ANTHROPOSOPHY
A
Quarterly Review of Spiritual Science
|
No. 3.
|
MICHAELMAS 1931.
|
Vol. 6
|
|
Gnostic
Doctrines and Supersensible Influences in Europe
By
RUDOLF STEINER
A lecture given at Dornach, 15th
July, 1923. From a shorthand report unrevised by the lecturer. All
rights reserved by the Philosophisch-Anthroposophischer Verlag,
Dornach, Switzerland. English translation published by permission
of H. Collison, with rights reserved.
IN a time of great and
momentous decisions like the present it is all the more necessary
that in their study of contemporary events and happenings, men's
minds should also be raised to the Spirit. The Spirit is no
abstraction but a reality which transcends and works into the
physical life of humanity. It is by no means enough to admit that the
Spirit pervades all things physical, for this is to recognise one
fragment only of the world in which man lives and moves as a thinking
and acting being. For many centuries it was justifiable to hold such
a view, but in our age this justification has ceased. In the lecture
to-day, therefore, we will consider how certain happenings in the
physical world are connected with impulses emanating from the
spiritual world.
To
begin with, we will study the character of certain spiritual impulses
which have been at work in the course of evolution and have led on to
the present state of affairs in the world. For long ages now, Western
civilisation and its offshoots have paid attention to one fragment
only of the whole story of the evolution of the world, and from a
certain point of view this was quite right. In times when the Old
Testament became the authoritative record, it was proper to regard
the creation of man by Jahve or Jehovah as the dawn of
world-evolution.
But
in still earlier times the intervention of Jehovah was regarded not
as the incipient but as a much later episode in the
evolutionary process. It was said that another, more purely spiritual
phase of evolution had preceded the creation of the world by Jehovah
as it is described in the Bible and as it is ordinarily understood.
In other words, it was held that the intervention of Jehovah had been
preceded by that of other Beings, that the creation of man had
occurred after the passage of an earlier phase of the evolutionary
process.
Those
men in Greece who meditated upon the earliest stages of
world-evolution spoke of a primordial Being for the understanding of
whose nature a much more highly spiritual mode of knowledge is
required than for an understanding of the events described in the Old
Testament. These men spoke of the Being whom they held to be the
actual Creator of the world — the Demiurgos.
The
Demiurgos was a Being dwelling in spheres of lofty spirituality, in a
world devoid of every element of that material existence with which
in the Bible story the humanity created by Jehovah is naturally
associated.
We
must therefore think of the Demiurgos as a sublime Being, as the
Creator of the world who sends forth other Beings from Himself. The
Beings sent forth by the Demiurgos were ranked in successive stages,
each stage being lower than the last. (Such expressions are, of
course, quite inadequate, but no other words are available.) The life
of these Beings, however, was held to be entirely free from the
conditions of earthly birth and earthly death.
In
Greece they were known as Aeons — of the first rank, the second
rank and so on. The Aeons were Beings who had issued from the
Demiurgos. Among these Aeons, Jahve or Jehovah was a Being of a
relatively subordinate rank. And this brings us to a consideration of
the teachings of the Gnostics, as they were called, in the early
centuries of Christendom. It was said that Jehovah united with matter
and that from this union man came into existence.
|
| Demiurgos | |
| | | |
| Æons 1. | |
| | | |
| Æons 2. | |
| | | |
| Jehovah | Matter |
| Man |
|
According
to this Gnostic conception, therefore, Jehovah was a somewhat lower
descendant of the more lofty Aeons who had proceeded from the
Demiurgos, and as the outcome of Jehovah's union with matter,
man was created.
“Pleroma”
was the name given to a world which transcends, although it has its
basis in the phenomena of the world of sense. This conception was
thoroughly intelligible to the Ancients although it was utterly
beyond the grasp of a later humanity. The Pleroma was a world at a
higher level than the physical world but peopled none the less by
individualised Beings. And at the lowest level, at the lowest stage
of the Pleroma, the human being created by Jehovah comes into
existence. At this same stage, another Being appears, a Being
incorporate not in the individual man nor yet in a nation, but rather
in humanity taken as one whole, a Being who remembers its descent
from the Demiurgos and strives again to reach the spiritual world.
The name of this Being was Achamoth and in Greece, Achamoth
was a personification of the spiritual strivings of mankind. The urge
which lives in men to reach the spiritual world again was therefore
said to be due to Achamoth.
