IV
MOSES
When we study the great historical
individualities of the past, such as those who have already
claimed our attention during these lectures, namely, Zarathustra,
Hermes and Buddha, we are brought face to face with incidents and
facts which are of interest to us as human beings, because we
feel that our whole soul life plays a part in the collective
evolution of humanity. It is only when we look back to those
great spiritual characters of by-gone times, who have helped to
bring about the conditions in which we now live, that we can
truly comprehend our present circumstances.
With regard to Moses, however, whose personality
we are about to consider, the matter presents a wholly different
aspect; for here we have the feeling that there is no limit to
that direct influence exerted by all those events connected with
his name, which yet continue to affect the spiritual content of
our souls. We still feel, in our very bones, as it were, the
workings of those impulses which emanated from this great
outstanding patriarch. It seems to us that Moses is even now a
living force in our thoughts and feelings, and as if when we
analyse our ideas and motives according to his doctrine and
sentiments, that we are in truth arraigning and searching our
very souls. It is for this reason that all that persistent
tradition which is directly associated with Moses, seems to us
more vivid, more actually present, than that which is connected
with those other great personalities to whom I have referred. It
is therefore in a certain sense, less difficult to deal with this
outstanding individuality, for through the Bible we are all
familiar with this mighty figure, whose influence has endured
even to the present time.
Although the conscientious researches which have
been conducted by science during the past ten years and more,
have to a certain extent touched upon the surface and here and
there thrown new light upon the history of Moses — in so far as
it can be gleaned from the Bible — nevertheless, when we look
more deeply into the matter, we must admit that very little
indeed has been altered with regard to the general impression
which we have received from our own personal study of the
Scriptures.
Whenever we refer to any matter connected with
Moses, or to the great patriarch himself, we speak as if we were
mentioning some subject well known throughout the widest circles;
this fact somewhat simplifies the contemplation of the historical
features. But on the other hand there are certain difficulties
which arise, because of the manner in which the Bible tradition
concerning Moses is expressed. This we at once realize when we
call to mind the vicissitudes which accompanied the Biblical
researches of the nineteenth century.
There is scarcely a single branch of human
knowledge, or sincere scientific endeavour, even when we include
the natural sciences, which claims in so high a degree our deep
admiration and reverence, as do these investigations; and I feel
that this point should be repeatedly emphasized. The industry,
the discrimination, the devoted and unselfish scientific
application, expended upon separate sections of the Bible, in
order to educe from their character and style a definite
knowledge of their alleged origin, is considered by those who
have followed these researches closely as a work which has had no
parallel during the nineteenth century.
All this investigation of the past hundred years
has, however, a tragic side, for the further the researches were
carried, the more did they tend to place the Bible beyond the
reach of the people. Anyone who will consult the current
literature concerning the results of these exhaustive studies can
convince himself of this fact. The difficulty arose because the
Bible was dissected and split up, particularly in the case of the
Old Testament, in an attempt to show, for instance, that a
certain passage occurring in one part of the Bible owed its
origin to a different current of tradition to that of a passage
in another part. Also, that during the course of time the whole
subject matter had gradually become welded together, in a form
which made it necessary for it to be first separated out in this
scholarly manner, in order that it might be understood. Hence, in
a certain sense, the outcome of these investigations must be
looked upon as tragic, since they were fundamentally wholly
negative in character and contributed nothing toward the
continuance of that vivifying influence which the Bible is
capable of exerting, and which has lived in the hearts and souls
of mankind for thousands of years.
That movement towards true spiritual development,
which we have termed Spiritual Science, is chiefly concerned with
constructive activities and is not interested in mere criticism,
as is so often the case with other sciences. In our time its most
important task is to bring about once again an accurate and
proper understanding of the Bible, and in this relation it puts
forward the following question: — ‘Is it not essential
that we should first penetrate into the very depths of the import
and significance which underlies the whole character of the
ancient Biblical traditions, and then, only after these are fully
and clearly understood, inquire as to their origin?’ Such a
procedure is however, not easy, especially with reference to the
Old Testament, and is particularly difficult in regard to those
sections which deal with the great outstanding figure and
personality of Moses.
We would now ask: — ‘What is it that
Spiritual Science has to say regarding the peculiar nature of
those ancient Biblical descriptions?’ It tells us that
those external events which are associated with this or that
personality or nation, have been chronicled in the order and
manner in which they actually occurred, as viewed from the
stand-point of external history. Following this method, the
personality of Moses is so depicted that his experiences in the
physical world are represented just as they took place in
relation to space and time.
It is only when we have made a profound study of
the Bible through the medium of Spiritual Science, that we
realize that a Biblical description concerned with external
happenings and experiences may become merged in one of quite
another nature; and it is often with difficulty that we can
distinguish this change in fundamental character. We are told,
for instance, of journeys and other worldly events which we
accept as such; then, all unnoticed, as the account continues, we
find ourselves confronted with a graphic narrative of a wholly
different order. It seems to us that a certain journey is
represented as continuing from one definite place to another, and
as if we were expected to look upon the account of events
depicted in the latter part of the narrative in the same light as
the external physical happenings described at the beginning. In
reality, however, the latter part of such an account may be
actually a figurative portrayal of the soul-life of the
particular personality to whom the story has reference. It then
has no connection whatever with external worldly events, but
depicts the soul experiences, struggles and conquests, through
which this especial being is raised to a higher degree of soul
development, greater enlightenment, a more advanced stage of
activity, or to a mission concerned with the world’s
evolution. In such case, descriptions of outside events pass over
without any noticeable change directly into pictorial
representations, which although remaining similar in style and
character, have absolutely no significance with regard to
external physical happenings — but refer only to the inner
experiences of the soul.
The above assertion will always remain ‘a
mere assertion’ to those who are unable to utilize the
methods of Spiritual Science and thus enter gradually and
understandingly into the strange and unusual features associated
with many of the graphic narratives found in the Bible; more
particularly will this be the case with regard to those sections
which deal with the patriarch Moses. When, however, we study this
strange method of representation deeply, we notice that when at
some certain point in a story the description of external
physical events changes into one of soul-experiences, the whole
style and fundamental character of the account alters, while a
new element suddenly makes its appearance. If we ask ourselves:
— ‘How does it come about that we are able to perceive
this change?’ we can only answer that we realize it because
of a conviction that comes to us from the soul. This curious
descriptive method, which we have just characterized, lies at the
base of ancient religious historical narratives, more especially
when they are concerned with personalities who have reached a
high standard of discernment and understanding of the
soul’s action and inner workings.
