IV
A MICHAEL LECTURE
The Michael period into which the world has entered ever since the
last third of the 19th century, and into which human beings will have
to enter with increasing consciousness, is very different from former
periods of Michael. For in the earthly evolution of mankind different
ones among the seven great Archangel Spirits enter from time to time
into the life of man. Thus, after given periods of time a certain
guidance of the world such as the guidance of Gabriel or Uriel,
Raphael or Michael, is repeated. Our own period is, however,
essentially different from the preceding period of Michael. This is
due to the fact that man stands in quite another relation to the
spiritual world since the first third of the 15th century than he ever
did before. This new relation to the spiritual world also determines a
peculiar relation to the Spirit guiding the destinies of mankind, whom
we may call by the ancient name of Michael.
Recently I have been speaking to you again of the Rosicrucian
movement. Rosicrucianism, I remarked, has indeed led to charlatanry in
many quarters. Most of the so-called Rosicrucianism that
has been transmitted to mankind is charlatanry. Nevertheless, as I
have explained on former occasions, there did exist an individuality
whom we may describe by the name of Christian Rosenkreutz. This
individuality is, in a sense, the type and standard: he reveals the
way in which an enlightened spirit a man of spiritual knowledge
could enter into relation with the spiritual world at the dawn
of the new phase of humanity.
To Christian Rosenkreutz it was vouchsafed to ask many questions,
deeply significant riddles of existence, and in quite a new way when
compared to the earlier experiences of mankind. You see, my dear
friends, while Rosicrucianism was arising, directing the mind of man
with Faustian striving as it was afterwards
described towards the spiritual world, an abstract naturalistic
Science was arising on the other hand. The bearers of this modern
stream of spiritual life men like Galileo, Giordano Bruno,
Copernicus or Kepler, worthy as they are of fullest recognition
were quite differently situated from the Rosicrucians, who wanted to
foster, not a merely formal or abstract, but a true knowledge of
things. The Rosicrucians perceived in their own human life and being
how utterly the time had changed, and with it the whole relation of
the Gods to mankind.
We may describe it as follows. Quite distinctly until the 4th century
A.D., and in a rudimentary way even until the 12th and 13th century,
man was able to draw forth from himself real knowledge about the
spiritual world. In doing the exercises which belonged to the old
Mysteries, he could draw forth from himself the secrets of existence.
For the humanity of olden times it really was so: the Initiates drew
forth what they had to say to mankind, from the depths of their souls
to the surface of their thought their world of ideas. They had
the consciousness that they were drawing forth their knowledge from
the inner being of the human soul. The exercises they underwent were
intended, as you know, to stir the human heart to its depths,
so to inform the human heart and mind with experiences which man does
not undergo in the ordinary round of life. There-by the secrets of the
world of the Gods were, so to speak, drawn forth from the depths, from
the inner being of man.
Man, however, cannot see the secrets he draws out of himself while in
the very act of doing so. True, in the old instinctive clairvoyance
man did behold the secrets of the world; he saw them in Imagination;
he heard and perceived them in Inspiration; he united himself with
them in Intuition. These things, however, are impossible so long as
man merely stands there alone, just as little as it is possible
for me to draw a triangle without a board. The triangle I draw on the
board portrays to me what I bear in a purely spiritual way within me.
The triangle as a whole, all the laws of the triangle are in
me; but I draw the triangle on the board, thereby bringing home to
myself what is really there within me. So it is when we make external
diagrams. But when it is a question of deriving real knowledge out of
the being of man, after the manner of the ancient Mysteries, this
knowledge too must, in a certain sense, be written somewhere. Every
such knowledge, in effect, to be seen in the spirit, must be inscribed
in that which has been called from time immemorial the astral
light, i.e., in the fine substantiality of the Akasha.
Everything must be written there, and man must be able to develop this
faculty of writing in the astral light.
