Part 4 (1/2)
physical descent in the centre. For the idea of heredity plays far the greatest role in the theory of evolution. It is a onesidedness. Men are thoroughly satisfied with such onesidedness, for people think nowadays that in this way one can be very learned. So one can, with quite arbitrary explanations of things, drawn apparently from deep logic, but in reality from misty vagueness.
Yesterday we saw an example of how whole literatures are written because men have lost the connection of a concept with the original experience from which the concept proceeded: the Cross-symbol. A whole literature has been written about it, the cross has been related to everything imaginable. We saw yesterday to what it must be related. The same has been done in regard to many other things and people think themselves very profound when they do it.
I will remind you of one case, my dear friends.
Just think how infinitely important many men think themselves nowadays when they believe that they are speaking as we have spoken here today!
There are a fair number of people who say - in
fact they very frequently use the words - Oh, one can read it any moment in the papers (with respect be it spoken) - 'the Letter kills, but the Spirit gives life'. And with this, one thinks one has said something most profound. But one should inquire about the origin of such a saying. It goes back to those times when one had living concepts which indeed still had a connection with what had been undergone and experienced. When one talks today there is little connection - especially between the word and its place of origin. If you want to have a right connection between words and sentences and their origins, then I advise you to read the little book in which 'Swiss-German Proverbs' have now been collected. For one still finds in these popular proverbs an original harmonizing of what is said with the direct experience. The letter ... by this is meant, as you know, the letter-script in contradistinction to the ancient kind which the Imaginative life drew out of the spirit, as we described yesterday. This ancient spirit gave life, and the livingness in that epoch of human evolution resulted in the Imaginative atavistic clairvoyance. But there was a consciousness that
this epoch must in turn be succeeded by another, that the letter must come which kills the ancient livingness.
And now bring that into connection with all that I have said about the actual nature of consciousness in connection with death. For it is the letter that kills but that also brings the consciousness which must be overcome again through another consciousness. The sort of disdainful rejection that modern journalistic folly attaches to the proverb 'the letter kills but the spirit gives life' is not what is meant, but the sentence is connected with impulses of man's evolution. It implies approximately: In ancient times, Imaginative times, Osiris times, the spirit kept the human soul in a state of dulled livingness, in later times the letter called forth consciousness. That is the interpretation of the sentence, that is what it originally meant. And in many instances, Just as in this one, men today are very ready with opinions, with arbitrary explanations, because they do not connect anything with them.
This does not prove that it is false what the modern profound scientific method has to say about the idea of heredity, it is only that the other pole must be added when one speaks of heredity.
If man points to his childhood, and back from childhood to birth, if he asks himself 'What do I carry within me?' - then the answer is: what parents and ancestors have carried within them and transmitted to me! There is, however, another way of looking at the human being which present- day man does not as yet practise, which the man of the future must practise, and which must be put in the centre of pedagogy, the art of Education. This is not the looking back at having been younger, but the right consideration of the fact that with every day in life one becomes older. As a matter of fact modern mankind only understands that one has once been young. It does not really understand how to grasp realistically that one gets older with every day. For they do not know the word that must be added to the word heredity when one sets the becoming-older opposite the having-been- young. If one looks to one's childhood one speaks of what one has inherited; in the same way, when
one looks towards the getting-older one can speak of the other pole; as of the Gate of Birth, so one can speak of the Gate of Death. There arises the one question: What have we gained through our forefathers by entering this life through the Gate of Birth? There arises the other question: What perhaps do we lose, what becomes different in us through the fact that we are approaching coming times, that we get older with every day? What is it like when we consciously experience the becoming-older-with-every day?
That, however, is a demand on our age. Humanity must learn to become older consciously with every day. For if man learns consciously to become older with every day, then this really means a meeting with spiritual beings, just as it means a descent from physical beings, that one is born and possesses inherited qualities.
I will speak next of how these things are connected: of that important inner impulse which must draw near the human soul, if the soul is to find what is so necessary for the future, what alone can round out and complete the one-sided
teachings of Natural Science.
Then you will see why the new Isis Myth can stand beside the old Osiris-Isis Myth, why both together are necessary for the men of today; why other words must be combined with the words which resound from the Statue of Isis at Sais in ancient Egypt: 'I am the All; I am the Past, the Present, the Future; no mortal has lifted my veil' ...
Other words must sound into these; they may no longer echo one-sidedly into the human soul today but in addition must resound the words: 'I am Man, I am the Past, the Present and the Future.
Every mortal should lift my veil.'
Today I have set before you more riddles than solutions. We will, however, speak of them further and the riddles will then be solved in manifold ways.
Lecture IV 8th January, 1918.
We will try to go more fundamentally into those matters connected with the question which has just been raised. The question was: What impulses of human life must enter especially into the consciousness of man today so that a counterweight may be created to the principle of heredity that prevails almost exclusively - whether in science or in general life? This extraordinarily important question, however, can only be approached slowly and gradually. It is, in fact, most deeply connected with the contrast that I wished to bring before your spiritual eyes in showing how one can look towards the old Egyptian inscription of Isis: 'I am the All. I am the Past, the Present, the Future; no mortal has yet lifted my veil' - and how on the other hand one
can take into one's consciousness the words which from the present on into the future must be the complementary saying: 'I am Man. I am the Past, I am the Present, I am the Future. Every mortal should lift my veil.'
