LECTURE EIGHT
LAWS OF RHYTHM IN THE DOMAIN OF
SOUL-AND-SPIRIT. THE GOSPEL OF THE CONSCIOUSNESS-SOUL
When we study
the Gospels in the light of Spiritual Science we find
descriptions of momentous, overwhelming experiences. And it
is only when Spiritual Science has been studied much more
widely than it is to-day, that men will be able to form an
adequate idea of what has been poured into these Gospels out
of the spiritual experiences undergone by their authors. They
will realise then that many things become apparent only when
the accounts given in the four Gospels are studied side by
side.
Let me first
of all call attention to the fact that in St. Matthew's
Gospel the account of the Christ Impulse is preceded by
references to childhood and a record of the generations of
the Hebrew people from their first ancestor onwards. In this
Gospel the account of the Christ Impulse takes us to the
beginning of the Hebrew people from whom the bearer of the
Christ Being is born. In St. Mark's Gospel we meet the
Christ Impulse at the very beginning. The whole childhood
story is omitted. We are simply told that John the Baptist
was the forerunner of the Christ Impulse and the Gospel then
begins at once with the description of the Baptism by John in
the Jordan. From St. Luke's Gospel we get a different
childhood story which traces the ancestry of Jesus of
Nazareth much further back, ‘to the very beginning of
humanity on Earth; the descent is traced to Adam who, it is
then said, ‘was the son of God’. This indicates
clearly that the human nature in Jesus of Nazareth is to be
traced right back to the time when man was formed from
divine-spiritual Beings. Thus St. Luke's Gospel takes
us back to an epoch when man must not be regarded as an
earthly being incarnated in the flesh, but as a spiritual
being born from the womb of divine spirituality. In St.
John's Gospel, again without any childhood story or any
mention of the destinies of Jesus of Nazareth, we are led in
a very profound way to the Christ Being Himself.
In the course
of the development of Spiritual Science we have followed a
definite path in our study of the Gospels. We began with the
Gospel which reveals the very highest insight into the
spirituality of Christ — namely, the Gospel of St. John.
Then we studied the Gospel of St. Luke, in order to
understand how the highest spirituality in human nature
reveals itself when man's descent is traced back to the
time when he came forth, as earthly man, from the Godhead.
Study of St. Matthew's Gospel then helped us to
understand the Christ Impulse as proceeding from the ancient
Hebrew people. Study of St. Mark's Gospel has been left
to the last. To understand the reason for this, many subjects
recently touched upon must be connected both with facts
already familiar to us and with others that are new. That is
why in the last lecture I said something about aspects of
human life in connection with the several members of
man's being. I shall be speaking in a similar strain
to-day, as a kind of introduction to certain aspects of
evolution. For it will become more and more necessary to
recognise the conditions upon which human evolution depends
— indeed not only to recognise but also to heed them.
As they
advance into the future men will become more and more
independent, more and more individualistic. Belief in
external authorities will be increasingly replaced by belief
in the authority of a man's own soul. This is a
necessary trend of evolution. If, however, it is to bring
wellbeing and blessing, man must have knowledge of his own
being, and it cannot be said that humanity in general has yet
advanced very far in this respect.
What is
particularly characteristic of the present day? There is no
shortage of ideals and programmes for the good of humanity.
Practically every single individual comes forward as a
small-scale Messiah and is anxious to create a picture of
ideal human happiness. Above all there is no shortage of
associations and societies founded for the purpose of
introducing into our culture something they consider
essential. There is also abundant faith in these programmes
and ideals: indeed so convinced of their value are their
promoters that it will soon be necessary to set up a kind of
Council to establish the infallibility of individuals
concerned! All this is deeply characteristic of our age.
Spiritual
Science does not stop us from thinking about our future, but
indicates certain fundamental laws and conditions which
cannot be disregarded with impunity if its impulses are to
achieve any positive effect. What does a modern man believe?
An ideal takes shape in his soul and he considers himself
capable of making it everywhere a reality. He does not pause
to reflect that the time may not be ripe for its fulfilment,
that the picture he has formed of it may be a caricature or
that it can become mature only in a more or less distant
future. In short, it is very difficult for a man today to
understand that every event must be prepared for and occur at
a particular point of time determined by macrocosmic
conditions. Nevertheless this is a universal law and holds
good for each individual as well as for the whole human race.