The further we advance, and the more deeply we
become immersed in the study of Spiritual Science, the greater is
our faith in this singular style of representation; but just
because of the strangeness of this method it is, in some ways,
far from easy to gain a clear comprehension of the true meaning
of certain passages which occur in the graphic delineation of
Moses. On the one hand, we have the Bible with its apparently
straightforward narrative, but on the other, there are
difficulties due to the curious way in which the account is
presented, when the subject matter is of an especially profound
character. This fact has resulted in the customary
interpretations being much too liberal in many cases.
When, for instance, we consider the conception of
ancient Hebrew history, as advanced by the philosopher Philo, who
lived at the time of the founding of Christianity, we realize at
once that he endeavoured to portray the whole record of the old
Jewish nation as if it were an allegory. Philo aimed at a
figurative representation in which the entire history of this
ancient race becomes a sort of symbolical account of the
soul-experiences of a people. In so doing, Philo went too far,
and for this reason: he did not possess that judgment and
insight, born of Spiritual Science, which would have enabled him
to discern and to know when the descriptions concerning external
events glided into portrayals relative to soul-life.
As we proceed it will be realized that in Moses
we have a personality who influenced directly the active course
of human evolution, and whose mission it was to enlighten mankind
concerning matters of the utmost import and significance. When we
experience that deep sense, so pregnant with meaning, through
which we become aware that his deeds even yet touch a chord
within our souls, then do we feel that a full and clear
comprehension of the Moses-Impulse is to us a necessity. We will,
therefore, without further preamble, enter at once upon the
question of his great Mission. The true object of his
life’s work cannot, however, be fully understood unless we
presuppose that the Bible narrative was based upon actual and
specific knowledge of a certain fundamental change in man’s
psychic condition, to which we have already referred when
considering the individualities of Zarathustra, Hermes and
Buddha. We then drew attention to the fact that during the course
of evolution the soul-life of man has gradually undergone a
definite modification, from a divine primordial clairvoyant state
to that of our present-day intellectual consciousness.
I must once again bring back to your minds a
statement made in previous lectures, namely, that in primeval
times the soul of man was so constituted that during certain
intermediary conditions between that of sleeping and being awake,
he could gaze upon the Spirit-World, and that things thus
observed, and which were truly of the spiritual realms,
manifested as pictures or visions; and it is these visions that
in many cases have been perpetuated in the form of mythological
legends of by-gone times.
In reply to the question: — ‘How can the
reality of this ancient clairvoyant consciousness be proved
externally, and without the aid of Spiritual Science?’ we
would say that the answer is to be found in the results of
certain precise and painstaking investigations which have been
carried on even in our time, but which have not as yet received
general recognition. We would point out that comparatively
recently some of our mythologists during their researches into
the origin of ancient mythical visions, legends, etc., which have
arisen among certain separate and distinctive peoples, have been
forced to assume the existence of an altogether different
conscious state in order to account for these ancient myths and
concepts.
I have often referred to an interesting book,
entitled The Riddle of the Sphinx, by Ludwig Laistner, a
mythologist who must be ranked as the most prominent among the
modern investigators in this field of research. The Riddle of
the Sphinx is regarded as one of the most important works of
its kind. Laistner draws attention to the fact that certain myths
appear to form a sequel to events typical of experiences in a
dream world. He did not advance so far as the study of Spiritual
Science, and he was quite unaware that he had in reality laid the
foundation stone of a true knowledge and understanding of the
Ancient Mythologies. We ( annot, however, regard Myths and
Legends merely in the light of transfigured typical dreams, as
Laistner has done, but we must recognize in them the products of
a by-gone condition of human consciousness in which man could
apprehend the Spirit-World in pictorial visions, that later found
expression in mythical imagery.
It is impossible to comprehend the old fables and
legends, unless we start with the hypothesis that they were
evolved from a different form of conscious state; and it is just
because this basic assumption has been lacking that they are so
little understood. This prehistoric soul-state has now given way
to our present intellectual consciousness, which latter may be
briefly characterized as follows: — We alternate between a
condition of sleeping and of being awake. In our wakeful state we
seize upon those impressions which come to us from the external
world, through the medium of our senses; these ideas we group
together, combining them by means of our intellect. This material
form of intellectual consciousness, which acts through our power
of understanding and intelligence, has now superseded the ancient
clairvoyant soul-state. We have thus characterized a particular
episode of history, and presented it in the aspect which it
assumes when we make a profound study of the evolution of
mankind.
There is yet another factor which underlies the
manner in which Bible narratives are expressed. It appears that a
special mission was assigned to each nation, race and tribe in
connection with the evolution and development of man; and that
the ancient clairvoyant forms of consciousness manifested in
different ways according to the capacity and temperament of the
various peoples. It is for this reason that we find fundamentally
among the mythologies and pagan religions of divers nations such
uniformity of tradition concerning this old clairvoyant
state.
We thus realize that we are not dealing with just
one abstract idea, or unit, in this ancient conception of the
world; for the most varied missions were assigned to Nations and
to Peoples who differed very greatly from one another; and thus
it came about that the universal consciousness found expression
in many and varying forms. If we would indeed understand all that
the evolution of mankind implies, then we must take into
consideration the fact that it does not merely consist of a
meaningless succession of civilizations, but that throughout the
whole course of man’s progress and development there is
found interwoven both significance and purport. Hence we find
that a certain order of conscious-state may reappear and be found
active in some later civilization because, like a fresh page, or
a new-born flower, it has something to add to that which has gone
before; for the whole meaning and purpose of human evolution
implies ever recurrent and successive forms of
manifestation.
