Four
I HAVE BEEN
SPEAKING to you about the secrets connected with the mummy and
with cult and rites, indicating how the mummy enshrined secrets of
antiquity before the Mystery of Golgotha, whereas cult and ceremonial
rites in their more modern forms enshrine secrets whose full
significance will be revealed only in the future. Today and tomorrow I
want to add something to what has already been said and to begin with I
will give you a picture in the form of a kind of narrative.
If you had been able to
participate in many a scene in the Mysteries during a certain epoch of
Egyptian development, in times when the custom of the mummification of
bodies was at its height, you would have experienced something like the
following. The Priest-Instructor in the Mysteries would have tried,
first, to explain to his pupils that in the human head all the
mysteries of the world lie concealed, in a very special sense. He would
have bidden them regard the earth, the dwelling-place of man, as a
mirror, a reflection of the whole cosmos. In very truth, everything
that exists in the cosmos is also to be found in the earth itself.
Looking upwards to the world of stars, we see the moon as our nearest
neighbour among the heavenly bodies. Think of the earth and the moon
circling around the earth.1 We can picture the course taken
by the moon as it moves around the earth and all that lies between the
earth and the orbit of the moon. Those who rightly understand how to
interpret what they find when they dig down into the earth, will say:
What is present in the environment is mirrored, and condensed, in an
outermost layer of the earth itself.
And now take another
planet, which together with the earth, circles round the Sun. We can
picture this planet, Venus, and its path. This sphere is filled with
delicate, aeriform, etheric substance. Again a lower layer in the earth
must be pictured as a reflection of what is outside in the cosmos.
Proceeding in this way we have the whole earth as a mirror image of the
universe, remembering that what exists out yonder in a state of
extremely delicate, ethereal volatility is condensed and still further
condensed when it is found in the earth's strata. Thus at the centre of
the earth, the outermost periphery of the universe would be condensed
into a single point.
In the epoch to which I
am now referring, the Initiate of Egypt spoke to his pupils of those
things I have very briefly outlined. But the Initiate also said to his
pupils: To understand the interaction between the cosmos and its mirror
image, the earth, let us study the human head. The human head is formed
in the mother's body through the combined working of the whole universe
and the earth. But — so the Initiate would have said to his
pupils — no observation of the human head can, in itself, enable
us to understand its real nature, for the head in itself does not
reveal its secrets. It contains innumerable secrets and mysteries but
they remain concealed.
The human head is active
from the earliest period of germination in the body of the mother until
death but it does not contain within itself the effects of its own
activity. The mystery of the human head is that it is infinitely
active, but the effects of its activities are to be found in the other
parts of the organism, not in the head itself.
An Egyptian Initiate
would have spoken to his pupils just as I am speaking to you now,
except that he would, of course, have used the forms of expression
current in those days.
Diagrams were sketched
on the blackboard, of circles one inside each other, the smallest
indicating the earth in the centre and the larger circles the paths
around the earth of the moon and other planets with their
interpenetrating spheres
He would have made the
following intelligible to his pupils. When the human eye looks at a
colour, the perception of the colour gives rise to a change in the
brain. What is thus produced in the human eye, with the resulting
change in the brain is, in truth, a deed of the outer world. The
processes that take place in the brain itself are deeds of the outer
world. But the brain itself does something. When the brain receives a
colour-impression from outside and a nerve-process arises inwardly as a
result, the brain brings about something in the astral body and Ego.
The actual effect of this, however, manifests in the other parts of the
organism, not in the brain itself. Whereas the working of the external
world results in a change in the brain, the brain, for its part, works,
for example, upon the heart or upon some other organ of the human body.
You can only perceive what the human head does when you know exactly
what happens in the human physical body — so would the Initiate
have spoken to his pupils.
The Egyptians had
knowledge of these things, but because the possibilities that had
existed in still earlier times were no longer at their disposal, the
Initiates were obliged to adopt methods different from those used by
the Initiates of ancient Persia or ancient India. The Initiates of
ancient India let their pupils carry out exercises of Yoga, made them
breathe in a particular way; and by transforming the breathing process
into a sensory process the pupils acquired knowledge of the human
physical body. And how did they acquire it?
We know that when man
breathes in, the breath-impulse passes through the lungs into the whole
of the body, through the spinal canal into the brain. In the brain, the
breath-impulse combines with the other processes there, and then
recoils. It was this recoil that the pupil of Yoga observed. The
breath-impulse passes first into the lungs, through the spinal canal
into the brain, and there expands; then it recoils and passes through
the different organs, into the chest, and so on. Observing the recoil
of the breath downwards into the organism, the pupil of Yoga was able
to watch what the brain was doing in the chest, in the abdominal organs
and so on. In the recoil through the spinal cord and the expansion
through the whole body, the pupil of Yoga was able to observe what the
head brings about in the organism. Such was the art connected with the
breath, in times when the breathing process was made into a sensory
process, when through observation of the breathing, a human being could
answer for himself the question: How does my head work in my
organism?