We can recognise how this law affects an individual when we
study his life in the light of Spiritual Science for we can
turn to experiences lying very near at hand.
I am not going
just to generalise but will keep to what can be observed. Let
us suppose that someone conceives an idea which fires him
with enthusiasm; it takes definite form in his soul and he is
anxious to bring it in some way to fulfilment. The idea comes
into his head and his heart urges him to act. In such
circumstances a man of to-day will find it almost impossible
to wait; he will go all out to bring this idea to fulfilment.
Let us suppose that the idea is, in itself, insignificant, or
merely a matter of information about scientific or artistic
facts. An occultist, who knows the law, will not immediately
proclaim his unfamiliar idea to the world. An occultist knows
that such ideas live, first of all, in the astral body: the
presence of enthusiasm in the soul is sufficient evidence of
this, for enthusiasm is preeminently a force in the astral
body. Now as a rule it will be harmful if at this stage a man
does not let the idea rest as it is but proclaims it at once
to his fellow-men or to the world, for the idea must follow a
quite definite course. It must take deeper and deeper hold of
the astral body and then impress itself into the etheric body
like the imprint of a seal. If the idea is of no great
importance this process may take seven days — that is the
minimum time necessary. And if a man storms around with his
idea he is always apt to overlook something very important,
namely that after seven days there will be a subtle but quite
definite experience. This experience we may have if we pay
proper attention. But if a man rushes wildly around trying to
launch the idea into the world, the soul will certainly not
be alert to what may happen on the seventh day. In the case
of an idea of only slight importance we shall always find
that on the seventh day we don't really know what to do
with it, and it fades away. We may feel ill at ease, perhaps
inwardly worried and oppressed with all kinds of doubts, yet
in spite of this we find ourselves attuned to the idea.
Enthusiasm has changed into an intimate feeling of love: the
idea is now in the etheric body.
If the idea is
to continue to thrive it must now lay hold of the outer
astral substance which always surrounds us. Hence it must
pass from the astral body into the etheric body and from
there into the outer astrality. For this, seven more days are
needed. And unless the man in question is such a novice that
when the idea begins to worry him he wants to get rid of it,
he will realise, if he pays attention to what happens, that
after this period something from without comes to meet his
idea; he then recognises that it has been beneficial to wait
fourteen days, because now he is not alone with his idea. It
is as if he had been inspired from the Macrocosm, as if
something had penetrated into his idea from the outer world.
He will then for the first time feel in harmony with the
whole spiritual world and will realise that it brings
something to him when he has something to bring to it. A
certain feeling of contentment arises after a period of about
twice seven days.
But now the
idea has to retrace its path, to pass from the outer
astrality back into the etheric body. It has then become
concrete and the temptation to communicate it to the world is
very great. We must resist this with all our might, for there
is now the danger that because the idea still lies in the
etheric body, it may pass coldly into the world. If we wait
another seven days the coldness leaves it and it is again
filled with the warmth of the individual astral body and
takes on a personal quality. That to which we gave birth and
have allowed to be baptised by the Gods may now be given over
to the world as our own. Every impulse in the soul must pass
through these last three stages before it becomes fully
mature. This holds good for ideas of no great
significance.
In the case of
an idea of weight and importance, longer periods will be
necessary, but always in this rhythm of seven to seven.
You see, then,
that what really matters is not, as a modern man thinks, to
have an impulse in his soul but to be able to bear this
impulse with patience, to let it be baptised by the
World-Spirit and to let it live and achieve a state of
maturity. Other such laws could be cited for the soul's
development is a process full of ordered rhythms. For
example, on some particular day — and such days vary greatly
— we may feel that we have been blessed by the World-Spirit
and ideas surge up from within us. In these circumstances it
is a good thing not to lose our head but to recognise that
after nineteen days a similar process of fructification may
be expected. As I say, the development of the human soul is a
process full of regular rhythms. On the whole, man has a
healthy instinct not to carry these things to excess or to
disregard them entirely. He takes heed of them, especially if
he is one who aims at developing higher qualities and who
allows them to mature; he heeds these things without being
consciously aware of the law. It would be easy to show that
in the creative work of artists there is evidence of a
certain periodicity, a certain rhythmic process, a rhythm of
days or weeks or years. This is particularly apparent in the
lives of artists of the first rank — in the life of Goethe,
for instance. It can easily be shown that something arises in
Goethe's soul, becomes mature only after a period of
four times seven years, and then appears in a different
form.