We can best understand the people of a nation
from the stand-point of Spiritual Science when we realize that
all races, be they Ancient Indians, Persians, Babylonians,
Greeks, or Romans, had a definite mission to fulfil, and that
each nation gave expression in some special and distinctive
manner to that which was active and could live in man’s
consciousness. We cannot rightly comprehend these different
peoples unless we are in a position to apprehend and to realize
the nature of their mission from their individual
characteristics. The whole evolution of mankind proceeds in such
manner that to each nation a certain time is apportioned and when
this period draws to a close, the nation’s work is done. It
is as if the hour had struck, the seeds had brought forth their
fruit, and the task was ended. It may, however, happen that with
this or that race certain peculiarities of temperament, or
natural disposition, corresponding to a former period may
persist. In such a case this particular nation has, as it were,
overpassed the appointed time when a new mission should be
entered upon, and take the place of that which was before. Thus
it is that certain singular and distinctive national traits may
endure and become active at a later period, the while the
objective course of human evolution substitutes some fresh
purpose for that which was previously determined.
A course of events of this nature is especially
noticeable with the Egyptians, and we have already become
acquainted with their peculiar characteristics during the lecture
devoted to Hermes. The Egyptians had been assigned a lofty
mission in connection with the collective progress and
development of humanity; and all that was embodied therein was
perfected and fulfilled, while the seeds of that which was to
follow had been laid in the Egyptian civilization. The people of
this great nation, however, retained their original temperament
and singular characteristics and were therefore not of themselves
capable of formulating and undertaking a new mission. Hence it
came about that the control and government of the succeeding
community passed into other hands. The source out of which the
fresh movement evolved was fundamentally Egyptian, but the
mission itself was destined to assume a different
character.
Here we note something akin to a change of
tendency in the whole purport of man’s evolution, and in
order that we may understand the circumstances, it is necessary
that we immerse ourselves deeply in the study of all that
pertained to the growth and development of the Egyptian mission.
When Moses had acquired all the knowledge and information
possible concerning this matter, he pondered deeply and the souls
of his people were stirred. It was, however, not his task to
carry on the ancient Egyptian mission; he must evolve therefrom
some entirely new plan which he might instil into the course of
human evolution. It is because his concept was so mighty, so
comprehensive and so penetrating in its nature, that the
personality of Moses exerted so powerful an Influence upon the
whole history of mankind. The way in which the Moses Mission was
evolved out of the past evolution of the Egyptian people is even
in our day of the greatest interest, while its example and study
yet bear abundant fruit. That knowledge and understanding which
came to Moses from the Egyptians, and which was enhanced through
his contact with the lofty and eternal course of spiritual
development has ever reached outward, until it has now become
active in our soul-life.
Hence, the impression we have gained of Moses is
that of a personality not directly dependent upon any particular
period, or upon any special mission, for that wisdom which was
his to impart to humanity. We regard him as one whose soul must
have been stirred by those eternally surging waves of Divine
influence, that ever find new channels through which to reach
deep down into the evolution of mankind, so that man may be
productive and bring forth goodly fruits. It is as if the
ever-lasting germ of wisdom implanted in the soul of Moses, found
its fitting soil, and ripened, in the light of that knowledge
which came to him from the Egyptian civilization.
The Bible account of the finding of Moses
enclosed in an Ark, shortly after his birth (Ex. ii. 5), is a
symbolical description according to the ancient mode, from which
we are to understand that in Moses we are concerned with a soul
that drew upon eternal sources for the most lofty of those
concepts which it proffered to humanity. Anyone who understands
the singular form in which such religious narratives are
developed, knows that this particular style is always indicative
of some matter of deep significance. During former lectures of
this series, we have learnt that when man desires to raise his
capacity of apprehension to the higher level of the spiritual
spheres he must pass through certain stages of soul development,
during which he completely shuts himself off from the external
world, and also from that ever wakeful call emanating from the
lowest forces of the soul.
Let us suppose that we wished to express
figuratively, that at birth some personality entering upon earth
life came upon the world endowed with certain Divine gifts which
would later raise him to great heights in his relation to
mankind. We might well indicate this concept by developing a
narrative telling us that it was essential that this being
should, shortly after birth, pass through some material
experience of such nature as to cause all his sense perceptions
and powers of external apprehension to be for a time entirely
shut off from the physical world.1 Viewed in this light the Bible story
concerning the discovery of Moses becomes quite
intelligible.
We read that the daughter of the Egyptian King
Pharaoh [sent her maid to the river to fetch the Ark, in which
was the child] and that she herself named him Moses —
‘Because,’ she said, ‘I drew him out of the
water.’ (Ex. ii, 10.) Those who are aware of the true
meaning of the name ‘Moses’, know that it signifies
this act, as is indicated in the Bible. From this graphic
narrative we are to understand that the daughter of Pharaoh, who
is here symbolical of Egyptian culture, guided the influx of
external life into a soul touched with the attributes of
eternity. At the same time we find intimated in a wonderful
manner that the imperishable message which Moses was destined to
bring to humanity was as one might say, enfolded and lay within
an outer shell encompassed and enveloped by the old Egyptian
culture and mission.
Next follow descriptions of external events which
occurred during the life-development of Moses; and we realize
once again from the form in which they are presented, that they
have reference to actual outer happenings. All that we read
concerning the vicissitudes of Moses, especially where mention is
made of his grief and distress over the bondage of his people in
Egypt, may be regarded as an actual account of mundane events. As
the story continues, it merges almost imperceptibly into a
graphic portrayal of his inner soul-life and soul-experiences.
This occurs at that place where it is stated that he fled away
and was finally guided to a priest of Midian whose name was
Jethro or Ruel. (Ex. ii, 15 to 20.)
Anyone having the knowledge and discernment
necessary in order to discover the existence of a story of this
nature underlying what, at first sight, would appear to be an
ordinary spiritual narrative, would at once realize from the very
names alone that the account changes its whole character at this
point and passes over to a description of soul-events. We do not
mean to suggest that Moses did not actually set out upon a
journey to some temple sanctuary or abode of priestly learning;
but rather that the whole narrative has been most ingeniously
developed and told in such manner that external happenings are
deliberately intermingled with the soul-experiences of the great
patriarch. Thus do we find that all outer life-experiences
mentioned at this point are suggestive of the trials and
tribulations against which Moses struggled in order to attain to
a more exalted soul-state.
What, then, is the actual significance of Jethro?
