Part Two: The Procedings of
the Conference
The Envy of the Gods — The Envy
of Human Beings
Looking
back to the burning of the Goetheanum
on New Year's Eve 1922/23
•
Lecture by Rudolf Steiner
31 December, 8.30
p.m.
My dear friends!
We stand
today under the sign of a grievous memory and we shall by all
means place what is to be the content of today's lecture
within the sign of this grievous memory. Those of you who
were present then will remember how the lecture I was
permitted to give just a year ago in our former building
[ Note 75 ]
followed a path
which led from the description of earthly, natural conditions
upwards into the spiritual worlds and into the revelation of
these spiritual worlds out of the starry script. You will
remember how it was possible, then, to link the human heart,
the soul of man, the human spirit, and all that belongs to
it, with all that can be discovered on the path outwards into
not only the wide realm of the stars but also into what
depicts the world of the spirit through the wide realm of the
stars, like a cosmic script. The last thing I was permitted
to write down on the blackboard in that hall which was taken
from us so soon afterwards, that last thing was intended to
raise the human soul up into spiritual heights. On that very
evening the link was made with that to which our Goetheanum
building was to be dedicated in its whole being. So now, as
though in a continuation of that lecture given here a year
ago, let me begin by speaking about that to which the link
was then made.
If in the
times before the burning of Ephesus men spoke about the
Mysteries, then those who in their heart and soul understood
something of the nature of the Mysteries said, in essence:
Human knowledge, human wisdom has an abode, a dwelling place
in the Mysteries. And if in those olden times there was talk
of the Mysteries among the spiritual leaders of the world,
that is if there was talk in super-sensible realms about the
Mysteries — allow me to use these expressions even
though they describe only figuratively how thoughts are sent
down from the super-sensible realms and how the super-sensible
works in the sense-perceptible realm — if in
super-sensible realms there was talk about the Mysteries, then
what was said went, in essence, like this: In the Mysteries,
human beings set up an abode where we gods can find those
human beings who bring us offerings and who understand us in
their act of offering. For indeed those who knew about such
things in the ancient world were generally aware that in the
Mystery centres gods and human beings encountered one another
and that all that carries and maintains the world depends on
what takes place in the Mysteries between gods and human
beings.
But there are
words which have even come down to us in external history.
These words handed down through history can deeply move our
human hearts, especially when they can be seen taking shape
out of very special events, when the shape they take is
formed as though in letters of bronze, visible in spirit only
for a moment and written into the history of humankind. Such
words are always seen when one looks in spirit towards the
deed of Herostratos,
[ Note 76 ]
the burning of the temple at Ephesus. In the flames the ancient
words stand out: The envy of the gods.
Among the
manifold words that have come down to us from olden times,
which can be seen in the life of those times in the manner I
have described, I do believe that this is one of the most
terrible to be found in the physical world: The envy of the
gods. In those olden times the word ‘god’ was
used to describe anything that lived as a super-sensible being
without ever needing to appear on earth in a physical body.
And in those times people distinguished between many and
varied races of gods.
But those
divine spiritual beings who are so closely linked with
mankind that the human being in his inmost nature has come
into existence through them and has been sent by them on his
journey through the ages, those beings we sense in the
majesty and in the minutest appearances of outer nature,
those divine spiritual beings cannot become envious. Yet in
olden times the envy of the gods denoted something very real.
Following the human race in its development up to about the
time of Ephesus we find that indeed the more advanced human
individuals had taken for themselves much of what the good
gods had been glad to give them in the Mysteries. It is quite
right to say that an intimate relationship exists between the
good human hearts and the good gods, a relationship made ever
more close in the Mysteries. Thus the realization came about
in the souls of certain other luciferic and ahrimanic godly
beings that human beings were being drawn ever closer to the
good gods. And thus arose the envy of the gods towards man.
Again and again we hear in history that a human being
striving for the spirit; if he meets with a tragic destiny,
is described as having been a victim of the envy of the
gods.
The ancient
Greeks knew of this envy of the gods and they traced much of
what took place in external human evolution back to this envy
of the gods. The burning of the temple at Ephesus made it
obvious that a certain further spiritual development of
mankind is only possible if human beings realize that there
are gods, that is super-sensible beings, who are envious of
the further progress of humankind. This has coloured the
whole of history since the burning of the temple at Ephesus,
or I could say since the birth of Alexander.
