LECTURE 4.
We have seen how out of the
Mysteries has grown that which has bound the consciousness of
man so closely to the universe that this bond found expression
in the annual round of festivals, and we have seen especially
how the Festival of Easter has evolved out of the principle of
Initiation. From all that has been said, you must have been
struck by the great importance of the part played by the
Mysteries in the development of mankind.
Everything spiritual that passed through the world in ancient
times, by which men were able to develop, did in fact have its
rise out of the whole life and content of the Mysteries
(Mysterienwesen).
Making use of a modern expression, one might
say: the Mysteries had a great deal of power in respect of the
guidance of all spiritual life.
Now
humanity was ordained from the beginning to develop freedom.
That this might develop, it was necessary that the life
of the Mysteries should decline, so for a long time men were
not so closely associated with the powerful guidance coming
from the Mysteries and were left more to themselves.
It
is very certain we cannot yet say that the time has come when
men have attained true inner freedom, that they are now
sufficiently ripe to pass on to the next age following the one
in which freedom has been gained. Truly we are unable to say
this. All the same, there are a sufficient number who have gone
through incarnations in which the power of the Mysteries was
less apparent than formerly; and if to-day the seed of their
passage through these incarnations has not yet germinated,
still it is there — it is implanted in the souls of men.
And as an age is now approaching which will be again an age of
greater spirituality, men must begin to develop what in their
present state of dullness they have not yet developed. Without
appreciation, without reverence and true knowledge, a spiritual
life is really not possible. We make a right use of these
festival seasons when we employ them to develop, and to some
small extent to implant in our souls, this feeling of
appreciation and reverence for what is spiritual that has
evolved in the course of human history; when we endeavour to
learn as intimately as possible how and why external historical
events point to spiritual facts, and carry over what is
spiritual from one age into another. This is mainly possible
because men come again and again into earthly existence in
recurring earthly lives, and therefore carry with them into
later epochs what they had experienced in earlier ones. Men are
the most important factors in the further development of human
history. In every age they live in a definite surrounding or
atmosphere
(Umgebung),
and one of the most important of these
was that of the Mysteries. Thus one of the most important
agents in human progress is the power to carry over what was
experienced in the Mysteries and to live this again, whether it
be in the Mysteries themselves, where it works into humanity at
large, or simply as cognition or knowledge. To-day
this must be in some form of conscious knowledge
(Erkennen),
for the true life of the Mysteries
(Mysterienwesen)
has withdrawn more or less from the external life of to-day and
must come forth into it again.
We
are here constrained to say: It is indeed the case that if that
impulse which went forth from the Christmas session here at the
Gœtheanum really enters into the life of the
Anthroposophical Society, this society, by pressing onwards to
ever greater depths of knowledge, can provide the foundation of
a further “living content of the Mysteries”
(Mysterienwesen).
This must be nurtured consciously within the
Anthroposophical Society. For this society has experienced an
event that can be utilized in evolution in the same way as a
similar event was once utilized: the burning of the temple at
Ephesus. Both there and here a great wrong lies at the root of
what was done. Things present, however, different aspects on
different levels, and what at one level is a dreadful wrong,
may be used in accordance with human freedom in such a way that
real human progress can be achieved through it.
If
we are to enter into such matters with understanding we
must grasp them, as I have already said, in as intimate a way
as possible. We must study the special way in which the
spiritual things of the world were cultivated in the
Mysteries. I indicated in the last lecture how out of the
spiritual observation of the constellations of the sun and
moon, as practised in the Mysteries, the fixing of the annual
festival of Easter was determined; further, that the other
planets were regarded from the point of view of the moon. I
said that according to what was experienced in the observation
of the other planets a man was guided at his descent from
pre-earthly to earthly existence, that his luminous etheric
body was constructed in accordance with what was then seen.
Now
if anyone desires to gain some comprehension of how through the
forces of the moon — or rather through the spiritual
observations by the moon — these etheric forces are
transmitted to man, this can be done, as we have tried to do,
from observation of the cosmos itself, where it is inscribed,
where it exists as fact.
But
it is most important that the human interest, which throughout
the ages has been felt in these truths, should be permitted to
influence the soul. Never did the souls and minds of men take
so much interest in the descent of the soul from pre-earthly
existence, never was so intimate an interest felt in the last
stage of this descent, in man's clothing of himself with the
etheric body, as in the Mysteries of Ephesus.
In
the Mysteries of Ephesus the whole ritual practised by the
goddess of Ephesus, who is named esoterically Artemis, was
really directed towards participating in the spiritual blending
and interweaving of life in the ether of the universe —
in the cosmic ether.