Another
conception was then added to this world of ideas, namely, that in
order to reward the strivings of Achamoth, the Demiurgos sent down an
Aeon of a very high rank. This Aeon — so it was said —
united with the man Jesus in order that the strivings of Achamoth
might be fulfilled. The Gnostic teaching was that in the man Jesus
there had dwelt a Being belonging to the ranks of the Aeons, a Being
of a far more highly spiritual order than Jahve or Jehovah.
And
so, among those in whom these ideas lived during the early Christian
centuries — and the hearts of many men in those times were
turned with the deepest fervour and reverence to the Mystery of
Golgotha — there grew up the conception of the great mystery
connected with the man Jesus in whom a holy Aeon had come to dwell.
Study
of this mystery took many different forms but no essential purpose
would be served to-day by entering into a detailed consideration of
the various ideas current in Greece, Asia Minor and its neighbouring
districts, as to the manner in which this Aeon had been incorporate
in the man Jesus. The kind of ideas which in those days men brought
to their study of a mystery of this character have long since passed
away from the sphere of human thinking. Man's thought to-day is
concerned with all that surrounds and is connected with his life
between birth and death and at best there dawns upon him the
realisation that spiritual foundations underlie this physical world
of sense. Direct, inner experience of the kinship of the human soul
with the Pleroma which was once a matter of immediate experience and
referred to as naturally as we refer to-day to man's connection
with the spiritual world — which was moreover of far greater
interest to human beings in those days than the physical world —
this too has passed away. There is no longer any direct experience of
kinship with the spiritual world. Such ideas lived in European
civilisation no longer than the first three, or rather no longer than
the first three and greater part of the fourth centuries of our era.
By that time the minds of men were no longer capable of rising to the
sphere known as the Pleroma, and the dawn of another age had broken.
This was the age of thinkers like Augustine and Scotus Erigena who
were among the first. It was the age of Scholasticism, of European
Mysticism at its prime, an epoch when the language of the mind bore
little resemblance to the language used in the early days of
Christendom. Men's minds were now directed to the physical
world of sense and on the basis of this material world they
endeavoured to evolve their concepts and ideas of the super-sensible
world.
Direct
experience of kinship with the spiritual world, with the Pleroma, had
died away. The time had come for man to pass into an entirely
different phase of development. It is not a question here of the
respective merits of two epochs of time, or of forming an opinion of
the inherent value of the medieval mind. The point is to realise and
understand that civilised humanity is faced with different tasks
during the different epochs. In an earlier age, kinship with the
world known as the Pleroma was a matter of immediate experience, and
it was man's task and function to activate the spiritual forces
of knowledge in the innermost recesses of the soul — the forces
of spiritual aspiration. But as time went on, darkness crept over the
world of the Pleroma. Faculties of an entirely different character
began to function in the human mind and the development of
rationalistic thought began. In the ages when there had been direct
experience of kinship with the Pleroma, the faculty of individual
thinking had not begun to function in the mind of man. Knowledge came
to him through illumination, through inspiration and through an
instinctive realisation of the super-sensible world. His thoughts were
revealed to him. The springing-forth of individual thoughts
and the building of logical connections in thinking denoted a later
phase, the coming of which was already foreshadowed by Aristotle.
This later phase of evolution cannot really be said to have begun in
any real sense before the second half of the fourth century of our
era. By the time of the Middle Ages the energies of the human mind
were directed wholly to the development of thought per se and
of everything that is associated with the activity of thinking.
In
this connection, medieval culture and, above all, Scholasticism
rendered inestimable service to the progress of civilisation. The
faculty of thinking was turned to practical application in the
shaping and association of ideas. A technique of thought of the very
purest kind was worked out, although it too has been wholly lost.
The
re-acquisition of the technique of Scholastic thought is a goal to
which humanity ought for their own sake to aspire. But it goes
against the grain in our days, when men prefer to receive knowledge
passively, not by dint of their own inner activity. The urge to inner
activity is lacking in our present age, whereas in Scholasticism it
lived and worked with a tremendous power. And that is why even to-day
it is possible for the thought of men who understand the essence of
Scholasticism to be far more profound, far more consistent than the
thought emanating from the world of science. Modern scientific
thought is formal, short-winded, often inconsistent. Men should
really learn a lesson from the technique of Scholastic thought, but
the learning will not be of the kind that finds favour to-day. It
must be an active learning, not a learning that consists
merely in assimilating knowledge that has already been laid down as a
model, or deduced from experiments.
