V
WHITSUN
The Festival of united Soul-Endeavour
THE spiritual evolution of mankind must be brought into a living
connection with the whole surrounding world. For many men to-day a
great deal has become dead and prosaic; and this is true even of our
religious festivals. A great section of mankind has only the smallest
notion of what Christmas, Easter and Whitsun signify; it has almost
entirely lost that overwhelming richness in the life of feeling which
in earlier times men possessed through their knowledge of their
connection with the spiritual worlds. Yes, even the festivals have for
many men to-day become dead and prosaic. The pouring down of the
spirit has become a mere abstraction, and this will change only when
men come again to a real spiritual knowledge.
Much is said nowadays about the forces of nature, but little enough
about the beings behind these forces. Our forefathers spoke of gnomes,
undines, sylphs and salamanders, but to see any reality in such ideas
is regarded to-day as sheer superstition. It doesn't matter much, in
themselves, what theories people hold; it only begins to be serious
when the theories tempt people not to see the truth.
When people say that their ancestors' belief in gnomes, undines,
sylphs, salamanders and the like was all nonsense, one would like to
make a rather grotesque reply, and say: Well, go and ask the
bees. They could inform you: the sylphs are no superstition to us; we
know well enough what we owe to the sylphs. Anyone
investigating spiritual forces can find out which force it is that
draws the bee on towards the flowers; he sees actual beings leading
the bee to the flowers: amid the myriads of bees which fly forth in
search of nourishment are the beings our predecessors called sylphs.
It is especially where the different kingdoms of nature come in
contact with each other that certain elemental beings are able to
reveal themselves. Where moss is growing on the rocks, for example,
such beings can establish themselves; or again, in the flowers, in the
contact of the bee with the flowers, certain beings have the chance to
show themselves. Another possibility arises where man himself comes
into touch with the animal kingdom. This does not happen, however, in
the ordinary run of things, as for example, when a butcher slaughters
an ox or when a man eats meat. It does occur, however, in less usual
circumstances, where the contact between the two kingdoms is the
result of something more than the mere fact of life. It occurs
particularly where a man has that kind of relationship to animals
which involves his own feelings, his own concern of soul. A shepherd,
for example, may sometimes have such a special relationship to his
sheep. Connections of this sort were very frequent in more primitive
cultures in earlier times; they resembled the relationship which an
Arab has to his horse. And such soul-forces as play over from one
realm into the other as they do between the shepherd and his
lambs, or when the forces of smell and taste stream over from the
flowers to the bees these give to certain beings the
possibility of incarnating themselves. The spiritual investigator
perceives something like an aura around the blossoms, which arises as
the bees thrust their way into them and taste what they find there. A
kind of flower-aura streams out, and this provides nourishment for
certain spiritual beings.
The question why there are beings just here and nowhere else, does not
arise for anyone who understands the spiritual world. If opportunities
are provided for such beings, then they are there; give them that on
which they can live and they are there. It is just as when human
beings let evil thoughts stream out from themselves, certain beings
then incorporate themselves in his aura; they are there because he
allows nourishment to stream to them. The opportunity is given for
certain spiritual beings to incorporate themselves wherever different
kingdoms of nature come into touch with each other. Where metal is
found in the rocks, the miner as he hacks away sees certain tiny
beings which were compressed together into quite a small space and now
scatter in all directions. These are beings in some ways not unlike
man himself; they have the power of reason, but it is reason without
responsibility; and so, when they play some mischievous prank on a
man, they in no way feel they are doing anything amiss. They are the
beings our forefathers called gnomes; they prefer to take up their
abode where metal and stone come together. There was a time when they
did men good service, as in the early days of mining; the way to lay
out a mine, the knowledge of how the strata ran this was learnt
from such beings.
