LECTURE THREE
MUNICH —
May 8, 1907
A DAY OF REMEMBRANCE SUCH
as we have today
[See Note 1]
means much to those who belong to the theosophical movement, who feel
that they belong to a spiritual movement. It means something entirely
different from a day of remembrance for others, for those departed human
beings who were firmly anchored in our materialistic culture. Such a day
for us is also a day of gathering together; for what would the teachings
of Theosophy be if they did not enter into every fiber of our hearts and
there enrich our innermost life of feeling? If a soul has been separated
from its physical body, that means only that a person's inner being has
entered into a different relationship to us. It is just such a relationship
to the founder of the theosophical movement that we would like to
especially enliven on this day. We want to be filled with a feeling
for our connectedness
with the founder of our movement. We want to become fully conscious
that thoughts and feelings are invisible powers in our soul, that they
are facts. Feelings are living forces. If we today unite all our thoughts
with what is included in the name “Helena Petrovna Blavatsky,”
if we are united with the spirit who left her earthly sheaths behind
on May 8, 1891, then our feelings and thoughts are real forces and create
a real, spiritual bridge to another form of existence. Another world
finds access to our souls across this bridge. For human beings who see,
such thoughts and feelings are really living rays, rays of spiritual
light that shoot forth from a human being, and are then united in a
point that meets with the spiritual being. Such a festive moment is
a reality. When our soul, dwelling in our body, wants to work on the
physical plane, then it must form a body for itself: it must build and
form matter and forces in such a way that it can express itself through
them. If the matter and forces did not fit together then this soul could
no longer live its life on the physical plane. Just as it is here on
the physical plane, so it is also on the higher planes for spiritual
beings. If we want to understand correctly Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
then we must realize that all of her efforts are bound up with the proper
progress of the theosophical movement. And so it has been since her
soul freed itself from her physical body. Even now she is working as
a living being within the Theosophical Society. If she is to be able
to work then matter and forces must be at her disposal. From where could
they be better taken than from the souls of those who understand her
being within the theosophical movement. As our souls take hold of matter
and forces on the physical plane, so also does such a being take hold
of the matter and forces in human souls in order to work through them.
If those people who are members of the theosophical movement were not
willing to place themselves at the disposal of this being, then she
could not find expression on the physical plane. We ourselves must create
a place in our souls for reverence, love, and devotion, thus creating
the forces through which Helena Petrovna Blavatsky can work, just as
our soul works trough our bodies of flesh. We must become aware that
we are truly creating something when, in this moment, we are loving
and receptive. It is true that all the love and devotion that today
streams up to the soul of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky are powerful forces
that are called upon to connect with her.
We must correctly understand
what this personality signifies within our cultural life. The nineteenth
century will one day be described as the materialistic century in the
history of humankind. The people of the twentieth century cannot really
imagine how deeply the nineteenth century was entangled in materialism.
Only later when people have again become spiritual will that be possible.
Everything, even the religious life, was permeated by materialism. Anyone
who can look upon human evolution from higher planes knows that in the
forties of the nineteenth century there was an extreme low point in
the spiritual life. Science, philosophy, and religion were in the grip
of materialism. It was incumbent upon the leaders of humankind gradually
to allow a stream of spiritual life to flow into humanity. It is most
telling that, within the widest circumference of spiritual life in
Occidental culture, no one was found as suitable as Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky to
guide the stream of spiritual life into the world, the stream that should
refresh humankind and begin to pull it out of materialism. In the light
of this one fact, the impact of all the attacks against her swirling
around in the world today fade away. For, among many other things, the
Theosophical Society must teach us the feeling of positivity. We must
acquire an attitude that seeks, above all, to see what speaks of greatness
in a human being. Then, in comparison to this greatness, all the little
faults that incite criticism must fade away. Just as with other great
personalities many things that were seen by their contemporaries with
critical eyes have disappeared, so too will all these things fall away
from her. But the great things she has accomplished will remain.
Let us learn to regard
the mistakes of human beings as their own affair and the accomplishments
of human beings as something that concerns all of humankind. People's
errors belong to their karma; their deeds concern humanity. Let us learn
not to be troubled by people's mistakes; they themselves must atone
for them. Let us rather be thankful for their accomplishments, for the
entire evolution of humanity lives from them.
This year's White
Lotus Day, a day of remembrance for souls who have struggled free from
the body and lift their experiences in another form up into the heights
like a lotus flower, is the first day of this kind that we are not
celebrating in community with Henry Steel Olcott, Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky's associate.
