I
THE
MICHAEL IMAGINATION
To-day I would
like first to remind you how events which take place behind the veil of
appearance, outside the physical, sense-perceptible world, can be
described in pictorial terms. One has to speak in this way of these
events, but the pictures correspond throughout with reality.
With regard to
sense-perceptible events, we are living in a time of hard tests for
humanity, and these tests will become harder still. Many old forms of
civilisation, to which people still mistakenly cling, will sink into
the abyss, and there will be an insistent demand that man must find
his way to something new. In speaking of the course that the external
life of humanity will take in the early future, we cannot — as
I have often said — arouse any kind of optimistic hopes. But a
valid judgment as to the significance of external events cannot
be formed unless we consider also the determining, directing
cosmic events which occur behind the veil of the
senses.
When a man
looks out attentively with his physical eyes and his other senses at his
surroundings, he perceives the physical environment of the earth, and
the various kingdoms of nature within it. This is the milieu in
which comes to pass all that manifests as wind and weather in the
course of the year. When we direct our senses towards the external
world, we have all this before us: these are the external facts. But
behind the atmosphere, the sun-illumined
atmosphere, there lies another world, perceptible by spiritual
organs, as we may call them. Compared with the sense-world, this
other world is a higher world, a world wherein a kind of light, a
kind of spiritual light or astral light, spiritual existence and
spiritual deeds shine out and run their course. And they are in truth
no less significant for the whole development of the world and of man
than the historical events in the external environment of the
earth and on its surface.
If anyone
to-day is able to penetrate into
these astral realms, wandering through them as one may wander among
woods and mountains and find signposts at cross roads, he may find
“signposts” there in the astral light, inscribed in
spiritual script. But these signposts have a quite special
characteristic: they are not comprehensible without further
explanation, even for someone who can “read” in the
astral light. In the spiritual world and in its communications,
things are not made as convenient as possible: anything one
encounters there presents itself as a riddle to be solved. Only
through inner investigation, through experiencing inwardly the riddle
and much else, can one discover what the inscription on a spiritual
signpost signifies.
And so at this time — indeed for some
decades now, but particularly at this time of hard trials for mankind
— one can read in the astral light, as one goes about
spiritually in these realms, a remarkable saying. It sounds like a
prosaic comparison, but in this case, because of its inner
significance, the prosaic does not remain prosaic. Just as we find
notices to help us find our way — and we find signposts
even in poetical landscapes — so we encounter an
important spiritual signpost in the astral light. Time and time
again, exactly repeated, we find there to-day the following saying,
inscribed in highly significant spiritual script:
O Man,
You mould it to your service,
You reveal it according to the value of its substance
In many of your works.
Yet it will bring you healing
Only when it reveals to you
The lofty power of its spirit.
Injunctions
of this kind, pointing to facts
significant for man, are inscribed, as I have said, in the astral
light, presenting themselves first as a kind of riddle to be
solved, so that men may bring their soul-forces into activity.
Now,
during our days here, we will contribute something to the solving
of this saying — really a simple saying, but important for
mankind to-day.
Let
us recall how in many of our
studies here the course of the year has been brought before our
souls. A man first observes it quite externally: when spring comes he
sees nature sprouting and budding; he sees how the plants grow and
come to flower, how life everywhere springs up out of the soil. All
this is enhanced as summer draws on; in summer it rises to its
highest level. And then, when autumn comes, it withers and fades
away; and when winter comes it dies into the lap of the earth.
This
cycle of the year — which in
earlier times, when a more instinctive consciousness prevailed, was
celebrated with festivals — has another side, also mentioned
here. During winter the earth is united with the elemental spirits.
They withdraw into the interior of the earth and live there among the
plant-roots that are preparing for new growth, and among the other
nature-beings who spend the winter there. Then, when spring comes,
the earth breathes out, as it were, its elemental being. The
elemental spirits rise up as though from a tomb and ascend into the
atmosphere. During winter they accepted the inner order of the earth,
but now, as spring advances and especially when summer comes on, they
receive more and more into their being and activity the order which
is imposed upon them by the stars and the movements of the stars.
