas co-operate even more strongly
in what man achieves today through work on his etheric body. We have
seen that in a part of Kamaloka man's forces are used in the service
of the animal kingdom, but they are guided by the Devas. Thence man is
progressing ever further on his way to Devachan.
A special class of Devas are the Planetary Spirits the
Dhyan-Chohanic beings who earlier reached the stage which human beings
will only attain much later. They stand at the stage that will only be
reached by man in the Sixth and Seventh Rounds. A Planetary Spirit is
engaged with others in creative work on certain aspects of planetary
evolution.
At present man is active on the physical, astral and devachanic
planes. Everything is activity. Now what significance have the
Planetary Spirits for man in any particular situation? The activity
which is at present being carried out by man, was carried out by the
Planetary Spirits during previous stages of evolution, during previous
planetary conditions. What they then absorbed they now have within
them as wisdom. This enables them to become the teachers of the next
planetary epoch. Those Devas who were actively engaged in the
formation of the earth were not yet able to recognise the underlying
laws; this was only possible for beings at the higher stage of Wisdom.
Above the stage of Wisdom is the stage of Will, of manifested
activity. The Spirits of Wisdom (Kyriotetes) and the Spirits of Will
(Thrones) are the actual leaders of planetary evolution.
At the time when man was still an astral being, before the Lemurian
Age, the Devas worked within him and built into him in advance what
came forth from him later. Before the Lemurian Age there rose up in
the inner being of man a picture of his environment. Feelings of
sympathy and antipathy also arose in picture form within him. All this
was brought about by the Devas. At that time he was governed by the
regency of the Devas. Later he assumed in some measure the regency
over himself, becoming a subordinate member in the service of the
Devas. Now he is to some extent Godforsaken. Only in the part
that is not Godforsaken do the Devas still work within him. The Chela
consciously brings to life within him that world which man in the
Pre-Lemurian Age had learned to know in pictures. Then desires and
passions approached him in the form of auric pictures in which lived
the thoughts of the Devas, but it was all in deep twilight
consciousness. Now after all this had been lost, man had to struggle
to attain conscious seeing of an external world. The further
development of Chela-ship consists in gaining this also in complete
awareness. He retains throughout full consciousness. The medium, that
is to say, mediumship, is a relapse into an earlier age.
What the human being experiences on the physical plane is the skeleton
of his creative activity; the foundation for the following periods of
evolution. Through his contact with the outer world, faculties are
formed within him according to which later planetary activity is
ordered, after man himself will have become a planetary spirit.
In our speech we create the foundation for later planetary conditions.
What we speak today will actually be present there as foundation, just
as the rocks and stones form the foundation of the earth. In one
sphere the experiences pass through an involutionary process so that
in another sphere they may be able to evolve. An individuality is
divine in so far as he is able to breathe out again what he has taken
in. The Devas become Devas as soon as they are able to give back again
what they have previously absorbed.
It is a primeval wisdom that was absorbed earlier and is now being
given back. It is Theosophy in as much as the Gods themselves were
once the teachers of mankind.
Karma is the law. The Deva is the one who brings the law into
application. The angel of the rotation of time brings about the
application of the law governing groups of human beings. The single
person in a group acts instinctively. The Deva guides the Folk Soul;
he is in fact the Folk Soul. The Folk Soul is no abstraction, but a
living spirit.
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