He, too, has left the physical plane, he who stood there as the great
organizer, as the form-giving power. [Here follows an indecipherable
sentence.] To him we direct our grateful, revering, and love-filled
thoughts; these thoughts will flow into the spiritual world and we
ourselves will thereby be strengthened. We should continue the celebration
on the other days of the year as we send out our thoughts as rays of light,
as we apply the strength we have received to the work that we call the
theosophical movement. We will only work as they would if we are devoted
to the spiritual life in an entirely undogmatic, nonsectarian way. Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky did not ask for blind faith. What can be asked of her
followers is that they let themselves be stimulated by her spirituality.
There is a spring of spiritual power in what Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
left to the physical plane, a spring that will be a blessing to us if
we let it influence us in a living way. The letters on the page can
stimulate us, but the spirit must become alive within. One thing that
can be said of the writings of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky is this: Only
someone who does not understand them can underestimate them. But someone
who finds the key to what is great in these works will come to admire
her more and more. That is what is significant about these works —
the more one penetrates them the more one admires them. It is not the
case that there are no mistakes to be found in them. But those who really
take hold of life know, if they strive to evermore penetrate these works,
that what is therein expressed could only have come from the great
spiritual beings who are now guiding world evolution. This is how we
must read
Isis Unveiled,
[See Note 2]
a book containing truths
which, although sometimes caricatured like a beautiful face seen in
a distorting mirror, are truly great.
A person who would merely
like to speak out of a critical spirit might perhaps say: It would have
been better not to give any such distortion. But anyone seeing matters
in the proper light will say: If someone places their weak spiritual
forces at the disposal of spiritual powers who wish to reveal themselves,
and knows that these forces will produce only a distorted picture but
that there is no one else who could do it any better, then that person,
through their devotion, is making a great sacrifice for the world. All
renderings of the great truths are distortions. If someone wanted to
wait until the whole truth could be manifested, then they would have
a long wait. Selfless are those who devote themselves to the spiritual
world saying: It doesn't matter if people tear me apart, I must present
the truth as I can. This sacrifice is much greater than a moral sacrifice,
this noble sacrifice of the intellect — an expression so often
misused by a wrong-headed conception of religion — it signifies
the yielding up of the intellect for instreaming, spiritual truth. If
we are unwilling to offer up our intellect then we cannot serve the
truth. When we look toward Helena Petrovna Blavatsky with gratitude,
we do so above all because she is a martyr in the sense just described,
a martyr among the great martyrs for the truth. This is how we consider
her when we gladly and willingly regard her as a model in the Theosophical
Society. Therefore, when I speak about regions of the spirit inaccessible
to her it will not profane this day.
I will speak about spiritual
streams in the world that Helena Petrovna Blavatsky least understood
on the physical plane. We serve her best by placing ourselves in the
service of that to which she could find no access. She would much prefer
to have followers rather than worshipers. Although much of what I say
may sound opposed to her, nevertheless we know that we are acting according
to her wishes; by taking this liberty we esteem her the most.
Our transition now to the
Apocalypse is not sought after, not forced. For if we wish to understand
more deeply the world mission of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, then we
must imagine evolution as consisting of two streams. Eighteen forty-one
was the low point of humanity's spiritual life. The opponents of spiritual
life had, in 1841, the strongest point of attack in the evolution of
humankind.
[See Note 3]
They did the groundwork necessary
to prepare for many of the things described in the Apocalypse as prophetic
visions of the future. What is represented by the beast with the horns
of the ram and the number 666, the beast with the seven heads and so
forth — that is prepared by the powers who, in 1841, found their
moment for attacking the evolution of humankind. Those elemental beings
who, at that time, found suitable soil, those powers have taken possession
of a large part of humanity and, from that position, are exerting their
influence. Otherwise, the adversarial powers that find expression in
the two beasts would not reside in humanity pulling it down. Against
this downward pull there is another movement drawing us upward. What
is accomplished today for this upward movement is a preparation for all
those who are to be sealed, who enter the stream of spiritual evolution.
This stream found an instrument precisely in Helena Petrovna Blavatsky.
We do not understand our present age if we do not recognize the deep
necessity for this spiritual stream. We stand now in the fifth subrace
of the fifth root race and are living toward the sixth and seventh subrace,
then the sixth ground-race. What does it mean to say that we are living
toward these races?
[See Note 4]
It means that an understanding
of Christ is contained in the sixth epoch — be it in the sixth
epoch of the sixth subrace prophetically announced, or the sixth root
race — for the human being who wants it.
At that time there will
be human beings who are Christ filled, who have been sealed; in the
ages of future spirituality the opening up, the breaking of the seals
of human souls will take place. That the five wise virgins have oil
burning in their lamps, that the bridegroom finds illuminated souls,
signifies that a portion of humanity will have revealed to it the mystery
that is still today closed to humankind. The book with the seven seals
will be deciphered for a portion of humankind. The writer of the
Apocalypse, John, wants through signs to point to this time, wants to
proclaim prophetically this age. In one sentence we read: “And
a great sign appeared in heaven ...”