When high summer has come, then out there in the periphery of the
earth there is a surging of life among the elemental beings who had
spent the winter in quiet and silence under the earth's mantle of
snow. In the swirling and whirling of their dance they are governed
by the reciprocal laws of planetary movement, by the pattern of the
fixed stars, and so on. When autumn comes, they turn towards the
earth. As they approach the earth, they become subject more and more
to the laws of earth, so that in winter they may be breathed in again
by the earth, once more to rest there in quietude.
Anyone
who can thus experience the cycle of
the year feels that his whole human life is wonderfully enriched.
To-day — and it has been so for some time past — a man
normally experiences, and then but dimly, half-consciously,
only the physical-etheric processes of the body which occur within
his skin. He experiences his breathing, the circulation of his blood.
Everything that takes its course outside, in wind and weather, during
the year; all that lives in the sprouting of the seed-forces, the
fruiting of the earth-forces — all this is no less significant and
decisive for the whole life of man, even though he is not
conscious of it, than the breathing and blood-circulation which go on
inside his skin.
When
the sun rises over any region of the
earth, we share in the effects of its warmth and light. But when a
man accepts Anthroposophy in the right sense, not reading it
like a sensational novel but so that what it imparts becomes the
content of his mind, then he gradually educates his heart and
soul to experience all that goes on outside in the course of the
year. Just as in the course of a day we experience early freshness,
readiness for work in the morning, then the onset of hunger and of
evening weariness, and just as we can trace the inner life and
activity of the forces and substances within our skin, so, by taking
to heart anthroposophical ideas — entirely different from
the usual descriptions of sense-perceptible events — we can
prepare our souls to become receptive to the activities that go on
outside in the course of the year. We can deepen more and more this
sympathetic participation in the cycle of the year, and we can
enrich it so that we do not live sourly — one might say —
within our skin, letting the outer world pass us by. On the contrary,
we can enrich our experience so that we feel ourselves living in the
blossoming of every flower, in the breaking open of the buds, in that
wonderful secret of the morning, the glistening of dew-drops in the
rays of the sun. In these ways we can get beyond that dull,
conventional way of reacting to the outer world merely by putting on
our overcoat in winter and lighter clothes in summer and taking an
umbrella when it rains. When we go out from ourselves and experience
the interweaving activities, the flow and ebb, of nature — only
then do we really understand the cycle of the year.
Then,
when spring passes over the earth and
summer is drawing near, a man will be in the midst of it with his
heart and soul; he will discern how the sprouting and budding life of
nature unfolds, how the elemental spirits fly and whirl in a pattern
laid down for them by planetary movements. And then, in the
time of high summer, he will go out of himself to share in the life
of the cosmos. Certainly this damps down his own inner life, but at
the same time his summer experience leads him out — in a cosmic
waking-sleep, one might say — to enter into the doings of the
planets.
To-day,
generally speaking, people feel they
can enter into the life of nature only in the season of growth
— of germination and budding, flowering and fruiting. Even if
they cannot fully experience all this, they have more sympathy and
perception for it than they have for the autumn season of fading and
dying away. But in truth we earn the right to enter into the season
of spring growth only if we can enter also into the time when summer
wanes and autumn draws on; the season of sinking down and dying that
comes with winter. And if during high summer we rise inwardly, in a
cosmic waking-sleep, with the elemental beings to the region where
planetary activity in the outer world can be inwardly experienced,
then we ought equally to sink ourselves down under the frost and
snow-mantle of winter, so that we enter into the secrets of the womb
of the earth during mid-winter; and we ought to participate in the
fading and dying-off of nature when autumn begins.