The
Middle Ages, then, were the period during which man was meant to
unfold an inner faculty in his soul, namely the faculty of thought.
The Gods drew a veil over the Pleroma — which was a direct
revelation of their life and being — because, if this
revelation had continued to influence the human mind, men would not
have unfolded that strong, inner activity of thought which came to
the fore during the Middle Ages and from which sprang the new
mathematics and its kindred sciences, all of which are the legacy of
Scholasticism.
Let
us try now to summarise what has been said. Throughout many centuries
the Pleroma was a revelation vouchsafed to man. Through an Act of
Grace from on high, this world of light revealed itself in and
through the light that filled the mind of man. A veil was then drawn
over this world of light. Yonder in Asia, decadent remains of the
world behind this veil were still preserved, but in Europe it was as
though a precipitous wall arose from Earth to Heaven, a wall whose
foundations stretched across the districts of the Ural Mountains and
Volga, over the Black Sea and towards the Mediterranean. Try to
picture to yourselves this great wall which grew up in Europe in
consequence of the trend of evolution of which I have told you. It
was an impenetrable wall, concealing from men all traces even of
those decadent remains of earlier vision of the Pleroma which were
still preserved over in Asia. In Europe, this vision was completely
lost. It was replaced by a technique of thought from which a vista of
the spiritual world was entirely absent. There you have a picture of
the origin and subsequent development of medieval thought. Great
though its achievements were, men's eyes were blinded to all
that lay concealed behind the wall stretching from the Ural and Volga
districts, over the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Medieval thought
was incapable of piercing this wall and though men hankered after the
East, the East was no reality.
This
is not a symbolic but a true picture of Europe as it was in the
Middle Ages. Under the influences of a Giordano Bruno, a Copernicus,
a Galileo, men felt the call to set about understanding the Earth
beneath their feet. And they then proceeded to work out a science of
the Heavens modeled upon their conception of the Earth, in contrast
to the older science of the Earth which had been a reflection of
heavenly lore and of the mysteries of the Pleroma.
And
so in the darkness there arose a new mode of knowledge and a new
mental life, for the light was now shut off by the wall of which I
have spoken.
The
course of evolution is such that when the time is ripe for the
development of certain definite faculties in one portion of the human
race, other portions of humanity are separated off as it were behind
a veil. And in the case of which we are speaking, a decadent culture
grew up in the East behind the wall which had now been erected on the
Earth, while Europe saw the beginnings of what was later to develop
into Western culture in its most characteristic form. As a matter of
fact the position to-day is fundamentally the same, except that men
try now by means of historical documents and an external mode of
knowledge devoid of all insight into the mysteries of the Pleroma, to
inform themselves about the dark secrets of existence. The
significance of these things in the present age becomes quite
apparent when we look over to the East, behind the great wall, where
decadence has corrupted an earlier insight into the world known as
the Pleroma. What was once an instinctive but at the same time a
highly spiritual form of knowledge has become corrupt; the life of
the human soul in the spiritual worlds has descended to the material
world which from the time of the Middle Ages onwards was the only
world that remained accessible to the mind of man. Over yonder in the
East we see a culture which in the true sense is not culture at all
but an impulse to give an earthly, physical garb to purely spiritual
experiences awakened by insight into the mysteries of the
Pleroma.
Deeds
of the Gods in the world of the Gods were conceived as the deeds of
idols and the worship of idols superseded the worship of the Gods.
Forces belonging in truth to the world of the Pleroma were dragged
down to the material realm and gave rise to the practice of corrupt
magical arts in the regions of Northern Asia. The magic arts
practised by the Shamanic peoples of Northern Asia and their
aftermath in Central Asia (Southern Asia too was affected to a
certain extent but remained somewhat freer), are an example of the
corrupt application of what had once been a direct vision of the
Pleroma. What ought to have been achieved, and in earlier times was
achieved by the inner activity of the soul was now assisted by
earthly magic. The forces living in the Pleroma were dragged down to
the material world in an Ahrimanic form and were applied not only on
Earth but in the spiritual world bordering on the Earth, the
influences of which pour down upon human beings. And so, Eastward of
the Ural and Volga regions, in the astral world which borders on our
physical world, there arose during the later Middle Ages, continuing
through the centuries to our own day, an Ahrimanic form of magic
practised by certain spiritual beings who in their etheric and astral
development stand higher than man but in their development of soul
and Spirit stand lower than man. Throughout the regions of Siberia
and Central Asia, in the spiritual world immediately adjacent to the
earthly world, terrible etheric-astral Beings are to be seen,
Ahrimanic beings who practise an earthly, materialised form of magic.
