Moses
Berlin, 9 March 1911
When we dealt with Zarathustra, Hermes, and Buddha in the
preceding talks, we faced phenomena which interest us as human
beings, in so far as we feel that we have a share of the entire
development of humanity with our soul life and can understand
the present only if we look back at those great spiritual men
who co-operated on that what projects in our present. With
Moses whom we want to consider today, the situation is
completely different. For all that what is tied up with the
name of Moses, we feel that infinite of it still lives on
immediately in that what is a component, spiritual contents of
our own soul. We still feel as it were in our limbs that the
impulses have a lasting effect, which started from Moses. We
feel that he still lives in our thoughts and sensations, and
that if we deal with him we deal with a piece of our own soul.
Hence, the continuing tradition that is linked to Moses is
present to us in a quite different way from that which is
linked to the other great men. This makes it easy, on one side,
to deal with Moses, because today everybody knows this mighty
figure projecting in the times from the Bible. Even if the
conscientious research, the serious science unveiled many
things in the last decades and years that can cast new light on
the history of Moses in certain respect, in so far as we take
it from the Bible, nevertheless, we must say if we exactly
observe: in our general view of Moses has little changed,
actually. Hence, we speak, if we speak about him, about
something widely known. This makes the consideration easy as it
were. On the other side, however, we can say that just the way
of the tradition we have in the Bible about Moses makes this
consideration difficult. One can realise this already in the
destiny of the biblical studies in the nineteenth century. One
has to stress repeatedly that — even if we consider the
natural sciences — that hardly any branch of human
scholarship, of serious scientific striving demands such deep
attention, such holy respect as the biblical studies of the
nineteenth century. Nothing can exceed that diligence, that
astuteness, that scientific devotion which one applied to get
to know the single parts of the Bible concerning their style or
their origin, for example.
However, one can see something tragic in these biblical studies
of the nineteenth century. Since the more they advanced, the
more they withdrew the Bible from us, actually. Since they have
cut the Bible into pieces, above all the Old Testament.
Everybody can convince himself of it who reads the current
books about the results of the biblical studies — in
order to show that one piece follows the one stream of
tradition or the other that everything has been brought
together in the course of time to a whole, scholarship has to
disassemble it again to understand it. That is why in a certain
sense, one can call the result of this research a tragic one
because it is quite negative, actually, and because it has
contributed nothing to the revival of that which can liven the
Bible up which revived it in the human hearts and souls for
millennia.
Spiritual science often has the task of building up something
and not of criticising only compared with the other sciences.
It has also the task that we learn to understand, above all,
the Bible again while questioning, is it not necessary to
penetrate the whole sense of the traditions in their entire
deepness, and then only, after one has completely understood
them, to ask for their origin? This is easy by no means,
concerning the Old Testament, in particular those parts of it
which deal with Moses. Since what does spiritual science show
as a characteristic of the biblical portrayals? It shows that
outer events, outer facts which are tied up with this or that
personality, with these or those people are shown in such a way
as they just run for the outer historical consideration, so
that in the Bible the experiences of Moses are presented in the
outer physical world, as they happen in space and time. Then,
however, it becomes obvious — and only the
spiritual-scientific deepening in the Bible can achieve this
result — that a portrayal that deals with outer processes
and experiences in the outer world at first continues
immediately in a portrayal of quite different kind that one can
hard distinguish only from that what preceded.
One
tells there about journeys and other outer experiences which we
simply have to take as those. Then it is so continued that we
do not notice at first that we are — reading on —
in a portrayal of quite different kind, as if a journey is
continued from one place to the other, and as if the further
experiences are still to be taken as outer physical experiences
like the preceding ones. Then we are right in the middle of a
portrayal of the soul life of the person concerned, which does
not refer at all to outer events, but to inner soul fights and
soul experiences. Thereby the person concerned ascends to a
higher level of soul development, of knowledge, to a higher
level of energy or to a mission in the world development. The
portrayals of the outer events change over as it were abruptly
to symbolic representations that are completely held in the
style of the former outer events, which do not at all mean
outer experiences, but inner soul experiences. I have to say
that this assertion remains an assertion for everybody as long
as he does not settle more and more in the peculiarity of the
biblical portrayals on the basis of spiritual-scientific
representations, in particular also of those parts which deal
with Moses. However, if one settles in this peculiarity, one
learns to feel how in such points where an outer portrayal of
physical experiences changes to a portrayal of mental
experiences and developments, indeed, the whole style, the
whole tonic changes that suddenly a new element of
representation appears, and we ask ourselves: why does this
happen? Then this “why” can be answered in no other
way than by the conviction that can be gained from the soul
itself. We deal with that peculiarity of representation, which
has been characterised just now.