This faculty has depended on many and varied things in the course of
human evolution. Not to speak, for the moment, of pristine ages, I
will leave on one side the first Post-Atlantean epoch, the ancient
Indian. At that time it was somewhat different. Let me begin with the
ancient Persian epoch, as described in my Outline of Occult
Science. There was an instinctive clairvoyance, knowledge of the
divine-spiritual world. This knowledge could be written in the astral
light so that man himself could behold it, inasmuch as the earth, the
solid earth, afforded resistance. The writing itself is done, needless
to say, with the spiritual organs, but these organs also require a
basis of resistance. The things that are thus seen in the spirit are
not inscribed, of course, on the earth itself; they are written in the
astral light. But the earth acts as a ground of resistance. In the old
Persian epoch the seers could feel the resistance of the earth; and
hence the perceptions they drew forth from their inner being grew into
actual visions.
In the next, the Egypto-Chaldean epoch, all the knowledge that the
Initiates drew forth from their souls was able to be written in the
astral light by virtue of the fluid element. You must conceive it
rightly. The Initiate of the old Persian epoch looked to the solid
earth. Wherever there were plants or stones, the astral light
reflected back to him his inner vision. The Initiate of the
Egypto-Chaldean epoch looked into the sea, into the river, or into the
falling rain, the rising mist. When he looked into the river or the
sea, he saw the lasting secrets. Those secrets, on the other hand,
which relate to the transient to the creation of the Gods in
transient things he beheld in the downpouring rain or the
ascending mist. You must familiarise yourself with the idea. The
ancients had not the prosaic, matter-of-fact way of seeing the mist
and rain which is ours to-day. Rain and mist said very much to them
revealed to them the secrets of the Gods.
Then in the Graeco-Latin period, the visions were there like a Fata
Morgana in the air. The Greek saw his Zeus, his gods, in the astral
light; but he had the feeling that the astral light only reflected the
gods to him under the proper conditions. Hence he assigned his gods to
special places, places where the air could offer the proper
resistance to the inscriptions in the astral light. And so it remained
until the 4th century A.D. Even among the first Fathers of the
Christian Church, and notably the old Greek Fathers, there were many
(as you may even prove from their writings) who saw this Fata Morgana
of their own spiritual visions through the resistance of the air in
the astral light. Thus they had clear knowledge of the fact that out
of Man the Logos, the Divine Word, revealed Himself through Nature.
But in the course of time this knowledge faded and grew feeble. Echoes
of it still continued in a few specially gifted persons, even until
the 12th or 13th century. But when the age of abstract knowledge came
when men were only dependent on the logical sequence of ideas
and the results of sense-observation then neither earth nor
water nor air afforded resistance to the astral light, but only the
element of the warmth-ether. It is unknown, of course, to those who
are completely wrapped up in their abstract thoughts that these
abstract thoughts are also written in the astral light. They are
written there indeed; but in this process the element of the
warmth-ether is the sole resistance.
The following is now the case. Remember once more that in the ancient
Persian epoch men had the solid earth as a resistance so as to behold
their entries in the astral light. What is thus contained in the
astral light all that, for which the solid earth is the
resistance rays on and out, but only as far as the sphere of
the Moon. Farther it cannot go. Thence it rays back again. Thus it
remains, so to speak, with the Earth. We behold the secrets reflected
by virtue of the earth; they remain because of the pressure of the
lunar sphere.
Now let us consider the Egypto-Chaldean epoch. The water on the Earth
reflects. What is thus reflected goes as far as the Saturn-sphere,
which presses once again. Thereby the possibility is given for man to
remain with his visions on the Earth. And if we go on into the
Graeco-Latin period even into the 12th or 13th century
we find the visions inscribed in the astral light by virtue of the
air. This time it goes to the very end of the cosmic sphere and thence
returns. It is the most fleeting of all; yet still it is such that man
remains united with his visions. The Initiates of all these epochs
could say to themselves every time: Such spiritual vision as we have
had through earth or water or air it is there. But when
the most modern time arrived, only the element of the warmth-ether was
left to offer resistance. And the element of the warmth-ether carries
all that is written in it out into the cosmic realms, right out of
space into the spiritual worlds. It is no longer there.
It is so indeed. Take the most pedantic of modern professors with his
ideas. (He must at least have ideas. You would first have to make sure
of it in the individual case; modern professors seldom have ideas!)
But if he has ideas, then they are entered through the warmth-ether in
the astral light. Now the warmth-ether is transient and fleeting; all
things become merged and fused in it at once, and go out into cosmic
distances.
