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LECTURE TEN
Dornach, 25 December 1916
Yesterday we began by considering the Baldur myth which, as we saw,
goes back to ancient customs, and it is precisely such considerations
that make clear for us how Christianity had to, and indeed should,
link on to what mankind had previously understood. The three great
festivals of the year, as they are still celebrated today, are very
much linked with things which have slowly and gradually come about
during the course of human evolution. We can only completely
understand what still wants to express itself in the Christmas,
Easter and Whitsun Mysteries if we do not shy away from linking these
things with the thinking and feeling and experience of mankind
gradually developing during the course of evolution. We saw how the
Christ idea goes back to early, early times.
To understand this more exactly you only need to call before your
soul what is contained in the book
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity.
[ Note 1 ]
There you will learn how the foundation
of the Christ idea can be traced back to the mysteries of the
spiritual worlds. In the book is shown the path followed in the
spiritual worlds by the Being Who underlies the Christ idea before He
revealed Himself in physical human incarnation at a certain point in
earthly evolution. In coming to grips with these concepts concerning
the spiritual guidance of mankind it is possible to sense what
connection, or even lack of connection, there exists between
anthroposophical spiritual science and ancient Gnosis. To describe
the path of Christ through the spiritual worlds in the way it is done in
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity
would not yet have been possible for ancient
Gnosis. But this ancient Gnosis also had its own image of Christ, its
Christ idea. It was capable of drawing sufficient understanding out
of its atavistic or clairvoyant knowledge to comprehend the Christ in
a spiritual way, saying: In the spiritual world there is an
evolution; the hierarchies — or, as Gnosis put it, the aeons
— follow one another; and one such aeon is the Christ. Gnosis
showed how, as aeon after aeon evolved, Christ gradually descended
and revealed Himself in a human being. This can be shown even more
clearly today, and you may read about it in the book
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity.
It is good, in our spiritual scientific Movement, to feel many
aspects of the deeper connections in order to free oneself of purely
personal affairs. For in this fifth post-Atlantean period mankind has
reached a stage in evolution at which it is very difficult for the
individual to escape from his personal affairs. The individual is in
danger of mixing up his personal instincts and passions with what is
common to mankind as a whole.
Even the various festivals have deteriorated into purely personal
affairs because mankind has lost the earnestness and dignity which
alone make it possible to approach the spiritual world in the right
way. It is perfectly natural in our fifth post-Atlantean period, in
which man is supposed to comprehend himself to a certain extent and
become independent, that there should exist such a danger of man to
some extent losing his connections with the spiritual world. In
earlier times man was aware of his connections with the spiritual
world, yet unaware of certain other things, such as I pointed out
yesterday. Today man is, above all, unaware of those things I have
mentioned in these lectures by saying: People are no longer inclined
to pay attention to them; they allow them to pass by without being
concerned about them.
It is a good thing on occasions such as the Christmas festival to
say to oneself: Spiritual impulses, both good and evil, play into the
evolution of our world. We have seen how these impulses can be used
in an evil way by individuals who know about them either for some
personal, egoistic purpose, or in the interests of the egoism of a
group. We must learn to adjust our feelings to more comprehensive
affairs and more comprehensive conditions. Even though we cannot
always advertise such feelings, we must nevertheless cultivate
them.
I am now going to give you the opportunity — in connection
with a certain matter — to, as it were, tear your soul away
from any sort of personal interpretation of Anthroposophy and turn
instead towards something general which is connected with our
Anthroposophical Movement. If you understood properly what I said
yesterday, you will say to yourself: That twentieth day of May in
1347, that May Whitsuntide when Cola di Rienzi accomplished his
important manifesto in Rome, was repeated in a certain way at
Whitsuntide in the year 1915. Those who have been following the
events will soon notice, or would soon notice, that this May
Whitsuntide was selected entirely purposely and entirely consciously
by those who brought this about. It was known to these people that
these old impulses would once again revive, and that the hearts and
souls who succumb to the blindness of Hödr can be caught when
Loki approaches them. But people can only be caught so long as they
do not have the will to accustom themselves to look at, and be
impressed by, connections that are perfectly obvious and
comprehensible. One is only at the mercy of connections that remain
in the unconscious so long as one is so tied up in personal matters
that one cannot see proper connections — connections in the
good sense — so long as one has no interest for those things
which involve mankind as a whole, which are things that inevitably
lead into the spiritual realm.
I explained to you that in Gnosis there was still an understanding
of the Christ idea; that when Gnosis was rooted out the Christ idea
degenerated into dogma and that, in the South, therefore, the genuine
Christ idea more or less disappeared. Now spiritual science has the
task, in accordance with spiritual evolution, of once again
comprehending this Christ idea, of forming a Christ idea that is not
an empty phrase but filled with content, with real content.