From the Bible we learn that he was one of those mysterious
individualities whom we meet again and again when we study the
evolution and development of the human race. Beings who stand
supreme in having won their way through toil and effort to that
lofty standard of knowledge and discernment which can only be
acquired, slowly and gradually, through veritable experience of
the soul’s inner conflicts. It is in this wise alone that
man may gain true understanding of those grand spiritual heights
where lie the paths ever traversed by such exalted ones. Moses
became, to a certain extent, a disciple of Jethro, and through
this association his mission was destined to receive a direct
impulse. Now, Jethro was one of those incomprehensible beings who
withhold their innermost nature from the apprehension of mankind,
though acting on occasion as teachers and leaders of men. In
these days there is much doubt and incredulity regarding the
reality of such mystic personalities, but that they have indeed
existed becomes evident to every earnest student of the
historical development of humanity.
The account of the experiences of Moses while a
disciple of this great wise priest, opens with a description of
his meeting with Jethro’s seven daughters [in the land of
Midian. Ex. ii, 15, 16] near-by to a well (a symbol betokening:
— source of wisdom). Anyone who would comprehend the deeper
significance underlying a graphic narrative of this nature must
above all remember that mystical descriptions of every period
have symbolically portrayed all such knowledge and power as the
soul itself may display in the form of female figures — even
down to
Goethe,
who in the closing words of
Faust,
alludes to the
‘eternal feminine’. Thus in the seven daughters of
Jethro, we recognize the seven human soul-forces, over which that
priestly character ever exercised control.2
We must bear in mind that in those ancient times
when man’s consciousness was still quickened by the old
clairvoyance, other views prevailed regarding the nature of the
human soul and its various powers. The only way in which we can
form any conception of this primordial consciousness is by
starting with our current ideas as a basis. We speak in these
days of man’s soul and its powers of thinking, feeling and
willing, as if these forces were within us, contained, as one
might say, in the very soul itself; and this concept is
essentially correct, as viewed from the stand-point of
intellectual consciousness. Primeval man, however, under the
influence of his gift for clairvoyant vision, regarded the soul
and its workings from a different aspect. He was not aware of any
centralized system in this connection and did not look upon his
powers of thought, feeling and will, as forces whose mid-point of
activity is situated in the Ego and which determine the oneness
and individuality of the soul, but regarded himself as wholly
subservient to the Macrocosm and its several forces; while each
separate source of energy within his soul seemed linked with
specific and divine spiritual beings. This concept may be
compared to one in which we might conceive our thought activities
as prompted and maintained by some spiritual soul-power other
than that which stimulates and influences the faculties of
feeling and will. We would thus picture separate currents of
spiritual energy as flowing inward from the Macrocosm, and
activating our powers of thought, feeling and willing. Although
in these days we form no such conception, it was thus that
primeval man regarded his soul, not as a centralized unit in
itself, but rather as a theatre in which the divine spiritual
powers of the cosmos might unceasingly play their several parts.
In connection with Moses, reference is made to seven such forces,
which are conceived as ever active upon the stage of
soul-life.
We have only to turn to
Plato
in order to realize
that man's outlook upon the evolution of human
consciousness changed and became in general ever more and more
abstract and intellectual. Plato conceived ‘Ideas’ to
be living entities, leading an existence such as in our time
could only be thought of in connection with matter; while each
separate soul-force is pictured as possessing an attribute which
plays its part in the theatre of the soul’s totality.
Gradually the conceptions formed regarding the capacity of the
soul became increasingly abstract while the Unity of the Ego
assumed more and more its rightful place in man’s
concepts.
Strange as it may appear, in the medieval
conception of the seven liberal arts,3 we can still recognize in abstract
form characteristics typical of the symbolic representation of
the seven active spiritual forces of soul-life in the seven
daughters of the Midianite priest, Jethro. The manner in which
the seven liberal arts were evolved and brought to light was as a
last dim echo (touched with a modern trend of thought) of that
consciousness which recognized that seven distinct faculties
persist, and are ever active in the scenes staged in the theatre
of man’s soul.
When we consider the above concepts, we begin to
realize that while, from the spiritual standpoint, Moses was
confronted with the collective aspect of these seven human
soul-forces, nevertheless, his chief mission was to implant one
particular soul-influence in the form of an impulse deeply and
fully in the course of human evolution. This it was possible for
him to do, because it lay in the blood and in the temperament of
his people to manifest an especial interest in that outstanding
soul-power, the activities of which have been felt right on down
to our own time, and which it was his task to instil. We refer to
that dominant soul-energy which unites all those forces,
previously regarded as separate and detached, in one centralized
and homogeneous bond of inner soul-life — the life of the true
self — the Ego. We are next told that one of the daughters of
Jethro married Moses; this means that within his soul one of
these forces became especially active, so much so indeed, that
owing to its influence it became for a long period a dominating
power in human evolution, reducing all other soul-forces to a
unified Soul-Ego.
Statements such as the above must be made with
the greatest reserve, for in our present age mankind has no
adequate faculty, or organ, wherewith he may realize that many
Biblical descriptions which apparently represent external
happenings are presented solely for the purpose of drawing
attention to the fact that at the time at which the events
portrayed took place, a particular soul was undergoing some
experience of inner development; in other words, was especially
concerned with, and attracted to, its individual mission. It is
also apparent that one special attribute which the old Egyptians
did not possess, namely, that inspiration which Moses drew from
the human Ego-force at the mid-point of man’s soul-powers
was for him the criterion [to which he referred his
judgment].
We can therefore with reason assert that the true
mission of the ancient Egyptian nation was to found a culture
based upon the practise and methods of primeval clairvoyance. All
that is best of those things which have been handed down to us
from the Egyptian civilization, has sprung from the singular
nature of those peculiar psychic powers, once possessed by the
Egyptian priests and the leaders of the people. But the time came
when with regard to the old Egyptian mission, one might say, that
the cosmic clock had run down, and the call must go forth to
mankind to unfold and develop those soul-forces which it was
ordained should, for a long period, supersede that ancient
passive clairvoyant condition in the future evolution of
humanity.
Ego-consciousness, intellectuality, rationalism,
reason and understanding, with their spheres of action in the
external perceptual world were destined to replace the old
clairvoyant consciousness in the human race yet to come. I have
already stated how, in the future of mankind, the clairvoyant
power, and the intellectual consciousness, will be found united.
Even now, humanity is advancing toward a time when these two
conscious states will be universally interwoven and co-active
throughout the human race.