One
finds this with all old religio-historical representations and
especially if persons should be described, who have attained a
certain height of cognition, of soul work, and one familiarises
oneself with such a style if one settles down more and more in
spiritual science. This makes it difficult again, so to speak,
to obtain full understanding of that from the biblical
representation what is meant at the single passages with the
portrayal of Moses.
Thus, we have as it were the Bible on one side — however,
we also have difficulties on the other side because of its kind
of representation where it penetrates in particular depths.
This caused that one went too far concerning the view of the
Bible now and again. If one envisages, for example, the view of
the ancient Hebrew history by that philosopher who lived in the
time of the foundation of Christianity, Philo (Ph. of
Alexandia, ~ 25 BC - ~ 50 AD, Hellenistic Jewish philosopher),
then one realises that he wants to show the whole history of
the ancient Hebrew people allegorically. He wants to give a
symbolic representation of the historical view, so that the
whole history would be a kind of symbolism of the soul
experiences of a people. This would go too far. Philo went so
far because he lacked the spiritual-scientific sensibility to
know where the outer experiences change to mental
experiences.
With Moses, I want to show how a personality intervenes in the
living course of human development who had to bring something
highest, most important to humanity. If we feel that we still
have something relative of it in our souls, the full
understanding of Moses's impulse becomes quite necessary to us.
Hence, we can immediately go into the mission of Moses without
further ado.
However, one cannot understand this mission of Moses if one
does not assume that the consciousness of a fact forms the
basis of the biblical representation at first that we could
already envisage considering Hermes, Buddha, and Zarathustra.
It is the fact that the development of humanity experienced a
transition from the old clairvoyant state to the today's state
of our intellectual consciousness. Once again, I mention that
in ancient times the human soul was able to behold in a
spiritual world in certain interstates between waking and
sleeping that that what one beheld this way in the spiritual
world was shown in pictures, and that these pictures were
preserved to us in the mythologies and legends of ancient
times. If anybody asks, how can one prove the old clairvoyant
consciousness also externally without spiritual science? Then
he can get answer by means of conscientious researches, which
were already done in our time, which, however, did not meet
with universal approval. I have to refer to the fact that
certain mythographers saw themselves forced to assume a quite
different kind of human consciousness for the origin of myths
or legends also of later times. I often referred to an
interesting book which is due to a mythographer who must be
called the most important mythographer of the newer time: I
mean Ludwig Laistner (1845-1896), and his book The Riddle of
the Sphinx (1889). This book belongs to the most
significant ones in this field. He showed in it that certain
myths appear as continuations of dream events, which are
experienced typically. Laistner did not advance to spiritual
science, he was not aware that he delivered the first stones of
a real cognition of the ancient mythologies.
However, one cannot understand the myths and legends as
transformations of typical dreams as Laistner understood them,
but one has to understand them as arising from a former state
of human consciousness that beheld the spiritual world in
pictures and expressed them, therefore, also in pictures.
Nobody can understand the ancient myths and legends really who
does not assume — at first as a hypothesis — that
the ancient mythology is taken from another state of human
consciousness. This ancient prehistoric state of spiritual
condition changed to the current state of consciousness that
can be characterised briefly that one says, we change
concerning our consciousness from waking to sleeping. In the
awake consciousness, we perceive the outer world by our senses
and connect the percepts with our intellect. The
sensuous-intellectual consciousness, which works by our mind,
by our reason, removed the ancient clairvoyant spiritual
condition. Thus, we have characterised a feature of history if
one considers the human development in its depths.
However, something else forms the basis of such representations
as the Bible gives them. This is that to every people, every
tribe, every human race, as they appear in the course of the
human development, so to speak, a certain mission is assigned.
The old clairvoyant consciousness appeared in different forms
according to the talents, the temperaments of the single
peoples. Hence, the unity of the old clairvoyant consciousness
is preserved to us in the different mythologies and pagan
religions of the single peoples. Thus, we can say: there is not
only an abstract unity of this old view of the world, but the
most manifold missions were handed over to the most various
peoples and races, and thereby the common consciousness was
elaborated in the most various ways.