In the North the very thing that could take root there has
disappeared, namely, the feeling for Jesus. As I said the day before
yesterday, the feeling for Jesus was really formed in the North and
lingered on into the eighth, ninth, tenth centuries after the Mystery
of Golgotha. In ancient times the Christ-child was welcomed wherever
a birth took place, wherever a worthy new member could be taken into
the tribe, especially among the Ingaevones, while those born at the
wrong time were out of place — of course I am not being
pedantic. We then saw how, as external Christianity spread, all
things connected with the ancient feeling for Jesus, even the myths
and processions — in other words, any remnants of religious
customs — were pushed aside. We also saw how, since the Middle
Ages, strenuous efforts have been going on to obliterate all that
spread from Jutland across Europe, especially Central Europe.
Situated in the region of Denmark was the chief Mystery centre
which laid down and watched over the conditions which then appeared
in the regulation of conception and birth. There it was that a
general consciousness of the social connections of human beings grew
up, connections that were also sacramental, a true social sacrament.
The year as such was arranged as a sacrament and human beings knew
they were contained within this sacrament of the year. For people in
those days the sun did not for nothing go in different ways across
the dome of heaven at different seasons, for what took place on earth
was a mirror image of heavenly events. Where human beings as yet
have, or can have, no influence, where elemental and nature beings
still regulate what is now regulated by human beings in social life
— there the sacrament can exist. Today, though people are not
as yet aware of it, quite strong ahrimanic impulses live in
individual human beings. I mean it when I say that people are not yet
aware of this. These ahrimanic impulses are directed towards seizing
from certain elemental nature spirits their sacramental influence on
earthly evolution.
When modern technology has made it possible to warm large areas
with artificial heat — I am not finding fault but merely
telling you of something that will of necessity come about in the
future — then plant growth, above all that of grain, will be
taken away from the nature and elemental spirits. There will be
heating installations, not only for winter gardens and smaller spaces
for plants to grow, but for whole cornfields. Deprived of cosmic
laws, grain will grow in every season, instead of only when it grows
of its own accord — that is, when it grows through the working
of the nature and elemental spirits. For the seeds this will be
similar to what happened when the ancient consciousness of
sacramental laws about conception and birth faded so that these
events came to be spread over the whole year. The task of Mystery
centres such as that in Denmark, which I described as regulating, as
a sacrament, the social life of the people, was to search for ways in
which spiritual beings could work in the social and sacramental
field, just as they work on the sprouting and growing of plants in
the spring and their fading in autumn. From this centre in Denmark
there spread what we were able to find in the third millennium before
the Mystery of Golgotha, but which then faded gradually to make way
for something new, without which human beings would have been unable
to ascend to the use of their intellect. These things are necessary
and we ought to recognize them as such, instead of trying to meddle
with the handiwork of the gods by saying: Why have the gods done it
like this, why did they not arrange things like that? — which
always means: Why have they not made things more comfortable for
human beings!
So in Jutland, in Denmark, originated the receptivity for the
feeling for Jesus. You see, it is important to think about what is
happening, not only in connection with events which are more or less
important, but also to consider the connections. But this thinking
must be straight and true, not full of fantastic aberrations. Many
people like to brood on the weird and wonderful, but proper thinking
means to consider how actual events are linked and then to wait and
see what arises in the way of understanding.
After all I have said in the last few days it might occur to you
to ask the following question, and those of you who have already
asked yourselves this question have definitely sensed in your soul
something that is right. If you have not yet asked it, you could
strive in future to ask yourselves this kind of question. For such
questions are to be found everywhere when there is determination that
there shall be truth, not only in what is said, but also in what is
done. The World Logos, Whose birth we celebrate in the Christmas
Mystery, can only be understood rightly if we think of It as being as
general and universal as possible, if we think of this World Logos
actually vibrating and pulsating in all things that happen, in every
event. And when we have the humility and devotion to feel ourselves
interwoven with this universal process, then we recognize the
connections and links which hold sway.
What is the question our soul might place before us? In recent
days you soul might have thought: We have now seen that in Gnosis
there was an important Christ idea; it disappeared in the South and,
in a certain way, was unable to make its way to the North. To meet it
came the Jesus idea, which is linked as a feeling to the Mysteries of
Jutland. This is what we have seen.
Having recognized this and having seen the links between these
two, would it not be natural to have the desire to bring together
what has been unable to come together? In the world evolution of the
West the Christ idea has been unable to come together with the Jesus
idea. Out of this must surely come the desire to unite them.
In all modesty, modern Anthroposophy is to take on this task. It
is the affair of Anthroposophy to endeavour to do what is right in
this matter and bring these things together to some extent in the
constellation of the universe. So in attempting to describe how
modern Anthroposophy, as a Gnosis brought forward into the present
day, can once again understand the Christ, the wish might arise to
unite this Christ idea with something that can live again in a
certain place where once it lived as the feeling for Jesus in such an
intense way. To do this, one would endeavour to speak about the
Christ idea and how it fits in with the spiritual guidance of man
exactly at that spot, or as near to that spot as possible, whence the
feeling for Jesus originally emanated.