The most important element in human culture,
regarded from our modern stand-point, received its first impulse
through Moses; hence, that sense of persistency in connection
with the Moses-impulse which still exists in our soul-life and
power. To Moses was granted a certain capacity for intellectual
thought and action, controlled by reason and
understanding; and this ability [and his wisdom] were
instilled into him in a singular and unusual manner; because all
those concepts and ideas which came to him and were destined to
manifest and bear fruit in some particular way at a later period,
must first be implanted in a fashion conforming with the peculiar
methods in vogue in those ancient times. Here we come upon a
remarkable fact, namely, that later generations of mankind were
directly indebted to Moses for their power of expanding and
developing their understanding and intellect through the medium
of their Ego-consciousness; so that they might reason and ponder
upon the world, and gain enlightenment through inner intellectual
contemplation while yet fully awake.
The manner in which a consciousness of
intellectuality came to Moses must have been through flashes of
intellectual awareness, similar in nature to the old clairvoyant
manifestations. He was indeed the recipient of that first initial
impulse toward the new order of reasoned judgment and
understanding, while at the same time he possessed the old
clairvoyant power, being in fact, under the influence of the last
of its promptings. All that knowledge and enlightenment which was
acquired by later generations independently of clairvoyance was
accessible to Moses through its aid. His understanding, his
discernment and intuition in the sphere of pure reason came to
him when his soul passed into that same clairvoyant condition
which he had experienced when under the influence of the old
Midianite priest. We have the incident of the burning bush, which
glowed with fire of such nature that it was not consumed. In this
case, the spirit of the cosmos manifested before Moses in an
entirely new manner, which was beyond the clairvoyant knowledge
of the Egyptians to explain.
Everyone who is acquainted with the essential
facts knows that, during the course of development, man’s
soul reaches a point when the aspect of external objects
gradually undergoes a change, so that they appear interwoven with
that mysterious background of archetypes from which they emanate.
The spectacle of the ‘burning bush’, so magnificently
portrayed in the Bible, is recognized by all who are advanced in
spiritual discernment as an instance of man’s apprehension
of the Spirit-World.
We now realize that the enlightenment which Moses
received in clairvoyant form must have been of the nature of a
new consciousness proceeding from the great spirit of the cosmos,
that spirit which is ever active and weaves throughout the whole
material world. Ancient peoples believed in a plurality
of cosmic forces, these they conceived as operating in
man’s soul in such manner that the soul’s power did
not represent a unit, for the forces were manifold in nature,
while the soul was regarded merely as the scene of their active
expression. It was for Moses to recognize a cosmic spirit of a
very different order — one that did not manifest as a soul-power
owing its origin to divers spirit influences which, although
exhibiting a certain similitude, find ultimate expression in
varied form. That spirit of the cosmos, which it was ordained
that Moses should apprehend, was of wholly other character, for
its revelation can alone take place in the innermost and holiest
mid-point of soul-life, the Ego. There works the spirit of the
universe — in the place where man’s soul is conscious of
its very centre.
When the human soul feels that the Ego is linked
with the weaving and the life of the spirit, in the same way as
the people of old realized that their being was truly related to
the cosmic forces, then can it apprehend those things which were
first revealed to Moses through his clairvoyant powers. And these
revelations must be regarded as forming the cosmic basis from
which came the great impulse he gave to mankind. That primal
impulse enabling humanity through its reasoning faculties and
understanding alone [unaided by the old clairvoyance], to
associate and compare physical phenomena, and to recognize in
them factors underlying all continuity in the material
world.
In these days, if we consider the centre of our
soul-life, it appears to be of extremely poor content, in spite
of the fact that this content represents our most intense life
experiences. Certain people, especially those of a highly gifted
and talented character, as for instance, Jean Paul, have felt,
sometime during the course of earthly existence, that they were
actually confronted with their true centre of being. Jean Paul,
in his autobiography, tells this story: — ‘Never shall I
forget an inner vision which I once experienced and which I have
not as yet described to anyone. In this vision I was present at
the birth of my true conscious self, and I clearly recollect both
the time and the place of this occurrence. It was one morning
when I was a very young child; I was standing in the doorway of
our house, and as I looked toward the left, in the direction of
the wood-shed, there suddenly came to me an inner vision flashed
down as lightning from Heaven, of the words: — “I AM AN
I” (Ich bin ein Ich) — and these words remained for a
space shining brightly. In that moment, and in that place, my Ego
had looked upon itself for the first time, and the gaze would
endure forever. Illusion due to defect of memory is hardly
conceivable in this case, since no outside incidents on topics
could mingle extraneous matter with an event which could only
take place in the secret and most holy seclusion of man’s
innermost being, and the very novelty of which caused minor
details to be deeply impressed upon my memory.’
This ‘secret and most holy seclusion’
appears to be the most intense and powerful condition of our
soul-life, but mankind cannot be so aware of this particular
soul-state as of many another, for it is lacking in [conscious]
plentitude. When man withdraws himself to this central point,
then does he indeed realize that through those wondrous words —
‘I AM’ — so earnest and so forceful, but withal so
meagre in actual word content, there ever resounds the dominant
tone of his innermost soul-being.
That spirit from the cosmos, which Moses clearly
apprehended as an homogeneous unity, is unceasingly active in
that abode of ‘secret and most holy seclusion’. No
wonder, when this cosmic essence was first revealed to Moses that
he cried out: — ‘If I am appointed to the task of standing
before the people in order to inaugurate a new civilization based
upon the consciousness of self — who will believe me? — In
whose name shall I proclaim my mission?’ And the
answer came: — ‘Thou shalt say “I AM THAT I
AM.”’ This profound asseveration signifies that the
name of the Divinity Who reveals Himself in the ‘secret and
most holy seclusion’ of man’s nature, cannot be
otherwise proclaimed than with words which designate the
consciousness of self-being. In the phenomenon of the burning
bush, Moses discerned the Jahveh, or Jehovah-nature, and we can
well understand that from the moment when the name — Jahveh —
broke in upon his consciousness as ‘I AM’, there came
a new current, a new element into the course of human evolution,
and which was destined from that time on to supplant the old
Egyptian civilization. The ancient culture had merely served to
develop the soul of Moses, in order that he might be in a
position to truly appreciate and to cope with those most exalted
personalities and difficult situations which it would be his lot
to encounter during the course of his life experiences.