We
can venture to say that, when those taking part in the Mystery
of Ephesus approached the image of the goddess, an enhancement
of perception occurred which amounted to hearing, and what was
heard might be given in the words of the goddess somewhat as
follows: “I rejoice in all that is fruitful within the
wide-spreading universal ether.” This expression of
inward joy on the part of the goddess exercised a very profound
influence on all growing, blossoming life in the universal
ether. And feelings inwardly connected with this springing life
breathed like a magic sigh through the spiritual atmosphere of
the sacred precincts of the temple of Ephesus.
All
the arrangements at this centre of the Mysteries were so
directed as to enable people to say: Nowhere but at Ephesus is
there so close a union with the growth of living plants, with
this sprouting and springing of the being of plants from the
earth. This led to the fact that within those Mysteries
especially clear instructions were given concerning those
secrets of the moon of which I spoke in the last lecture, and
which were for the special purpose of bringing an understanding
of such things to the souls of those who were adherents of the
Ephesian Mysteries.
To
feel himself as a light-form was an individual experience to
each of these Ephesian pupils and initiates, for it was a real
and living fact to them that their light-forms came to them
through the moon. The instruction they received was somewhat as
follows:
Those able to let the instructions they received in the places
of consecration work on them were entirely taken up with this
self-construction out of Sunlight that came to them, though
changed, by way of the moon. They then heard as if coming to
them from the sun the tones: J O A.
They knew that these tones, J O A, stimulated their ego and
their astral body. J O equalled the I (ego) and astral body,
and they perceived the approach of the Etheric-Light-Body in
the A, forming together J O A. When these tones vibrated within
the pupil for initiation he was conscious of his ego, of his
astral body and etheric body.
Then it was as if there rang forth from the earth (for the man
was now entered into cosmic conditions) something which
enforced the J O A, making of it eh v,
JehOvA. It was the forces of the earth
that revealed themselves in the eh v.
The
pupil now felt his whole human being in the
JehOvA. He felt a premonition of the
physical body as it was first on earth in the consonants which
accompanied the vocalization, which in the J O A
indicated the ego, the astral body, and the etheric body. It
was the experiencing of himself in the
JehOvA that enabled the pupil of the
Ephesian Mysteries to experience the final steps in his descent
from the spiritual world. At the same time the consciousness of
the J O A was such that he felt himself to be in the light,
that he was this tone, J O A. He was then a Man: a resounding
(Klingendes)
ego, a resounding astral body, within the
luminous, shining etheric body. Man was then tone in light.
This is the cosmic man.
Thus man is capable of accepting
(aufzunehmen)
that which he
sees out in the cosmos, in the same way as here on earth he
accepts the things he sees with his eyes when he looks out to
his physical surroundings on the earth. The pupil of the
Ephesian Mysteries really felt when he bore the J O A within
him as if transported to the Moon-sphere. He shared in what was
observed from the point of view of the moon. At that time the
human being was still a universal being
(Mensch im allgemeinen).
It first became man and woman at its descent to
earth. But man then felt he was transported to the realms of
pre-earthly existence, though aware of the approach of what was
earthly. This transporting of themselves into the Moon-sphere
was, to the Ephesian pupils, an act of the greatest possible
intimacy. They then bore within their hearts and within their
souls all the things they had experienced and which
sounded in their ears somewhat as follows:
Thou Being, offspring of worlds, who in thy Light-form art
strengthened by the Sun under the Moon's control,
Thou art endowed by Mars with his creative resonance, with
Mercury's swinging movement of thy limbs ;
Enlightened by the rays of Jupiter's wisdom, And by the
love-bearing beauty of Venus,
And Saturn's age-old spiritual inwardness consecrates thee to
life in space, to growth in time!
Consciousness of this filled each pupil of Ephesus. He realised
that this consciousness which pulsated through him was of the
greatest consequence to his humanity.
One
can say: this was something which enabled a pupil belonging to
the Ephesian Mysteries to feel himself most truly man. To put
it trivially — when these words sounded in his ears he
felt a consciousness dawn in him that connected him, through
the powers of his etheric body, with the whole planetary
system:
Weltentsprossenes Wesen, du in Lichtgestalt,
Von der Sonne erkraftet in der Mondgewalt,
Dich beschenket des Mars erschaffendes Klingen
Und Merkurs gliedbewegendes Schwingen,
Dich erleuchtet Jupiters erstrahlende Weisheit
Und der Venus liebetragende Schönheit,
Dass Saturns weltenalte Geist-Innigkeit
Dich dem Raumessein und Zeitenwerden weihe!