In line with
the tendency of the times, the general attitude might be:
Yes, that is all very well; there may be such laws, but why
should people trouble much about them? They will observe them
instinctively. — Now that may have been true in the past;
but because men are becoming more independent, more and more
attentive to their own individuality, they must also learn to
develop an inner calendar. Just as there are outer calendars
of importance for everyday matters, so in the future, as the
intensity of man's soul-life increases, he will have a
feeling of ‘inner weeks’, of an inner ebb and
flow of life, of inner ‘Sundays’, for the trend
of humanity is towards an increasing inwardness. As we move
towards the future, much of what man has experienced in the
past as a result of the rhythmical periodicity of his life
will be experienced later on as a macrocosmic resurrection in
the life of soul. It will then seem to be an obvious duty to
avoid bringing tumult and disorder into evolution by
constantly transgressing the laws of the soul's
development. Men will come to realise that the wish to
communicate immediately whatever takes root in the soul is
only a subtler form of egoism. They will come to feel the
spirit working in the soul, not abstractly, as nowadays, but
in conformity with law. And when some idea occurs to them,
when they may desire to communicate some inner experience to
others, they will not set about their fellow-men like raging
bulls but listen to what spirit-filled nature has to say in
their inmost soul.
What will it
mean for men when they come more and more to recognise the
spirituality which works in the world in obedience to law and
by which they should let themselves be inspired? The vast
majority of men to-day still have no feeling for such things.
They do not believe that spiritual beings will lay hold of
and work within their soul according to law. Even those who
sincerely desire to work for cultural progress will for a
long time yet regard it as madness to speak of this ordered
activity of the spirit. And owing to the antipathy that is so
prevalent to-day, those whose belief in the spirit is founded
on spiritual-scientific knowledge will find that certain
words in St. Mark's Gospel are directly applicable to
them, and indeed to the present time:
‘But
when they shall lead you, and deliver you up, take no
thought beforehand what ye shall speak, neither do ye
premeditate: but whatsoever shall be given you in that
hour, that speak ye; for it is not ye that speak, but the
Holy Ghost’ (xiii, 11).
We must try to
understand a passage such as this, which has special
significance for our own time because of its place in the
whole framework not only of St. Mark's Gospel but in
that of the other Gospels as well. Generally speaking, St.
Mark's Gospel contains a good deal that is also found
in the other Gospels. But there is one very remarkable
passage which does not occur in the other Gospels and is
particularly noteworthy because of the silly statements that
have been made about it by biblical commentators. It is the
passage where we are told that after Christ Jesus had chosen
His disciples, He went out to preach to the people:
‘And
they went into an house. And the multitude cometh together
again, so that they could not so much as eat bread. And
when his friends heard of it, they went out to lay hold on
him, for, they said, he is beside himself’ (iii,
20-1).
When we
consider that in the future course of human evolution St.
Paul's saying, ‘Not I, but Christ in me’,
will become more and more true, that only an Ego which
receives into itself the Christ Impulse can work fruitfully,
we are justified in regarding the passage as particularly
relevant to the present time. The destiny lived through by
Christ Jesus during the events in Palestine will be lived
through by the whole of mankind in the course of the ages. In
the immediate future it will be more and more noticeable that
wherever Christ is proclaimed with inner understanding,
intense antipathy will be displayed by those who
instinctively avoid Spiritual Science. It will not be
difficult in the future to see how a prototypal event in
Christ's life described in St. Mark's Gospel is
coming to expression. Men's attitude to daily life, or
the way in which art develops, and more particularly what is
so widely accepted as science, will make it clear that what
was said of Christ will be said of those who proclaim the
Spirit in the truly Christian sense: There are many among
them who seem to be beside themselves.
Again and
again we must repeat that as time goes on the most important
facts of the spiritual life as presented by Spiritual Science
will be regarded as fantastic nonsense by the greater part of
humanity. And from the Gospel of St. Mark we should draw the
strength we need to stand firm in face of opposition to the
truths that will be unveiled in the domain of the spirit.
