Supplement to ANTHROPOSOPHICAL MOVEMENT
Vol.
VIII, No. 4.
Thinking
and Willing as Two Poles of the Human Soul-Life
LECTURE
BY RUDOLF STEINER
Given
in Dornach, 15th July, 1921.
[Shorthand
report unrevised by the lecturer. All rights reserved by
Philosophisch-Anthroposophischer Verlag, Dornach. English translation
published by permission of H. Collison, with rights reserved.]
Y
lecture to-day will contain certain truths which will
be of use to us again later, and which will help us in the course of
the next few days to pursue our ideas further and to develop them in
a definite direction. When we turn our attention to the life of the
soul we may say that at the one pole of this soul-life lies the
thought element, at the other pole the will element, and
between these two the element of feeling, that which in
ordinary life we call feeling, qualities of the heart, and so on.
Naturally, however, what actually takes place in the life of the soul
during the waking state is never entirely one-sided; thinking is not
present by itself, nor willing by itself, there is always a
mutual relationship and interplay between them. Let us suppose
that we maintain a completely passive attitude towards life, so
that we can say that our will does not function outwardly at all. We
must nevertheless be aware that if, during such a period of outer
quiescence, we think, an element of will reigns in
the thoughts that we unfold. Will holds sway in the sphere of our
thinking in that we correct one thought with another. Hence even if
we are apparently absorbed in contemplation, in pure thought, a
certain will element prevails, at any rate inwardly. On the other
hand, unless we are actually raving, or given to walking in our
sleep, we cannot be active in our will without allowing our will
impulses to be permeated by thoughts. Thoughts always interpenetrate
our will-activity, so that in this connection we may say: in the life
of the soul the forces of the will are never separated off; they
never exist for themselves alone. But the qualities that are never
completely sundered from one another, that have no separate
existence, may nevertheless be traced back to a different
origin. And in this case the one pole of our soul-life, thinking, has
a completely different origin from our life of will.
Even
if we limit our observation to the affairs of everyday life we shall
find that thinking always bears reference to something that is already
there; it takes certain presuppositions for granted. Thinking
is for the most part reflection. Even when we think ahead, as it
were, when we decide to undertake something which we afterwards
carry out by means of our will, even then experience lies at the back
of such thinking, and we are guided by it. Thus this kind of
thinking also is in a certain sense meditative or reflective.
The
will cannot be influenced by what is already there. This would obviously
entail a perpetual losing of the race. The will can be guided solely by
that which is to come, by what lies in the future. Feeling stands mid-way
between the two. Our thoughts are accompanied by feelings. Thoughts
delight us, repel us. Feeling imbues our will impulses with life, and
stands mid-way between thinking and willing.
Even
in ordinary life there is some indication that this is the case, and so
it is also in the great universe. And in this connection we must say:
that which determines our thinking, that which enables us to think and
creates in us the possibility of thought, all that we owe to our life
before birth, before conception. Fundamentally speaking, the faculty
of thought which man develops in himself is already present in
germ in any little child we may happen to meet. Only, — as you
know from other lectures I have given — the child makes use of
thought as a means of building up his body. ... Particularly
during the first seven years of his life, up to the time of the
change of teeth, the child makes use of thought-forces to guide
him in the building up of his physical body. From then on these
forces gradually emerge as actual thought-forces; but they are present
in man from the moment he enters upon his physical, earthly life.
That
which develops into the forces of will has, in the case of the young
child, very little connection with the power of thought. To an unprejudiced
observation this is obvious. Watch the sprawling movements of a child during
the first weeks of his life and you will certainly say: The child has
first won for himself the power of making these sprawling,
chaotic movements through the fact that his soul and spirit are
clothed from the physical outer world with physical bodily
substance. In this physical bodily substance which we
gradually develop from the time of conception and birth lie the
forces of the will, and the development of child-life consists
really in this, that gradually the will is taken hold of by the
thought-forces which we bring with us through birth into physical
existence. Watch and see how, to begin with, the child moves his limbs
quite meaninglessly, purely out of the activity of the physical body,
and how, little by little, as one might say, thoughts enter into
these movements so that they become imbued with meaning. Thus there
is a pressing, a pushing of thinking into the forces of the will,
forces which live absolutely and complete in the physical covering
which enwraps the human being when he is born, indeed from the moment
of conception. The life of the will is therein contained.