Then, however, we have to take into account if we want to
understand this human development that it is not a futile
succession of cultures, but that a sense goes through the whole
human development. Hence, any form of consciousness enjoys life
in a certain culture later because the later has to add
something like a new leaf, a new blossom to the former because
the whole sense of human development enjoys life in successive
arrangements. Thus, we understand people best of all in the
spiritual-scientific sense that we say to ourselves: all these
peoples — the ancient Indians, Persians, Babylonians,
Greeks, or Romans — had a certain mission; what can live
in the human consciousness was developed with them in a
particular way. We do not understand these peoples if we are
not able to comprehend their particular, individual
characteristic as their mission. Now, however, the whole
development of humanity proceeds in such a way that, so to
speak, a period is assigned to such a mission. If this period
has run out, this mission is fulfilled. The concerning mission
was assigned to a people. The period can have run out, so to
speak, for the concerning national mission. What is included in
it embryonically became fruit, enjoyed life. Then, however, it
can happen that these or those peoples keep the concerning
characteristic, which lies in its temperament, in its other
arrangements. Then the concerning people skips over, so to
speak, the point in time at which a new mission should replace
the old one, lives on with its characteristic in the later
time, while the objective course of the human development puts
something new to its place.
One
can see such a thing especially with the Egyptians whose
characteristic we got to know in the talk on Hermes. The
Egyptians had a high mission in the whole development of
humanity. Nevertheless, this mission developed everything that
was in it once. What should happen further, indeed, was
embryonic in the Egyptian culture, but the Egyptian people as
such kept its temperament, its characteristic, was not able to
develop the new mission from itself. Hence, the leadership of
humanity had to change to another human element. Indeed, this
had to grow out of the Egyptian element; nevertheless, it had
to be different. Thus, we realise something like a change of
direction in the whole sense of the human development. One has
to think one's way into the development of the Egyptian
mission. Moses opened himself to what could be got out of it at
first. This also worked on the souls of his people. However, he
was destined not to continue the old Egyptian mission but to
inculcate something quite new in the human development. Because
this new was so immense, so extensive and drastic, the
personality of Moses was such a mighty one for the whole human
history, and, therefore, the way in which the mission of Moses
developed from the expired development of the Egyptian people
is so interesting and fertile still for our time. Since what
Moses got out of the Egyptian people, what he added then like
from eternal heights of the spiritual development keeps on
working on our souls. Hence, one felt Moses as a human being
who had not to take what he had to give humanity from any time,
from any special mission immediately. He was understood as
somebody who had to be touched in his soul by the waves of the
eternal, which flows through new canals in the human
development repeatedly to fertilise it. What existed as the
everlasting core in the soul of Moses had to find its ground
and mature on that what he could get out of the Egyptian
culture.
The
fact that one deals with Moses as with a soul which the highest
that it had to give from everlasting origins is symbolically
indicated in the way of old representations that Moses is
enclosed in a small basket soon after his birth. With it, one
indicates something significant. From former talks of this
cycle, we know that the human being if he wants to attain
knowledge of higher spiritual worlds has to experience certain
stadia of his soul development, while he completely cuts
himself off from the environment and evokes the elementary
spiritual forces of his soul. If now should be shown that such
a person already brings those spiritual gifts with him at
birth, which lead to the heights of humanity, it cannot be
shown better than that one says: this person had to go through
an experience, into the physical by which his senses, his
perceptive faculties are cut off from the physical world.
— Then it seems understandable that Pharaoh's daughter
drew the boy out of the water and called him
“Moses” because she said: “I drew him out of
the water” (Exodus 2:1-10). This is already contained in
the name Moses for someone who understands this name. One
wanted to say with it that the representative of the Egyptian
culture, Pharaoh's daughter, directed life in a soul that is
filled with eternal contents. Thus, it is wonderfully indicated
that the everlasting that Moses had to bring to humanity is
wrapped in the outer cover of the Egyptian culture and
mission.