We next come to the conference between Moses and
Pharaoh. It is easy to see that when these two came together,
they could not understand one another. The account is intended to
convey the idea that all those things regarding which Moses spoke
proceeded from an entirely changed order of human consciousness,
and must, therefore, have been quite unintelligible to Pharaoh,
in whom the old clairvoyant Egyptian culture alone continued
active. That such was the case, is evident from the way in which
the records are expressed — for Moses spoke a new language. He
clothed his speech in words which emanated from the
Ego-consciousness of the human soul, and were, therefore,
incomprehensible to Pharaoh, who could only follow the old train
of thought.
Up to that cosmic hour, the Egyptians had had a
mission to fulfil, based upon the powers of a by-gone clairvoyant
conscious state — but the time allotted to that mission had
passed. Henceforth, the race, if it should continue to live on,
would still remain endowed with the same temperament and national
characteristics which it had heretofore possessed. It had found
no means whereby it might raise itself and cross the sheer
boundary which separated the old epoch from the new. But at this
very time it was ordained that the Hebrew people would arise, and
that Moses should point out a way. In remembrance of the events
connected with the ‘passing over’ by Moses and his
people from that period which was ended to that which was to
come, there has ever since been celebrated The Feast of the
Passover, and this festival should constantly remind us that it
was Moses who was blessed with the understanding and the
wisdom that made possible the transition from the old order of
consciousness to the new. The Egyptians could not span this gulf,
and while as the nation tarried, the waves of time swept onward.
It is in the manner outlined above, that we must regard the
relation of Moses to the Egyptians, and to his people.
The Hebrew race was by nature thoroughly adapted
to receive that great enlightenment which it was the Mission of
Moses to impart. What was its actual character? It was ordained
that the old clairvoyant state should give place to an
intellectual reasoning consciousness. It has been pointed out in
previous lectures that clairvoyant consciousness is in no way
connected with our external corporeal nature, and that it unfolds
freely just at those times when man, through his soul training,
has released himself from his external bodily instrument in order
that he may be active and untrammelled in his soul-life. The
intellectual consciousness is associated with the brain and the
blood, and its means of expression lies in the human
organism.
The continued spiritual development of that
conscious state which had previously hovered, as it were, over
the physical structure had, up to the time of Moses, been brought
about solely through the relation existing between master and
pupil; but it must now accommodate itself to a new condition in
which it would be directly connected with, and confined to, the
physical organism, and to the blood which would flow in the veins
of the people from generation to generation. It was for this
reason that the enlightenment which Moses was destined to give to
humanity, so as to bring about an impulse toward an intellectual
culture, could only be instilled into a nation in which the blood
of the race would continue to flow vigorously throughout future
generations, and therefore of such nature was the instrument
chosen to receive the basal principles of the new cognitive
faculty.
The new reasoning consciousness, the seeds of
which were implanted by Moses, was not destined to live on merely
in the spirit, for it had been ordained that the people thus
chosen should be taken away from the Egyptian nation, in the
midst of which they had been made ready, and that henceforth
isolated and as a separate race they must develop through
centuries to come those external methods and means which would in
future form the basis of an intellectual culture, that should
continue on throughout all coming ages.
We thus realize that the world’s history is
full of significance and purport, and that the spiritual element
is closely related to all external physical agents. It is clear
that the author of the Bible narrative is at great pains to
present the account of the transition of the ancient Egyptian
culture to that of Moses in its true light and meaning as an
episode in the history of the world. We have, for instance, the
story of the passing of the Children of Israel through the Red
Sea. Concealed beneath this narrative lies a wonderful truth
relative to the evolution of mankind, but which is only to be
understood by those who clearly comprehend the whole nature of
this incident.
In connection with the Egyptians, we find proof
of that link which necessarily exists between the soul-powers and
that which is termed the clairvoyant faculty. We obtain the
clearest insight into this matter when we take the animal
organism as our starting-point, but I am sure you will not assume
that by so doing, I would suggest that man’s nature
resembles that of the animal kingdom. We must first imagine that
the whole outlook and soul-life of the brute creation is dreamy
and torpid, compared with the intellectual soul-state of man.
Now, although primeval human clairvoyance most certainly cannot
be directly compared with the soul-life of animals, from which it
differs radically, nevertheless, we can clearly trace a definite
relation between the instinctive existence and soul-life of the
brute creation and that of the ancient soul-life of man. Although
often exaggerated, there is a certain amount of truth underlying
those stories which tell of animals leaving districts subject to
earthquakes and volcanic disturbances, days before an eruption
takes place. It has certainly happened, in some cases, that while
human beings who regard and apprehend all things through the
medium of their intellect have remained unmoved, the animals in
the neighbourhood have been aroused. Anyone who has a knowledge
of Spiritual Science knows that brute nature is so closely
interwoven with all life in its immediate environment, that we
can, in a sense, assert that animals possess a measure of
instinctive understanding, which through its rudimentary powers
controls and regulates their existence. This faculty is no longer
found in man, because he has developed a higher intellectual
quality, through which he is able to form reasoned concepts and
ideas concerning all things which come within his cognizance; but
this very logical capacity has, in effect, torn asunder that
close tie with Nature herself, which he once enjoyed.
We must picture that in primeval times man was
the possessor of a similar instinctive cognition to that above
mentioned, in connection with the old clairvoyant state and also
in conjunction with his relation to the external phenomena of
Nature — a kind of intuition — whereby the ancients were
enabled to say: — ‘Such and such events are about to
occur, hence we must take certain steps to prepare ourselves in
advance.’ Just in the same way as some people, who are
suitably constituted, raise themselves through striving of soul
to a higher power of discernment and attain to an order of
apprehension concerning matters connected with Nature for which
no cause or reason can be assigned.
He who uses the forces of his soul and through
its attributes and its virtues wins power to utter statements
which are beyond the scope of his intellectual consciousness,
feels uncomfortable when people come to him and say: —
‘Why is that so? Give us proof of your assertions.’
Such persons never realize that knowledge of this nature comes by
quite a different path from that which is born of logical
reasoning. It is a striking and pertinent fact that Goethe, when
he looked out of a window could often predict, hours in advance,
what kind of weather was in store. If we conceive faculties of
this nature as existing among the ancients and manifesting in
such a way that through direct contact with the Spirit-World, the
people of old were enabled to be closely associated with creation
and the Phenomena of Nature (but in a manner entirely different
from that which is the case to-day), then, we can realize and
picture at least one fundamental feature of the old clairvoyance
relative to the practical conduct of life. In olden times mankind
did not possess meteorological observatories, there were no
weather-forecasts published in newspapers or in other ways, as
there are to-day; but the ancients were endowed with a sense of
perception which clearly foretold what would occur, and they
governed their actions in accordance with the impressions
received.