So
that, speaking from a more or less schematic point of view, we might
portray man in some such words as these: Man brings his thought-life
with him when he descends from the spiritual world. He incorporates
his willing life into the bodily substance which is given to him by
his parents. The forces of will which express themselves chaotically
are situated in the body. Here too are to be found the thought-forces
which to begin with serve as regulating forces whose function
it is to permeate the incarnated will in the right way with spirit.
We
become aware of these will forces when we pass through death and enter
into the spiritual world. There, however, they are in the highest degree
ordered and controlled. We carry them with us through the gate of
death into the spiritual life. The thought-forces which we bring with
us out of the super-sensible life into earthly life we lose in the
course of this earthly life.
In
the case of human beings who die prematurely things are somewhat different.
At the moment however we are speaking of normal human beings. Such people,
those for instance who live to be more than fifty years old, have as a rule
already lost the original thought-forces they brought with them from
an earlier life, and they have preserved the directing forces
of the will, which can then be carried over beyond death into the
life upon which we enter when we pass through the gate of death.
One
can certainly take for granted that thought has its own place within each
one of us, although indeed when a man has passed the age of fifty he has
usually lost his power of thinking.
In
a certain sense this is absolutely true to-day in the case of the large
majority of people who take no interest in the things of the spirit. I
suggest that you should one day really start from this point and make a
record of how many fundamentally original thoughts and ideas at the present
time proceed from persons who are more than fifty years old! As a rule the
thoughts of such people can be traced back to their earlier years.
These thoughts have gone on automatically; they were once imprinted
into the body, and the body has gone on automatically in its
turn. The body is indeed a picture of the thought-life, and the
human being, in accordance with the law of inertia, ambles on and on
in the same old habits of thought. Today it is hardly possible
to escape from this ambling on in the same old groove of thought if
one does not, in the course of one's life, absorb thoughts which are
of a spiritual nature, which are similar to those thought-forces in
the midst of which we were placed before our birth. It is an
actual fact that the time is rapidly approaching when old people will
become sheer automata if they do not accustom themselves to
receiving thought-forces coming from the spiritual worlds. Naturally
people can continue to think in a more or less automatic way. It can
appear as though they really were thinking. In reality, however,
unless man is laid hold of by those youthful elements which proceed
from thoughts given to him by Spiritual Science, such thinking is
only an automatic continuation of movement in those organs in which
thoughts have previously been embedded. This taking in of thoughts
arising out of Spiritual Science is in no sense merely theorising,
for such thoughts penetrate into the depths of human life.
Now you
will see that this whole question gains special significance when we
take into account the relationship existing between man and
nature. By the term “Nature” I am now including
everything which surrounds us and works upon our senses,
everything to which we are subjected from waking until sleeping. All
this one can observe in the following way. One can allow to pass
before one's eyes, — I am speaking now of spiritual eyes,
— everything that one sees. We call it the tapestry of the
senses. I will draw it diagrammatically as follows: Here we
have everything that one sees, hears, perceives as warmth, as the
colours of nature, and so on. (I have drawn an eye as a symbol of all
that can be sensed in this way). There is, however, something behind
this tapestry of the senses. The physicist, or people generally who
accept the modern world-conception, say: Behind this tapestry
are atoms, and these atoms whirl round and round, and then — well
then, they just go on whirling. In reality there is no tapestry of the
senses, but somehow or other in the eye, or in the brain, or
somewhere else, these atoms call up the impression of colour, sound,
and so on. Now I would ask you to think a little about this tapestry
of the senses, quite without prejudice, and without starting
off with the illusion that you can prove the existence of this mighty
army of atoms, which are marshalled by the militaristic thought of
the chemists in such a way that, let us say, Sergeant C. stands here,
then two Privates, O., O., and then still another Private called X,
so that we have ranged up in militaristic style: Ether, Atoms and so
on. Now if, as I have just said, you do not give way to this illusion,
but hold fast to reality, you will know that this tapestry of the
senses is spread out before us, that there outside are the
sense-qualities, and that the faculty by means of which I am able to
comprehend with my consciousness what is contained in such
sense-qualities is that to which we give the name of thinking.