This is why, years ago, in response to an invitation from Copenhagen
[ Note 2 ]
I spoke particularly there about the path of
Christ through the spiritual evolutions. Why did the need arise just
at that time, to develop at that particular place the theme of the
Christ idea as it is woven into
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity?
It is a statement,
expressed not in spoken words but in the constellation! It is up to
people to understand such things. There is no need to speak about it
publicly everywhere, but one must understand that not only what is
said but also what is done will bring things to expression, and that
in these things the Universal Logos lives in a certain way.
It seems to be the case nowadays that people obviously bring more
feeling to bear on what is not right, on what is evil, seen
universally, than they do when, by expressing a real fact, one
endeavours to incorporate something that is essentially good in the
sense of human evolution. But the feeling one really wants to
inspire, especially now in connection with the Christmas Mystery, is
that of participation in the Anthrosophical Movement, the feeling of
living within something that is above mere external maya. Also one
hopes that people will take seriously the knowledge that what happens
on the physical plane, the way things happen on the physical plane,
is maya, and not reality in the higher sense.
Not until we feel that what takes place on the earth also, in a
way, takes place in ‘heaven’ — to use a Christian
expression — not until we feel that the full truth only comes
about when we bring the two together in the human spirit — that
is, in this fifth post-Atlantean period, the human intellect —
are we seeing the full reality. The full reality lies in the
bringing-together of what happens on earth and in heaven. Without
this, we remain held fast in maya. We have, today, this great desire
to remain held fast in maya because, in the fifth post-Atlantean
period, we are far too exposed to the danger of taking the word for
the fact. To a great extent words have lost their meaning, by which I
mean the living soul-connection of the word with the reality that
underlies the word. Words have become mere abbreviations, and the
intoxication in which many people live with regard to words is no
longer genuine ecstasy, because only a deepening as regards the
spiritual world can make genuine the words we speak. Words will only
regain real content when human beings fill themselves with knowledge
of the spiritual world. Ancient knowledge is lost, and for the most
part we speak in the way we do just because the ancient knowledge is
lost and we are surrounded by maya, which gives us nothing but mere
words. Now we must once again seek a spiritual life which gives the
words their content. We live, in a way, in a mechanism of words, just
as externally we shall gradually completely lose our individuality in
a mechanism of technology until we are at the mercy of external
mechanisms.
It is our task to bring together what lives in the spiritual world
with what lives in the physical world. To do this we have to tackle
very seriously the grasping of reality. In this materialistic age
people are too much accustomed to living within narrow horizons and
to seeing things confined within these horizons. They have even
arranged their religion so comfortably that it gives them a narrow
horizon. People today avoid wide horizons and do not want to call a
spade a spade. That is why it is so difficult for them to understand
how a karma could come about that is as terrible as that besetting
Europe today. Everybody regards this karma — today, at least
— from a narrow national standpoint, as it is called, although
there is much that is untrue in this too. But at the foundation there
lies the karma of mankind as a whole, something that is
everybody's concern, which can be expressed in a single
sentence with regard to one particular point — though there are
many other points as well. People are inclined to pass by the very
thing that matters. This thing that matters is the flight from truth
into which souls have fallen today! Souls run away from the truth;
they have a terrible abhorrence of grasping the truth in all its
strength and intensity.
Consider the following: We have gradually built up a picture for
ourselves of the evolution of mankind and we now know how to assess
the fact that, during a certain period in this evolution, wars came
upon the scene, that wars were what fired mankind. But it was a time
when mankind believed in war. What do I mean when I say that it was a
time when mankind believed in wars? What does it mean: to believe in
wars? Well, a belief in wars is very similar to a belief in the duel,
in the fight between two. But when does a duel have a real meaning?
It has a meaning only when the two concerned are inwardly fully
convinced that, not chance, but the gods will decide the outcome. If
the two who take up their positions in order to fight a duel fully
believe that the one who is killed or wounded will receive his death
or wound because a god has sided against him, then there is truth in
the duel. There is no truth in the duel if this conviction is
lacking; then, obviously, the duel is a genuine lie. It is the same
in the case of war. If the individuals who constitute the warring
peoples are convinced that the outcome of the war is divine, that the
gods govern what is to happen, then there is truth in the actions of
war. But then the participants must understand the meaning of the
words: A divine judgement will come about.
Ask yourselves whether there is any truth in such words today! You
need only ask: Do people believe that actions of war express divine
judgements? Do people believe this? Ask yourselves how many people
believe that the outcome is divine! How many people truly believe
this, how many honestly believe this? For among the many lies buzzing
about in the world today are the prayers to the gods, or to God,
offered up — naturally — by all sides. Obviously, in this
materialistic age there cannot be a real belief that a divine
judgement is going to take place. So it is necessary to look
seriously and soberly at this matter, and admit that one is doing
something without believing in its inner reality. One does not
believe in this inner reality, and one believes all the less in this
inner reality the further westwards one goes in Europe — quite
rightly, because the further westwards one goes, the more does one
enter western Europe, which has the task for the fifth post-Atlantean
period of bringing about materialism.