Then the Bible shows outer experiences of Moses. There we
realise again that the Bible gives its representation in such a
way that outer experiences are concerned. We can regard what we
read in the Bible about the destinies of Moses and his pains
because of the suppression of his people in Egypt as a
representation of outer conditions. Then, however, the
representation changes again unnoticed to a portrayal of inner
soul experiences. This happens where Moses flees to Jethro or
Reguel, a priest of Midan. Someone who can recognise such a
representation from the custom of old spiritual representations
finds out even in the names that here the portrayal changes to
the description of soul experiences of Moses. This is not meant
possibly in such a way, as if Moses had not really made such a
trip to a temple site, a priestly training centre, but the
representation is given so skilfully that the appearance is
interweaved in the soul experiences of Moses. Thus, the outer
experiences are everywhere indications of that for what Moses
struggles to attain a higher position of his soul. What is
indicated in Jethro? One can infer from the Bible easily that
he is one of those individualities to whom we are led
repeatedly if we go through the evolution of humanity. They
have attained a surveying knowledge to a high degree that one
can only gain if one settles down slowly and gradually by inner
battle of the soul in that which can only give understanding of
those spiritual heights on which such human beings walk. Moses
should be stimulated to his mission by the fact that he became
the pupil of one of those mysterious figures who withdraw with
their meditation for the remaining humanity and are only the
teachers of the leaders of humanity. I probably know that I say
something at which many people take offence today. However, it
is something that should strike every deeper beholder of the
historical evolution already externally that there are such
secrets and mysterious human beings.
What Moses should experience now as a pupil of this great
priestly sage is shown in such a way that he meets the seven
daughters of the priest at the place where he visits the
priest, at a well — again a symbol, a symbol of the
source of wisdom. He who wants to understand what is deeper
hidden in such a portrayal has to remember, above all, that in
any mythical representation always that is represented by
female figures which the soul can develop as higher knowledge
and forces — down to Goethe in his words at the end of
his Faust of the “eternally-female.” Thus,
we recognise in the “seven daughters” of the priest
Jethro seven human soul forces that the wisdom of the priest
had at command. There one has to think that in those times of
the ancient clairvoyance other views of the single soul forces
prevailed. We can imagine this consciousness if we start from
concepts which we have today. Today we speak of the human soul
and its forces, thinking, feeling, and willing in the way that
we have these forces in us that they form as it were inclusions
of the soul. The ancient human being thought different under
the influence of his clairvoyant talent. He did not feel such
uniform being and not such forces in his thinking, feeling and
willing at first, which work from the centre of the ego and
organise the soul uniformly. Nevertheless, he felt given
himself up to the macrocosm and its single forces, and he felt
the single soul forces as connected with special
divine-spiritual beings. As we can imagine — however, we
do not do it — that our thinking is fertilised, is
carried by a spiritual world force different from that of our
feeling and our will. Hence, different streams, different
spiritual forces flow from the macrocosm in our thinking,
feeling and willing. We are related to them — in such a
way the ancient human being did not feel the soul as something
uniform, but he said to himself: what is in me is only the
mental scene on which spiritual-divine forces of the universe
are acting.
Seven such soul forces worked on the scene of the soul life of
Moses. If we want to see how generally for the development of
the human consciousness the views became more and more abstract
and intellectual, we can look, for example, at Plato whose
ideas are living beings that are as real as only the materials
to the modern human being. The single soul force has something
that has an effect on the scene of the whole soul. However, the
abilities of the soul become more and more abstractions, and
the unity of the ego gets its rights more and more. We can
still recognise — as strange as it sounds — what
the seven daughters of Jethro symbolise as the seven living
spiritual forces which should work on the scene of the soul as
the medieval seven free arts in abstract form; they are the
last abstract echo of the consciousness that seven abilities
work in the soul.
If
we regard this, we are led before the fact that Moses stood
with his soul before the whole aspect of the seven human soul
forces that he had, however, the task mainly to inculcate one
single of them completely as an impulse in the human
development. He was able to do this because it was given to the
special blood predisposition and the temperament of his people
to meet this soul force with particular interest whose effects
reach down to us. This soul force unites the remaining soul
forces imagined as separated before in a uniform soul life, in
an ego-life. This is why the Bible tells: one of Jethro's
daughters marries Moses. That is, in particular, in his soul
one of the soul forces made itself so effective that it became
the predominant soul force for a long time of the human
development that comprises the others to a uniform
ego-soul.
