LECTURE TWO
From the
manifold indications and details I have given concerning the Christ
Mystery, you will be aware that we must differentiate between what
had come to be present in the general course of human evolution at
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, and what came in through the
Mystery of Golgotha. You know that in human evolution we have to
do with a continuous stream of forces proceeding from the Beings of
the higher Hierarchies who belong to man's original nature, and also
with two side-streams, the Luciferic stream and the Ahrimanic stream.
Now the
point is that the Luciferic and Ahrimanic streams reached a certain
climax, the climax of the usefulness of their working within human
evolution, just at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, and —
if one may put it like this — mankind was threatened by the
danger of this climax being overstepped, so that the necessary
equilibrium between the Ahrimanic and the Luciferic forces in the
whole evolution of mankind might have been lost. If we look at
mankind's evolution as progressing in a straight line (see diagram),
we can say: To the course of this evolution belong the Lemurian age
(we will start there), the Atlantean age, and our own age, the fifth,
which we always refer to as the post-Atlantean age. If I draw in the
strength of the Luciferic influence as a red line, we can say: In the
Lemurian age a certain strength is there which first grows, then
decreases, becomes very slight, and disappears entirely in the
Atlantean age — to arise again in the post-Atlantean age. So
that, strictly speaking, in the Atlantean epoch (I am talking not of
the evolution of individuals but of mankind as a whole) very
little of the direct influence of the Luciferic is there
(see red line in diagram).
But in this
Atlantean age the Ahrimanic development was there instead, where I
have put in a yellow line. I have to show it as particularly strong
in the Atlantean age, and later, in the post-Atlantean times,
becoming weaker. I am referring now to historical evolution, and when
we characterise anything in this way, we must always pay heed
to what I said recently: when Lucifer is working particularly
strongly, he calls up Ahriman in the subconscious. Thus, if in our
fifth age the Luciferic curve is specially noticeable, this does not
mean that because Lucifer is active, Ahriman is somewhat outside our
sphere. On the contrary, it means that, because Lucifer is working
strongly among the forces of history, Ahriman sets to work
particularly in the subconscious regions of man.
You see,
therefore, that in man's earthly evolution a kind of waving line is
there in the case of Ahriman's activity, just as in that of Lucifer.
These degrees of strength of the Ahrimanic and the Luciferic both
have to be balanced. But in the course of history this state of
equilibrium has never come to perfection. There have been times when
the Luciferic was working with great strength, and times when the
Ahrimanic was doing so.
If we look
at the period of human evolution when mankind was approaching the
Mystery of Golgotha, we find that the state of equilibrium between
the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic forces was extraordinarily
fluctuating, vacillating — no real balance was there. We have
on one hand the stream of mankind which is moving towards the Mystery
of Golgotha and manifests historically in the evolution of the
Semitic peoples. This
stream is particularly susceptible to the Luciferic influence,
whereby a strong Ahrimanic activity is brought about in the
subconscious.
On the other
hand, the Greek nature is highly susceptible to the forces of
Ahriman, and this brings about great
Luciferic activity
in the subconscious. We can fully
understand the Semitic
and Greek cultures — polaric opposites of one another —
only by keeping in mind this vacillation in human evolution between
the Ahrimanic and the Luciferic. At
the time when the
Mystery of Golgotha entered Earth
evolution from without,
the influence of Greece was of enormous
importance for the
people of the West. This influence,
however, was already
beginning to wane, or, more exactly, it
had passed its peak.
Greek culture was threatened with a
decline which can be
characterised in the following way.
Precisely through the
Ahrimanic intervention experienced by
the Greeks, and
manifest as a Luciferic element of their
art, they had
developed a lofty wisdom. And — as we have
often said —
this wisdom took on a very individual, humanly individual,
character. But fundamentally it was at its
greatest where there
still shone into it out of primeval times the
teachings received
from actual spiritual
Beings.