In reality thought and nothing else lies behind this tapestry of the
senses. In other words, thought and thought alone lies behind
everything which we have in the physical world. That these
thoughts are carried by beings is something about which I shall have
more to say later. The point is that it is only by means of thought
that we can penetrate into what lies at the back of the content of
our consciousness. The power of thinking, however,
we bring with us from our life before birth, from our
life before physical conception. Why is it that we are able to
penetrate behind the tapestry of the senses by means of this power?
Try to
familiarise yourselves with the thought to which I have just
referred. Try to formulate the question clearly, basing it on what
has already been indicated and what we have already considered
from many points of view. Why is it that we succeed in getting
behind the tapestry of our senses with our thoughts if these same
thoughts have their origin in our life before birth? The answer is
simple. Because at the back of this tapestry something is to be found
which does not belong to the present, but to the past. The past lies
under the surface of the tapestry of the senses, and we only behold
it aright when we recognise it as belonging to the past. The
past works down into the present, and out of the past springs up
that which becomes visible to us in the present. Imagine a meadow
decked with flowers. You see the grass as the green carpet, you see
the gay beauty of the blossoms. That is the present. But all this
grows out of the past, and if you think your way through it then you
have, not an atomic present, but in very truth a past which is related
to that which can be traced back to the past in your own being also.
When
we begin to think about these things it is interesting to find that it
is not the present which is revealed to us by the outer world, but the
past. What is the present? The present has no logical structure. A
sunbeam falls upon some plant. There it shines; a few minutes later its
direction changes and its light shines somewhere else. The picture
never remains the same for a moment. The present is of such a nature
that we cannot understand it by means of purely mathematically
constructed thoughts. What we are able to understand by means
of such thoughts is the past which continues on into the present.
This it
is which can reveal itself to man as a great and significant truth:
If you think, if you spin a web of logical
thought, you are, broadly speaking, reflecting upon that which is
past. He who grasps this idea will no longer seek for wonders in the
past. For in so far as the past is interwoven with the present, the
present must inevitably be a product of the past. Let us
suppose that yesterday you ate some cherries. That is a past action.
You cannot undo it because it belongs to the past. If, however,
cherries had the propensity of making a sign or mark somewhere or
other before disappearing into your mouth, then this sign would
remain. You could not alter it. If yesterday, when you were eating
cherries, each cherry had inscribed its past into your mouth, and
then someone had come along and wanted to erase five of these marks,
— well, it might be possible to do so, but the fact would in no
way be altered thereby. Just as little can you perform any kind
of miracle with regard to natural phenomena, for they are all the
outcome of what is past. And everything that we can grasp by an
understanding of natural law is already past, it no longer belongs to
the present. The present is always in a state of flux, and can only
be fathomed by means of pictures. You must take up a position
from which these pictures can work upon you. You
must, as it were, see the shadows in their proper proportion.
You can construct shadows, but you will get from them only
circumscribed shadow pictures. If a physical object shines it
produces a shadow. That the shadow really arises in this way can only
be verified by giving oneself up to a study of the picture. So that
one can say: Even in ordinary life that which is circumscribed and
limited, in other words, logical thinking, is related to the
past. And Imagination is related to the present. With regard to the
present man is always gifted with Imagination.
Just
think how it would be if you wanted to live logically in the present!
To live according to the laws of logic means that each concept is
induced by the one which went before, it means that one passes
systematically from one concept to the next. Now place yourselves in
imagination in some definite situation in life; visualise an
actual event. Is the following event logically connected with it? Can
you logically deduce this event from the preceding one? When you
survey life in this way do not its pictures seem dream-like in their
nature? The present is similar to a dream, except for the fact that
the past is mixed in with the present, and so brings it about that this
present runs an ordered and logical course. And if you try to
bring some premonition of the future into the present, indeed if you
merely try and think of what you intend to accomplish in the
future, such thinking deals with what is absolutely intangible.
What you will experience this evening does not stand before you as a
picture, but as something still more immaterial. At the most it
exists in you as Inspiration. Inspiration is connected with the future.