This was especially the case with the old
Egyptians, among whom the faculty of sense-perception was
developed to a very high degree. They had no knowledge of our
modern science or of our analytical methods, but nevertheless
they knew how to comport themselves so as to be in living harmony
with the whole surrounding world. But because the cosmic hour had
struck for the Egyptian culture, this faculty, once so prominent,
fell into decadence, and the Egyptian people became ever less and
less capable of understanding and dealing with the facts and
realities of Nature, and could no longer foretell from the
grouping and interaction of external elements and factors, what
should be their attitude and mode of conduct. But humanity was
now destined to learn how to investigate and to study the
arrangement and interrelations of these external elements, and it
was Moses who would impart the impulse, but the impulse that he
gave came even then from his old clairvoyant
consciousness.
While Moses and his people stood upon the shore
of the Red Sea, he realized, through an understanding somewhat
similar to our own, but which still unfolded clairvoyantly, that
exceptional natural circumstances, namely, an unusual combination
of an East Wind and ebbtide together with a channel-like passage,
made it possible at the right moment, for him to lead the
Israelites across shallow waters. This historical fact has been
graphically portrayed in order that we may realize that Moses was
indeed the founder of a new and universal mode of intellectual
apprehension that is still active in our day, and through which
mankind will once more learn to bring the practical affairs of
life into harmony with the existing order of Nature, even as was
done by that great patriarch.
The Egyptians were a nation whose hour was spent;
they could no longer foretell what would come to pass. The power
of the old instinctive faculties which were theirs in by-gone
times had waned, and they found themselves once more in a
position as in the past when a decision must be made. In by-gone
times they would have cried out: — ‘It is too late! We
cannot now make the passage.’ But that innate gift of
discernment which they had so long enjoyed had all but vanished,
and they knew not how to live in the new intellectual conscious
state. Therefore they stood before the Red Sea helpless and
bewildered, the old clairvoyant consciousness could no longer be
their guide [they followed] and disaster overtook them. Here we
find the new Moses-element in direct contrast with the old, and
we see that the ancient clairvoyant faculty had so far declined
that it could no longer be relied upon; and because it was
unsuited to the new age it was the forerunner of
calamity.
When we look beneath the surface of such
apparently external graphic narratives as the above, and come
upon the matter which the narrator really has in mind, we find
that the stories oft-times characterize great turning-points in
the evolution of mankind; and we realize that it is no light task
to deduce from the peculiar descriptions found in the ancient
writings, the true significance of the various personalities
mentioned, such for instance, as Moses in the circumstances we
have just quoted.
It is clear from what follows later in the
account that at that time when it had to be decided whether Moses
should, or should not, lead his people to Palestine, he still
relied entirely upon the old clairvoyance, and that in his case,
his intellectual enlightenment was fundamentally dependent upon
this faculty. It was because the blood that flowed in the veins
of the Jewish people made them by nature especially suitable to
the task of laying the foundation of the impending movement
toward intellectuality, that it was ordained that they should be
led forth and guided to the Promised Land. The knowledge and
wisdom which Moses acquired through his clairvoyant powers
sufficed to impart the necessary impulse — but could not be of
itself of the new culture; for this new cultural faculty was
destined to manifest in ways which would be the antithesis of the
old order of clairvoyant consciousness.
From the Bible account it is evident that Moses
felt that his call was merely to lead his people to a certain
place; he was not to take them into the Promised Land; the last
stage of the journey must be left to those who were destined to
embrace the new order of intellectual development.
Although Moses was the prophet of the Lord, who
manifests in our very Ego-being, we are nevertheless given to
understand that it was only in virtue of his clairvoyant faculty
that he could become conscious of the Mighty Word of the Great
Spirit of the cosmos. When at last he was left to himself with
the task of succouring his people, he fled to his tent in order
that through his clairvoyant powers he might once more be in the
actual presence of his God. Then it was that a Voice said: —
‘Because thou canst not carry out all that is betokened by
those thoughts which come to thee with visions, henceforth must
another be the leader of thy people.’ The words of this
decree shed a radiance around the great patriarch, for they
implied that Moses with his clairvoyant faculty, was a prophet
the like of whom would no more be seen in Israel. We are to
understand that Moses was the last among the ancients to be
endowed with the old order of psychic discernment. Henceforth
would a form of intellection wholly independent of this gift
spread its influence among all fitting peoples, and man’s
actions and cognition be based on power to reason and tradition
alone. Thus might the Ego, the verity of which had already become
recognized by those who had understanding of the fundamental
factors of the new culture, be made ready that it might absorb a
new principle.
It was through the Mission of Moses that mankind
was first led to realize that the most positive feeling which man
can experience of the absolute reality of the all-pervading
cosmic Spirit, that Divine Principle which is ever active and
interwoven throughout the whole earth, is centred in the ‘I
AM’ — the very mid-point of the human soul. But in order
that these two simple words may be fraught with the uttermost
import, the ‘I AM’ must first store within itself
full measure of a content that shall once again embrace the
world. To compass this end necessitated yet another mission,
which mission is expressed in those deeply significant words of
St. Paul: — ‘Yet not I, but Christ liveth in Me’
(Gal. ii, 20). Now, Moses had brought humanity up to the point of
establishing a true culture of man’s Ego. This new-born
intellection was destined to live on throughout the ages yet to
be, a gift from above, a form of civilization, a
‘receptacle’, so to speak, for the coming content. It
was essential that the centre of our being should first unfold in
the bosoms of the ancient Hebrew people. Henceforth, would this
divine ‘receptacle’ be filled with all that springs
from a true understanding of The Mystery of Golgotha, and the
events which took place in Palestine. Thus would the Ego receive
its new content, which itself would be a creation of the
Spirit-World. We can most easily recognize all that came of that
fresh in-pouring, and that owed its origin to the preparation and
development of the Hebrew people, when we refer to the book of
Job. We cannot, however, rightly understand the wonderful tragedy
therein portrayed, unless we take into account the peculiar
characteristics of the Jewish race.