We know
that in those times the Teachers of
mankind were those who
were inspired, initiated, directly from the spiritual world. But
through them spiritual Beings spoke; and, if we look back into those
remote ages of mankind's evolution at the beginning of the fifth
epoch, we can see into a wonderful primeval wisdom. Among the Greeks
it was so highly clarified in its concepts and ideas that in this way
it had adapted itself to the nature of man. Whereas in earlier times
it was given out through the great Initiates in a more pictorial,
imaginative way, with the Greeks it was grasped in ideas, in
concepts, and thereby was adapted to the human nature of that time.
What is so admirable among the Greeks, however, is that resounding
through the philosophy of Plato is an echo of that primeval wisdom
which mankind may be said to
have received from the very lips of the Gods. But men were threatened
with the loss of this wisdom.
When we
look back to the period of Greek spiritual development that
Nietzsche has called the “tragic age,” we are looking
back at the great figures of Greek philosophy, at Anaxagoras, at
Heraclitus, and in them we can see the final bearers of a divine
wisdom which, however, is already converted into ideas and concepts.
Thales is to a certain extent the first to take his stand solely upon
natural concepts; he is already at some distance from the directly
living impression of the primeval wisdom of mankind which we can
still discern in Anaxagoras. Mankind was threatened with the gradual
loss of this wisdom. But out of this primeval wisdom there had flowed
something which in ancient days gave men the capacity to gain some
knowledge about man. Knowledge of man was indeed something in which
the Greek and all primeval wisdom were destined to be steeped. The
Mysteries were meant to give knowledge of man; from them came the
aphorism, “Know thyself!” This ancient knowledge of man,
however, was mediated by way of Lucifer, and men worked upon it with
the aid of Ahrimanic forces. It was bound up with a state of
equilibrium between the Ahrimanic and Luciferic
powers.
Now at the
time when the ancient world was passing away and from the other side
came the Mystery of Golgotha, the Ahrimanic forces began to gain a
slight ascendancy; they were then particularly strong. And since the
sixteenth century something similar is happening again — a kind
of renaissance of the Ahrimanic forces. But at the time of the
Mystery of Golgotha the Ahrimanic forces were specially strong. And
through them man's life of soul was driven in the direction of the
abstract — towards that abstraction which meets us in the
thoroughly abstract nature of the Romans. We have now to ask: What
would have happened to mankind if the course of evolution had
continued on these lines and there had been no Mystery of Golgotha?
The result would have been that men would have no longer been able to
have any concept, any idea, any perception, of the human personality
itself.
This is a fact
of extraordinary significance. Because it would no longer have been
possible for anything to be said to man by way of the Gods, because
even the tradition of this divine source of wisdom concerning human
personality was being lost, man was threatened with finding himself
ever more and more of a riddle. We must feel the full implications of
this truth — without the Mystery of Golgotha, man
would have been faced
by the threat of becoming an ever-increasing
riddle to
himself. He would indeed have been able to wring forth wisdom, but
only about nature, not about himself. And he would gradually have
forgotten his divine origin; he would have had to lose all knowledge
of it.
Then came
the Mystery of Golgotha. And among all the diverse points of view
from which the Mystery of Golgotha can be characterised, this one
must be specially considered — that through the incursion of
the Mystery of Golgotha men were given from spiritual heights, which
were no longer within their reach on earth, a renewed capacity for
grasping themselves as persons. The Christ Impulse brought men the
possibility of once more grasping their personalities, but now of
doing so through inner forces.
To-day it
is extraordinarily difficult for human beings to conceive how men of
old arrived at their consciousness of personality, because one thing
people refuse to believe is how entirely different for men of old was
their conception of the external world. It is impossible to
understand such a figure as Julian the deserter, the apostate, in all
his world-historic significance. if it is not known that he was
one of the last who still saw the sun differently from the way in
which it is seen to-day.