I told you in the last
lecture that at a certain stage of the Egyptian epoch, this art had
been lost and the Egyptian Initiates were obliged to resort to other
means. The Initiates of Egypt led their pupils to the mummies, taught
them to mummify the human organism, taught them, through observation of
what was there presented to them, something that had once been learned
by inner means, through contemplation of the breathing process. But I
told you, too, that although the pupils of the Egyptian Initiates were
no longer capable of following these spiritual processes, which are
revealed as the deeds performed by the brain in the human organism
— and that was the point of importance — nevertheless the
Initiates were helped, as they spoke to their pupils, by the spiritual
Moon-Beings. These spiritual Beings who would otherwise have wandered
homeless about the earth, found dwelling places in the mummies. These
were the Beings who could be observed, whose speech was still
understood in that period of ancient Egyptian development and through
whom the first science of nature was imparted. What the pupil of Yoga
was able to perceive inwardly, through cultivation of the breathing
process — these things were now taught somewhat in the following
way. The Initiates would say to their pupils: The human head is
involved in a constant process of dying. It is really dying all the
time, and every night the organism must make efforts to counteract this
dying process in the head. But what the head does during this dying
process between birth and death results in the influx of new life into
the other organs of the body, so that inasmuch as the forces of these
other organs — not their substance, of course, but their
forces — are sent on into the future, during the period
between death and a new birth they become head, the head of the
next earthly incarnation. But the Initiates impressed upon their pupils
the necessity of understanding what is contained in the actual forms of
the organs, and it was for this reason that such scrupulous care was
given to the preservation of the mummies. By way of the forms in the
mummy, the Moon-Spirits were able to reveal the secrets of the organs,
their connection with the human head, and how they bear within them
those forces of germination by means of which they become head in the
next earthly life. Such was the teaching given by the Initiates of
Egypt to their pupils, by means of the mummy.
At a certain period,
then, it became necessary to teach in an external way what had once
been inner teaching in the days when the Yoga philosophy and religion
were at their prime. This, indeed, was the great transition that took
place from the culture of ancient India and ancient Persia to that of
Egypt: what had once been a teaching by inner means was now taught by
external means.
The teaching given by
the Initiates of Egypt was brought to a majestic climax when they said
to their pupils: And now steep yourselves in the plastic quality of the
forms lying before you in the mummy. Here you have very faint
indications of that which during the life of man on earth is
perpetually passing away, namely, the inner components of the human
head. But you have before you in great clarity and precision the forms
of the rest of the human organism. Contemplation of the mummy will not
help you to study the life-processes, or the perceptive processes; but
the plastic quality of the forms of the inner organs of the human body,
the heart, the lungs, the kidneys, the stomach, and so forth —
all this you can study from the mummy. Try to picture the following.
During life, the breath is drawn back into the head and then streams
out into the organism. In this breath there is a plastic force, which
has the tendency to shape the breath into the form of a mummy. The
breath, in its drive from the head towards the body, has the tendency
towards mummy-formation. And it is only because the body works against
this impulse and brings about out-breathing, that this
“nascent” mummy is transformed back again. Thus what is
seen streaming from the human head into the other part of the organism,
taking shape there as the breath passes onwards, is a form like the
mummy, a form that takes shape rapidly. In that the breath is breathed
out, it dissolves again. All that remains of it is a form of appearance
of the etheric body, which is almost always there, notably during
waking life. Observation of the etheric body gives the feeling that
from the head outwards the etheric body is trying all the time to form
itself into a mummy and is in turn dissolved into a kind of resemblance
with the human physical organisation. The inner, plastic force of the
human etheric body tends to make it assume the form of a mummy, and
then to dissolve this form again so that finally the etheric body
resembles the physical organism. This was taught as an apotheosis of
all the manifold teachings given by the Initiates of ancient Egypt to
their pupils with the help of those super-sensible, elementary Beings
whom we may call the Moon-Spirits.