Mankind will land itself in a blind alley if it fails to acquire a
spiritual understanding of these things. As with the gnomes, so with
the beings we may call undines; they are found where the plants come
into contact with the mineral kingdom. They are bound up with the
element of water, they incorporate themselves where water and plant
and stone come together. The sylphs are bound to the element of
air, and lead the bees to the flowers. Now everything science has to
say about the life of the bees is riddled with error from top to
bottom, and nowadays the beekeepers are often misled by it; in this
direction science proves itself unusable and again and again
beekeepers have to come back to old practices.
As for salamanders, these are still known to many people. When someone
feels that this or that element of soul is streaming towards him, this
mostly arises through the salamanders. When a man relates himself to
animals in the way the shepherd does to his lambs, the salamanders are
then able to embody themselves; the knowledge the shepherd has in
regard to his flock is whispered to him by these beings.
If we take these thoughts farther we shall have to say: We are
entirely surrounded by spiritual beings; we are surrounded by the air
and this is crowded with these spiritual beings. In times to come, if
his destiny is not to be of the sort that will entirely dry up his
life, man will have to have a knowledge of these beings; without such
a knowledge he will be unable to make any further progress at all. He
will have to put the question: Whence do these beings arise? And this
question will lead him to see that, through certain steps taken by the
higher worlds, that which is on the downward path to evil can through
a wise guidance be changed into good.
Here and there in life we meet with the products of decay with waste
products. Thus for example, manure is a waste product, and in
agriculture it is used as a basis to further plant growth. Things
which have apparently fallen away from a higher course of development
are taken up again by higher powers and transformed. This happens with
the very beings of whom we have been speaking.
Let us consider how the salamander, for example, originates.
Salamanders, as we have seen, are beings who require a special
relationship between man and animal. Now the kind of ego man has
to-day is only to be found in man, in the human being living on the
earth; every man has his ego enclosed within himself. It is different
with the animals: they have a group-ego, a group-soul; that is to say,
a group of animals with the same form have a common group-ego. When
the lion says I, its ego is up above in the astral world.
It is as if a man were to stand behind a wall in which there were ten
holes, and then to stick his ten fingers through them. The man himself
cannot be seen, but every intelligent observer would conclude that
someone is behind, a single entity who owns the ten fingers. It is the
same with the group-ego. The separate animals are simply the limbs:
the being they belong to is in the astral world. We must not imagine
the animal-ego to be like the human being of course, though if we
consider man as he is as a spiritual being, we can then certainly
compare the animal group-ego with him.
In many animal species the group-ego is a wise being. If we think of
how certain kinds of birds live in the north in the summer and in the
south in the winter, how in spring they fly back to the north
in this migrating flight of the birds there are wise powers at work;
they are in the group-egos of the birds. Anywhere you like in the
animal kingdom you can find the wisdom of the group-egos in this way.
If we turn back to our schooldays we can remember learning how modern
times gradually arose out of the Middle Ages, of how America was
discovered, and how gunpowder and printing were invented, and later
still the art of making paper from rags. We have long been accustomed
to such paper, but the wasp group-soul invented it thousands of years
ago. The material of which the wasp's nest consists is exactly the
same as is used in making paper out of rags. Only gradually will it
become known how the one or the other achievement of the human spirit
is connected with what the group-souls have introduced into the world.
When the clairvoyant looks at an animal, he sees a glimmer of light
along the whole length of its spine. The physical spine of the animal
is enveloped in a glimmering light, in innumerable streams of force
which everywhere travel across the earth, as it were, like the trade
winds. They work on the animal in that they stream along the spine.
The group-ego of the animal travels in a continual circular movement
around the earth at all heights and in all directions. These
group-egos are wise, but one thing they have not yet got: they have no
knowledge of love. Only in man is wisdom found in his individuality
together with love. In the group-ego of the animals no love is
present; love is found only in the single animal. What underlies the
whole animal-group as wise arrangements is quite devoid of love. In
the physical world below the animal has love; above, on the astral
plane, it has wisdom. When we realise this a vast number of things
will become clear to us.