I
have to give such considerations very reservedly. For our time
has, so to speak, no suitable organ to realise that those
portrayals which look like outer, physical experiences are just
given to show that in the time for which this is described the
soul concerned goes through an inner development, that is it is
especially called on its mission. Thus, we see what the ancient
Egyptians did not have: Moses's inspiration with the human ego
power, with the centre of the human soul forces which is the
authoritative for him. We may say, it was the mission of the
ancient Egyptian people to found a culture still with the old
clairvoyance. Everything that the Egyptian culture delivered to
us as its best had still arisen from the special kind of
clairvoyant forces, which the Egyptian priest sages and the
leaders of the Egyptian people had. Nevertheless, the time for
this mission passed as it were, and humanity should be called
for the development of that soul force that should substitute
the old vague clairvoyance for a long time of the human
development. Self-consciousness, intellectuality, rationalism,
reason, and mind directed to the outer sensory world should
replace the old clairvoyance. However, I have also already
mentioned that both kinds combine in future: the clairvoyant
force with the intellectual consciousness, so that humanity
progresses towards such future where intellectuality
interweaved by clairvoyant force is general for the human
beings.
What we regard as the most significant element of the cultural
life received its first impulse from Moses, hence, the feeling
that the impulse of Moses still keeps on working in our own
soul force. Moses received the intellectualistic thinking, the
working with mind and reason. However, he received it in
particular way. Since everything that should appear in its
special characteristic later must be given before in the
characteristic way of the old times. There is a miraculous fact
that Moses had to receive the consciousness of intellectuality
in such a way that in him the intellectual consciousness still
lighted up in the way of the old clairvoyants. That is, indeed,
Moses had the first intellectualistic impulse, but it was still
clairvoyance with him. With him, it was the first new impulse
and the last old one at the same time. What the later humanity
had beyond clairvoyance, he had this within it. The knowledge
of the pure reason and mind was given to him, while his soul
was transported to clairvoyant states by the influence which he
had received from Jethro, thus, for example, with the
experience of the burning bush which glowed, however, in such
fire that he did not burn. There the world spirit revealed
itself to Moses in new way as it did reveal itself to the
clairvoyant knowledge of the Egyptians.
He
who knows the facts knows how in the course of the development
the human soul gradually gets around to seeing the outer
objects changed, so that they appear on the background
interweaved by the prototypes from which they have arisen.
Everybody who rises to spiritual knowledge recognises the
picture of the burning bush as something by which he beholds
into a spiritual world. Thus, we understand that what had to be
given to Moses in clairvoyant way a new consciousness of the
world spirit had to be that interweaves and lives in the world.
While the ancient peoples looked up at the majority of the
world forces in such a way that they work in the soul that the
single soul forces represent no unity, but a variety and that
the human soul is only their scene. Moses, however, should now
recognise such a world spirit that does not reveal itself only
for a single soul force that does not stand beside spirits of
the same value that work in other soul forces. Moses should
recognise the world spirit that can only reveal itself in the
holiest centre of the soul life that lives in the ego where the
human soul realises its centre. If the human soul feels
standing in the ego as the peoples felt once standing with
their being in the spiritual world forces, the soul feels that
what revealed itself to Moses first by clairvoyant cognition
and what should be considered as the primordial ground from
which the peoples got the impulse by Moses. One cannot
understand it with the reason, which combines the phenomena by
the uniformity of the world. If the human being looks at the
centre of his soul life today, it is still something that must
appear to him as rather poor in contents, even if it is the
strongest that he can experience. Highly gifted human beings
felt directed to this centre of their soul life in particular
in the course of their life as, for example, Jean Paul (born
Johann Paul Richter, 1763-1825, German author) who tells in his
autobiography:
“I never forget the phenomenon in myself still told to no
one where I stood at the birth of my self-consciousness the
place and time of which I can give. In a morning, I stood as a
very young child under the front door and looked at the
woodshed on the left when all at once the inner face “I
am an ego” as a streak of lightning penetrated me and
stood still luminously since then, my ego had seen itself for
the first time and forever. Deceits of memory are hard to
imagine, because no other information could intermingle
something in an event that took place only in the veiled
sanctum of the human being the novelty of which made everyday
minor details permanent.”
What the “veiled sanctum” is, appears to the human
being, indeed, as the strongest, the most powerful of the soul
life, but he cannot realise it as the various other soul
experiences: it is not so rich. If the human being withdraws to
this centre, he feels that in the wonderful words “I
am” this centre of his soul life sounds intense and
powerful, but with low contents.