Things are different going eastwards, however. I am not in the
habit of constructing theories about such things or of saying such
things lightheartedly. When I say something of this kind it is based
on actual facts. It is nowadays already possible to make a remarkable
discovery. Coming from the West to Central Europe you discover that
here there exists a sporadic belief in divine judgement. In the West
this is impossible unless it has been imported from Central Europe.
But in Central Europe there are isolated individuals who have a kind
of belief in destiny and who use the word ‘divine
judgement’. And if you go right to the East where the future is
being prepared, you will, of course, find numerous people who regard
the approaching outcome as a divine judgement. For Russian people are
not averse — as are the people of the West — to seeing a
divine judgement in what takes place.
These things must be faced with full objectivity. Only then can we
speak truly; only then do our words have meaning. Mankind has the
task of learning to give meaning back to words.
Some time ago I drew your attention to what almost amounts to a
religious cultivation of something that is entirely without thought
or feeling, namely, the lack of desire to know that modern religions,
when they speak of ‘God’, actually only mean an angel
being, an angelos. When human beings today speak of ‘God’
they mean only their angel, the angel who guides them through life.
But they persuade themselves that they are speaking of a being higher
than an angel. It is maya that modern monotheism speaks of a single
god for, in reality, seen from a spiritual point of view, mankind has
the tendency to speak of as many gods as there are human beings on
the earth, since each individual means only his own angel. Under the
mask of monotheism is hidden the most absolute polytheism. That is
why modern religions are in danger of being atomized, since each
individual represents only his own idea of God, his own standpoint.
Why is this? It is because, today, in the fifth post-Atlantean
period, we are isolated from the spiritual world. Our consciousness
remains solely in the human sphere.
In the fourth post-Atlantean period human consciousness reached
some way into the spiritual sphere, namely, as far as the region of
the angeloi. In the third post-Atlantean period it penetrated as far
as the archangeloi. Only in this third period could such a thing as
the Mysteries of Jutland, of Denmark come into being. What kind of a
being was it who announced to each individual mother the coming birth
of her child? It was the being about whom the Luke gospel speaks: an
archangel, a being from the region of the archangeloi. One who can
see only as far as the angeloi and calls an angel-being his god
— regardless of whether he believes this is really God, for it
is reality and not belief that matters — such a one is
incapable of finding any connection that goes beyond the time between
birth and death to those regions which are today hidden by external
maya. In the third post-Atlantean period, however, he was still able
to look into the region of the archangels, for there was still a
living connection with that region. In the second post-Atlantean
period, the ancient Persian period, what was open to human
consciousness was still connected with the archai. Then man did not
feel himself to be in what we today call nature. He felt himself to
be in a spiritual world. Light and darkness were not yet external,
material processes, but spiritual processes. In the original
Zarathustra religion, in the second post-Atlantean period, this was
so.
So mankind gradually came down to the earth. In the second
post-Atlantean period his consciousness reached up into the region of
the archai, so that he was then still able to say: As a human being I
am not solely an articulated doll consisting of muscles and flesh
— which is what modern anatomists, physiologists and biologists
maintain — but a being who can only be understood in connection
with the spiritual world, immersed in the living weaving of light and
darkness, for I belong to the weaving of light and darkness.
Then came the third post-Atlantean period. Nature began to take
hold of man in so far as it worked on him. For the processes of birth
and death link the soul life of man with nature. For external maya
these are natural processes. Birth, conception, death are natural
processes for external maya. They are only spiritual processes for
one who can see where spiritual reality intervenes in these natural
processes, and that is in the region of the archangeloi. This
connection was seen during the third post-Atlantean period.
Gradually, nature itself became reality for man. This was from the
fourth post-Atlantean period onwards. Before that nature was not
spoken of in the way we speak of it today. But man needed to step out
of the spiritual world and dwell alone with nature, isolated to a
certain extent from the spiritual world. But then he needed an event
which would enable him once again to forge links with the spiritual
world. In the second post-Atlantean period the divine element
appeared to him in the region of the archai; in the third, in the
region of the archangeloi; and, in the fourth, in the region of the
angeloi. In the fifth post-Atlantean period he had to recognize the
divine as man. This was prepared in the middle of the fourth period
when the divine appeared as Man — in the Christ. What this
means is that Christ must come to be understood ever better and
better; He must come to be understood in His connection with the
human being. For Christ appeared as Man so that man might find the
connection of mankind with the Christ. Such things we must make
especially clear to ourselves in connection with the Christmas
Mystery. Mankind's connection with the spiritual world must be
found in the way that has become possible since man stepped down from
this spiritual world in order to dwell within nature. This was
prepared, as a fact, during the fourth post-Atlantean period. Now, in
the fifth post-Atlantean period, it must be understood — really
understood!