Such a man as Christian Rosenkreutz knew that the Initiates of olden
times had lived with their visions. They had confirmed what they
beheld through knowing that it was there, reflected somewhere in the
heavens be it in the moon-sphere or in the planetary sphere, or
at the end of the Universe it was reflected. But now, nothing
at all was reflected. For the immediate, wide-awake vision of man,
nothing at all was reflected. Now men could find ideas about Nature;
the Copernican cosmology could arise, all manner of ideas could be
formed, but they were scattered in the warmth-ether, out into cosmic
space.
So then it came about that Christian Rosenkreutz, by inspiration of a
higher Spirit, found a way to perceive the reflected radiation after
all, in spite of the fact that it was only a reflection by the
warmth-ether. It was brought about as follows. Other conditions of
consciousness dim, subconscious and sleep-like were
called into play; conditions in which man is even normally outside his
body. Then it became perceptible that that which is discovered with
modern abstract ideas is after all inscribed, although not in space,
but in the spiritual world. This, therefore, was the peculiar outcome
for the Rosicrucian Movement: the Rosicrucians, as it were in a
transition stage, made themselves acquainted with all that could be
discovered about Nature in this epoch. They received it into
themselves and assimilated it as only man can assimilate it. They
enhanced into true Wisdom what for the others was only Science.
Holding it in their souls, they tried to pass over into sleep in
highest purity and after intimate meditations. Then the divine
spiritual worlds no longer the spatial end of the universe, but
the divine spiritual worlds brought back to them in a
spiritually real language what had been conceived at first in abstract
ideas.
In Rosicrucian schools not only was the Copernican cosmology taught,
but in special states of consciousness its ideas came back in the form
I explained here during the last few days. It was the Rosicrucians,
above all, who realised that that which man receives in modern
knowledge must first be carried forth, so to speak, and offered to the
Gods, that the Gods may translate it into their language and give it
back again to men.
The possibility has remained until this present. It is so indeed, my
dear friends. If you are touched by the Rosicrucian principle as here
intended, study the system of Haeckel, with all its materialism; study
it, and at the same time permeate yourselves with the methods of
cognition indicated in Knowledge of Higher Worlds and its
Attainment. Take what you learn in Haeckel's Anthropogenesis:
on the Ancestors of Man. In that form it may very likely
repel you. Learn it nevertheless; learn all that can be learned about
it by outer Natural Science, and carry it towards the Gods; then you
will get what is related about evolution in my Occult
Science.
Such is the connection between the feeble, shadowy knowledge which man
can acquire here with his physical body, and that which the Gods can
give him, if with the proper spirit he duly prepares himself by the
learning of this knowledge. But man must first bring towards them what
he can learn here on the Earth, for in truth the times have changed.
Moreover, another thing has happened. Let a man strive as he will
to-day; he can no longer draw anything forth from himself as the old
Initiates did. The soul no longer gives anything forth in the way it
did for the old Initiates. It all becomes impure filled with
instincts, as is evident in the case of spiritualist mediums, and in
other morbid or pathological conditions. All that arises merely from
within, becomes impure. The time of such creation from within is past;
it was past already in the 12th or 13th century. What happened can be
expressed approximately as follows: The Initiates of the old Persian
epoch wrote very much in the astral light with the help of the
resistance of the earth. When the first Initiate of the old Persian
epoch appeared, the whole of the astral light, destined for man, was
like an unwritten slate. I shall speak later of the old Indian epoch.
To-day I shall only go back to the ancient Persian epoch. All Nature:
all the elements solid, liquid, airy and warmth-like
were an unwritten slate.
Now the Initiates of the old Persian epoch wrote on this slate as much
as could be written by virtue of the resistance of the earth. There,
to begin with, the secrets destined to come to man from the Gods were
mitten in the astral light. To a certain degree the tablet was
inscribed; yet judged by another standard it was empty. So the
Initiates of the Egypto-Chaldean epoch were able to continue the
writing in their way; for they gained their visions by the resistance
of the water. Another part of the tablet was inscribed.