(Rev. 12:1)
That means we are dealing in the Apocalypse
with signs representing the great phases of the evolution of humanity.
We must then decipher these signs. We remember that our present fifth
root race was preceded by the Atlantean race, which was destroyed by
a flood. What will destroy the fifth race? The fifth race has a special
task: the development of egotism. This egotism will, at the same time,
create what causes the downfall of the fifth root race. A small part
of humankind will live toward the sixth main race; a larger part will
not yet have found the light within. Because egotism is the fundamental
power in the soul, the war of all against all will rage within this
larger part of humanity. As the Lemurian race found its end through
the power of fire, the Atlantean through water, so will the fifth race
find its destruction in conflict between selfish, egoistic powers in
the war of all against all. This line of evolution will descend deeper
and deeper; when it arrives at the bottom everyone will rage against
everyone else. A small part of humankind will escape this, just as a
small part escaped during the destruction of the Atlantean race. It
is up to every individual to find a connection to the spiritual life
in order to be one of those to go over into the sixth root race. Mighty
revolutions stand before humankind; they are described in the
Apocalypse.
First, seven letters
to seven communities are placed before us. If human beings are to find
the path to that great point in time, they must have something to hang
on to, something that enables them to ennoble the seven sheaths of their
human constitution, so that they are prepared when the time comes. There
are places on the earth where, through religious exercises, the main
emphasis is on the development of the physical body. In other places
the emphasis is on the development of the etheric body. In other locations
the emphasis is on the development of the astral body, or the I. There
will also be more and more places where special attention will be given
to the development of manas, or budhi, or atma.
[See Note 5]
We would not believe in reincarnation in the proper sense unless we
would say: If a person has once been born in a location where the primary
emphasis is on the physical body, then, another time, he or she would
be born in a place where more attention was paid to the other bodies,
and so forth.
Seven letters are directed
to seven separate geographical regions where particular emphasis is
placed on one of the seven parts of the human being. The first letter
is directed to the Ephesians. They put great stock in the development
of the physical body. The Phrygians in Smyrna emphasized the etheric
body; in Pergamon people worked especially on the astral body.
We want to consider why
seven geographical regions signify special kinds of development for
humankind in relation to the seven members of the human being. Let us
assume that someone lives in a region where the physical body is especially
developed; if that person then neglects the physical body, it then becomes
a caricature of what it might have become. If what is supposed to be
brought to a certain perfection is not developed, then something arises
inwardly that makes such a person receptive to the evil manifestations
in the evolution of humankind.
The first letter is directed
to the community in Ephesus, the place consecrated to Diana.
[See Note 6]
It emphasizes the beautiful formation of the human body. Where does
the development of the physical body lead? We can become increasingly
clear about this if we realize that the physical body must be evermore
purified, and must become more and more an expression of the etheric
body. The etheric body must itself become an expression of the astral
body, which in turn should become an expression of the I.
Numbers played a large
role in the ancient Pythagorean schools. Let us remember that in the
world of devachan, everything is ordered according to measure and number.
Of course, this is the case with everything. What would it mean to seek
the laws of nature, if they did not already exist? We weigh and measure
the bodies of the world as we do substances on a smaller scale. We must
put this fact together with another. We can think of this space as filled
with the “sound forms” of a sublime musical composition,
for example, the sounds of the “Good Friday Spell” from
Wagner's opera Parzifal. That is the higher, soul form for what a physicist
would express in numbers for the frequency of the sound vibrations.
The spirit of these vibrations of the music flows through our souls.
If we think of the numbers being heard by the ear of the spirit, then
we have the music of the spheres. If a physicist would record in numbers
the vibrations in the air he or she would record the magic of “Good
Friday” just as little as a mathematician describes Pythagorian
ideas in measure and number. The numbers express only the harmonies.
When Pythagoreans wanted to express the four members of the human being,
they expressed the harmony in the ratio: 1:3:7:12. That signifies the
sound wherein the four numbers harmonize in the same way as do the four
parts of the human being. The three sounds: I, the sound of the sun;
II, — the sound of the moon; III, the sound of the earth —
resound into the astral body.
Physical body : 12 Ephesus
Etheric body : 7 Smyrna
Astral body : 3 Pergamon
I : 1
Spirit self
Life spirit
Spiritualized human being
What comes forth from
the earth, sun, and moon sound together in our astral body. But what
comes forth from the planets sounds in our etheric body. There is a
sevenfold influence from the planets on the etheric body, as there is
from the seven musical intervals: the unison interval, major second,
major third, perfect fourth, perfect fifth, major sixth, major seventh
— Saturn, Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus. These seven
planets resound into our etheric body. There are twelve influences from
the signs of the zodiac that resound into our physical body. The seer
experiences twelve fundamental tones on the devachanic plane. They
influence our physical body. Everything in the I, astral body, etheric
body, and in the physical body resounds in tones. One tone resounds in the
I, three tones in the astral body, seven tones in the etheric body and
twelve tones in the physical body. Altogether this results in harmony
or disharmony.