Human beings must find their way to an understanding of the fact
of Christ, to an understanding of this in its connection with the
whole of the spiritual world. There is so much today which is
not understood about Christ, and so much which is not
understood about Jesus. Yet these are the two constituent parts
necessary for the understanding of Christ Jesus! Looking at the
historical context we can see that the understanding for Christ
disappeared when Gnosis was rooted out. Looking at the mysteries
expressed in the Baldur myth we can understand how the feeling for
Jesus was rooted out.
If we remain truthful we can see now, in the present, how external
life corroborates what we find in history. For how many
representatives of religion today believe in their hearts — not
merely with their lips but in their hearts — how many believe
in the true Resurrection, in the Mystery of Easter? They can only
believe if they can comprehend it. How many priests do? Modern
priests and pastors think themselves particularly enlightened when
they succeed in disavowing the Easter Mystery, the Resurrection
Mystery, if they manage somehow to discuss it to bits, to make it
disappear through sophistry. They are delighted every time they
discover a new reason for not having to believe in it.
First of all, the Christ idea, which is inseparable from the
Resurrection Mystery, was made into dogma. Then gradually it became a
subject for discussion, and the tendency now is to drop the
Resurrection Mystery altogether. But the Mystery of the Birth is also
not understood. People no longer want to have dealings with it
because they do not want to accept its validity in all its profound
depths as a mystery. They want to see only the natural side; they do
not want to be aware that something spiritual came down. In the third
post-Atlantean period human beings still saw this spiritual element
descending, but then their consciousness was at a different level.
What is today called modern religion, modern Christianity, really has
no desire to comprehend either the birth or the death of Christ
Jesus. Some still want to maintain a dogmatic connection. But a
comprehension of these things that goes beyond mere words is today
only possible through spiritual science. For this to be possible, the
horizon of comprehension must be widened. But people today flee from
the truth; they literally flee from what could lead them to an
understanding of these things.
Only anthroposophical spiritual science is in a position to create
out of itself — not by warming up ancient history —
certain concepts which will now exist for conscious rather than
atavistic understanding. Long ago these concepts existed
atavistically; today, people no longer have any real feeling for
them. Let me remind you of something I mentioned yesterday. The
kingship of the ancient European tribes was connected with all those
social institutions I mentioned as emanating from the Mysteries of
Jutland. The first child born in the holy night in the third year was
destined to be king. He was prepared for this in the way I explained
and he grew up to be the man who could be king for three years. He
had reached the stage I described when I said that he grew beyond his
national limits — he stepped out of the context of his tribe.
An individual of the fifth degree-called ‘Persian’ by the
Persians — bore in every tribe the name of that tribe; he still
stood within the group. The one who was to be king for three years
had to be filled with the mystery of the ‘sun hero’. This
was the sixth degree, and for this he had to have grown beyond his
tribe or group and stand in the context of mankind as a whole. But he
could only do this if his connections were not only earthly but also
cosmic, if he was a ‘sun hero’, which meant that he lived
in a realm governed not only by earthly laws but also by those laws
with which the sun is interwoven. If man is to act on the earth he
has to have contact with the earthly realm, and contact with this
realm brings about a certain process. This process must be
recognized. For by recognizing this process we gain an understanding
for certain transitions, for certain things into which we need
insight if we are to gain insight into reality.
In ancient times a man belonging to the tribe of the Ingaevones
was called an ‘Ingaevoni’. But the one who ruled the
tribe for three years as a ‘sun hero’ could not be called
an Ingaevoni, because he had grown beyond his tribe. It would not
have been truthful to call the ‘sun hero’ an Ingaevoni,
because he had become something else. You see what an exact concept
was attached to an earthly reality because the spiritual world was
felt to be streaming in.
Nowadays, when we merely play with words instead of adhering
strictly to concepts, who would take it into his head to say that it
is untrue to call the Pope a Christian, since this is a paradox, just
as it would have been paradoxical to call the king of the Ingaevones
an Ingaevoni? If the Pope really wanted to be a ‘pope’,
that is, if he really wanted to stand within the actual spiritual
process, it would not be possible to take him for a Christian. We can
only be Christians if the Pope is not a Christian. To say this would
be to speak the truth.
Who would take it into his head today to want to think the truth
about such important matters? And who would take it into his head to
see in earthly things, which he recognizes as maya, the playing in of
divine, of supernatural forces? This would be quite uncharacteristic
of the present day. Only if we are forced do we recognize these
things; only if forced do we bow to the laws of the cosmos. We are
forced to recognize that the blade of wheat sprouts from the earth at
a given season, develops ears which in turn produce new seeds; that
there is a definite rotation so that what has come into being has to
fade again in due season in accordance with the laws of nature. Even
this we would not recognize if we were not forced to do so.