[See
Planetary Spheres and Their Influence on Mans Life on Earth and in Spiritual Worlds,
Lecture I,
“The Threefold Sun and the Risen Christ.”
This lecture was given in London, April 24th, 1922. See also
Karmic Relationships: Esoteric Studies - Volume IV,
Lecture VI,
given in Dornach, September 16th, 1924.]
The man of to-day sees the sun as a physical body. The influence of the
moon through its natural effects has stayed with him longer. In the
moonlight lovers still stroll and sentimentally dream; in the
moonlight imagination grows and flourishes; moonlight is like
twilight — and poetry written in that key, both true and false,
is still widespread. The same feelings that people still have in
moonlight, the men of old had, but much more intensely, when on
waking they first caught sight of the sun. They did not talk merely
of the sunlight; they said something like this: “Out of
this heavenly being there streams into us a radiance which permeates
us with warmth and light, making of each one of us a
personality.”
This was still
felt by Julian the Apostate, and he believed it could be preserved.
That was his mistake, and also his great tragedy, for man no longer
experienced his personality through the physical rays of the sun.
This knowledge of the personality was brought to man by a spiritual
path. That which the sun out there in space could no longer give him,
the experience that could no longer come to him from outside,
now had to rise up from his own inner depths. Christ Himself had to
unite His cosmic destiny with mankind, so that in the continual
fluctuation of the balance between Ahriman and Lucifer men should not
fall away from their onward path.
We must take fully
and deeply in earnest that Christ had descended from spiritual
heights and has united His destiny with that of men. What does this
mean? When before the Mystery of Golgotha men looked into the world
of the senses, they saw at the same time a spiritual element there;
this I made clear when speaking to you about the perception of the
sun. All this was lost to men. They had to receive something in place
of it; they had to receive something of a spiritual nature, and at
the same time gain from this spirituality an impression of reality in
the sense-perceptible world. That is a salient point in the Mystery
of Golgotha and its relation to human knowledge.
And this
Mystery of Golgotha, which gave lo earth-evolution its real
meaning, actually took place in a little corner of the earth,
unnoticed by the Romans; and even Tacitus knew practically nothing of
the Mystery of Golgotha, although he wrote his excellent work on
Roman history a hundred years later. History says really nothing
about the Mystery of Golgotha, for the Gospels are not to be reckoned
as history. They were written in the way I have shown in my book
Christianity as Mystical Fact;
they are really Mystery-books applied to life. However much trouble
the theologians may give themselves, the Mystery of Golgotha will
never be part of the history that applies to other events. For this
is exactly what is meant to be characteristic of the Mystery of
Golgotha: that historically, by way of history founded on external
facts, nothing about it is to be known. Those who wish to know
anything about the Mystery of Golgotha must have faith in the
super-sensible. The Mystery of Golgotha does not admit of historical
proof by the senses.
In the
same way that men of old looked into the world of the senses and
apprehended at the same time the super-sensible, so must modern man,
if he does not wish to lose his knowledge of the personality, look
upon the Mystery of Golgotha as upon the super-sensible; that is how
he must come to the conviction that this historical event, for which
there is no historical evidence, did indeed take place. Whoever
does not keep in mind that there is no history concerning the most
important historical event in the course of man's evolution,
that no external account of this event can be called historical
— whoever does not grasp this has no understanding of the whole
relation to modern man of the Mystery of Golgotha. For concerning the
Mystery of Golgotha modern man is meant to turn to an actuality
of which history can tell him nothing. And this actuality is to have
an operative effect. For what did we speak of yesterday as
coming from Ahriman and Lucifer? We said that Lucifer turns men's
hearts from interest in other men. Were only the Luciferic to work in
mankind, we should increasingly lose interest in our fellow men. What
one or other person was thinking would concern us very little. We can
very well take the measure of the Luciferic in a man by asking: Is he
interested objectively, tolerantly, in others, or is he interested
only in himself? Luciferic natures take very little interest in their
fellows; they grow stiff and hard, considering as right only what
they themselves think and feel, and they are not accessible to
the opinions of others. Had the Luciferic gone on working in
human evolution in the same way that it worked up to the Mystery of
Golgotha, mankind would have gradually entered on a way that we might
characterise as follows: People would have become hard and detached
in their souls, each thinking only of his own affairs, each holding
his own ideas as conclusive, and having no inclination to look into
the hearts of his fellows.