Then came the Greek Initiates; they inscribed the third portion of the
tablet. Now the tablet of Nature is fully inscribed; it was quite
fully inscribed by the 13th or 14th century. Then human beings began
to write in the warmth-ether; that, however, scatters and dissolves
away in the vast expanse. For a time until the 19th century
men wrote in the warmth-ether; they had no inkling that their
experiences also stood written in the astral light. But now, my dear
friends, the time has come when men must see that not out of
themselves, in the old sense, can they find the secrets of the world,
but only by so preparing themselves in heart and mind that they can
read what is written on the tablet which is now full of writing. This
we must prepare to do to-day. We must make ourselves ripe for this
no longer to draw forth from ourselves like the old Initiates,
but to be able to read in the astral light all that is written there.
If we do so, precisely what we gain from the warmth-ether will work as
an inspiration. The Gods come to meet us, and bring to us in its
reality what we have acquired by our own efforts here on Earth. And
what we thus receive from the warmth-ether reacts in turn on all that
stands written on the tablet by virtue of the air and water and earth.
Thus the Natural Science of to-day is actually the true basis for
spiritual seership. Learn first by Natural Science to know the
properties of air, water and earth. Attain the corresponding inner
faculties. Then, as you gaze into the airy, into the watery, into the
earthy element, the astral light will stream forth. It does not stream
forth like a vague mist or cloud; but so that we can read in it the
secrets of world-existence and of human life.
What, then, do we read? We the humanity of to-day read
what we ourselves have written in it. For what does it mean to say
that the ancient Greeks, Egyptians, Chaldeans, Persians wrote in the
astral light? It was we ourselves who wrote it in our former lives on
Earth.
You see, my dear friends: just as our inner memory of the common
things that we experience in earthly life preserves them for us, so
too the astral light preserves for us what we have written in it. It
is the astral light which spreads around us, as a fully written tablet
with respect to the secrets which we ourselves have inscribed. There
we must read, if we wish to find the secrets once more. It is a kind
of evolution-memory which must arise in mankind. A consciousness must
gradually arise that there is such an evolution-memory, and that in
relation to former epochs of culture the humanity of to-day must read
in the astral light, just as we, at a later age, read in our own youth
through ordinary memory. This must come into the consciousness of men.
In this sense I have held the lectures this Christmas-time, so that
you could see that the point is to draw forth from the astral light
the secrets that we need to-day. The old initiation was directed
mainly to the subjective life; the new initiation concentrates on the
objective, that is the great difference. For all that was
subjective is written in the outer world. All that the Gods have
secreted into man, . . . what they secreted in his sentient body, came
out into the old Persian epoch; what they secreted in his sentient
soul, came out in the Egypto-Chaldean epoch; what they secreted in his
intellectual or mind-soul came out during the Grecian epoch. The
spiritual soul which we are now to evolve is independent, brings forth
nothing more out of itself; it stands over against what is already
there. As human beings we must find our humanity again in the astral
light.
That is the peculiarity of the Rosicrucian movement: in a time of
transition it had to content itself with entering into certain
dream-like conditions, and, as it were, dreaming the higher truth of
that which Science discovers here in a dry, matter-of-fact way
out of the Nature around us.
And this is the peculiarity since the beginning of the Michael epoch,
since the end of the 1870's, the last third of the 19th century:
The same thing that was attained in the way above-described in
the time of the old Rosicrucians, can now be attained in a conscious
way. To-day, therefore, we can say: We no longer need that other
condition which was half-conscious. What we need is a state of
enhanced consciousness. Then, with the knowledge of Nature which we
acquire, we can press into the higher world; and the Nature-knowledge
we have acquired emerges and comes towards us from that higher world.
We read again what has been written in the astral light; and as we do
so, it emerges and comes to meet us in spiritual reality. We carry up
into a spiritual world the knowledge of Nature here attained, or
again, the creations of naturalistic art, or the religious sentiments
working naturalistically in the soul. (Even religion has become
naturalistic nowadays). And as we carry all this upward if we
develop the necessary faculties we do indeed encounter Michael.