We can
make this clearer by means of a simple illustration. For instance,
when a man surveys the tapestry of the senses, —
diagrammatically indicated here by the eye I have drawn on the
board, — he perceives this tapestry in its ever-changing
pictures. But now he comes and introduces law and order into these
pictures. He creates a Natural Science out of the changing pictures
of the sense world. He creates a specialised science. Think
for a moment how you develop this Natural Science,
or perhaps I should say, how this Natural Science is developed.
The scientist makes experiments; as a thinking being he makes
experiments. If you wish to develop a science based on logical
thinking and dealing with all that is spread out before you as
the tapestry of the senses, you cannot do
it by drawing on the outer world for your logical thoughts. That is
quite impossible. If thoughts, — and the laws of Nature must
also be looked upon as thoughts, — if the laws of the external
world emanated from this world: well, in that case it would be quite
superfluous to learn about the external world, for then anyone, by
just looking at the light for instance, would know as much about the
laws underlying electricity and so on, as anybody else who had made a
study of such things! In the same way, unless he has actually learned
it, a man knows nothing of the relationship of a circle to its
radius, etc., etc. Out of our own inner being we bring everything
which we introduce into the outer world as thoughts. Yes, it is
indeed as I have said, — that which we introduce into the outer
world as thought emanates from our inmost being. In this
connection we will consider the human being as a
“head-man,” we will consider him from the point of
view of his head organisation. He surveys the tapestry of the senses.
Interwoven with this tapestry of the senses is all that we are able
to acquire through the medium of thinking; and between this and what
is contained in our own inner being there is a certain
connection, a kind of sub-earthly connection. This is how it
comes about that we draw forth from our inner being in the form of
thought-life what we no longer perceive in the outer world
owing to the fact that it has become part of us ourselves. This
we incorporate into the outer world. Take counting for instance.
There is no counting in the outer world. The laws underlying counting
are contained in our own inner being. But that they are in
accordance with truth depends upon the fact that between the
potential qualities inherent in the outer world and our own
earthly laws there is a sub-earthly connection going [on] below the
surface, below the merely physical side of things. Hence we derive
the laws of number from our own inner being, and these laws are in
harmony with what exists outside us. But the way does not lie
through our eyes, through our senses, but through our whole organism.
All that we develop by virtue of our humanity is developed out of the
whole human being. It is not true that we learn to comprehend Natural
Law by means of the senses. We understand it with our whole human being.
These
things must be borne in mind if one is anxious to gain a true picture
of the relationship existing between man and his surroundings. We are
continually living in a world of pictures, of imaginations; this will
immediately become clear to you if you consider without
prejudice the normal course of a dream. I grant you, the ordinary
dream is usually very chaotic, but for this very reason it is more
closely related to life than logical thinking. Let us take an extreme
case. We will imagine a conversation taking place between reasonable
human beings of the present day. One listens. One even takes part in
the conversation. Try to recall a conversation of this kind which has
lasted, let us say, for half-an-hour or so, and ask yourselves
whether such a conversation has more connection with dreaming or with
logical thinking. If you were to demand opportunity for the
development of logical thinking in such a conversation, you
would lay yourselves open to profound disappointment. The world
of the present comes to meet us clothed in
pictures, so that in a certain sense our life is one continuous
dream. We have to introduce logic into life by our own individual
effort. We acquire logic in our pre-natal existence, and only
later bring it into connection with the things of this world. By so
doing we become aware of the past as it exists in the things present.
The present we comprehend by means of imaginations.
When we
consider this imaginative life which continually surrounds us in the
sense-world of the present, we cannot do otherwise than say:
This imaginative life yields itself up to us. We ourselves do nothing
towards it. Just think how great is the effort we have to make if we
wish to acquire the faculty of logical thinking. In order to enjoy
life, in order to observe life, there is no need for us to make the
slightest effort. Everything is revealed to us in form of
pictures. In this respect life is kind to us, for the events of the
outer world are revealed pictorially to our picture consciousness.
Nothing now remains but for us to acquire the faculty of making
similar pictures, — but in this case through personal activity
such as that which is called forth by thinking, — and to learn
to understand and experience these pictures by means of inner effort
similar to that which is associated with the process of
thinking. Then not only does one see the present in the form of
pictures, but this picture consciousness
expands into the life before birth or before conception, and
one perceives what took place before one was born. And when one gazes
deeply into such pictures, then one's thinking itself becomes
pictorial, and the pre-earthly life is no longer an abstraction but a
reality. All we have to do is to accustom ourselves, — by
the development of those faculties which are spoken of in my book
“Knowledge of Higher Worlds and its Attainment.”