The Egyptian Initiates
directed the attention of their pupils especially to the past, to the
inner experiences of human beings in very ancient times. This, in
truth, was the essence of Egyptian culture, which for us today is so
fraught with riddles. Sphinxes, pyramids, mummies — they are all
enigmas. But these enigmas are unveiled to spiritual science when we
know that the sphinxes represent forms that were actually visible to
men in the time of Atlantis, and when we remember that the teachings
concerning the mummy given by the Egyptian Initiates to their pupils
were an echo of the Yoga teaching imparted, for example, by Initiates
of ancient India to their pupils. It was not difficult for an Initiate
of ancient India to give such teaching because in those remote times
the slightest impetus would enable a man to perceive within a human
physical organism this momentary birth of the ether-mummy and its
retransformation.
It is deeply interesting
to contemplate how these mysteries were unveiled in the Egyptian
centres of instruction where such intimate connections were thus
established with death. Through the methods adopted in Egypt, death
preserved forms, which, during life, are hidden from observation but of
which there must be knowledge if the being of man is to be truly
understood.
The mummies were
displayed before the eyes of the ancient Egyptians and I have told you
that there is something analogous for human beings who have lived since
the Mystery of Golgotha. For them, cults and rites in many forms have
been preserved. I told you that at the time when men needed such forms,
they began to “mummify” ancient cults and rites. In its
first, faint beginnings, this custom arose in the fourth and fifth
centuries A.D., but it comes more and more to
the fore with the passage of time. In occult and other Brotherhoods,
rituals are studied and enacted, but there is never anything
essentially new in them. Ancient forms, ancient rituals, are preserved.
Indeed those whose task it is to preserve these rites and ceremonies,
who have to lead them, lay great stress upon the fact that the
ceremonies and customs date back to very ancient times, that they have
been preserved from remote antiquity. But we never find that the
ceremonies or the effects produced by the rituals are really
understood.
To
“understand” such rites and ceremonies — what does
this really mean? What does it mean to understand the nature of acts
performed in rites and ceremonies? To answer this question we must go
back to the times, say, of ancient India and ancient Persia and try to
discover how ceremonies and rites were understood then. A man today is
aware of a difference when, let us say, he touches a rose made of
papier-mâché and when he touches a real rose. He is also
aware of the difference, through his sense of smell, when he is near a
rose. He is aware of the difference and says that the
papier-mâché rose is a dead object whereas the rose picked
from the rosebush is alive. In very early times, dating back to four or
five thousand years before Christ, a man with true perception of the
world seeing someone working with a machine or tool, say for cutting
wood, would have called this a “dead” process; for even
with the eye of spirit he would have seen not the physical substance
but a kind of dead, shadow-image. But in ritualistic and ceremonial
enactments he saw Spiritual Beings from the surrounding elementary
world approaching and pervading all the forms and actions of the rite.
He beheld spiritual reality in these enactments.
If you were to ask
people today whether they have ever seen Spiritual Beings weaving and
streaming through rituals and ceremonies in Churches or Lodges, you
would find that this is never the case. In these ritualistic enactments
today there is no more spiritual life than there was life in the
Egyptian mummy of the human being who had been mummified. But inasmuch
as these rituals were preserved, as the form of the human body was
preserved in the Egyptian mummy, inasmuch as human enactments and rites
were preserved by tradition — “mummified”, as it were
— something was preserved that can and will be wakened into life
when men have discovered how to bring into all their deeds the power
that streams from the Mystery of Golgotha.
Men today have very
little understanding of how to draw into their actions the power of the
Mystery of Golgotha. Through the centuries, however, there were always
individuals here and there who had some conception — even if not
so clearly as in earlier times — of how the spiritual impulse
that can live in the human being may be guided into all his actions,
and of how the human being himself can be an intermediary between the
Spirit and what comes to pass through him in the outer world. The right
impulse must, of course, be at work before this can happen. Think of a
man like Paracelsus. He was one of those isolated individuals who had
an inkling, at least, that the spiritual must so live among men that it
streams out from them into their actions. There is a great difference
between man's mode of life today and what Paracelsus, for example,
desired. Today people make a sharp distinction between certain domains
of their life. For instance, they practise medicine, but according to
materialistic conceptions. A doctor today may, of course, also be a
religious man or woman in the modern sense; but the two domains are
separated. Medicine is practised on the basis of materialistic
principles and people seek what their souls need in an entirely
separate sphere of religion — into which, as a result, a highly
egoistical element finds its way. People only turn to religion when
they want to know what is to become of them after death or how what
they do tallies with what a God would be able to make of their deeds.
Paracelsus had a very different attitude. He wanted to be a man of
piety and religion as a doctor. He wanted each medical, each
therapeutic deed also to be a religious deed. He regarded what he did
with a sick man as the union of an external, human deed with a
religious act. To Paracelsus, healing was still a sacred enactment and
it was his constant ideal to make it so. His contemporaries had little
understanding of this and today there is even less. It makes one's
heart ache to hear the tradition which still persists in Salzburg, that
Paracelsus was a drunkard and that returning to his house late one
night in a state of intoxication, he met his death by falling over a
rock and breaking his skull. If the real truth were told, one would, of
course, have to point to the work of his enemies. Paracelsus'
drunkenness was less responsible for his broken skull than were people
who then proceeded to spread the fairy-tale about his habits.