And these forces work upon human beings who are unskilled in such
arts but who are infected by them and so come under the influence of
this astral world.
In
connection with these matters we must remember that ancient
mythological lore was the outcome of a wonderfully spiritual
conception of Nature. When men spoke in Greece of the Fauns and
Satyrs and of the activities of the Fauns and Satyrs in earthly
happenings, these beings were not the creations of fantasy as modern
scholars would have us believe. The Greeks knew the reality of the
Fauns and Satyrs who peopled the astral sphere adjacent to the
earthly world. Approximately at the turn of the third and fourth
centuries of our era these astral beings withdrew into regions lying
Eastwards of the Ural, the Volga and the Caucasus. This territory
became their home and there they entered upon their later phase of
development.
Against
this cosmic background the faculty of thought in its pure form began
to evolve in the souls of the men of Europe. So long as they adhered
rigidly to an inwardly pure, inwardly austere activity of thinking of
which Scholasticism affords a splendid example their
development was thoroughly in harmony with the aims of the spiritual
world. They were preparing for something that must be achieved in our
present age and in the immediate future. But this purity was not
everywhere maintained. Eastwards of the great wall of which I have
spoken, the urge had arisen to drag down the forces of the Pleroma to
the earthly world and apply them in an earthly, Ahrimanic form of
magic. And Westwards of this wall, the urge towards rationalistic
thought and towards a purely intellectual grasp of the earthly world
mingled with the element of lust in material existence. In other
words, a Luciferic impulse gradually insinuated itself into the
working of the faculty of pure reason now dawning in the human mind.
The
result of this was the development of another astral world,
immediately adjacent to the Earth, together with the efforts that
were being made to unfold the faculties of pure reason and a pure,
inwardly active form of thought. This astral world was ever-present
among those who strove with the purity of purpose of men like
Giordano Bruno, Galileo and others to promote the development of the
faculty of earthly thought and to establish a standard and technique
of thought. In and among all this activity we can divine the presence
of beings belonging to an astral world — beings who attracted
not only to themselves but to the religious life of men, forces
proceeding from the element of lust in earthly existence, and whose
aim was to bring the strivings for rationalistic thought into line
with their own purposes. And so the efforts of the human mind to
unfold the faculty of pure thought were gradually tinged with
earthly, material considerations.
The
technique of thought manifest in the latter part of the eighteenth
century and especially in the nineteenth century was influenced in a
very high degree by the astral forces which by this time had
insinuated themselves into the sphere of rationalistic thought. The
material lusts of human beings which a pure and developed technique
of thought ought to have been capable of clarifying and to some
extent dispersing, gave birth to an element well-fitted to provide
nourishment for certain astral beings who set out to direct the
forces of this astute, keen thinking to the needs of material
existence.
Such
is the origin of systems of thought of which Marxism is an example.
Instead of being sublimated to the realm of the Spirit, thought was
applied merely to the purposes of physical existence and of the world
of sense. In this way the realm of human thinking became easy of
access to certain Luciferic beings indwelling the astral world. The
thoughts of men were impregnated through and through with the
thoughts of these astral beings by whom the Western world was
obsessed just as the East was now obsessed by astral beings whose
existence had been made possible by the decadent magic arts practised
among the Shamanic peoples. Under the influence of these astral
beings, the element of earthly craving and desire crept into the
realm of an astute but at the same time material mode of thought. And
from this astral world influences played into and took possession of
men of the type of Lenin and his contemporaries.
We
have therefore to think of two worlds: one lying Eastwards of the
districts of the Ural Mountains, the Volga and the Caucasus, and the
other Westwards of this region. These two worlds in themselves
constitute one astral sphere. The beings of this astral region are
striving in our present age to enter into a kind of cosmic union.