— all we have to do is to accustom ourselves to think in
pictures, without these pictures yielding themselves up to us
of their own accord as is the case in ordinary life. When we
transmute this soul-life, in which in reality we are always
living, and make it into a conscious life of our own, then we are
able to look into the spiritual world and behold the why and
the wherefore of the course of our own life.
To-day,
nearly without exception, it is considered to be a
sign of spirituality when anyone, — I have often spoken
of this before, — thoroughly despises material life and says: I am
striving towards the spirit. Matter lies far beneath me. In
reality this is weakness; for only he can attain to a true life of
the spirit who is not content with leaving matter beneath him,
but who sees matter itself and the activities connected with
matter as spirit, who recognises all matter as spirit, and all
spirit in its manifestation as something inseparable from matter.
What
I have just said becomes fraught with special significance when we
turn our attention to thinking and willing. Speech at the most, speech
which contains within itself a mysterious and secret genius, has something
still to add to that which leads to knowledge in this particular
sphere. When you consider the will and what is absolutely fundamental
to the will in ordinary life, you know that it arises out of desire.
Let us
take the crudest form of desire. What is it? Hunger. It follows,
therefore, that what arises out of desire is also in a certain sense
related to hunger. You will have gathered from what I have already
tried to indicate to-day that thinking lies at the opposite pole. A
certain relation will therefore be found to exist between thinking,
and a condition which is diametrically opposed to desire. We can say:
If we place desire at the back of the willing, then we must place
repletion, satiety, not hunger, at the back of the thinking.
Logical Thinking |
: |
Past |
} |
Intuition |
Imagination |
: |
Present |
Thinking, Satiety |
Inspiration |
: |
Future |
Will, Desire |
If we,
as human beings, take our head-organisation and the rest of the organisation
dependent upon it, then the facts are as follows: We perceive through the
medium of our senses. And in that we perceive something is continually
taken away from us; something enters into our inner being from
outside. The ray of light which penetrates into our eye
actually carries something away. A hole is bored in our own
physical-substance. Previously physical matter was there. Now
the ray of light has bored a hole. As a result hunger makes
itself felt. This hunger must be satisfied. It is satisfied out
of the organism itself, by nourishment present in the organism. In
other words this hole is filled in with nourishment contained within
us. Now suppose we have been thinking; we have made our perceptions
into material for thought. While we are thinking we are filling out
the holes created by our sense-perceptions, we are satisfying this
hunger with what rises up, out of our own organism.
When
we turn our attention to the head organisation it is extraordinarily
interesting to observe how into the holes which arise through our ears
and our eyes — holes — everywhere — through our
susceptibility to warmth — holes everywhere — we insert
matter coming from the rest of the organism. By means of his thinking
man completely fills himself out; he fills out the holes which have
been bored in the manner described.
And with
our willing the process is similar. Only in this case it works not
from outside inwards, so that we are hollowed out, as it were, but
from inside outwards. When we will, cavities arise in us on all
sides. These must also be filled in with matter. So that we can say:
We receive impressions of a negative character which create in us
hollow cavities, cavities coming from without as well as from within,
and into these cavities we insert our own substance. Of these
activities the ones which affect us most intimately are those which
delve into us from without, for they destroy in us everything
appertaining to the earth. For in the moment of receiving the ray of
light, in the moment of hearing a tone or a sound, we destroy our
earthly existence. We re-act to this destructive process
however, and fill ourselves out again with earthly substance. Thus
our life is poised mid-way between the annihilation of earthly
existence and the building up of earthly existence, in other words,
between Lucifer and Ahriman. Lucifer is concerned with the attempt to
make us into non-corporeal beings; he would fain lift us right out of earthly
existence. Lucifer, if he could, would spiritualise us, or shall we
say de-materialise us. But Ahriman is his opponent. Ahriman works in
such a way that he continually fills in what is hollowed out by
Lucifer. Ahriman is the indefatigable “refiller.” If you
wished to give plastic expression to Lucifer and Ahriman you
could do it very well by merging your material in such a way that the
figure of Ahriman was continually pressing into the hollows and
curves of Lucifer, as though desirous of turning him inside
out. And because these hollows and cavities are actually
present within us they must be pushed outwards, they must, as
it were, be turned inside out. Ahriman and Lucifer are two
opposing forces, and both work in the human being. Equilibrium lies
between them. The result of Lucifer's persistent efforts at
dematerialisation is: Materialisation. When we perceive:
Lucifer. When we think over that which we have perceived:
Ahriman. When we form ideas with regard to our desires and wishes:
Lucifer. When we really bring our will-forces into play on the earth:
Ahriman. Thus we stand midway between them both. Like a
pendulum we swing first towards the one, then towards the
other, and we must be quite clear on the following point. As human
beings we are placed in the most intimate relationship with
the Ahrimanic and Luciferic powers, and we learn to understand man only
when we consider him in connection with these polar opposites.