In ancient times it was recognized that the ‘sun hero’
called to be the leader of the Ingaevones would cease to be so after
three years. These laws were felt, just as were those of the growing
plants. It is important to endeavour to think of all these things
resounding in unison, in harmony. Only by doing so can one come to
the truth and widen one's horizons. For the truth is not a
child's game to be arranged according to personal interests. To
adhere to the truth is a grave and holy act of worship. This must be
felt and sensed. Yet the whole tendency today is none other than to
make maya absolute and declare it to be the truth.
What is the historical criticism cultivated today in historical
seminars? It is a neat paring down to the bare sense-perceptible
facts, and this can only lead to error. For by striving to pare
things down to the sense-perceptible facts we drift over into maya.
But maya is illusion. So any science of history which endeavours to
exclude every spiritual element and, instead, bring maya to the fore,
must of necessity lead directly to maya. Just try, by using modern
seminar methods applied in historical departments today, to pare
things down to the truth by eliminating anything spiritual and
accepting only what takes place on the physical plane, that is, only
sense-perceptible facts, and you will find that you fall a victim to
maya and never reach an understanding of history. Take a modern
history book for which anything supersensible is an absurdity and in
which great care is taken to attach validity only to physical events,
and you have in your hand the striving to bring maya to the fore. But
maya is illusion. So you have to fall a victim to illusion; and this
is exactly what you do. The moment you believe history as it is
written today you become a victim of maya, of illusion.
But history has not always been written in this way. The way it
was done in former times is scorned today. It is a terrible aspect of
human karma that even in man's view of history the spiritual
element is excluded. Let us look back to the time when the attitude
of the fourth post-Atlantean period was dominant. History was told
quite differently then. It was told in a way which makes
today's professors turn up their noses and say: These fellows
were totally uncritical; they let themselves be lumbered with all
sorts of myths and sagas; they had no feeling for tidy criticism
which would have shown them the facts as they really were. This is
what historians say today, and of course also those who copy them.
The people in those days were childish, they say. Of course they were
childish when compared with today's notions! Let us listen to
the old way of telling history, of telling what countless people with
the attitude of mind of the fourth post-Atlantean period saw as
history. Let us listen to this today and look at it as an example
which we can use as a basis for what is to be said tomorrow:
Once upon a time
[ Note 3 ]
there lived in Saxon lands an Emperor
whom people called ‘Red Emperor’, the Emperor with the
red beard: Otto of the Red Beard.
[ Note 4 ]
This Emperor had a wife
who came from England and whose heart's desire it was to endow
a church. So Otto the Red decided to endow the archbishopric of
Magdeburg. The archbishopric of Magdeburg was to have a special
mission in Central Europe. It was to link the West with the East in
such a way that this very archbishopric would be the one to bring
Christianity to the neighbouring Slavs. The archbishopric of
Magdeburg made good progress, carrying out charitable works over a
wide area, and Otto of the Red Beard saw what good effects his
endowment was having in the district. He was very pleased at this. He
said to himself: My deeds are sufficient as a blessing in the
physical world. He always longed for God to reward him for his
benevolent deeds towards the people. That was his aim: that God might
reward him because, after all, everything he did was done from
piety.
Once he knelt in church in prayer which rose up to become a
meditation, beseeching the gods to reward him, when he died, for his
endowment, in the same way as he had found his reward on the physical
plane, in all the good that had come about in the environment of the
archbishopric of Magdeburg. Then a spiritual being appeared to him
and said: It is true, you have endowed much that is good, you have
acted with much benevolence towards many people. But you have done
all this with a view to receiving the blessing of the divine world
after your death, just as you are now enjoying the blessing of the
earthly world. This is bad and it spoils your endowment.
Now Otto of the Red Beard was very unhappy about this and he spoke
with this being who was — was he not? — a being from the
ranks of the angeloi. We may feel this in the attitude of mind of the
fourth post-Atlantean period. He spoke with this being and this being
said to him: Go to Cologne where Gerhard the Good lives. Ask where
you can find Gerhard the Good. If you can make yourself more virtuous
through what Gerhard the Good will say to you, then perhaps you can
avoid what I have just said will happen to you. This, more or less,
was the conversation of Otto of the Red Beard with the spiritual
being.
With a speed which those around him could not understand, the
Emperor Otto made ready to journey to Cologne. In Cologne he called a
gathering of the Burgomaster and all ‘wise and benign
councillors’. One of those who came he recognized by his
appearance as an unusual man, the one whom he had really come to see.
He asked the Archbishop of Cologne, who had accompanied him, whether
this was Gerhard the Good. And indeed it was. Then the Emperor said
to the councillors: I wished to consult with you, but now I shall
first speak apart with this man and then discuss with you what I have
gleaned from him when I have spoken with him.