This,
however, is merely the reverse side of the loss of personality.
For by losing the possibility of recognising man as a personality, we
lose also our understanding of the personality of those around us.
Just at the time when the Mystery of Golgotha was approaching,
there were very many people — more than is generally thought
— in the Greek and Roman worlds, in Africa, in the West of
Asia, who were in a certain sense spiritually proud, people who
went through the world as — one cannot say peculiar
people — but as proud, lonely men who hugged their loneliness.
There were many such, and also those who made it a philosophy not to
trouble about other people, but merely to follow the way of their own
choice. This was brought about by the Luciferic falling out of balance.
And indeed
the Ahrimanic was present in excess. This is best shown in the
outlook of the first Roman Emperors, the Julians, of whom the very
first, Augustus, was the only one to be initiated, though in a rather
questionable way. Among the other Emperors there were some who at
best obtained initiation by force, but they all regarded
themselves as sons of God; that is, they considered themselves
initiates by claiming divine descent.
[See the lecture cycle:
Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha
(notably lectures 5–8)
given in Berlin, March 27th to April 24th, 1917.]
For the Ahrimanic is particularly revealed
by a man not being willing to live among other men as a
personality among other personalities, but wanting to
develop power in the way
I referred to yesterday — wanting to rule by exploiting the
weaknesses of others. The two great dangers threatening the world at
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, dangers to which
men would have succumbed if the Mystery of Golgotha had not come,
were lack of interest in other men, and the lust for domination in
every individual. The Christ, by uniting His destiny with that of
mankind, implanted into humanity something of extraordinary depth.
You may perhaps understand me best if I give you an outline of what
this really was. As I have
shown you, we men possess forces that we develop through our original
being. You know that in a certain sense we
become clever, through our original being, only in the second half of
our life. I have spoken of this fully and repeatedly. But that is not
quite all; what I was then referring to as the
growth of cleverness in man between birth and death is, strictly
speaking, valid only for earthly evolution; we are intended to become
still cleverer during the evolutionary stages
of Jupiter,
Venus and Vulcan. And the forces we are to develop in the course of
the Jupiter and Venus stages are already latent in
us.
Now the following
has come about. You know that during the first half of life a man is
unable to acquire self-knowledge through his original being; he has
to acquire it through Lucifer, while his original being goes on
developing further. The Luciferic infuses him with self-knowledge
during the first half of life; in the second half of life this
brilliant self-knowledge is clouded over by Ahriman. With the Christ
Impulse, another stream enters man's evolution; it speaks to the very
depths of the human being. And if man had to rely on his original
forces for developing the faculty that would of itself lead him to
those cosmic insights which come into Earth-evolution through Christ,
then he would not acquire this faculty until the Venus stage of
evolution. Thus, however clever a man might become during his life on
earth, up to the time of his death he would never be able to reach
the point that can be reached through the Christ Impulse having
united its destiny with Earth-evolution.
We live
through our earthly life, therefore, without being able to understand
the Christ Impulse with the help of our original evolution. From this
you can gather the following. There were contemporaries of Christ,
His disciples; they went about with Him; through the traditional
primeval wisdom they could acquire so much wisdom about Him that
later they were able to produce the Gospels — but they could
not really understand Him. Right up to their deaths they certainly
never reached an understanding of the Christ Impulse. When was it,
then, that they could achieve this? After their death, in the time
after death. Given that Peter or James, let us say, were
contemporaries of Christ, when were they ready to understand Christ?