This is expressed most pregnantly in the following words spoken
to the etheric body by the universe:
“Weltentsprossenes Wesen, du in Lichtgestalt, Von der
Sonne erkraftet in der Mondgewalt.”
The
man now consciously felt himself within the power of the
moonlight.
“Dich beschenket des Mars erschaffendes Klingen Und
Merkurs gliedbewegendes Schwingen.”
Here the resonance, which has something creative in it, comes
to him from Mars. And that which imparts power to his limbs,
that enables him to become a being of movement, comes
from Mercury:
“Und Merkurs gliedbewegendes Schwingen.”
From Jupiter illumination comes to him:
“Dich erleuchtet Jupiters erstrahlende
Weisheit.”
And
from Venus there comes:
“Und der Venus liebetragende
Schönheit.”
In
order that Saturn can gather together all that completes man
inwardly and outwardly, preparing him for his descent to earth,
clothing him with his physical body and enabling this
physically clothed being, who bears God within him, to carry on
his life on earth:
Dass Saturns weltenalte Geist-Innigkeit
Dich dem Raumessein und Zeitenwerden weihe!
From all I have described you can gather that the spiritual
life at Ephesus was inwardly bright and full of colour. And
this inwardly bright and colourful life contained
precisely all that is summed up in the thoughts of Easter, all
that the consciousness of man was able to grasp as his own
intrinsic worth in the whole cosmos, the whole universe.
Many of those wanderers to whom I alluded in the last lecture,
who passed from Mystery to Mystery in order that they might
gather the full sum of those influences that came from the
Mysteries — many of these wanderers have given us the
assurance: that nowhere had the Sphere-harmonies resounded so
clearly, so inwardly, as they sounded at Ephesus, because of
the perception they had of things as seen from the aspect of
the moon. In no other place had the astral light of the world
appeared so luminous as when perceived in the light of the sun
flooded by the softly glimmering light of the moon — and
spiritualized by this astral light as man is ensouled by
it — in no other place had they been able to perceive
this, or at least not with the same joyousness and inward
artistic acceptance.
All
this was associated with the temple which later went up in
flames through criminal or crazy folly. Initiates of these
Ephesian Mysteries were incarnated, as I informed you at the
Christmas meeting, in Aristotle and Alexander the Great. These
individuals came in touch at that time with what could still be
traced of the Mysteries of Samothrace.
Now
an external, apparently chance event is sometimes of
great importance in the evolution of the world. Some
considerable time ago I informed you that the time of the
burning of the temple at Ephesus coincided with the birth of
Alexander the Great. But other things also took place through
this burning of the temple. Oh, how manifold and tremendous are
the things that have happened in the course of centuries to
those who belonged to this Temple! How much of spiritual light
and wisdom has passed through these Temple Halls! And all that
passed within these halls was recorded in the world-ether while
the flames burst forth from out the Temple. So that one can
say: the continuous Easter festival at Ephesus, enclosed as it
was within the Temple Halls, has been inscribed ever since on
the vast dome of the universe in respect of this dome's
ether-nature, though perhaps in letters that are not
perceptible to all.
And
so has it been with many things. Much of the wisdom of humanity
was in ancient times enclosed within Temple walls. It has
escaped from these walls, has been inscribed on the universal
ether, and henceforth is immediately visible there to
those who have risen to real imaginative knowledge.
This imaginative knowledge is to a certain extent the
interpretation of the secrets of the stars. What once was
Temple-wisdom has been inscribed on the universal ether, and
can thence be read by those possessing Imagination.
This can be put in a different way; yet it is the same in
whatever way it is put. One can say: I go forth into the night,
and gaze on the starry heavens, allowing the impression they
make to sink into me. And if the necessary faculties have been
acquired, that which is contained in the grouping of the
constellations, in the movements of the planets, is
transformed into a mighty script. And when this cosmic script
is read, something emerges from it of a similar kind to what I
described in the last lecture concerning the Secrets of the
Moon. These things can absolutely be read in the script of the
firmament by those to whom the stars are not merely objects for
mathematical calculations but when they are letters in a
cosmic script. Something further might here be added for the
elucidation of this matter.