If we have any
feeling for the finer variations of style between the Gospel
of St. Mark and the other Gospels, we shall also notice that
the form in which certain things are presented by St. Mark is
different from that to be found in the other Gospels. We
become aware that through the actual structure of the
sentences, through the omission of certain sentences found in
the other Gospels, many things that might easily be taken
abstractly are given definite shades of meaning. If we are
sufficiently perceptive we shall realise that St.
Mark's Gospel contains incisive and very important
teaching concerning the ‘I’, concerning the
inmost significance of the ‘I’ in man. To
understand this we need only look carefully at one passage in
the Gospel which has all the peculiar features due to the
omission of details that are included in the accounts given
in the other Gospels. Here is the passage in St. Mark's
Gospel which, if there is a feeling for such details, will
indicate its deep significance:
And Jesus
went out accompanied by His disciples into the towns that
are in the neighbourhood of Caesarea Philippi. And on the
way He asked those who were around Him: ‘What do men
say of the ‘I’? Whom do men recognise as the
‘I’?’ — And those who were around Jesus
answered: ‘Men say that in the ‘I’, if
the ‘I’ is the true ‘I’, there must
live John the Baptist; but others say that this
‘I’ must be filled with Elias, that Elias must
live in the ‘I’; others again say that another
of the prophets must be regarded in such a way that the
‘I’ says: Not I, but this prophet works in
me.’ But He said to those around him: ‘But whom
do you say is the ‘I’?’ And Peter
answered: ‘We understand the ‘I’ in its
essential spirituality to be Thou, the Christ!’ And
Christ charged those around Him: ‘Tell nothing of
this to ordinary men, for they cannot yet understand this
mystery!’ (viii, 27-33)
[Dr. Steiner was not quoting
any of the usual versions of this passage but giving an
extended paraphrase to clarify the points he wanted to
make.
But to those
around Him who had been inwardly stirred by His words He
began to give this teaching:
That which
is the outward, physical expression of Ego-hood in the
human being must endure much suffering if the
‘I’ is to live in man. The ancient Masters of
humanity and those who have knowledge of the holiest wisdom
declare that in the form in which the ‘I’ is
present, it cannot function; in this form it must be killed
and after a rhythm of three days — a rhythm determined by
cosmic laws — it must rise again in a higher form. And
they were all amazed that He spoke these words openly
before all men ...
At this point
I must make a comment. Up to that time such words would have
been permissible only in the secrecy of the Mysteries. A
secret otherwise strictly guarded in the Mystery-temples was
that in the process of Initiation a man must pass through the
experience of ‘dying and becoming’ and waken
after three days. This is an indication of the meaning of the
verses which are to the following effect. —
Peter was
amazed, took the Christ apart and intimated to Him that
such things should not be spoken of openly. Then Christ
Jesus turned about and said: ‘In speaking thus,
Peter, the words are being put into your mouth by, Satan.
The way in which you speak of this truth now belongs to the
past, not to the present. In the past, such a truth was
confined to the Temples; but in the future, because of the
Mystery of Golgotha, it will be openly announced to all
humanity. This is ordained by the divine guidance of
world-evolution. Anyone who speaks in a contrary sense is
not speaking out of divine wisdom but is distorting the
divine wisdom into the form that was fitting only in the
past.’
This is more
or less how we must understand the above passage in the
Gospel of St. Mark. We must realise that according to this
Gospel the Christ Impulse means that we are to receive the
Christ into the ‘I’, thus fulfilling the words of
St. Paul, ‘Not I, but Christ in me’ — not an
abstract Christ but the Christ who sent the Holy Spirit, the
Spirit who works as inspiration in the human soul as
described to-day, following the rhythms of an inner
calendar.
In
pre-Christian times these truths were accessible only to
those who were initiated in the Mysteries and had remained
for three and a half days in a deathlike condition, after
having undergone the tragic sufferings which man must
experience on the physical plane if he is finally to attain
the heights of spiritual life. Such individuals learnt that
the ‘earthly man’ must be discarded and slain,
that a higher man must rise from within. This was the
experience of ‘dying and becoming’. What could
formerly be experienced only in the Mysteries became
historical fact through the Mystery of Golgotha, as I have
shown in
Christianity as Mystical Fact.