On
this veiled sanctum that world spirit works which Moses
recognised as the uniform world spirit. Small wonder when this
world spirit revealed itself to him that Moses said to himself:
if I receive the task to appear before the people to inaugurate
a culture that should be founded upon self-consciousness, who
will believe me? In whose name should I found my mission? He
got the answer: you have to say, I am the I-AM. — That
is: you cannot express the name of that being that announces
itself in the innermost sanctum of the human being other than
with the word which calls the self being! Thus, Moses beheld
Yahveh or Jehovah in the burning bush. We understand that at
the hour, when in Moses the name of Yahveh arose as “I
am,” a new element in the development of humanity came
that should supersede the ancient Egyptian culture with which
Moses had only to develop his soul to understand what should
meet him as a highest in his life.
Then we have the discussion of Moses with the Pharaoh. There we
can easily realise that Moses and Pharaoh are confronted and do
not understand each other. The portrayals should show that
everything that Moses had to say from a completely changed
human consciousness must remain incomprehensible to the Pharaoh
in whom only the effects of the ancient clairvoyant Egyptian
culture can live. This is clearly shown in the way in which
clairvoyant documents talk. For Moses speaks a new language,
dresses what he has to say in words that arise from the human
self-consciousness, which had to remain quite incomprehensible
to the Pharaoh.
Thus, the entire Egyptian people had the mission up to that
world hour which it could accomplish on basis of the old
clairvoyant consciousness. However, the time had passed. If the
Egyptian people lived on, it lived on with the national
qualities, with the temperament et cetera which it had before,
but it did not find the transition from the abyss which opened
between the old time and the new one for which just the Hebrew
people was determined. Moses found this transition from the old
to the new time. Hence, the memory of what Moses found with his
people, the memory of the transition from the old to the new
time, the Passover, was celebrated. Since this Passover should
remind of the fact that with Moses the possibility was given to
bridge the abyss from the old to the new time. The Egyptians
could not bridge this abyss, while they stopped as people and
the time passed over them. Thus, we have to imagine the
relation of Moses to the Egyptians and to his own people.
What Moses had to give his own people was completely founded on
the nature of the ancient Hebrew people. What was it? The
intellectual consciousness should replace the old clairvoyance.
I have shown in the preceding talks that the clairvoyant
consciousness is not bound to the outer corporeality that it
develops freely just when the human being becomes free by
exercises in his soul life from the outer physical instrument.
However, the intellectual consciousness just is bound to the
brain and to the blood. What hovered as it were over the
physical organisation once and found its further development
beyond the organisation by the relation of the teacher to the
pupil had to settle down as bound to a physical organisation,
to the blood of the people flowing from generation to
generation. Hence, what Moses should give as the impulse of an
intellectual culture he could only give to a people that
strictly observed the flowing on of the blood through the
generations. The nature of the new culture was bound to this
instrument at first. It had to enjoy life in such a way that it
did not only live in the spiritual, but that the people was got
out of the other people within which it prepared itself, and
then developed the outer tools in the separate blood stream for
centuries which should create the basis of the intellectual
culture for the future.
Thus, we realise that world history makes sense and that the
spiritual is bound to the outer physical tools of the blood. We
can realise in the Bible that the author endeavours to show
that the world historical significance of the transition from
the ancient culture of the Egyptians to the culture of Moses,
for example, with the passage through the Red Sea. A wonderful
fact of the development of humanity is concealed behind the
passage of the Israelites through the sea and the drowning of
the Egyptians. This fact becomes only explicable if we
understand these events.
There we see coming true with the Egyptian people what is
necessarily connected for the soul forces with the clairvoyant
culture. You do not assume after what I have brought forward up
to now in these talks that I want to bring the human being
closer to the animal nature. However, what I want to make clear
is to understand best of all if we take the starting point from
the animal organisation. We have to imagine that the entire
animal imagination and the animal soul life is dreamlike, vague
compared with the human one, in particular with the
intellectual soul life. Although the ancient human clairvoyance
must not be brought closer to the animal soul life and differs
radically from it, we are allowed to clarify a feature of the
ancient human soul life with the help of the animal soul life,
the instinctual life of the animal. Even if the concerning
portrayals often exaggerate, nevertheless, something true forms
the basis of it that where earthquakes, volcano eruptions and
the like happen the animals flee days before. While the human
beings who understand everything with their intellect keep
their seats, the animals are aroused. Thus, we consider the
vague instinctual life of the animal as affinity to the natural
life and realise how it works.