So we may say: the old Rosicrucian movement is characterised by the
fact that its most illumined spirits had an intense longing to meet
Michael; but they could only do so as in dream. Since the end of the
last third of the nineteenth century, men can meet Michael in the
spirit, in a fully conscious way.
Michael, however, is a peculiar being: Michael is a being who reveals
nothing if we do not bring him something from our diligent spiritual
work on Earth. Michael is a silent Spirit silent and taciturn.
The other ruling Archangels are talkative Spirits in a
spiritual sense, of course; but Michael is taciturn. He is a Spirit
who speaks very little. At most he will give sparing indications, for
what we learn from Michael is not really the word, but if I may
so express it the look, the power, the direction of his gaze.
This is because Michael concerns himself most of all with that which
men create out of the Spirit. He lives with the consequences of all
that men have created. The other Spirits live more with the causes;
Michael lives with the consequences. The other Spirits kindle in man
the impulses for that which he shall do. Michael will be the true
spiritual hero of Freedom; he lets men do, and he then takes what
becomes of human deeds, receives it and carries it on and out into the
cosmos, to continue in the cosmos what men themselves cannot yet do
with it.
Other beings of the Hierarchy of Archangeloi give us the feeling that
from them come the impulses to do this or that. In a greater or lesser
degree, the impulses come from them. Michael is the Spirit from whom
no impulses come, to begin with; for his characteristic period of
rulership is that which is now coming, when things are to arise out of
human freedom. But when man does things out of spiritual activity or
inner freedom, consciously or unconsciously kindled by the reading of
the astral light, then Michael carries the human earthly deed out into
the cosmos; so that it becomes cosmic deed. Michael cares for the
results; the other Spirits care more for the causes.
However, Michael is not only a silent, taciturn Spirit. Michael meets
man with a very clear gesture of repulsion for many things in which
the human being of to-day still lives on Earth. For example, all
knowledge that arises in the life of men or animals or plants, tending
to lay stress on the inherited characteristics on all that is
inherited in physical nature is such that we feel Michael
constantly repelling it, driving it away with deprecation. He means to
show that such knowledge cannot help man at all for the Spiritual
World. Only what man discovers in the human and animal and plant
kingdoms independently of the purely hereditary nature, can be carried
up before Michael. Then we receive, not the eloquent gesture of
deprecation, but the look of approval which tells us that it is a
thought righteously conceived in face of the cosmic guidance. For this
is what we learn increasingly to strive for: as it were to meditate,
so as to strike through to the astral light, to see the secrets of
existence, and then to come before Michael and receive his approving
look which tells us: That is just, that is right before the cosmic
guidance.
So it is with Michael. He also sternly rejects all separating
elements, such as the human languages. So long as we only clothe our
knowledge in these languages, and do not carry it right up into the
thoughts, we cannot come near Michael. Therefore, to-day in the
spiritual world there is much significant battle. For on the one hand
the Michael impulse has entered the evolution of humanity. The Michael
impulse is there. But on the other hand, in the evolution of humanity
there is much that will not receive this impulse of Michael but wants
to reject it. Among the things that would fain reject the impulse of
Michael to-day are the feelings of nationality. They flared up in the
nineteenth century and became strong in the twentieth stronger
and stronger. By the principle of nationality many things have been
ordered, or rather, disordered in the most recent times. For they have
in fact been disordered.
All this is in terrible opposition to the Michael principle; all this
contains Ahrimanic forces which strive against the in-pouring and
throbbing of the Michael-force into the earthly life of man. So then
we see this battle of the up-ward-attacking Ahrimanic spirits who
would like to carry upward what comes through the inherited impulses
of nationality which Michael sternly rejects and repels.
Truly to-day there is the most vivid spiritual conflict in this
direction. For this is the state of affairs over a great portion of
mankind. Thoughts are not there at all; men only think in words, and
to think in words is no way to Michael. We only come to Michael when
we get through the words to real inner experiences of the spirit
when we do not hang on the words, but arrive at real inner
experiences of the spirit.