Only gradually has man arrived at his present stage of development; in
earlier times he also had a group-soul, out of which the individual
soul has gradually emerged. Let us follow the evolution of man back
into ancient Atlantis. Mankind once lived in Atlantis, a continent now
lying beneath the Atlantic Ocean. At that time the vast Siberian
plains were covered with immense seas; the Mediterranean was
differently distributed, and in Europe itself there were extensive
seas. The farther we go back in the old Atlantean period, the more the
conditions of life alter, the more the sleeping and the waking state
of man changes. Since that time consciousness during the sleeping
condition has darkened, as it were, so that to-day man has, so to say,
no consciousness at all in this condition. In the earliest Atlantean
times the difference between sleeping and waking was not yet so great.
In his waking state at that time man still saw things with an aura
around them; he did not attain to any greater clarity than this in his
perception of the physical world. Everything physical was still filled
out, so to say, with something unclear, as if with mist. As he
progressed, the human being came to see the world in its clear-cut
contours, but in return he lost his clairvoyance.
It is in the times when men still saw clairvoyantly what was going on
up above in the astral world that all the myths and sagas originate.
When he was able to enter into the spiritual world, man learned to
know the beings who had never descended into the physical world:
Wotan, Baldur, Thor, Loki. These names are memories of living
realities, and all mythologies are memories of this kind. As spiritual
realities, they have simply vanished from the sight of man. When in
those earlier times man descended into his physical body, he got the
feeling: Thou art a single being. When he returned into
the spiritual world in the evening, however, the feeling came over
him: Thou art in reality not a single being. The
members of the old tribal groups, the Herulians, the Cheruskans and
the like, had still felt themselves far more as belonging to their
group, than as single personalities. It was out of this condition of
things that there arose such practices as the blood-feud, the
vendetta. The whole people formed a body which belonged to the
group-soul of the folk.
Everything happens step by step in evolution, and so it was only
gradually that the individual developed out of the group-soul. The
accounts of the patriarchs, for instance, reveal quite other
relationships which confirm this fact. Before the time of Noah, memory
was as yet something quite different from what we know. The frontier
of birth was no real frontier, for the memory streamed on in those
through whom the same blood flowed. This onstreaming of memory was in
earlier times something quite different from what we possess; it was
far more comprehensive. Nowadays the authorities like to have the name
of each individual recorded somewhere or other. In the past, it was
what man remembered of the deeds of his father and grandfather that
was covered with a common name and called Adam or Noah; what was
remembered, the stream of memory in its full extent, was called Adam
or Noah. The old names signified comprehensive groups, human groups
which extended through time.
Now we must put ourselves the question: Can we compare the anthropoid
apes with man himself? The vital difference is that the ape preserves
the group-soul condition throughout, whereas man develops the
individual soul. But the ape group-soul is in a quite special position
to other group-souls. We must think of a group-soul as living in the
astral world and spreading itself out in the physical world, so that,
for instance, the group-soul of the lion sends a part of its substance
into each single lion. Let us suppose that one of these lions dies;
the external physical part drops away from the group-soul, just as
when we lose a nail. The group-soul sends out a new ray of being, as
it were, into a new individual. The group-soul remains above and
stretches out its tentacles in a continual process of renewal. The
animal group-soul knows neither birth or death; the single individual
falls away and a new one appears, just as the nails on our fingers
come and go. Now we must consider the following: With
the lion it is entirely as we have said, that every time a lion dies,
the whole of what was sent out by the group-soul return to it again.
It is not at all so, however, with the apes. When an ape dies
the essential part does return to the group-soul, but a part does not;
a part is severed from the group-soul. The ape detaches substance too
strongly from the group-soul. There are species where the single
animal tears something away from the group-soul which cannot return to
it. With all the apes, fragments are detached in each case from the
group-soul. It is the same with certain kinds of amphibians and birds;
in the kangaroo, for example, something is kept back from the
group-soul. Now everything in the warm-blooded animals that remains
behind in this way becomes an elemental being of the kind we call a
salamander.