If,
however, we are to participate in this
waning of nature, just as we do in nature's growing time, we can do
so only if in a certain sense we are able to experience the dying
away of nature in our own inner being. For if a man becomes more
sensitive to the secret workings of nature, and thus participates
actively in nature's germinating and fruiting, it follows that
he will livingly experience also the effects of autumn in the
outer world. But it would be comfortless for man if he could experience
this only in the form it takes in nature; if he were to come only to
a nature-consciousness concerning the secrets of autumn and winter,
as he readily does concerning the secrets of spring and summer. When
the events of autumn and winter draw on, when Michaelmas comes, he
certainly must enter sensitively into the processes of fading
and dying; but he must not, as he does in summer, give himself over
to a nature-consciousness. On the contrary, he must then devote
himself to self-consciousness. In the time when external nature is
dying, he must oppose nature-consciousness with the force of
self-consciousness.
And
then the form of Michael stands before us again. If, under the impulse
of Anthroposophy, a man enters thus into the enjoyment of nature, the
consciousness of nature, but then also awakes in himself an autumnal
self-consciousness, then the picture of Michael with the dragon will
stand majestically before him, revealing in picture-form the
overcoming of nature-consciousness by self-consciousness when autumn
draws near. This will come about if man can experience not only an
inward spring and summer, but also a dying, death-bringing autumn and
winter. Then it will be possible for the picture of Michael with the
dragon to appear again as a forcible Imagination, summoning man to
inner activity.
For
a man who out of present-day spiritual knowledge wrestles his way through
to an experience of this picture, it expresses something very powerful. For
when, after St. John's tide, July, August and September draw on, he
will come to realise how he has been living through a waking-sleep of
inner planetary experience in company with the earth's elemental
beings, and he will become aware of what this really
signifies.
It
signifies an inner process of combustion, but we must not picture
it as being like external combustion. All the processes which take
a definite form in the outer world go on also within the human
organism, but in a different guise. And so it is a fact that these
inner processes reflect the changing course of the year.
The
inner process which
occurs during high summer is a permeation of the organism by that
which is represented crudely in the material world as sulphur. When a
man lives with the summer sun and its effects, he experiences a
sulphurising process in his physical-etheric being. The sulphur that
he carries within him as a useful substance has a special importance
for him in high summer, quite different from its importance at other
seasons. It becomes a kind of combustion process. It is natural for
man that the sulphur within him should thus rise at midsummer to a
specially enhanced condition. Material substances in different beings
have secrets not dreamt of by materialistic
science.
Everything
physical-etheric in man is thus glowed through at midsummer with
inward sulphur-fire, to use Jacob Boehm's expression. It is a
gentle, intimate process, not perceptible by ordinary
consciousness, but — as is generally true of other such
processes — it has a tremendous, decisive significance
for events in the cosmos.
This
sulphurising process
in human bodies at midsummer, although it is so mild and gentle
and imperceptible to man himself, has very great importance for
the evolution of the cosmos. A great deal happens out there in the
cosmos when in summer human beings shine inwardly with the
sulphur-process. It is not only the physically visible glow-worms
(Johannis Käferchen)
which shine out around St. John's Day. Seen from other planets,
the inner being of man then begins to shine, becoming visible as a
being of light to the etheric eyes of other planetary beings. That is
the sulphurising process. At the height of summer human beings begin to
shine out into cosmic space as brightly for other planetary beings as
glow-worms shine with their own light in the meadows at St. John's
time.
From
the standpoint of the cosmos this is a
majestically beautiful sight, for it is in glorious astral light that
human beings shine out into the cosmos during high summer, but at the
same time it gives occasion for the Ahrimanic power to draw near to
man. For this power is very closely related to the sulphurising
process in the human organism. We can see how, on the one hand, man
shines out into the cosmos in the St. John's light, and on the other
how the dragon-like serpent-form of Ahriman winds its way among the
human beings shining in the astral light and tries to ensnare and
embrace them, to draw them down into the realm of half-conscious
sleep and dreams. Then, caught in this web of illusion, they would
become world-dreamers, and in this condition they would be a prey to
the Ahrimanic powers. All this has significance for the cosmos
also.