Customs today are less
violent in such matters — less violent but not so very different.
A time will come when a deeper conception of the cult and of all
ceremonial enactments will take root in men. And then the true teachers
will be able to reveal to their pupils something similar to what was
revealed by the Initiates of Egypt with the help of the mummy. The
Egyptian Initiate was able to make his pupils realise that they could
behold in the mummy something, which in still earlier times, became
actual experience through transformation of the breathing process into
a sensory process. And so, when the cult can once again be truly
understood, those who possess this understanding will be able to make
clear to their pupils that enactments in sacred cults and rites have an
immeasurably greater significance for the cosmos than deeds performed
by men in the external world with mechanical tools or the like. Tools,
as you know, also play a part in cult and ritual. When true ceremonial,
true ritualistic enactments are again established in place of what is
customary today, Initiates will be able to say to their pupils: An
enactment in cult or rite is a call to the spiritual Powers of the
universe who through the deeds of men should be able to unite
themselves with the earth. Such an enactment, performed according to a
true rite, is different from an act of a purely technical nature. An
act that is purely technical or mechanical, however, does bring
something about, for with machines many things can be made and used in
life. Clothes, for instance, are made with a sewing machine. The
clothes are worn and eventually wear out. This is what happens to the
products of machines. But it is not so with sacred enactments. I told
you in the last lecture that provided a man has the requisite faculty
and the true conception of sacred enactments, he can come into contact
with spiritual Beings who are as closely connected with the earth as
the Spirits who spoke to the Egyptians out of the mummies were
connected with the moon. Through machines, through external technical
devices, man comes into contact with the physical nature-forces of the
earth. Through the sacred enactments of cult and ritual he comes into
contact with the elementary-spiritual Powers of the earth, with those
Powers who point the way to the future.
And so in times to come
an Initiate will be able to say to his pupils: When you participate
truly in a sacred enactment of cult or ritual, you are engaged in
something of which the materialist says that it has no reality, or, if
he is a cynic, he will say that it is all child's play. Nevertheless
the enactments of a true rite contain spiritual power. The elementary
spiritual Beings, who are evoked when such a rite is enacted, have need
of the rite because from it they draw nourishment and forces of
growth.
A time will come when
the earth will no longer exist. Everything that is around our physical
senses, everything that is present in the kingdoms of minerals, plants,
animals, in air and clouds, even the radiance of the stars ... all this
will pass away and, as I have described in An
Outline Of Occult Science, the earth will prepare to pass over
to the Jupiter embodiment. This future Jupiter planet will be a
subsequent incarnation of the earth just as our own future earthly life
will be a reincarnation of our present existence, save that the periods
of time involved are immeasurably longer. Of the substance present
today in minerals, plants, animals, in wind and clouds, not a single
particle will remain in that distant future. The processes set up by
machines and technical devices will have performed their task —
and they too will have become things of the past. But within what was
once earth, within what was once external, technical civilisation,
something different will have been prepared.
Think of the earth and
within it the different processes of nature and plant life. Machines
are there, with all that they bring about on the earth; animals and the
physical bodies of men move over the earth ... All this will pass away.
But on this earth, in future time, sacred rites will be enacted out of
a true understanding of the spiritual world. Through these rites and
sacred enactments, elementary spiritual Beings are called down. As I
have said, a time will come when the material substance in minerals,
plants, animals, clouds, the forces working in wind and weather and
also, of course, all the accoutrements used in rites and ceremonies,
will pass away, will be dissipated in the universe. But the spiritual
Beings who have been called down into the sphere of the rites and
sacred enactments — these will remain when the earth approaches
its end. They will remain, in a state of more perfect development,
within the earth, just as in autumn the seed of next year's plant is
concealed within the present plant; just as the dry, withered leaves
fall away from the plant, so the substance in the mineral, plant and
animal kingdoms will disintegrate in the universe, but the perfected
elementary Beings will be there, living on into the Jupiter existence
as a seed of the future.
And so once again an
Initiate will be able to bring the teaching given to his pupils to a
grand climax. He will be able to say: “Just as the Initiate of
Egypt, standing before the mummy, was able to explain to his pupils all
the mysteries of the human head and therewith all the mysteries of the
earth and the cosmos around the earth, I am able to explain to you how
the earth will arise from its destruction — rise again through
the spiritual Beings who develop onwards to the future in cults and
rites enacted with true understanding.”