Perhaps this put the councillors' noses out of joint
somewhat, but we shall not go into this. So the Emperor took aside
the councillor known in Cologne as Gerhard the Good and asked: Why do
people call you Gerhard the Good? He had to ask this question, for
the angel had pointed out that it all depended on whether he could
recognize why this man was called Gerhard the Good. For he was to be
healed through him. Gerhard the Good answered: People call me Gerhard
the Good because they are thoughtless. I have not done anything
special. But what I have done, which is something quite insignificant
and about which I shall not tell you, has become known to some extent
and, because people always want to invent phrases, they call me
Gerhard the Good. The Emperor said: Surely it cannot be as simple as
all that, and it is extremely important for me and my whole reign
that I discover why people call you Gerhard the Good. Gerhard the
Good did not want to disclose anything, but the Emperor pressed him
ever harder till Gerhard the Good said: Very well, I will tell you
why they call me Gerhard the Good, but you must not tell anyone else,
for truly I see nothing special in it:
I am a simple merchant, I have always been a simple merchant, and
one day I prepared to set out on a journey. First I journeyed on land
for a while, and then at sea. I travelled as far as the Orient where
I purchased very many valuable materials and valuable objects for
very little money. I planned to sell these things elsewhere for
double, treble, or even four or five times the price, for this is the
custom among merchants; this was my business, my trade. Then I
continued my journey by ship. But we were blown off course by an
unfavourable wind. We had no idea where we were. So I found myself
off course in the wind on the open sea with a few companions and all
my costly objects and materials. We came ashore and from this shore a
cliff rose up. We sent out a scout to climb the cliff to see what was
beyond it, for we had been stranded on the shore. The scout saw a
great city beyond the cliff; it was obviously a great trading city.
Caravans were approaching along roads from all sides and a river
flowed past it. The scout returned and showed us the way to approach
the city from a spot where we could make fast our ship.
Here we were, in a city totally strange to us. Soon it became
obvious that we Christians were surrounded by heathens. We saw a busy
market. I thought to myself that I would be able to sell all sorts of
things in the market, for the bargaining was lively. But I did not
know the customs of the country. Then I saw coming towards me along
the street a man who looked trustworthy. To him I said: Could you
help me to sell my wares here? The man evidently felt that I too
looked trustworthy and said: Where have you come from? I told him I
was a Christian from Cologne. He said: Despite that, you seem quite
respectable. Hitherto I have entertained the worst suspicions about
Christians, but you do not seem to be a monster. I shall assist you
and will find you lodgings. After that you may like to show me your
wares.
When the merchant, Gerhard the Good, had settled in his lodgings,
the heathen man he had met came one day, inspected his wares and
found them exceptionally costly. He said: Though there are quite a
few rich people in the town, none of them is rich enough to buy all
this. I am the only one to possess anything equivalent to these
wares. If you want to sell them to me, I can give you what they are
worth, but I am the only one who could do this. The merchant from
Cologne wanted to see for himself, so the heathen offered to show him
that he did indeed possess wares of an equivalent value to those
extremely costly pieces gathered from all over the world.
So Gerhard went to the home of the heathen, where he saw
immediately that he was dealing with a most important citizen of the
town. First the heathen led him to a chamber in which twelve youths
lay chained. They were prisoners, starving and wretched. He said:
See, these are twelve Christians whom we took prisoner on the high
seas where they were drifting aimlessly. Now come and see the rest of
the wares. He took him to another room and showed him the same number
of miserable old men. Gerhard's heart bled more for the old men
than it had for the youths. Then he showed him a number of women
— fifteen, I believe — who had also been taken prisoner.
And he said: If you give me the wares I will give you these
prisoners. They are exceedingly valuable and you can have them.
Then Gerhard, the merchant from Cologne, discovered that one of
the women was exceedingly valuable because she was a daughter of the
King of Norway who had been shipwrecked with her women — only
some of the fifteen, the others were from elsewhere — and taken
prisoner by the heathen. The other women were from England, as were
the youths and old men. They had set sail with William, the son of
the King of England, to fetch his Norwegian bride. When he had
collected his Norwegian bride from Norway they had met with
misfortune and been washed out to sea. William, the King's son,
had been separated from the others. They did not know what had
befallen him. As far as they were concerned he was lost. But the
others, the women and the King's daughter from Norway, the
twelve noble youths, the twelve noble old men, and the English women
who had accompanied William to collect his bride, had all been
shipwrecked and fallen into the hands of this heathen prince. He now
wanted to sell them to Gerhard in exchange for his oriental wares.
Gerhard wept bitter tears, not on account of the wares but, on the
contrary, because he was to receive such valuable commodities in
exchange for them. With his whole heart he agreed to the deal. The
heathen prince was much moved and thought to himself: These
Christians are not at all the monsters I thought them to be. He even
equipped a fully provisioned ship so that Gerhard might take the
youths and the old men, the King's daughter and the maidens
across the sea with him. In parting from them all he was much moved
and said: On account of you I shall henceforth be very just to all
Christians who come into my care.