[ Note 77 ]
And a proper conception of
the Mystery of Golgotha, too, must take into account that we
look into a world that is filled with the envy of certain
races of gods. From soon after the Persian wars the
atmosphere of soul in Greece had been filled with the
consequences of this envy of the gods. And what was then
accomplished at the time of Macedonia had to be carried out
in full awareness of the envy of the gods reigning over the
face of the earth in the spiritual atmosphere. Yet it was
carried out courageously, boldly, in defiance of
misunderstandings on the part of both gods and men.
And there
came down into this atmosphere filled with the envy of the
gods the deed of that God who was capable of the greatest
love that can possibly exist in the world. We see the Mystery
of Golgotha in its true light only if we can add to
everything else also the image of the clouds in the ancient
world, in Hellas, Macedonia, the Near East, North Africa,
Southern Europe; the image of those clouds that are an
expression of the envy of the gods. Wondrously warming,
gently gleaming, there falls into this cloud-filled
atmosphere the love that streams through the Mystery of
Golgotha.
This
interaction was, if I may describe it thus, a matter which at
that time took place between gods and human beings. Now, in
our time, in the age of human freedom, it is something that
has to take place down below, here in physical human life.
And the manner in which it takes place can indeed be
described. In olden times, down on the earth, one thought of
the Mysteries thus: Human knowledge, human wisdom finds an
abode in the Mysteries. But among the gods it was said: When
we descend into the Mysteries we find there the offerings of
human beings, and in the human being who makes his offering
we are comprehended.
The burning
of the temple at Ephesus marked the beginning of the age in
which the Mysteries in their old form gradually began to
disappear. I have told you how they continued to endure here
and there, sublimely, for example, in the Mysteries of
Hibernia, where the Mystery of Golgotha was celebrated in the
divine cultus simultaneously with the actual physical event
over in Palestine. They knew of it solely through the
spiritual communication that existed between Palestine and
Hibernia. There was no physical communication. Nevertheless,
in the physical world the Mysteries receded more and more.
The external abodes, which were places of encounter between
gods and human beings, increasingly lost their significance.
By the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries they had lost it
almost entirely. Those who wanted to find the way, for
example to the Holy Grail, had to know how to follow
spiritual paths. In olden times, before the burning of the
temple at Ephesus, the paths to be trodden were physical
paths. In the Middle Ages the paths were spiritual.
In particular
a spiritual path had to be followed by one who sought
instruction in the truly Rosicrucian way from the thirteenth
or fourteenth century onwards, but even more so from the
fifteenth century. The temples of the Rosicrucians were
profoundly hidden from any external physical experience. Many
true Rosicrucians frequented the temples, but these temples
could not be found by any external, physical human eye. But
it was possible for pupils to find these aged Rosicrucians
who lived here or there like hermits of wisdom, hermits of
the holy human deed. They could be found by those who could
comprehend the language of the gods speaking out of gently
shining eyes. I am not talking figuratively. I do not want to
speak in pictures. I am telling you of an actual reality
which was extremely significant at the time to which I am
pointing. The pupils found their Rosicrucian teacher if they
had first gained the capacity to understand the language of
the heavens speaking out of gently shining physical eyes. In
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Central Europe
these remarkable personalities were to be found living in the
most modest surroundings, in the most unassuming human
accommodation. They were filled with the divine spirit; in
their inner being they were linked to the spiritual temples
which existed but to which access was truly as difficult to
find as was that to the Holy Grail described in the
well-known legend.
Looking at
what took place between one of these Rosicrucian teachers and
his pupil, we can overhear many a conversation that describes
in the form appropriate for more recent times the divine
wisdom as it exists on the earth. The instruction was
profoundly concrete. A Rosicrucian teacher was discovered in
his solitude by a pupil who had enthusiastically endeavoured
to seek and find him. A pupil gazed into the gently shining
eyes out of which flows the speech of gods and, modestly, he
received something like the following instruction.
Look, my son,
at your own being. You bear with you that body which your
external, physical eyes can see. The very centre of the earth
sends to this body the forces which make it visible. This is
your physical body. But look around you at your own
environment on the earth. You see stones; they are permitted
to exist on the earth; their dwelling place is on the earth.
Once they have taken on a shape, they can maintain it through
the forces of the earth. Look at the crystal. It bears a form
and through the earth it retains this form of its own nature.