Henceforward
it was possible for all men who felt themselves united with
the Mystery of Golgotha to become disciples of this great
wisdom. Contemplation of what took place on Golgotha could
now lead to an experience that could hitherto have been
undergone only in the Mysteries. An understanding of the
Christ Impulse is consequently the most important thing which
a man can acquire for his earthly being, for the power which,
since the coming of the Christ Impulse, must waken in the
human ‘I’.
In this
present age we can be inspired in a special way by the
Gospels. The Gospel of St. Matthew was a particularly
valuable source of inspiration for the epoch in which the
Christ Event actually occurred. For our own time the same can
be said of the Gospel of St. Mark. We know that this is the
age of the development of the Consciousness or Spiritual Soul
which detaches itself, isolates itself, from its environment.
We know too that in our age primary attention should not be
paid to racial descent but rather to the living impulse
expressed in the words of St. Paul: Not I, but Christ in
me.
Our own fifth
post-Atlantean epoch can, as I have said, be inspired
particularly by the Gospel of St. Mark. By contrast,
man's task in the sixth epoch will be to permeate
himself wholly with the Christ Being. Whereas in the fifth
epoch the Christ Being will be a subject of study, of deep
meditation, in the sixth epoch men will be permeated by the
Christ Being in all reality. They will find particular help
in the Gospel of St. Luke, which reveals the whole origin of
Jesus of Nazareth — that is to say, of the Jesus described
in St. Matthew's Gospel who leads back to Zarathustra,
and the Jesus of St. Luke's Gospel who leads back to
the Buddha and Buddhism. St. Luke's Gospel gives a
picture of the evolution of Jesus of Nazareth, reaching back
to the divine-spiritual origin of man. It will be more and
more possible for man to feel himself a divine-spiritual
being. To be permeated by the Christ Impulse can hover as an
ideal before him but this ideal becomes reality only if, in
the light of St. Luke's Gospel, he recognises physical
man in the sense-world as a spiritual being having a divine
origin.
The Gospel of
St. John which may well be a manual of guidance for the
spiritual life of man to-day will be the book of inspiration
for the seventh post-Atlantean epoch. Men will then stand in
need of a great deal which, as spiritual beings, they will
have had to master during the sixth epoch. But they will also
have to unlearn from its very foundations much of what they
believe to-day. Admittedly, this will not be so very
difficult because scientific facts will themselves show that
many beliefs will have to be discarded.
To-day, for
instance, a man would be considered to be ‘out of his
mind’ if he were to maintain that the usual distinction
made between ‘motor’ and ‘sensory’
nerves is nonsense. Motor nerves, as they are called, simply
do not exist; there are only sensory nerves. The so-called
motor nerves are sensory nerves, but their function is to
make us aware of the corresponding movements in the muscles.
Before very long it will be recognised that the muscles are
not set in motion by the nerves but by the astral body —
moreover by a force in the astral body that is not directly
perceived in its real form: for it is a law that what is to
produce an effect is not directly perceptible. What gives
rise to movement in the muscles is connected with the astral
body, in which a sound or tone, a kind of resonance, is
produced. Something akin to music pervades the astral body
and muscular movement is the expression of this. What happens
can be compared with the well-known Chladni sound-figures
which are produced when a fine powder or sand is scattered on
a metal plate and forms itself into figures when the plate is
made to vibrate by drawing a violin bow across it. Our astral
body is filled with numbers of such figures or tone-forms
which bring it into a particular condition. In a quite simple
way you can convince yourself of this by tightening the
biceps — the upper-arm muscle — and holding it close to
your ear. When you have acquired the knack of making the
muscle sufficiently taut and lay your thumb on it you will be
able to hear a sound. — This is not meant to be taken as
absolute proof but is merely a trivial illustration. We are,
so to speak, permeated with music and give expression to this
in the movements of our muscles. And we have the
‘motor’ nerves, as they are wrongly called, in
order that we may be aware to some extent of the muscular
movements. The way in which facts are grouped together in
physiology still seems — but only seems — to contradict
this.
This is one
example of the kind of truths by which people will gradually
be convinced that man is indeed a spiritual being, woven into
the harmony of the spheres even in his muscles. And Spiritual
Science which has to make preparation for a spiritual
understanding of the world in the sixth post-Atlantean epoch,
will have to concern itself in every detail with the truth
that man is a spiritual being. Just as a musical tone rises
into a higher sphere when it becomes a spoken human word, so
in macrocosmic existence the harmony of the spheres rises to
a higher stage when it becomes the Cosmic Word, the
Logos.