By
so doing we gain an outlook on life which does not rest simply and
solely on an abstract spiritual conception, for such a conception is
nothing but a nebulous mysticism. Neither does it rest on a purely
materialistic conception, for everything which is material is at the
same time spiritual. Everywhere we have to do with spirit. And we learn
to understand matter in all its reality, matter as it actually
exists, when we are able to perceive the spirit inherent within it.
I said
that Imagination comes to us of itself in so far as the present is
concerned. When we develop Imagination by special means we are
able to look into the past. When we develop Inspiration we look
into the future in a way not unlike the way in which we are able to
reckon out when certain occurrences, such as a solar or lunar
eclipse, for instance, will take place. That is to say, we do not
perceive the details, but we do perceive, and that to a considerable
extent, the great laws determining the future. And Intuition embraces
all three: Present, Past and Future. As a matter of fact we are
constantly subject to Intuition, only we sleep through it and so
remain unconscious of it. When we sleep our Ego and astral body are
right outside in the external world. And in this condition we
unfold that intuitive activity which otherwise must be consciously
developed as Intuition. Organised as he is at the present day, man
is too weak to be conscious of his intuitive faculty. But he
nevertheless exercises this faculty during the night. So that it is
true to say: In the sleeping state man develops Intuition; in the
waking state he develops logical thinking — up to a certain
point of course. Between these two lie Inspiration and
Imagination. When man passes over from the sleeping condition
into waking life his Ego and astral body enter into the physical and
etheric bodies. What he brings with him is Inspiration, to which I
have drawn your attention in previous lectures. So that we can say:
In the sleeping state man is a being of Intuition: waking he is a
logical thinker; in the moment of waking he is endowed with
Inspiration; when falling asleep he is filled with Imagination.
From this you see that activities generally looked upon as
belonging to higher spheres of knowledge are in no way foreign to
ordinary life, but are actually present in ordinary life,
requiring only to be raised up into consciousness for the
development of a higher knowledge to become possible.
The
Moment of Waking Inspiration |
Waking
Logical Thinking |
Sleeping
Intuition |
Falling
Asleep Imagination |
It must
ever and again be pointed out that in the course of the last three or
four hundred years external science has collected a vast number of
purely material facts, and has succeeded in formulating these facts
and discovering the laws upon which they are based. These facts
must now once more be permeated with spirit. But it is good —
if I may say so without sounding too paradoxical — it is good
that materialism arose, for otherwise humanity would have fallen into
a vague and nebulous condition. Man would gradually have lost all
connection with earth existence. When in the fifteenth century
the age of materialism dawned, man was in great danger of falling
victim to Luciferic influences, and of becoming by degrees more and
more “hollowed out.” Since that time
Ahrimanic influences have made themselves felt. And during the last four
or five centuries Ahrimanic influences have
developed to an ever increasing extent. To-day these influences
have become very strong, and there is a danger that they will
overstep the mark if we do not oppose them with a force which will
weaken them, if we do not confront them with spirit.