Your physical body is incapable of this. If your soul departs
from it, then the earth destroys it, it dissolves it into
dust. The earth has no power over your physical body. It has
the power to shape and to maintain the transparent,
wonderfully formed shapes of the crystal; but it has no power
to maintain the shape of your physical body; it has to
dissolve it into dust. Your physical body is not of this
earth. Your physical body is of supreme spirituality. To
Seraphim, Cherubim and Thrones belong the form and shape of
your physical body. Your physical body does not belong to the
earth; it belongs to those spiritual forces which are the
highest as yet accessible to you. The earth can destroy it
but never build it up.
And within
this your physical body lives your etheric body. The day will
come when your physical body is taken in by the earth in
order to be destroyed. Then your etheric body will dissolve
into the widths of the cosmos. The widths of the cosmos can
dissolve this etheric body but they cannot build it up. Only
those divine, spiritual beings belonging to the hierarchy of
the Dynamis, Exusiai and Kyriotetes can build it up. You
unite with your physical body the physical substances of the
earth. But that which is in you transforms the physical
substances of the earth in such a way that within them there
is no longer anything resembling whatever is physical in the
environment of your physical body. Your etheric body moves
everything in you that is liquid or watery. The juices that
stream and circulate are under the influence of your etheric
body. See your blood: Exusiai, Dynamis, Kyriotetes cause this
blood as a liquid to circulate through your arteries. You are
human only in your physical body. In your etheric body you
are still animal, but an animal enspirited by the second
hierarchy.
What I have
been saying to you compressed into a few words was the
subject of long instruction by that teacher in whose gently
shining eyes the pupil heard the speech of heaven. Then the
attention of the pupil was drawn to the third member of the
human being, which we call the astral body. The pupil was
shown how this astral body contains the impulse to breathe
and to be involved with everything that is aeriform in the
human organism, with everything that pulses as air through
the human organism. The earthly realm may endeavour, for ages
after the human being has stepped through the portal of
death, to rumble about in the aeriform realm. For years the
clairvoyant eye can discern the astral bodies of those who
have died rumbling about in the atmospheric phenomena of the
earth. Yet the earthly realm with all its environment is
incapable of doing anything to the impulses of the astral
body except dissolve them. The beings of the third hierarchy,
Archai, Archangeloi, Angeloi, alone can form it.
Thus, deeply
moving the heart of his pupil, the teacher said: In your
physical body, by taking in and transforming the mineral
kingdom, by taking in the human realm and working on it, you
belong to Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones. In so far as you are
an etheric body, you are animal-like in the etheric realm,
but you belong to the spirits called the spirits of the
second hierarchy, Kyriotetes, Dynamis, Exusiai; in so far as
you weave in the fluid element you do not belong to the earth
but to this hierarchy. And by weaving in the aeriform element
you do not belong to the earth but to the hierarchy of
Angeloi, Archangeloi, Archai.
Having
undergone sufficient instruction in this way, the pupil no
longer felt related to the earth. Going out, he sensed, from
his physical, etheric and astral bodies were the forces that
joined him through the mineral world with the first
hierarchy, through the watery earth with the second hierarchy
and through the encircling air with the third hierarchy. It
was clear to him that he lives on the earth solely through
the element of warmth which he bears within him. Thus the
Rosicrucian pupil felt the warmth he bears within him, the
physical warmth, to be what is actually the earthly, human
element in him. And he learnt increasingly to feel that this
physical warmth is related to warmth of soul and warmth of
spirit. Human beings living in later times have increasingly
forgotten how their physical content, their etheric content
and their astral content is related to the divine world
through the solid element, the fluid element and the aeriform
element. But the Rosicrucian pupil knew this full well. He
knew that the warmth element is that which is truly earthly
and human. At the moment when the pupil of the Rosicrucian
master realized this mystery of the connection between the
element of warmth and the human, earthly element, he knew how
to link his human element with the spiritual world.
Before
entering those often quite unassuming dwellings inhabited by
such Rosicrucian teachers, the pupils were shown, usually
without their seeking it and in a seemingly miraculous manner
— the one in this way and the other in another way,
often coincidentally, so outwardly it seemed — they
were shown that they must seek to link their own spirit with
the spirit of the cosmos. And when the pupil had received
from his teacher the instruction about which I have just been
speaking, then, yes then he could say to his teacher: I now
depart from you having received the greatest consolation
possible on earth; by showing me that warmth is truly the
element of earthly man you have enabled me to link my
physical aspect with the realm of soul and spirit; I take the
soul element not into my solid bones, not into my liquid
blood, not into my airy breath, but into my element of
warmth.