Only in the third century after the Mystery of Golgotha —
for up to their deaths they were not sufficiently mature; they became
mature only in the third
century.
We are
touching here on a very important secret which we must bring with all
exactitude before our souls. The contemporaries of Christ had
first to go through death, had to live in the spiritual world until
the second or third century; and then, in the life after death,
knowledge of Christ could dawn upon them, and they could inspire
those who, towards the end of the second century, or from the third
century on, wrote about the Christ Impulse. Hence the writings about
the Christ Impulse from the third century onwards take on a special
character, for through the Church Fathers they received
inspiration, more or less clear or more or less clouded. Thus
Augustine, whose authority prevailed throughout the Middle Ages,
falls into this period. Hence we can see how the only way in which
people could be given an understanding of the Christ Impulse was to
be inspired on earth by the Venus wisdom, if I may so call it, which
at present man can experience only after death and in subsequent
centuries. And it was a piece of good fortune — a foolish
expression but there is no better one — that in the second and
third centuries this inspiration could begin. For had
men been obliged to wait longer, beyond the year 333, they
would have become increasingly hardened towards the
spiritual world and would have been incapable of receiving any kind
of inspiration.
You see,
the working of the Christ Impulse into mankind during the centuries
of Christian development was bound up with numerous mysteries. And
anyone wishing to seek for it again to-day finds the most important
elements in knowledge about the Christ Impulse only by achieving
super-sensible cognition. For the first actual teachers of
mankind concerning the Christ Impulse were really the dead, as you
have been able to see from what I have now been
saying —
persons who were contemporaries of Christ, and only in the third
century became mature enough to gain a full understanding. This
understanding was able to grow during the fourth century, but
at the same time the difficulty of inspiring men increased. In the
sixth century this difficulty went on increasing, until finally the
time came when the inspiring of men through spiritual mysteries
concerning the Christ Mystery, and the opposition to it caused by the
hardening of mankind, were brought under regulation by Rome. This was
done by Rome in the ninth century, in 869, at the Council of
Constantinople, where the spirit was finally done away with. This
whole matter of inspiration became too far-fetched for Rome,
and the dogma was laid down that man possesses in his soul something
of the nature of spirit, but that to believe in the spirit is heresy.
Men had to be enticed away from the spirit. This in essentials is
what is connected with the Eighth (Ecumenical Council held in
Constantinople in 869, to which I have often referred. It is
merely a consequence of this abolition of the spirit when Jesuits
to-day — I have mentioned this recently — say: “In
earlier times there was indeed such a thing as inspiration, but
to-day inspiration is devilish; we may not venture to strive for
super-sensible knowledge, for then the devil comes
in.”
These
things, however, are connected with the deepest matters which must
interest us if we wish truly to enter
into Spiritual
Science. They are connected particularly with a certain
recognition of the character of wisdom which many so-called spiritual
scientists, especially those who foregather in so-called secret
societies, do not recognise. A certain deception, one might
say, is constantly spread abroad among men — spread abroad by
those who know spiritual secrets. This deception is veiled by a false
contrast, a false polarity. Have you not heard people saying:
“There is Lucifer and his opponent is Christ?” and
setting up Christ-Lucifer as polaric opposites? I have shown you that
even Goethe's Faust-concept suffers from a confusion between Ahriman
and Lucifer; from Goethe's inability to distinguish between the
Ahrimanic and the Luciferic. The second part of my little book,
Goethes Geistesart,
treats of this.
But behind this
there is something extraordinarily significant. The real
contrast, imparted by those who wish to speak the truth out of the
spiritual world, is between Ahriman and Lucifer, and the Christ
Impulse brings in something different. It has nothing to do with the
Ahriman-Lucifer polarity, for it works in equilibrium. Something of
tremendous importance rests on a recognition of this fact; we will
speak of it further to-morrow.
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