Now in
man's physical organism, the blood, in the
physiological sense, is at a higher stage than the muscles.
And just as the muscles are attuned to the harmony of the
spheres, so is the blood attuned to the Logos and can be
experienced more and more strongly as an expression of the
Logos — as indeed has been the case unconsciously ever since
man was created. This means that on the physical plane man
will eventually feel the blood, which is the expression of
the ‘I’, to be the expression of the Logos. And
in the sixth epoch, when men have learnt to recognise
themselves as spiritual beings, they will no longer cling to
the fantastic idea that the muscles are moved by
‘motor’ nerves but will recognise that they are
moved by the harmony of the spheres which has become part of
their own personality.
In the seventh
post-Atlantean epoch men will feel their very blood to be
permeated by the Logos and will grasp for the first time the
real content of what is said in St. John's Gospel. For
not until the seventh epoch will the scientific nature of
this Gospel come to be recognised. And then it will be felt
that the first words of the Gospel ought to stand at the
beginning of every book on physiology, that the whole of
science should move in the direction indicated by these
words. The best thing to say at the moment is that much of
this can even to-day be understood, but by no means all; it
can hover as an ideal before us.
Everything I
have been saying indicates that St. Matthew's Gospel
could be a source of inspiration especially for the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch, just as that of St. Mark can be for our
own. The Gospel of St. Luke will be especially important for
the sixth epoch. We must ourselves prepare the conditions
that will then prevail, for the seed of whatever the future
holds in store must have been planted in the past. If we
understand the contents of St. John's Gospel we shall
find everything that is to be lived out in the further course
of human evolution, everything that is to develop in the
seventh epoch up to the time of the next great catastrophe.
Therefore it will be particularly important for us to regard
St. Mark's Gospel as a book that can give guidance for
much that we must practise and also for much that we must
guard against. The very sentences of this Gospel are
themselves an indication of the significance of the Christ
Impulse for the ‘I’ of man.
It is
important to realise that our task is to grasp the reality of
Christ in the spirit and to be aware of how Christ will
reveal himself in future epochs. In my Rosicrucian Mystery Play,
The Portal of Initiation,
an attempt was made
to indicate this task by words spoken by the seeress,
Theodora. There will be something like a repetition of the
event experienced by Paul at the gate of Damascus, but to
believe that the Christ Impulse will come into the world
again in a human physical body would merely be an expression
of the materialism of our times. We can learn from the Gospel
of St. Mark how to guard against such a belief, for the
Gospel contains a special warning for our own epoch. And
although much of the Gospel has a bearing on the past, its
verses apply, in the high moral sense I have indicated, to
our immediate future. We shall then realise the urgent
necessity of the influence that must proceed from Spiritual
Science.
If we
understand the spiritual meaning of the following passage we
shall be able to relate it to our own times and to the
immediate future:
‘For
in those days shall be affliction, such as was not from the
beginning of the creation which God created unto this time,
neither shall be again’ (xiii, 19-23).
These words
must be applied to man's power of understanding. There
is every prospect of affliction in the future, when truth
will come to expression in its full spiritual reality.
‘And
except that the Lord had shortened those days, no flesh
should be saved (that is to say, nothing would have been
saved of spiritual nourishment): but for the elect's
sake, whom he hath chosen, he hath shortened the
days.’
Then come the
words:
‘And
then, if any man shall say to you, Lo, here is Christ! or
lo, he is there! believe him not. ...’
Here the
Gospel of St. Mark is pointing to a possible materialistic
conception of Christ.
‘For
false Christs and false prophets shall rise, and shall show
signs and wonders, to seduce, if it were possible, even the
elect. But take ye heed: behold, I have foretold you all
things!’
So powerful
will be the onslaught of materialism that it will be
essential for human souls to acquire the strength to stand
the test expressed in the words: False Christs and false
prophets will arise. — But if it is then said: Here is
Christ! — those who have felt the true influence of
Spiritual Science will obey the exhortation: If any man shall
say to you, Lo, here is Christ — believe it not!
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