Under entirely different conditions from those on the earth to-day,
the other types of elemental beings have detached themselves in the
past. We have here a case where cast-off products of evolution, as it
were, are made of service under the wise guidance of higher Beings.
Left to themselves, these would disturb the Cosmos, but under a higher
guidance the sylphs, for example, can be used to lead the bees to the
flowers. Such a service changes the harmful into something useful.
Now it could happen that man himself might entirely detach himself
from the group-soul in becoming an individual and find no means of
developing further as an individual soul. If he does not accept
spiritual knowledge in the right way, he can run the risk of complete
severance.
What is it that protects man from an isolation which is, without the
direction and purpose which, earlier on, the group-soul had given him?
We must clearly recognise that man individualises himself more and
more, and to-day, he has to find a connection once again with other
men out of his free will. All that connects men, through folk, race
and family, will be ever more completely severed; everything in man
tends more and more to result in individual manhood.
Imagine that a number of human beings on the earth have come to
recognise that they are all becoming more and more individual. Is
there not a real danger that they will split away from each other ever
more completely? Already nowadays men are no longer held together by
spiritual ties. Each one has his own opinion, his own religion;
indeed, many see it as an ideal state of affairs that each should have
his own opinion. But that is all wrong. If men make their opinions
more inward, then they come to a common opinion. It is a matter of
inner experience, for example, that 3 times 3 makes 9, or that the
three angles of a triangle make up 180 degrees. That is inner
knowledge, and matters of inner knowledge need not be argued about. Of
such a kind also are all spiritual truths. What is taught by Spiritual
Science is discovered by man through his inner powers; along the
inward path man will be led to absolute agreement and unity. There
cannot be two opinions about a fact without one of them being wrong.
The ideal lies in the greatest possible inwardness of knowledge; that
leads to peace and to unity.
In the past, mankind became free of the group-soul. Through
spiritual-scientific knowledge mankind is now for the first time in
the position to discover, with the utmost certainty of purpose, what
will unite mankind again. When men unite together in a higher wisdom,
then out of higher worlds there descends a group-soul once more. What
is willed by the Leaders of the spiritual-scientific Movement is that
in it we should have a society in which hearts stream towards wisdom
as the plants stream towards the sunlight. In that together we turn
our hearts towards a higher wisdom, we give a dwelling-place to the
group-soul; we form the dwelling-place, the environment, in which the
group-soul can incarnate. Mankind will enrich earthly life by
developing what enables spiritual beings to come down out of higher
worlds.
This spirit-enlivened ideal was once placed before humanity in a most
powerful way. It was when a number of men, all aglow with a common
feeling of fervent love and devotion, were met together for a common
deed: Then the sign was given, the sign that could show man with
overwhelming power how in unity of soul he could provide a place for
the incarnation of the common spirit. In this company of souls the
same thing was living: in the flowing together, in the harmony of
feeling they provided what was needed for the incarnation of a common
spirit. That is expressed when it is said that the Holy Spirit, the
group-soul, sank down as it were into incarnation. It is a symbol of
what mankind should strive towards, how it should seek to become the
dwelling-place for the Being who descends out of higher worlds.
The Easter event gave man the power to develop these experiences; the
Whitsun event is the fruit of this power's unfolding. Through the
flowing of souls together towards the common wisdom there will always
result that which gives a living connection with the forces and beings
of higher worlds, and with something which as yet has little
significance for humanity, namely the Whitsun festival. When men come
to know what the downcoming of the Holy Spirit in the future can mean
for mankind, the Whitsun festival will once more become alive for
them. Then it will be not only a memory of the event in Jerusalem; but
there will arise for mankind the everlasting Whitsun festival, the
festival of united soul-endeavour.
It will depend on men themselves what value and what result such
ideals can have for mankind. When in this right way they strive
towards wisdom, then will higher spirits unite themselves with men.
Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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