And
when in high summer,
from a particular constellation, meteors fall in great showers
of cosmic iron, then this cosmic iron, which carries an enormously
powerful healing force, is the weapon which the gods bring to bear
against Ahriman, as dragon-like he tries to coil round the shining
forms of men. The force which falls on the earth in the meteoric iron
is indeed a cosmic force whereby the higher gods endeavour to
gain a victory over the Ahrimanic powers, when autumn comes on. And
this majestic display in cosmic space, when the August meteor showers
stream down into the human shining in the astral light, has its
counterpart — so gentle and apparently so small — in a
change that occurs in the human blood. This human blood, which is in
truth not such a material thing as present-day science imagines, but
is permeated throughout by impulses from soul and spirit, is rayed
through by the force which is carried as iron into the blood and
wages war there on anxiety, fear and hate. The processes which are
set going in every blood-corpuscle when the force of iron shoots into
it are the same, on a minute human scale, as those which take place
when meteors fall in a shining stream through the air. This
permeation of human blood by the anxiety-dispelling force of iron is
a meteoric activity. The effect of the raying in of the iron is
to drive fear and anxiety out of the blood.
And so,
as the gods with
their meteors wage war on the spirit who would like to radiate fear
over all the earth through his coiling serpent-form, and while they
cause iron to stream radiantly into this fear-tainted atmosphere,
which reaches its peak when autumn approaches or when summer wanes
— so the same process occurs inwardly in man, when his blood is
permeated with iron. We can understand these things only if we
understand their inner spiritual significance on the one hand, and if
on the other we recognise how the sulphur-process and the
iron-process in man are connected with corresponding events in the
cosmos.
A man
who looks out into
space and sees a shooting-star should say to himself, with reverence
for the gods: “That occurrence in the great expanse of space
has its minute counterpart continuously in myself. There are the
shooting-stars, while in every one of my blood-corpuscles iron is
taking form: my life is full of shooting-stars, miniature
shooting-stars.” And this inner fall of shooting-stars,
pointing to the life of the blood, is especially important when
autumn approaches, when the sulphur-process is at its peak. For when
men are shining like glow-worms in the way I have described, then the
counter-force is present also, for millions of tiny meteors are
scintillating inwardly in their blood.
This
is the connection between the inner man
and the universe. And then we can see how, especially when autumn is
approaching, there is a great raying-out of sulphur from the
nerve-system towards the brain. The whole man can then be seen as a
sulphur-illuminated phantom, so to speak.
But
raying into this bluish-yellow sulphur atmosphere come the meteor swarms
from the blood. That is the other phantom. While the sulphur-phantom rises
in clouds from the lower part of man towards his head, the iron-forming
process rays out from his head and pours itself like a stream of
meteors into the life of the blood.
Such is man,
when Michaelmas draws near. And
he must learn to make conscious use of the meteoric-force in his
blood. He must learn to keep the Michael Festival by making it a
festival for the conquest of anxiety and fear; a festival of inner
strength and initiative; a festival for the commemoration of selfless
self-consciousness.
Just
as at Christmas we
celebrate the birth of the Redeemer, and at Easter the death
and resurrection of the Redeemer, and as at St. John's Tide we
celebrate the outpouring of human souls into cosmic space, so at
Michaelmas — if the Michael Festival is to be rightly
understood — we must celebrate that which lives
spiritually in the sulphurising and meteorising process in man,
and should stand before human consciousness in its whole
soul-spiritual significance especially at Michaelmas. Then a man can
say to himself: “You will become lord of this process, which
otherwise takes its natural course outside your consciousness, if
— just as you bow thankfully before the birth of the Redeemer
at Christmas and experience Easter with deep inner response
— you learn to experience how at this autumn festival of
Michael there should grow in you everything that goes against love of
ease, against anxiety, and makes for the unfolding of inner
initiative and free, strong, courageous will.” The Festival of
strong will — that is how we should conceive of the Michael
Festival. If that is done, if nature-knowledge is true, spiritual
human self-consciousness, then the Michael Festival will shine out in
its true colours.
