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VI
The
Tasks of the Michael Age
The Michael period into which the world has been entering ever since
the last third of the nineteenth century, and into which human beings
will have to enter with increasing consciousness, is very different
from former periods of Michael. For so it is in the earthly evolution
of mankind. One after another 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
fifteenth 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 degenerated to charlatanry in many quarters.
Most of that which has been transmitted to mankind under the name 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 with the earlier
experiences of mankind. You see, while Rosicrucianism was arising,
directing the mind of man — with “Faustian”
endeavour, as it was sometimes called in later times — 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 differently situated
from the Rosicrucians, who wanted to foster, not a merely formal or
abstract, but a true knowledge of the world. The Rosicrucians
perceived in their own human life and being how utterly the times had
changed, and with it the whole relation of the Gods to mankind.
We may describe it as follows. —
Quite distinctly until the fourth century A.D.,
and in a rudimentary way even until the twelfth and thirteenth
century, man was able to draw forth from himself real knowledge about
the spiritual world. In doing the exercises of 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, to
inform the human heart and mind with experiences which man does not
undergo in the ordinary round of life. Thereby 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 beheld them in Imagination; he beheld them
hearingly 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. And it is the same 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 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 the 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 in that
time instinctive clairvoyance, there was knowledge of the
divine-spiritual world. This knowledge could be written in the astral
light so that man could behold it, inasmuch as the Earth, the solid
Earth, afforded resistance. The writing itself is done, needless to
say, with 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 into 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:
thereby alone, 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 secrets
that endure. 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 today.
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 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 fourth
century A.D. Even among the first Fathers of the
Christian Church, and notably the old Creek 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 twelfth or thirteenth century. But when the age of abstract
knowledge came — when men became entirely 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. They do not know 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. Man beholds 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. And now it is Saturn that
presses for man on Earth to “hold” what he beholds in
spirit. And if we go on into Graeco-Latin period — even into
the twelfth or thirteenth 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, my dear
friends. Take the most pedantic of modern professors with his ideas.
He must of course have ideas — some of them have none at all —
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
fastened and confirmed what they beheld, 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 vast.
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, albeit not in space, but in the spiritual
world. This, then, is what we see in 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 first
been apprehended 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 the Higher Worlds and its Attainment.
Take what you learn in Haeckel's
Anthropogenesis.
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. You will get what is related about evolution in my
Outline of Occult Science.
Such is the connection
between the feeble, shadowy knowledge which man can acquire here
until 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 today; he can no longer draw
anything forth from himself as did the old Initiates. 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
twelfth or thirteenth 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 solid 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. Today 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 written in the
astral light. To a certain degree the tablet was inscribed; yet in
another respect it was empty. Thus 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.
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 thirteenth or fourteenth 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 nineteenth century
— men wrote in the warmth-ether; they had no inkling that these
experiences of theirs stand written in the astral light. But now, my
dear friends, the time has come when men must recognise: 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 today. 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 air, water, and earth.
Thus is the Natural Science
of today 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 today — 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. The astral light is spread around
us — a fully written tablet with respect to the secrets which
we ourselves have inscribed. There we must read, if we would 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 today 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 today.
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 in the old Persian 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.
So then it was with 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 how it has been
since the beginning of the Michael epoch, since the end of the
1870's: 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. Today, 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 dive 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
ourselves do not bring Him something from our diligent spiritual work
on Earth. Michael is a silent Spirit — silent and reserved. The
other ruling Archangels are Spirits who talk much — 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.
For other beings of the
Hierarchy of Archangeloi, we feel that impulses are coming from Them.
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 most
characteristic epoch is the one now at hand, 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 it becomes cosmic deed. Michael
takes care 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
today still lives on Earth. For example, all knowledge that arises as
to the life of men or animals or plants, tending to lay stress on
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 harmony with 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 right, in harmony with 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, today in the spiritual world there is a
very 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 today
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, have become sadly disordered in the most recent
times.
All this is in terrible
opposition to the Michael principle; all this contains Ahrimanic
forces which strive against the inpouring of the Michael-force into
the earthly life of man. So then we see this battle of the
upward-attacking Ahrimanic spirits who would like to carry upward
what comes through the inherited impulses of nationality —
which Michael sternly rejects and repels.
Truly today 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. As a true element of feeling, it
begins to live in us and flow outward from us. This is the experience
to which the man of today must aspire. Perhaps, to begin with, he
cannot attain it for speech, but through writing. For in respect of
writing, too, it must be said: Today 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, even until the fourteenth or fifteenth century; so that
the form, the mechanism which comes to expression in writing, did not
enter the human being's 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 supposed to have
been 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:
8.
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
8. 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 it.
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 —
as 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 confess 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, by and by 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 writing as such, but draw the letters and re-draw them
after one's pleasure (for then it is as though you were
painting, it becomes an art). Thus 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 the Waldorf School educational method,
great care is taken that the human being does not go so far in
writing as in the profane educational methods of today. Care is taken
to enable him to remain within the Spiritual, for that is necessary.
The world must receive once
more the principle of Initiation as such among the principles of
civilisation. Only thereby will it come about that man, here on the
Earth, will gather in his soul something with which he can go before
Michael, so as to meet Michael's approving look, the look that
says: “That is right, cosmically right.” Thereby the will
is fastened and made firm, and the human being is incorporated in the
spiritual Progress of the Universe. Thereby, 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 the abyss opened out in the 1840's,
and how man today, as he looks back, can find his true relation to
this abyss and to this Guardian — helped by such detailed
knowledge as I have once again been trying to present.
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