In utmost
peace those who had received such instruction departed, in
those days, from their teachers. And out of the peace in
their countenance which expressed the outcome of that great
consolation, out of the peace in their countenance there
developed gradually that gentle glance through which the
speech of heaven can resound. Thus profound instruction in
the realm of the soul was available right into the first
third of the fifteenth century, hidden away from those events
of which external history tells us. An instruction took place
which encompassed the total human being, an instruction that
permitted the human soul to link its own being with the
sphere of the cosmos and of the spirit.
This
spiritual mood has entirely drained away during the course of
the last few centuries. It no longer belongs to our
civilization. A superficial civilization, estranged from the
gods, has spread itself over what were once the dwelling
places that saw what I have just described to you. Here one
stands today with the memory, which can only be called up in
the light of the astral world, of many a scene resembling the
one I have described. Hence our basic mood when we first look
back to those ages that are often described as being so dark,
and then look out into our present time. But when we look
back in this way our heart is stirred — through the
spiritual revelations that can once more be received by
mankind since the final third of the nineteenth century
— by a deep longing to speak in a spiritual way once
more to human beings. And this spiritual way of speaking is
not dependent on abstract words alone; it calls for all
manner of signs in order to be all-embracing. And a language
needed for those spiritual beings who are to speak to modern
mankind, such a way of speaking existed indeed in the forms
of our Goetheanum, burnt down a year ago. Truly these forms
were to have spoken out into the world the ideas told to the
audience from the platform. Thus in a certain way the
Goetheanum was something that could, in an entirely new form,
remind us of something ancient.
When the one
approaching initiation entered into the temple at Ephesus,
his glance was drawn to that statue about which I have spoken
during these days, that statue which called to him in words
of the heart: Unite with the world ether and you shall see
the earthly realm from etheric heights. Thus did many a pupil
at Ephesus view the earthly realm from etheric heights. And a
certain race of gods grew envious. But centuries before the
Mystery of Golgotha courageous human beings nevertheless
found ways, despite the envy of the gods, to carry forward
— weakly, perhaps, but not so weakly that it remained
without effect — that which had worked since the days
of ancient and holy human evolution right up to the time of
the burning of the temple. And if our Goetheanum could have
been finally completed, then once again, as we entered from
the West, our glance would have fallen on that statue which
would have challenged the human being to know himself as a
cosmic being placed between the forces of Lucifer and the
forces of Ahriman with the inward, divinely sustained
equilibrium of his being. And when our glance fell on the
forms of the pillars, the architraves, they spoke a language
that was a continuation of what was expressed from the
platform in the ideas which worked as though interpreting the
spirit. The words continued to resound along the sculpted
forms. And up above, in the dome, were scenes to be seen,
scenes which brought human evolution closer to spiritual
sight. In this Goetheanum there was indeed, for those who had
a feeling for it, a memory of the temple at Ephesus.
But that
memory grew terribly painful when the burning torch was
applied to this very Goetheanum in a manner that was not at
all dissimilar to ancient times, not at all dissimilar
especially as regards the moment of evolution in which the
Goetheanum was, of itself, to have become the bearer of a
renewal of spiritual life.
My dear
friends, our pain was profound. Our pain was inexpressible.
But we formed the resolve to continue our work for the
spiritual world unhindered by the most sorrowful and most
tragic event that could possibly have come upon us. For in
our heart of hearts we could say that in the flames rising up
from Ephesus was written the envy of the gods, at a time when
human beings still had to follow rather more without freedom
the will of good or evil gods.
In our day
human beings are organized more towards freedom. And a year
ago, in the night of New Year's Eve, we saw before us the
devouring flames. The red blaze shot skywards. Dark blueish,
reddish-yellow lines of flame curled through the seething sea
of fire, generated by the metal instruments contained in the
Goetheanum, a gigantic sea of flame containing the most
varied shades and colours. And gazing into this sea of flame
with the coloured lines darting hither and thither one could
not but read words which spoke to the pain in one's soul: the
envy of human beings.
Thus what
speaks from epoch to epoch in human evolution comes together,
link by link, even in the greatest of misfortunes. An
unbroken thread runs from the words that give expression to
the greatest misfortune at a time when human beings still
looked up to the gods without freedom, a time when they ought
to have been making themselves free of this unfreedom. An
unbroken thread of spiritual evolution runs from that
misfortune which bore, inscribed in the flames, the words
about the envy of the gods. This unbroken thread runs right
through to our own misfortune in a time when human beings
ought to be finding the strength for freedom, a misfortune in
which the flames bore the incription: the envy of human
beings. In Ephesus the statue of the goddess; here in the
Goetheanum the statue of the human being, the statue of the
representative of man, Christ Jesus, into whom, identifying
ourselves with him, in all humility, we thought to merge in
knowledge, just as in olden times, in their own way, no
longer quite comprehensible to mankind today, the pupils of
Ephesus merged into Diana of Ephesus.