Now above all one must realize that in the age when that saying arose in the Egyptian culture, it was still plain and clear that when one spoke of 'immortal' one spoke actually of man himself. In the Egyptian culture, however, the mystery as a principle of the Mysteries, was a deeply rooted principle. The Egyptian who was acquainted with his civilization knew that what lives as 'immortal'
within the soul, must be awakened. Yes, contrary to our custom of today, the Egyptian, as too the Greek, at least the Greek thinking in the sense of Plato, really only considered a man to be a partaker of immortality, who had consciously grasped the spiritual world. You can read the proof of this in my 'Christianity as Mystical Fact' where I quoted the often harsh-sounding expressions of Plato for the difference between men who seek to grasp in the soul the impulse of the immortal, the
spiritual impulse, and those men who disdain this, who neglect to do so. If you think this over, you will easily see that the saying on the Statue at Sais actually meant: He who will never seek to grasp the spiritual life of the soul cannot lift the veil of Isis; he however can lift it, who grasps the spiritual life, who therefore (in the Egyptian sense, today it sounds rather different) as 'mortal' makes himself 'immortal'. There was no intention of saying that the human being as such cannot lift the veil of Isis, but only that one who binds himself exclusively to the mortal element, one who will not approach the immortal element, cannot lift the veil. Later on when the Egyptian culture fell more into decadence the saying drifted into quite a wrong interpretation. As the priests transformed the Mystery-principle into a power-principle, they actually sought to instill into the laity - not the priesthood - that they, the priests, were the 'immortals' and those who were not priests were the 'mortals'. That is to say, all those standing outside the priesthood cannot raise the veil of Isis.
One might say that in the decadent age of Egyptian culture this was the interpretation: 'I am
the All; I am the Past, the Present, the Future; only a priest can lift my veil.' And the priests moreover called themselves the 'immortals' in that age of decadence.
The use of this expression then came to an end for men living on the physical plane; it is only still in use in the French Academy where, following the Egyptian priest principle, specially important persons are made 'immortals'. (One is reminded of it at this time because Bergson, the Sch.e.l.ling and Schopenhauer plagiarist, is about to be raised to the rank of Immortal by the French Academy.
Such things are left over from ages in which they were understood, and flow into times where the words, concepts and ideas are far removed from their source.) There are many things that must be said in the course of these observations and it might easily be thought that their purpose is merely to blame our times. I have often emphasized that that is not the case. What is said here is said to characterize the times not to criticize them. Where, however, truth is to be spoken it cannot be expected that no
mention will be made of things that have simply got to be seen through, whether for their emptiness or for their harmfulness. In fact one is fully justified in saying: ought it then to deserve censure if one follows a certain example - naturally at a great distance - an example that cannot be sufficiently followed? It is not related in the Gospel that Christ-Jesus went into the Temple and flattered the merchants; it is something else that we are told - that he overthrew the tables and so on! In order really to promote what must be promoted it is essential to indicate what, in accordance with the facts, must be censured if the age is to progress. The sentimentality of painting everything in glowing colours must not find entry into the human soul, nor even be blazoned forth as universal human love.
If one takes this properly into consideration, it can be said on the one hand that we are now living in the materialistic age, to which is added abstraction in the sense we have come to know it, namely estrangement from reality; furthermore, all that must break into our age catastrophically is
connected with this divorce from reality. On the other hand, however, it may also be said that compared with the various periods of post- Atlantean times - if we keep to these - our fifth period is in a certain respect and from certain aspects the greatest age, one that brings most of all to humanity, one that harbours within it immense possibilities for the evolution and existence of mankind. And precisely through what man develops very specially in this age as shadow-side of the spiritual life, he takes the way, and can, if he proceeds rightly, find the way into the spiritual world. In particular he can find the way to his true, his highest human goal. Evolutionary possibilities are in our time very great, greater from a certain aspect than they were in former phases of post- Atlantean evolution. In point of fact, something of immense significance occurred with the entry of this fifth post-Atlantean-period. We must transplant ourselves in a new way, my dear friends, into the connection of man with the whole universe, if we wish to give the right colouring, the right nuance of feeling to something we have often brought forward from various viewpoints.
The clever ones in Philisterium, to be sure, call it 'superst.i.tion' if one speaks of a certain connection of man with concrete constellations of the cosmos.
One must only understand this connection rightly.
Superst.i.tion - what is superst.i.tion? The belief that the physical human being must in a certain way take his direction from the universe? We go by the clock, which we regulate from the position of the sun; every time we look at the clock we practise astrology. We have subconscious members of our human nature which take their direction from other constellations than those we go by when in physical life we set our clock by them. If things are understood rightly, talking of superst.i.tion has not the slightest sense, and so by way of ill.u.s.tration a portion of this World-Clock shall now be set before your soul. We will use it as a means of further studying the riddle that was first propounded.
Now when the time of the flooding of Atlantis, the submergence of Atlantis, which separates our post- Atlantean culture from the Atlantean culture, had pa.s.sed by, the first post-Atlantean culture-epoch