But
before mankind can
think of celebrating the Michael Festival, there will have to be a
renewal in human souls. It is the renewal of the whole
soul-disposition of men that should be celebrated at the
Michael Festival — not as an outward or conventional ceremony,
but as a festival which renews the whole inner man.
Then,
out of all I have
described, the majestic image of Michael and the Dragon will arise
once more. But this picture of Michael and the Dragon paints itself
out of the cosmos. The Dragon paints himself for us, forming his body
out of bluish-yellow sulphur streams. We see the Dragon shaping himself
in shimmering clouds of radiance out of the sulphur-vapours; and over
the Dragon rises the figure of Michael, Michael with his sword.
But
we shall picture this rightly only if we
see the space where Michael displays his power and his lordship over
the dragon as filled not with indifferent clouds but with showers of
meteoric iron. These showers take form from the power that streams
out from Michael's heart; they are welded together into the sword of
Michael, who overcomes the Dragon with his sword of meteoric iron.
If we
understand what is going on in the
universe and in man, then the cosmos itself will paint from out of
its own forces. Then one does not lay on this or that colour
according to human ideas, but one paints, in harmony with divine
powers, the world which expresses their being, the whole being of
Michael and the Dragon, as it can hover before one. A renewal of the
old pictures comes about if one can paint out of direct contemplation
of the cosmos. Then the pictures will show what is really there, and
not what fanciful individuals may somehow portray in pictures of
Michael and the Dragon.
Then
men will come to
understand these things, and to reflect on them with understanding,
and they will bring mind and feeling and will to meet the autumn in
the course of the year. Then at the beginning of autumn, at the
Michael Festival, the picture of Michael with the Dragon will stand
there to act as a powerful summons, a powerful spur to action, which
must work on men in the midst of the events of our times. And then we
shall understand how this impulse points symbolically to
something in which the whole destiny — perhaps indeed the
tragedy — of our epoch is being played out.
During
the last three or
four centuries we have developed a magnificent natural science
and a far-reaching technology, based on the most widely-distributed
material to be found on earth. We have learnt to make out
of iron nearly all the most essential and important things
produced by mankind in a materialistic age. In our
locomotives, our factories, on all sides we see how we
have built up this whole material civilisation on iron, or on
steel, which is only iron transformed. And all the uses to which iron
is put are a symbolic indication of how we have built our whole life
and outlook out of matter and want to go on doing so. But that is a
downward-leading path. Man can rescue himself from its impending
dangers only if he starts to spiritualise life in this very domain,
if he penetrates through his environment to the spiritual; if he
turns from the iron which is used for making engines and looks up
again to the meteoric iron which showers down from the cosmos to the
earth and is the outer material from which the power of Michael is
forged. Men must come to see the great significance of the following
words: “Here on earth, in this epoch of materialism, you have
made use of iron, in accordance with the insight gained from your
observation of matter. Now, just as you must transform your vision of
matter through the development of natural science into
Spiritual Science, so must you rise from your former idea of iron to
a perception of meteoric iron, the iron of Michael's sword. Then
healing will come from what you can make of it.” This is
the content of the aphorism:
O Man,
You mould it (iron) to your service,
You reveal it (iron) according to the value of its substance
In many of your works.
Yet it will bring you healing
Only when it reveals to you
The lofty power of its spirit.
That is,
the lofty power of Michael, with the sword he has welded together in
cosmic space out of meteoric iron. Healing will come when our material
civilisation proves capable of spiritualising
the power of iron into the power of Michael-iron, which gives man
self-consciousness in place of mere nature-consciousness.
You
have seen that precisely the most important demand of our time,
the Michael-demand, is implicit in this aphorism, this script that
reveals itself in the astral light.
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