In the evolution of our
epoch this conception has a glorious beginning. It can be pictured as
follows. Human beings satisfied their hunger and thirst by what lay on
the tables before them. But there came the Being Who dwelt in the body
of Jesus of Nazareth, Who gathered His closest disciples around Him and
said: “Here is bread, here is wine. Do not now look upon what
your outer eyes see in bread and wine, upon what your tongue can taste
and your physical body digest. All that is earthly bears within it the
seeds of decay. But if you have within you the true impulse you can
permeate earthly substance with the Spirit of the earth. For then it is
no longer bread, nor is it wine, but something that can live in the
inmost depths of man himself, something that lives and has its being in
his body and that he can spiritualise and that will be carried over
into the future when everything on the earth has passed away.”
Christ entered into the body of Jesus of Nazareth and in his whole
being, Jesus of Nazareth was spiritualised. He could point to bread and
wine, saying: “This is not the true form of bread and wine. Their
true form is what indwells the human being — this is My Body,
this is My Blood.” And the words receive their full significance
from those other words of Christ: “Heaven and earth will pass
away but My Words will not pass away.”
I have said many times:
The kingdom of plants, of animals, of minerals, all that lives in wind
and storm, in clouds — even the radiance of the stars —
will be dispersed and scattered; not one particle will remain. But what
man prepares spiritually — this will remain.
In earlier times of the
evolution of humanity it was known that words contain Spirit. The
modern view is that when we speak, movement is brought into the air
through the speech-organs and these movements then beat upon the drum
of the ear [(Trommelfell, drum of the ear,
so-called because the modern view is that the movements of the air,
“drum” or beat upon the membrane.)], the nerves
begin to move, and there the process ends. In earlier times it was
known that words enshrine the movements of elementary Spirits, that
forces in words spoken in sacred ritual, for example, stream into the
external action and that the Spirit living in man unites with this
external enactment. Thereby the elementary Spirits who are developing
onwards to the future enter, in actual presence, into the sphere of the
sacred rite. Men who understand these things can realise what the
“word” signified in olden times. Today it means little more
than “noise and smoke”, and Goethe was justified when he
used the expression Schall und Rauch. But in days of yore the
“word” signified the indwelling Spirit, not the abstract,
conceptual properties, but the spiritual reality inherent in the word.
In the word there is much that is spiritual. Christ indicates that the
life with which man imbues the word is contained in what comes to pass
in sacred enactments of rite and cult, namely, a process whereby
elementary Spirits are borne on-wards to the fulfilment of their
existence, and He said:
“Heaven and earth
will pass away, but My Words will not pass away.”
And now think of the
beginning of St. John's Gospel: “In the Beginning was the Logos,
the Word ...” The Logos is the Christ. What, then, are the Bread
and the Wine in the service of Holy Communion? The Bread and the Wine
are the Body and Blood of the Logos. And as we have heard, the Logos
relinquishes what is transient, seizes what is in the becoming,
prepares what is to come.
Thus we can point to the
Mystery of Golgotha as a glorious climax, just as teaching in days of
old culminated in the revelation of the ether-body assuming the shape
of a mummy and then immediately changing into a form resembling that of
the human physical body. But I have emphasised over and over again that
man will have to re-establish his connection with the spiritual world
if the earth is to attain its goal. Just as the predecessors of the
Egyptians, perceiving the breath and its expansion in the organism,
inwardly experienced a nascent mummy-formation and its immediate
re-transformation, so, in the future, men must perceive in the
out-breathing process, in the passing of the out-breathed air into
cosmic space, the communication to cosmic space of what takes shape
within the human organism, the spiritualisation of the environment
through the human being himself. The ancient Egyptians said: The mummy
represents a form which the human being strives inwardly and
spiritually to assume with every indrawn breath. Initiates of the
future will say: Every out-breathing is a manifestation of man's
striving to become a cosmos, a whole world. Contemplation of how the
inbreathed air surges down from the head into the organism — this
brings understanding of the human being. Contemplation of how the
indrawn air is breathed out again by man into the world — this
can bring understanding of the cosmos. Understanding of the cosmos will
be born when Imaginative Knowledge is able to span the world; with
Imaginative Knowledge we can also recognise what the human being
himself sends forth into the external world with his out-breathing. It
is what he is preparing for the future.
Thus what man does in
the course of history and what comes to pass in the cosmos are
interwoven, intermingled. Without realisation of this there can be no
understanding of the world, for history must be studied in its cosmic
aspect and historical happenings must reveal to us the workings
of the cosmos.
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