At
the very time the Mysteries of the Kabiri arose in Samothrace,
and the older Mysteries were declining, something emerged
through the influence of these Kabiri Mysteries which for
Alexander and Aristotle were like a remembrance of the earlier
times they had passed through together in a certain century at
Ephesus. (Samothrace was not a Mystery-establishment of
remembrance, nor was it a place for work where development was
practised; as a matter of fact the life of the Mysteries was in
general decline at the time of Alexander.) In this remembrance
they heard again the sound of the word J O A. Once more there
sounded within them:
Weltentsprossenes Wesen, du in Lichtgestalt,
Von
der Sonne erkraftet in der Mondgewalt,
Dich beschenket des Mars erschaffendes Klingen
Und
Merkurs gliedbewegendes Schwingen,
Dich erleuchtet Jupiters erstrahlende Weisheit
Und
der Venus liebetragende Schönheit,
Dass Saturns weltenalte Geist-Innigkeit
Dich dem Raumessein und Zeitenwerden weihe.
In
this remembrance — in this historical remembrance of
things long past — there lay a certain power for the
creation of something new. From that moment a power went forth
for the creation of something new — a very remarkable new
thing which has attracted very little attention from mankind.
You must try to understand how this new creation which
proceeded from Alexander and Aristotle was really brought
about.
Take some well-known poetic work, or any other work — the
most beautiful you can find — take for instance a German
translation of the “Bhagavad Gita,” Gœthe's
“Faust,” or the “Iphigeneia,” anything
on which you set a high value, and think of its rich and mighty
content, that of Gœthe's “Faust,” for example.
By what means is this rich content communicated to you, my dear
friends? Let us take it that it is communicated to you as is
done in the case of the majority of men: that at some time of
your life you read Gœthe's “Faust.” What came
to you on this occasion on the physical plane? What was on the
paper? Nothing was on the paper but certain combinations of a b
c d e f, etc. These combinations were the only means
by which the mighty content of “Faust” was passed
on to you. When you know the Alphabet there is nothing on the
printed page that is not comprised in its 26 letters. But the
rich content of the “Faust” is conjured from the
paper in a magic way by means of these letters. It is clear to
the eye that the repetition of a b c is wearisome; it is the
most abstract thing imaginable. Yet this abstract thing,
rightly combined, gives you the complete
“Faust”!
And
now, when that cosmic world-tone of the moon was heard again
— the tone in which Aristotle or Alexander were versed
— the meaning of the fire of Ephesus became clear, they
knew how this fire had borne out into the far spaces of the
world-ether the secret of Ephesus — and there now arose
in Aristotle the inspiration to establish
(zu begründen)
the Cosmic-script. Only this world-script
could not be built on the foundation of a b c d e f;
but just as ordinary script was founded on letters, the
world-script was founded on thoughts. In this way letters of
the world-script came into being.
When I write down the following list, the words are just as
abstract as a b c d e:
Being.
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Time.
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Quantity,
that is Number.
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Place.
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Quality,
Attributes.
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To
have (or having).
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Relation.
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To
do (or doing).
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Space.
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To
suffer (or suffering).
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You
have here a few ideas. Learn to accomplish with these ideas
which were first propounded to Alexander by Aristotle —
learn to do with these ideas what you have learnt to do with
abed; you then learn how from Being, Quantity, Quality,
Relation, Space, Time, Place, Having, Doing, Suffering, to read
the Cosmos.
In
the age of abstraction something extraordinary occurred in the
schools of logic. Only suppose, if in certain schools concern
was not with teaching people to read, but with compiling books
in which every possible combinations of a b c d had to be
learnt — a c, a b, b e, and so on — but not so as
to learn by this to make use of the letter in a way that could
bring any rich content to their souls, this would be to do
exactly the same as the world has done to the logic of
Aristotle. In his logic what were called categories were put
forward; they were learnt by heart, but people did not know how
to make use of them. This is similar to learning the a b c by
heart without knowing how to use it.
Reading in the script of the universe can be traced back to
something as simple as the learning of a b c is to the content
of “Faust.”
In
fact, what has been put forward by Anthroposophy, and can
continue to be put forward, is arrived at from these ideas in
the same way as the reading of “Faust” is arrived
at by means of letters. For all the secrets of the physical and
the spiritual world are contained, as a world-alphabet, within
these simple concepts.
You
have to realize that in the course of the world's development
it happened, that as opposed to the earlier direct perception
of which the events at Ephesus were still the most
characteristic example, something arose which had its beginning
at the time of Alexander, and continued to evolve more
especially during the Middle Ages, something most profoundly
hidden and esoteric.
Most profoundly esoteric is the thought living in these ten
simple conceptions. We must learn really to live more and more
in them; we must strive to experience them in our souls, when
these have a richly organized spirit-filled content, as vividly
as we experience the a b c.