Westwards of the Ural and Volga districts live the beings whose
life-breath is provided by the thinking of the West, permeated as it
is by a Luciferic influence. In the astral sphere Eastwards of the
Ural and Volga districts dwell those beings whose life-element is
provided by magic arts which are the debased, materialised form of
what once was a power functioning in the world known as the Pleroma.
These beings are striving to unite, with the result that there has
come into existence an astral region in which human beings are
involved, and which they must learn to understand. If they succeed in
this, a task of first importance for the evolutionary progress of
mankind will be accomplished. But if they persist in ignoring what is
happening here, their inner life will be taken hold of by the fiery
forces emanating from the Ahrimanic beings of Asia and the Lucifer
beings of Europe as they strive to consummate their cosmic union.
Human beings are in danger of becoming obsessed by these terrible
forces emanating from the astral world. Eastwards and Westwards of
the Ural and Volga districts, then, we must conceive of the existence
of an astral region immediately adjacent to the Earth — a
region which is the earthly dwelling-place of beings who are the
Fauns and the Satyrs in a later metamorphosis.
If
the whole reality is revealed to us as we look over towards
the East of Europe to-day, we see not human beings alone but an
astral sphere which since the Middle Ages has become the Paradise of
beings once known as the Fauns and Satyrs. And if we understand the
nature of these beings, we can also follow the processes of
metamorphosis through which they have passed since then. These beings
move about among men and carry on their activities in the astral
world, using on the one hand the Ahrimanic forces of decadent,
Eastern magic and on the other, the forces emanating from the
Luciferic, rationalistic thinking of the West. And human beings on
the Earth are influenced and affected by these forces.
In
their present state, the goat-form which constitutes the lower part
of the bodily structure of these beings has coarsened and become
bear-like, but on the other hand their heads are radiant and
possessed of a high order of intelligence. They are the mirrored
personifications of Luciferic rationalism developed to its highest
point of subtlety. The beings indwelling this astral Paradise are
half bear-, half goat-like in form, with semi-human countenances
exhibiting a subtle sensuousness but at the same a rare cleverness.
Since the later Middle Ages and on through the centuries of the
modern age this astral region has become a veritable Paradise of the
Satyrs and Fauns in their present metamorphosis, and there they
dwell.
And
in the midst of all these mysterious happenings a laggard humanity
goes its way, concerning itself merely with physical affairs. But all
the time these forces — which are no less real than the
phenomena of the world man perceives with his physical eyes and
grasps with his physical brain — are playing into earthly
existence.
The
conditions now developing as between Asia and Europe cannot be fully
intelligible until we understand them in their astral aspect, their
spiritual aspect. The decadent forces emanating from Shamanic arts
which have been preserved in the astral regions of Central and
Northern Asia are striving to consummate a kind of cosmic union with
the impulse which has received the name of Bolshevism, and Eastwards
and Westwards of the Ural and Volga districts endeavours are being
made to consummate a union between a certain form of magic and
Bolshevism. It is a world of myth and is for this reason well-nigh
incomprehensible to the modern mind. Luciferic elements in the form
of Bolshevism are striving to unite with the decadent forces
proceeding from Shamanic arts and coming over from the East. From
West to East and from East to West forces are working and weaving in
this astral Paradise. And the influences which pour down from this
astral world into the earthly world emanate from the passionate
efforts for union between the beings known in olden times as the
Fauns and Satyrs who surge over from the East, and the spirits of the
West who have developed in a high degree, everything that is
connected with the head.
The spectacle
presented to super-sensible sight may be described in the following
way: The nearer we come to the Ural and Volga districts, the more do
these cloud-like, spiritual forms seem to gather together into a mass
of heads, while the other parts of the bodily structure become
indistinct. Seething over from the East we see those other beings,
known in days of yore as the Fauns and Satyrs. Their once goat-like
form has coarsened to a bear-like form and the further West they come
in their efforts to consummate their astral union with the Luciferic
beings of the West, the more do their heads seem to disappear. These
beings come into existence in the astral world and the Earth-sphere
is their home just as it is the home of physical humanity. They are
the tempters and seducers of humanity on Earth because they can take
possession of men; they can obsess human beings without in any way
needing to convince them by means of speech.
It
is urgently necessary that these things should be realised to-day.
Men must awaken those inner faculties of soul which once gave birth
to the mythological lore of olden times. For it is only by rising to
the sphere of Imaginative knowledge that we can stand with full
consciousness in the onward-flowing stream of human evolution.
|