We are told that Job, albeit he was a righteous
man who believed in his God was, nevertheless, convinced that the
Almighty was actually the true source of all his afflictions. He
experienced disaster after disaster to his property, his family,
and his own person. So that the Lord appeared to manifest in such
a manner that Job might well have doubted whether indeed the
Great Spirit of the cosmos was really active in man’s Ego.
Matters went to such a length that Job’s wife could not
understand why her husband, in spite of all that had befallen
him, should continue to trust in the Almighty. She therefore
spoke to him in words of paramount import, thus: — ‘[Dost
thou still retain thine integrity?) curse God, and die.’
(Job ii, 9.) What is the underlying meaning of this significant
allegorical tragedy, and of the words: — ‘Curse God, and
die’? It is here implied that, — If the God Whom you
regard as being the very source of your existence visits you with
sorrow and adversity, you may turn from Him; but of a verity
death will be the lot of the one who would do this thing, for he
who turns away from his God, places himself without the pale of
the living course of evolution. The friends of Job could not
believe that he had committed no transgression, for surely in the
case of a righteous person should equity prevail. Even the
narrator himself cannot make clear to us the justness of the
circumstances, for he can only say that Job, who was thus
stricken with misery and distress, nevertheless received
compensation in the physical world for all that he had lost and
suffered.
Throughout this deeply significant allegory as
depicted in the book of Job there is, as it were, an echo of the
Moses-consciousness; and in the story it is made clear that the
Spirit brings to us enlightenment and ever manifests in
man’s innermost being. But during the course of earthly
existence, the Ego must live in contact with physical things.
Hence it is that there are moments of transgression in which man
may weaken, and lose his feeling of unity with the vital source
of life. From the Christ-Impulse, humanity has learnt that
compensation for suffering and affliction is not to be sought in
the physical world alone. We now know that in every case when man
is overcome by bodily distress — in sorrow and in pain — then,
if he but remain steadfast, he may indeed triumph over that which
is material. For his Ego is not merely illumined by the ultimate
source of all that is spread throughout space and time, but is of
a verity so conditioned that it may yet absorb the mighty power
of the eternal.
We find the same uplifting thoughts underlying
St. Paul’s words: — ‘Yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me’ (Gal. ii, 20). Moses had brought humanity so far that
it could realize that all things that live and weave throughout
the cosmos, manifest in deepest and most characteristic form in
the Ego. Man may comprehend the world, if it be pictured as a
simple unit proceeding from some great universal Ego centre. If
we would indeed receive the eternal spirit within our being, then
must we not regard temporal things; nor take heed only of the
Jehovah-Unit hidden and beyond all that is of space and time; but
look also to that spontaneous and glorious benefaction — The
Christ-Source — which underlies and is concentric with all
unity.
Thus do we recognize in Moses the personality of
one who paved the way for Christianity; and we have learnt in
what manner he instilled into humanity a consciousness of self, a
consciousness which throughout the development of all future
generations would be as a store-house to be filled with the
substance of eternity; which means that it was yet to become a
fitting receptacle replete with the essence of the Christ-Being.
It is in this way that we picture the patriarch Moses in his
relation to the progress and evolution of mankind. History ever
reveals its deepest truths when subject to thought and reflection
of the above nature.
In a previous lecture devoted to Buddha, we drew
attention to the fact that from time to time some outstanding
personality arises, through whose agency the eternal fount of
wisdom springs once more into life, thus causing humanity to
advance yet another step in its growth and development; and when
we ponder upon the circumstances connected with this or that
great figure, there comes to us a sense of his true relation to
the collective evolution of mankind.
When we regard the development of the human race
from this stand-point, we find that we are involved in its
progress in a vital sense, and it is at once apparent that the
Spirits of the cosmos have some fixed and definite purpose
associated with our existence, the object of which becomes more
and more discernible as life proceeds. It is through the earnest
consideration of the example and works of lofty spiritual
individualities, together with profound meditation concerning
outstanding events in the world’s evolution and the history
of mankind, that we may gain that sense of power, confidence of
soul and unswerving hope, through which alone we may take our
proper place in the totality of human evolution. If we regard the
history of the world in this manner, we feel anew the beauty of
Goethe’s words, and we realize that the greatest benefit
which can accrue to us through the study of universal history is
the awakening of our enthusiasm. But it must be an enthusiasm
which is not mere blind admiration and wonder, for it should
prompt us to implant in our souls the seeds which are borne to us
from the past, so that they may bring forth goodly fruits in the
time yet to come.
The words of the great poet live again, in
somewhat modified form, when, through the contemplation of those
grand outstanding personalities and events of olden times we
realize this glorious truth: —
‘The age is as a field in flower,
Where wondrous growth and life proceed;
Fresh buds unfold with every hour —
Lo! all is fruit and all is
seed.’4
Notes for this
lecture:
1. The
underlying suggestion here involved is, that the fact that it is
necessary that the perceptual faculties be held in abeyance for
the time being, indicates that this particular personality,
already possessed other faculties of a spiritual order, which
being thus freed would become operative. [Ed.]
2. The
seven human soul-forces to which reference is here made, are
those cosmic-influences which act through the soul in connection
with the seven principles of man’s organism. These
‘seven principles’ are as follows: —
(1) The Physical body. (2) The Etheric or Life Body. (3)
‘The Astral Body. (4) The Ego or Body of Consciousness,
which sets about transforming the first three by acting upon the
psychic principles. Within the Ego is:
(5) Atma. Spirit-man as transmuted Physical Body.
(6) Buddi. Life-spirit as transmuted Etheric or Life Body.
(7) Manas. Spirit-self as transmuted Astral Body.
The latter, Manas, is partly developed; but of Atma and Buddi
there is merely a seed.
Vide, Investigations in Occultism by Rudolf Steiner.
Published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons, London and New York.
[Ed.]
3. In
the Middle Ages, the Liberal Arts (artes liberales) were
considered to be seven in number, namely, music, grammar,
rhetoric,logic, arithmetic, geometry and astronomy. Plato and
Aristotle,
distinguished between the practical arts, and the
so-called liberal arts, which latter were concerned with progress
of an ethical or literary character. [Ed.]
4. Die Zeit, sie ist eine blühende Flur,
Ein grosses Lebendiges ist der Menschheit Werdegang,
Und alles ist Frucht und alles ist Same!