Now the merchant Gerhard from Cologne set off across the sea, and
when they came to the point where the configuration of the land
showed that the passages to London and to Utrecht must separate, he
said to his travelling companions: Those who belong to England may
sail that way. Those who belong to Norway, the King's daughter
with her few women, may come with me to Cologne and I shall see
whether the one whose bride she was to be has perhaps been found so
that he may come and collect her.
In Cologne Gerhard kept the King's daughter in accordance
with her standing. She was most lovingly cared for by his family.
Only at first — Gerhard the Good permitted himself to remark
— was his wife's nose put slightly out of joint when he
arrived with the King's daughter. But soon she loved her like
her own daughter. These things are quite understandable. She grew up
like a daughter of the house and was cared for lovingly. Her only
great sadness was that she never stopped weeping for her beloved
William, for she naturally presumed that if he had been saved he
would scour the world to find her. But he did not come. The family of
Gerhard the Good loved her, and Gerhard had a son, so he thought to
himself that this beautiful maiden might become a wife for his son.
Of course, in accordance with opinions at that time, this could only
happen if the son could be raised up to an equal standing. The
archbishop of Cologne declared himself prepared to make the son a
knight. Everything was done in a suitable way. Gerhard was very rich
and everything went well. Tournaments were held and after waiting
still another year in case William should turn up — the
King's daughter had begged for this — preparations were
made for the wedding.
During the wedding a pilgrim appeared, a man with a beard so long
that it was plain to see that much time had passed since it had last
seen a blade. And he was very sad. Gerhard the Good was filled with
pity at the sight of the pilgrim and asked him what was the matter.
It is impossible to say, said the pilgrim, for from now on he must
carry his sorrow through the wide world; from today he knew that his
sorrow would never cease. For the pilgrim was William who had lost
all his companions, had found land at last, had wandered about and
arrived at the very moment when his bride was almost married to
Gerhard's son in Cologne. Then Gerhard said: Of course you
shall have your rightful bride; I shall speak with my son. Since the
bride loved her lost bridegroom, William, more than Gerhard's
son, everything was arranged and, after her marriage to William had
been celebrated in Cologne, Gerhard accompanied William, the heir to
the throne of England, with his bride to England. There he left them.
Since he was known in London as a merchant he walked about the town
and heard that a great meeting was in progress. Everything was in
turbulence and it was plain to see that a revolution might break out.
He heard that this was because there was no heir to the throne. The
heir had disappeared years ago. He had quite a number of supporters
in the land, but all the others were in disagreement and the meeting
was now to decide on a new heir.
Gerhard donned his best robe and went to the meeting. He was
allowed in on account of his best robe — which was exceedingly
splendid because he was such a rich merchant. There he found
four-and-twenty men discussing who should replace the beloved heir,
William. Gerhard saw that the four-and-twenty were the selfsame men
he had rescued from the heathen prince and had sent to London at the
point where the ways to London and Utrecht parted. They did not
recognize him immediately. They told him that William had been lost
— William, whom they loved above all others. But then they
recognized each other. Now Gerhard explained that he would bring
William to them. So the matter was settled. I need not describe to
you the joy which now broke out all over England. At first, in the
meeting, before they knew who Gerhard was about to bring to them, but
having recognized him as the one who had saved them, they even wanted
to declare Gerhard himself king. Now William became King of England.
Then William wanted to confer on Gerhard the Duchy of Kent, but he
did not accept this. Even from the new Queen, who had for so long
been his foster daughter, he refused the gold treasures she wished to
bestow on him, accepting only a ring and a few other trinkets to
bring to his wife as keepsakes from their foster daughter. So he
departed for home.
All this has now unfortunately become known here — said
Gerhard the Good to Otto the Red — and that is why people call
me Gerhard the Good. But it is not for people, or even myself, to
judge whether what I did was good or not. Therefore it is nonsense
for people to call me Gerhard the Good, for the words can have no
meaning.
Otto the Red, the Emperor, listened attentively and realized that
other attitudes than the one he had developed were possible and
existed, even in the heart of a merchant of Cologne. This made a deep
impression on him. He returned to the council meeting and said to the
councillors: Gentlemen, you may go home, for I have learned all I
needed to know from Gerhard the Good. This put the noses of the wise
and benign councillors thoroughly out of joint, but the attitude of
soul of Otto the Red was entirely transformed.
This is how a story — history — was told in those
days. What is told here is criticized, obviously, by the historians
of today, whose aim is to pare history down to the facts of the
physical plane, facts which have their feet on the ground. Not only
this event but many others also were told, when the feeling for
history was still that of the fourth post-Atlantean period, with the
inclusion of not only the physical facts but also with the meaning
they had in relation to the spiritual world. There was an
interweaving between what happened on the physical plane and what
flowed through it, giving it meaning.
There is very deep meaning in the story of Otto the Red and
Gerhard the Good.
I wanted to tell you this story, which was once seen as history,
so that tomorrow we can use it, among other things, as a foundation
for further discussions which will widen our horizons still
further.
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