But in
this connection it is necessary that man should develop the right
feeling for the relation of spirit to matter. You may remember that
there is a poem belonging to the old German culture called
“Muspille,” a poem which was first found in a book
dedicated to Ludwig the German in the ninth century, but which in
reality goes back to very much earlier times. In this poem there is
contained a purely Christian element. It describes the battle of
Elias with Antichrist. But the manner in which this battle of Elias
with Antichrist is described, the whole way in which the story is
unfolded, reminds one of the old battles which took place
between the inhabitants of Asgard and the inhabitants of
Jötunheim, the inhabitants of the Kingdom of Giants. All
that has been done is to change the Kingdom of the Asen into the
Kingdom of Elias, and the Kingdom of the Giants into the
Kingdom of the Antichrist.
The
manner of thinking which we meet with here conceals the real truth
less than the thinking of a later day. A more modern thinking speaks
always of a duality, of good and evil, of God and the Devil, and so
on. But this manner of thinking is of later development and no
longer coincides with the thinking of earlier times. Those people who
created the story of the battle between the Kingdom of the Gods and
the Kingdom of the Giants did not see in the Gods an equivalent,
they did not see the same as that which the Christian of
to-day understands as the
Kingdom of his God, but the thinking of an earlier, time placed
Asgard above, for example Asgard the Realm of the Gods, and below was
Jötunheim, the Realm of the Giants. Man himself was to be found
in the middle region, in Mittelgard. This is the Germanic-European
way of expressing what in ancient Persia was understood by Ormuzd and
Ahriman. In our manner of speaking to-day we should say Lucifer and
Ahriman. We ought in reality to speak of Ormuzd as Lucifer and not
merely as the good God. And the error so frequently met with is this,
that one understands this dualism in such a way that Ormuzd is looked
upon as the good God, and his enemy Ahriman as the evil God. In
reality the relationship is that of Lucifer to Ahriman. The
region of Mittelgard is represented quite accurately in the
time when this poem “Muspille” was written, for it was
not said: Christ allows His Blood to stream down from above, but:
Elias is there, it is he who allows his blood to stream down, and man
is placed in the middle. Ideas belonging to the time when
Ludwig the German apparently copied this poem into his book are truer
than those of a later age, for later on things took a strange turn,
and people no longer remembered the Trinity; that is to say,
they looked upon the Upper Gods which are in Asgard, and the Lower
Gods which are in the Realm of Ahriman, as being the All; they
conceived the Upper, the Luciferic Gods as being the good Gods,
and the others as being the evil Gods. That happened in later times.
An earlier humanity still understood rightly the contrast
between Ahriman and Lucifer, and therefore placed a being
such as Elias, — Elias with his emotional prophecy, with
all that he was at that time able to foretell in the Luciferic
Realm, — because it was felt that Christ must be placed
in the middle region, in Mittelgard.
Asgard
Lucifer — Ormuzd |
|
Jötunheim
Ahriman |
We must
go back to these concepts once more in full consciousness,
otherwise, if we speak only of the duality between God and the
Devil, we shall not be able to draw near again to the Trinity,
— to the Gods, to the Ahrimanic Powers, and,
mid-way between, to the Kingdom of Christ. Until we reach this
stage we cannot arrive at a real understanding of the world. You
must bear in mind how great a secret concerning the historical
evolution of European humanity is contained in the fact that the
Ormuzd of ancient times has been turned into the good God, whereas in
reality he is a Luciferic Power, a God of Light. As though to make
amends for this error humanity has gone to the other extreme, and has
made Lucifer as bad as possible. Because people were not
willing to give the name of Lucifer to Ormuzd they carried Lucifer
over to Ahriman, and made a mix-up of the two, the
after-effects of which are still to be seen in Goethe's character
Mephistopheles. In Mephistopheles we have Lucifer and Ahriman mixed
up together, as I have shown quite clearly in my little book:
“Goethe's Conception of the Soul.”
European humanity, the humanity of present-day civilisation, has become
very greatly confused, and this confusion pervades all thinking. It
can be put right by leading away from the conception of Duality, and
entering once more into the conception of the Trinity, for what is
dual leads finally to a condition in which man cannot live, for he
must needs seek for a polarity in which he can find adjustment
and balance. Christ stands there as the Balance between Lucifer and
Ahriman, as the Balance between Ormuzd and Ahriman.
This
is the subject that I wished to touch upon in my lecture, and that I
shall amplify and carry further in the course of the next few days.
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