This is the very essence, the secret of modern Initiation: to get
beyond the words to a living experience of the spiritual. It is
nothing contrary to a feeling for the beauty of language. Precisely
when we no longer think in language, we begin to feel
it; we begin to have it streaming in us and out from us as an
element of feeling. That, however, is a thing to which the man of
to-day must first aspire. Perhaps, to begin with, he cannot attain it
in his actual speech, but through his writing. For in respect of
writing, too, it must be said: To-day men do not have the writing but
the writing has them. What does it mean, the writing has
them? It means that in our wrist, in our hand, we have a certain
train of writing. We write mechanically, out of the hand. This is a
thing that fetters man. He only becomes unfettered when he writes as
he paints or draws when every letter beside the next becomes a
thing that is painted or drawn ... Then there is no longer what is
ordinarily called a handwriting. Man draws the form of the
letter. His relation to the letter is objective; he sees it before him
that is the essential thing.
For this reason, strange as it may sound, in certain Rosicrucian
schools learning-to-write was prohibited until the fourteenth or
fifteenth year of age; so that the form, the mechanism which comes to
expression in writing, did not enter the human organism. Man only
approached the form of the letter when his spiritual vision was
developed. Then it was so arranged that simultaneously with his
learning of the conventional letters, needed for human intercourse, he
had to learn others specifically Rosicrucian letters
which are regarded nowadays as a secret script. They were not intended
as such; the idea was that for an A one should learn at the
same time another sign: O. For then one did not hold fast to the one
sign but got free of it. Then one felt the real A as
something higher than the mere sign of A or O. Otherwise, the
mere letter A would be identified with that which comes forth
from the human being, soaring and hovering as the living sound of
A.
With Rosicrucianism many things found their way into the people. For
it was one of their fundamental principles: from the small circles in
which they were united, the Rosicrucians went out into the world, as I
have already told you, generally working as doctors. But at the same
time, while they were doctors, they spread knowledge of many things in
the wide circles into which they came. Moreover, with such knowledge,
certain moods and feelings were spread. We find them everywhere,
wherever the Rosicrucian stream has left its traces. Sometimes they
even assume grotesque forms. For instance, out of such moods and
feelings of soul, men came to regard the whole of this modern
relationship to writing and, a fortiori, to printing
a black art. For in truth, nothing hinders one more from
reading in the astral light than ordinary writing. This artificial
fixing hinders one very much from reading in the astral light. One
must always first overcome this writing when one wants to read in the
astral light.
At this point two things come together, one of which I mentioned a
short while ago. In the production of spiritual knowledge man must
always be present with full inner activity. I confessed that I have
many note-books in which I write or put down the results I come to. I
generally do not look at them again. Only, by calling into activity
not only the head but the whole man, these perceptions which do indeed
take hold of the entire man come forth. He who does so, gradually
accustoms himself not to care so much for what he sees physically,
what is already fixed; but to remain in the activity, in order not to
spoil his faculty of seeing in the astral light. It is good to
practise this reticence. As far as possible, when fixing things in
ordinary writing, one should adhere not to the writing as such, but
draw in the letters after one's pleasure (for then it is really as
though you were painting, it is an art). Or again, one does not
reflect upon what one writes down. Thereby one acquires the faculty
not to spoil the impressions in the astral light.
If we are obliged to relate ourselves to writing in the modern way, we
mar our spiritual progress. For this reason, in our Waldorf School
educational method, great care is taken that the human being does not
go so far in writing as in the ordinary educational methods of to-day.
Care is taken to enable him to remain within the spiritual, for that
is necessary.
Thus the world must come to receive the principle of Initiation as
such, once more, among the principles of civilisation. Only in this
way will it come about: man, here on the Earth, will gather in his
soul something with which he can go before Michael, so as to meet with
Michael's approving gaze, which says: That is just before the
Universe. Then the will is strengthened and made firm, and the
human being is incorporated in the spiritual progress of the Universe.
Hence man himself becomes a co-operator in that which is about to be
instilled into the evolution of mankind on Earth by Michael
beginning now in this present epoch of Michael.
Many, many things must be taken into account if man wishes rightly to
cross that abyss of which I spoke yesterday, where in truth a Guardian
is standing. We shall show in the next lectures how this abyss was
opened out in the 1840's, and how, under the influence of such
knowledge as I have set forth once more to-day, man, looking back to
this abyss, can relate himself to this same Guardian.
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