Thus we see, how in these ten concepts whose inner illumination
and source of power has once more to be discovered, was
comprised something which like a mighty instinctive revelation
of wisdom endured through thousands of years. And it will one
day come to pass that what seems actually to have been laid
within a grave — that is, the Wisdom of the world —
will once more emerge and find the Light of the world, men will
learn to read in the cosmos once more, and the resurrection of
that which has been kept in concealment during the interval of
human evolution between the two spiritual epochs, will again be
experienced.
Our
purpose, my dear friends, is to reveal to mankind that which
has been hidden. I can therefore say, as on other occasions:
Anthroposophy is a Christmas event, and in all its acts it is
also an Easter event, a resurrection experience that is
connected with a burial. And it is important that we should
feel, especially at this Easter Assembly, the solemn sanctity
— if I may so express it — of our Anthroposophical
aspirations, in that we have some perception of being able to
go to-day to a Spiritual Being who stands near us, perhaps
immediately beyond the threshold, and to Whom we can say: Ah!
at that time humanity was blessed by a divine spiritual
revelation, which shone with exceptional clarity at Ephesus,
but now all that lies buried. How can I again bring forth what
thus lies buried! Yet we can believe that what once has
been can somewhere be found again — can be found in the
grave where it was hidden.
Then a Being will answer us, as on a similar occasion this same
Being answered once before: “That which ye seek is no
longer here, it is in your hearts, if only ye will open them to
receive it in the right way.”
Anthroposophy already dwells in the hearts of men. These men
have only to open their hearts to it in the right way. Then we
shall experience in full sunlight, not in the old-time
instinctive way, our return to that Wisdom which lived in, and
illumined the Mysteries.
These are the things, my dear friends, which I desired to bring
before you at this Easter season. For to fill ourselves with
that which like a sacred breath can inflame the heart of
everyone who holds to Anthroposophy, and can bear us with it
into the spiritual world, is an impulse which is closely
associated with the Christmas Impulse given at Dornach. This
impulse must not remain something that can be thought
out; it cannot stop at intellectuality; it must be an
impulse coming from the heart, not dry or insipid — not
sentimental, but in accordance with its whole nature it must be
a very solemn one.
In
the same way as the flames at Ephesus were used by Aristotle to
fire his heart anew, and after they had streamed up into the
outer ether they had brought to him again the secrets which he
was then able to grasp in their primal significance ... as the
fire at Ephesus could be used in this way, it is laid upon us,
and we shall soon be able to carry out the demand (I say this
in all humility), it is laid upon us to use that which as the
aim and purpose of Anthroposophy was carried up into the ether
along with the flames of the Gœtheanum for the further
carrying out of this purpose.
What is to be the outcome of this, my dear friends? The outcome
is to be that we receive a new impulse from the Gœtheanum.
At the annual commemoration of the sad event which falls at
Christmas time, the time in which this misfortune overtook us,
we must receive a fresh impulse from the Gœtheanum. And
why? Because we should feel what formerly was more or less an
earthly concern, founded and constructed as a thing of earth,
has been borne up by the flames into the wide spaces of the
cosmos. Because this misfortune has come upon us we ought to be
able to say in recognizing the results of this misfortune: We
now realize that we should not have carried this out as a
merely earthly concern
(Erdensache)
but as one appertaining to
the whole far-reaching etheric world in which the Spirit
dwells: then what happened to the Gœtheanum becomes
something that concerns the wide ether in which dwells the
spirit-filled wisdom of the universe. It has been carried out
far into the beyond, and we must fill ourselves with the
impulses of the Gœtheanum that comes to us from out the
cosmos.
Let
us take this as we will, let us take it as an image. But the
image contains a profound truth. And this profound truth can be
expressed in simple words when we say: The activities
(Wirken)
of Anthroposophy have been permeated with an esoteric tendency
since the time of the Christmas impulse, 1923. This esoteric
impulse or tendency exists, for though the earthly part through
the co-operation of physical fire streamed out into space as
astral light ... this impulse works back again into the
Anthroposophical movement if only we are in a position to
receive it.
When we are able to do this we are aware of a most
important factor in all that lives in Anthroposophy. This
important factor or part
(Glied)
is the Easter-feeling
(Osterstimmung),
that Anthroposophical feeling that can never
be persuaded that the spirit can possibly die, but that, when
owing to the world it has to die, it rises eternally anew.
Anthroposophy must hold to the spirit that from eternal
foundations ever rises again.
Let
us take this to our hearts as an Easter thought, an Easter
feeling. We will then take with us from this place of meeting,
when we take our way into other walks of life, something which
will give us courage and power to carry on our work.
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