The
portrayals are often exaggerated. However, someone who knows
spiritual science knows that the animal nature is interwoven in
the whole surrounding nature. Thus, we can talk about a
“knowledge” of the animal which regulates the life
of the animal in its elementary forces and which the human
being does not have because he develops his higher intellect,
which enables him to comprise the things with concepts that
have torn him out of the connectedness with nature. We have now
to imagine the old clairvoyance connected instinctively with
the natural facts. This instinctive cognition said to the human
being: this and that happens; this or that prepares itself, as
it also applies to those human beings who attain higher
knowledge by own efforts and are able to behold into the
natural facts for which one can give no “reasons.”
Who works on his soul and knows to say something out of the
configuration of his soul that the intellectual consciousness
does not know to say feels uneasy if one asks him everywhere:
why is this in such a way? Prove what you have to say! —
One does not notice that such a knowledge takes quite different
paths than the knowledge that one obtains with the intellectual
logic. It is absolutely appropriate that Goethe — if he
looked out to the window — could often forecast the
weather for hours. Imagine that because of their clairvoyance
the ancient human beings were connected quite different with
nature and its facts from the today's human beings with their
science. The ancient humanity had no meteorological
institutions and reports where from newspapers and the like the
weather could be forecast, but it had a feeling, was determined
by their view, which showed vividly what would happen. This was
the case in particular with the ancient Egyptians, without
having our disassembling knowledge and science; they knew to
behave in such a way that it corresponded to the living
connection with the whole environment.
But
just because the world time had passed for the Egyptian
culture, this ability of the Egyptians decayed more and more,
and they were able less and less to familiarise themselves with
the facts of nature, did no longer know based on the
constellations of the outer elements how to behave. For the
human being should learn to figure the constellations of the
external elements out with the intellect, and Moses should
still give the impulse from the clairvoyant consciousness.
We
see Moses with his people standing before the Red Sea. With a
knowledge similar to ours which is still translated into the
clairvoyant with him he recognises that by an especial
connection of an easterly wind and low tide and flood a
possibility exists to lead his people through the sea at the
favourable hour. This fact is described and is shown: Moses
stands there as the founder of the new, intellectualised
worldview that does not yet seem absolutely expired which will
teach the human being only again to harmonise the life praxis
with the physical conditions as Moses did. The Egyptians were a
people whose hour had passed; they could no longer know what
happens at a later hour. The old natural instincts had gone to
rack and ruin with them. Thus, they stood at the same place as
in the old times. However, in the old times they would have
said to themselves, now we can no longer pass over! —
This old, instinctive natural feeling had decayed with them,
and they could not settle in the new, intellectual
consciousness. Hence, they stood before the Red Sea helplessly,
confused by their no longer authoritative consciousness, and
went to rack and ruin. Thus, we realise how the new element of
Moses contrasts the old element, and see the old clairvoyance
decaying so that it must doubt in itself and has to prepare its
doom because it did no longer fit into the new time.
If
we look through such apparently outer portrayals at that what
the author wants to say, actually, we find in such information
the big turning points of human development characterised and
understand that it is not easy at all to find the significance
of such personalities out — as for example Moses —
because of the peculiar representation in the old scriptures.
The fact that Moses was completely based on an old clairvoyance
and with him, the new intellectual culture was still
clairvoyant is still shown later where it should be decided
whether he has to lead his people to Palestine really. This
people should found the intellectual culture on its blood. The
clairvoyance of Moses could give the impulse; however, it could
not be this culture. For this culture should not be
clairvoyant, it should appear as something new compared with
the old clairvoyance. Hence, we see Moses felt called to lead
his people up to a certain point, however, being unable to lead
it in the new land. He should leave this to those who are
called to the new culture. This is clearly said in the Bible.
While Moses is the herald of the God who announces himself in
the ego-being, however, it is also indicated to us that Moses
is only able to perceive the magniloquence of this world spirit
with his clairvoyance. When he is in a situation where he is
left to his own resources and should help his people, he flees
to his tent where he could perceive his God clairvoyantly
again. However, there it is said to him: because you could not
continue what is given you in the clairvoyant thinking, another
has to lead your people. — From it something speaks by
which he appears to us, however, as in a glance which wants to
say that no clairvoyant prophet lived in Israel after him. With
it is indicated that he was the last to have such clairvoyance,
and that the new culture had to work on without clairvoyance,
with mere tradition and intellectuality with the suitable
peoples. With it, it should be prepared that the ego of which
humanity had become conscious now on this new cultural basis
could take up a new element.