There is an expression
in occultism: the twelve goes into the seven, which means that the physical
body is constantly becoming more like the etheric body. If the physical
body sounds right then we can hear the seven tones of the stars through
the twelve tones. “Become such that the twelve becomes the seven,
that the seven stars appear” is said to the Ephesians, because
with them the physical body is especially developed. They should turn
to look at the seven stars. We know that the development of Christianity
means a transition from the old forms of community based on blood ties
to spiritual love, that the spiritual will take over from the flesh.
Those who tell us that we should endeavor, above all, to insure that
the sensual, the elemental gets its due — those people were called
the Nicolaitans: They wanted to remain rooted in the material forces
of the blood; hence, the warning concerning the Nicolaitans.
[See Note 7]
They are the ones who will bring about the downfall.
Opposing them are those
who want to overcome material evolution, who want spiritual life. The
letter closes with the symbol of the tree of life: “He who has
an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who
conquers I will give some of the hidden manna ...”
(Rev. 2:17)
The second letter is
directed to the community that is supposed to be most concerned with
the cultivation
of the etheric body. The etheric body must gradually be developed into
life spirit. The human being now goes through birth and death, but later
this etheric body will become life spirit. Then it will have overcome
death. In the Sermon on the Mount we read: “Blessed are those
who pray for spirit, for they find through themselves the Kingdom of
Heaven” (compare:
Matt. 5:3)
Those who pray for spirit are blessed;
that means that soul permeates their life. Just as the physical body
is developed by the Ephesians, so, too, in the second community, is
the etheric body developed into a body of soul. When they strive for
this blessing they are called “beggars for spirit”; they
pray for a blessing through the enlivening of the etheric body. This
is indicated by the words: “Be faithful unto death and I will
give you the crown of life.” With these words the development
of the etheric body is clearly expressed.
The Apocalypse is one
of the greatest spiritual documents. There are hardly any great spiritual
truths whose significance is not to be found there. The study of the
Apocalypse is not without its connections to theosophical evolution.
By understanding such
a work we allow ourselves to be stimulated by the spirit who spoke through
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. What the Theosophical Society seeks to achieve
must strike us like a trumpet proclamation sent to humankind. The more
we understand the Apocalypse the more we understand the task of our
movement.
Notes:
Note 1.
Day of remembrance of Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky (born 1831) who died on May 8, 1891. In 1875
with Henry Steel Olcott (1832 – 1907) she founded the Theosophical
Society.
Note 2.
Isis Unveiled: A Master-Key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science and Theology,
2 vols. (New York: J.W. Bouton, 1877).
Note 3.
Compare Rudolf Steiner's
lecture of October 14, 1917 in
The Fall of the Spirits of Darkness
(GA 177) (Forthcoming from Rudolf Steiner Press).
Note 4.
Steiner uses the old theosophical
term “root race” to designate the seven epochs of earth
evolution: the Polarian, the Hyperborean, the Lemurian, the Atlantean,
Post-Atlantean and the last two, the sixth and seventh epochs. Each
of these epochs consists of seven “subraces” It should
be noted that Steiner used the word “race” only in the
early, the theosophical, period of his work. Furthermore, his use
of the word has little in common with the word's use today.
On June 20, 1908 he said, “... we speak of ages of civilization,
in contradistinction to races. All that is connected with this idea
of race is still the remains of the epoch preceding our own, namely,
the Atlantean. We are now living in the age of cultural epochs.
Atlantis was the age in which seven great races developed one after
another. Of course, the fruits of this race development extend into
our epoch, and for this reason races are still spoken of today,
but they are really mixtures and are quite unlike those distinct
races of the Atlantean epoch. Today the idea of civilization has
already superseded the idea of race”
(The Apocalypse of St. John,
London: The Anthroposophical Publishing Co., 1958, 61).
Note 5.
Characterized by Rudolf Steiner in his book
Theosophy.
as Spirit-self, Life-spirit,
and Spirit-Man.
Note 6.
Ancient Roman goddess of
the forest, protector of wilderness and women. She was identified
with the Greek goddess Artemis.
Note 7.
The Nicolaitans mentioned in chapter 2 of the
Book of Revelation
are pagan Christians
from Pergamon. They disregarded the Old Testament proscriptions
concerning the consumption of food sacrificed to idols and certain
marital unions characterized as sexually immoral.
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