We do not
lessen our pain by viewing in the light of history what took
place on New Year's Eve last year. When I was permitted to
stand for the last time on that platform that had been set up
in harmony with the whole of the building, the intention had
been to guide the eyes of the listeners, to guide the eyes of
their souls towards the ascent from earthly realms into
starry realms that express the will and the wisdom, the light
of the spiritual cosmos. Many of the spirits who taught their
pupils in the Middle Ages in the manner described just now
stood, I know, as godparents at that moment. And an hour
after the last word had been spoken I was called to the
burning Goetheanum. We spent the night of New Year's Eve last
year watching the Goetheanum burning.
The mere
utterance of these words, dear friends, conjures up an
inexpressible response in all our hearts, in all our souls.
When something like this has swept across a hallowed place in
human evolution, there have always been a few who have vowed
to work on in the spirit devoted to what had once been
physical even though whatever it had been was no longer
present. And gathered now as we are on the anniversary of
that misfortune of the Goetheanum, let us be aware that our
souls will be living in the proper mood for this our
gathering if we all vow to carry on in spirit through this
wave of progress in human evolution that which was present in
physical form, as a physical image and a physical shape in
the Goetheanum, visible to our physical eyes, before being
snatched away from our physical perception by a
Herostratos-deed. Our pain attaches itself to the old
Goetheanum. We shall only become worthy of having been
permitted to build that Goetheanum if today in remembering it
we vow, before whatever is best and most divine in each one
of our souls, to keep faith with the spiritual impulses that
had been given an outer form in that Goetheanum. It was
possible for this Goetheanum to be taken from us. The Spirit
of this Goetheanum, if our will is truly upright and honest,
cannot be taken from us. And least of all will it be taken
from us if at this solemn and festive hour, separated by so
short a time from the moment a year ago when the flames leapt
up from our beloved Goetheanum, if at this moment we not only
feel the pain anew but also vow out of this pain to keep
faith with that Spirit for whom, over ten long years, we were
permitted to build this abode.
Then, my dear
friends, when this inner vow flows from our heart in all
honesty and uprightness, when we can transform the pain and
suffering into the impulse for doing deeds, then shall we
transform the sorrowful event into a blessing. The pain
cannot diminish because of this, but it behoves us to find
out of this very pain the incentive to act, the incentive to
do deeds in the spirit.
And so, my
dear friends, let us look back to the terrible flames of fire
which filled us with such inexpressible sorrow. But let us
also, in making that vow before whatever forces are the best
and most divine in each of us, feel the holy flame in our
hearts, the flame which is to enlighten and warm that which
was willed in the Goetheanum, by bearing this will onwards
through the waves of progress in human evolution. So now,
more profoundly, we repeat those words which I was permitted
to speak over there, a year ago almost at this very moment. I
said, in essence: We are living on the eve of a new year, let
us live towards a new cosmic year. If only the Goetheanum
still stood amongst us, we could renew this exhortation at
this moment! It no longer stands amongst us. Yet I believe
that just because it no longer stands amongst us we are
permitted, on this eve of another new year, to renew this
exhortation with a force increased many times over. Let us
bear the Soul of the Goetheanum over into the new cosmic
year, and let us endeavour to build in the new Goetheanum a
worthy monument to the body of the old Goetheanum, a worthy
memorial!
My dear
friends, may this link our hearts to the old Goetheanum which
we had to consign to the elements. May it link our hearts
also to the Spirit, to the Soul of this Goetheanum. With this
vow before whatever is best within our being we want to live
on not only into the new year. In strength of deed, bearing
the spirit, leading the soul we want to live on into the new
cosmic year.
My dear
friends, you greeted me this evening by standing in memory of
the old Goetheanum. You are living in the memory of this old
Goetheanum. Let us stand once more as a sign that we vow to
work on in the Spirit of the Goetheanum with whatever best
forces we can find in the image of our inner human being.
Indeed, so be it. Amen.
Thus let us
continue, my dear friends, as long as we are able, in
accordance with the will that unites our human souls with the
souls of the gods with whom we wish to keep faith in the
spirit, in the spirit out of which we sought this faith with
them at a certain moment in our lives, at that moment when we
sought the spiritual wisdom of the Goetheanum. Let us
understand how to keep this faith.
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