Moses had led humanity until it could realise that the world
spirit can be felt most clearly, most humanely in the I-am, in
the innermost centre of the human soul that, however, only this
I-am has to be filled with contents which can comprise the
world again, so that the poor word I-am can receive the richest
contents. However, for that another mission was necessary which
could be pronounced with the important words of Paul:
“Not I — but Christ in me!” Moses had led
humanity to the foundation of an ego-culture. This ego-culture
had to settle down like a gift from above, like a national
culture, like a vessel that should take up new spiritual
contents. The ego should develop in the ancient Hebrew people
at first, and this vessel had to be filled with that what could
originate from a real understanding of the events of the
Mystery of Golgotha. There the ego should get new contents that
were taken from the spiritual world itself. We can see this
best of all, if we visualise the miraculous, but only from the
characteristic of the ancient Hebrew people understandable
tragedy in the Book of Job.
Although Job as a righteous man holds on his God and is aware
that everything that he has comes from his God, he experiences
misfortune by misfortune concerning his possessions, his
family, and himself. There is something in the revelations of
his God that could confuse him that now really that world
spirit realises itself in the human ego. It comes to the point
that Job's wife cannot understand, why her husband still holds
on his God, and, hence, says the important words to him which
are of incomparable meaning: “Curse God — and
die!” What does that mean? Nothing else than: if God who
should be the source of your life treats you in such a way,
curse Him. Then indeed, it is certain that death is the result
of the renunciation of God, so that someone who curses God
lifts himself out from the living development. Job's friends
cannot understand that he has not sinned, because,
nevertheless, the results would have an effect on the righteous
person. The author himself can make it comprehensible to us in
no other way that the world justice still exists than by the
fact that the deeply afflicted Job thrown in misery still gets
a substitute in the physical world of everything he has
lost.
Thus, Moses's consciousness already sounds through in the
important allegory of the Book of Job, so that we see: the
human being is referred to his ego. However, at the moment when
he can err, because the ego can realise itself in the physical,
he loses — or can lose — the consciousness of his
connection with the source of life. However, the Christ impulse
caused that the balance should not be in the physical world,
but that in spite of all decay and misery, grief and pain the
human being can be victorious over the physical. For in his ego
not only the primary source of everything spatial and temporal
shines, but in his ego can be taken up the power of the
everlasting. Thus, the words of Paul “not I — but
Christ in me” meant: Moses led the human beings to that
point where they understood everything that lives in space and
time and expresses itself in the human ego most
characteristically. One understands the world if one
understands it in its unity like arising from such an ego.
However, if you want to take up the everlasting in the ego, you
must not only recognise the summary of the temporal, not only
Jahveh's unity behind that which is spread out in space and
time, but the concentric Christ source behind any unity.
With it, we consider Moses as the true preparer of
Christianity; we realise how he prepares the vessel for the
human self-consciousness which now should be filled with the
everlasting spiritual substantiality in future, that is —
understood in the right sense — it should be filled with
Christ. We understand that Moses is placed in the human
development in such a way. Just by such a consideration,
history gains the deepest sense. The fact that at this or that
time these or those human beings appear that those everlasting
sources flow through them for humanity which further its
development, this causes the feeling of the real connection of
the single human being with the entire human development.
Surveying the human development in such a way, we say to
ourselves, we understand that we are in a living development.
We learn to recognise what, so to speak, the world spirits
meant with our existence, and how that what they have meant
appears more and more in life. Just the considerations of the
greatest spirits and events of the development of world and
humanity give us that confidence with which we can stand in the
entire human determination that we survey the world history in
such a way and feel again according to Goethe that enthusiasm
is the best that history can cause in us. That enthusiasm which
does not only remain dead admiration but consists of the fact
that we take up the seeds of the prehistoric time in our souls
and develop them to fruits for the future.
The
poet's words (Friedrich Schiller, 1759-805, in his Bride of
Messina) revive in changed form, while we gain truth from
the consideration of the greatest human beings and events:
Time is a blossoming mead,
The human development is a big living,
And everything is fruit,
And everything is seed!
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