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Evolution in the Aspect of Realities
GA 132

7 November 1911, Dornach

2. Inner aspect of Sun-Embodiment of Earth.

You will have gathered from our last lecture how extremely difficult it is to describe the early condition of our evolution before our own Earth came into being. For we have seen that we must first of all build up concepts and ideas through which we may reach those strange and distant conditions of the evolution of our world. I have already called attention to the fact that the description in my Occult Science of the period of ancient Saturn, as well as that of the following embodiments of our Earth is not only not exhaustive, but that, in a sense, we had to be satisfied (in order not to startle the public, to whom the book is accessible) with clothing the subject in pictures taken from what is near at hand and familiar. The description given there is in no respect incorrect, but it is very deeply immersed in Maya and Illusion; and we must first work our way through the illusion in order to penetrate further into the truth of the matter. For instance, the old Saturn period is described (and this is quite correct within certain limits) as a heavenly body whose essential parts did not consist of what we know as earth, water and air, but of ‘heat.’ So, too, in first speaking of ‘space,’ that also is merely a pictorial description; for, as we saw in the last lecture, ‘time’ itself did not even exist. When we speak of ‘space’ we are speaking pictorially. Of space there was none in our sense. And time first came into being on Saturn itself. When we carry our thought back to ancient Saturn we are absolutely in the realm of spaceless eternity. When, therefore, something is said to call up a picture before our minds, we must be clear that it is only a picture. If we could have observed the space of ancient Saturn we should have found no substance dense enough to be called gas, nothing but heat and cold.

In reality we could not speak of coming from one part of space into another, but only the sensation of passing through warmer and colder conditions; so that even the clairvoyant, when he transports himself back to the time of Saturn, receives the impression of being in spaceless ebb and flow of heat. That is only the outer veil of the Saturn condition. For this ‘heat’ or ‘fire’ as it is called in occultism, is concealed from us in the fundamental depths of its being; and we have seen that spiritual achievements formed in truth the very existence of ancient Saturn; and we have formed a picture of the spiritual deeds then existing. We have said that the Spirits of Will or Thrones achieved sacrificial acts; so that when we look back to the concrete occurrences on Saturn, we have the Cherubim and the sacrifice flowing forth from the Thrones. Sacrifice streamed from the Thrones to the Cherubim. And it is these sacrificial deeds seen from without, as it were, which appear as ‘heat.’ Conditions of heat are the external expression—speaking in a general sense—the external physical expression of sacrifice, and throughout the world, wherever heat is perceptible it is the outer expression of what lies behind it. Conditions of heat are the sacrificial acts of beings. Thus in describing heat we must say ‘Cosmic heat is the manifestation of Cosmic sacrifice, or of Cosmic sacrificial deeds.’

For we have seen that from this sacrificial deed offered by the Thrones to the Cherubim is brought to birth that which we call time: though I have already called attention to the fact that ‘brought to birth’ is a modern term and does not quite apply. For time was not then that abstraction man now accepts as time, but a totality of beings, the Spirits of Personality, whom we have therefore come to recognise as ‘Time-Spirits.’ The Time-Spirits are the true ancient time—and they are the children of the Thrones and the Cherubim. The condition by means of which the Beings of Time originated on ancient Saturn was sacrifice. Thus, in order to obtain an actual comprehension of what lies behind, when it is said: Ancient Saturn consists of ‘heat,’ we do not merely require external, physical concepts (for ‘heat’ is a physical concept), but we must acquire concepts which can only be derived from the soul-life itself, from the ethical wisdom-laden life of the soul. No man can know what heat is who is not able to form a conception of what it means; to be ready to sacrifice what he has, everything he possesses, indeed, not only everything he possesses, but also what he himself is. The sacrifice of the individual being, the soul's determination to renounce individual being, so regarding it as to be ready to devote its best to the welfare of the world, wishing to keep back nothing of the heat for itself, but gladly to offer it in sacrifice on the altar of the universe; if this becomes a living idea permeating our soul, it will gradually lead to the understanding of what lies behind the phenomenon of heat. If it is to be recognised as what in our modern life—even today—is bound up with the conception of sacrifice, it is hardly thinkable that anyone sacrificing himself with understanding ever does so against his own will. A sacrifice offered against the will argues some compelling motive; there must be compulsion. But this would not apply to what we are now discussing. The sacrifice that flows forth from a being as a matter of course is what is meant here. And if a man should make a sacrifice, not because he is forced to do so by any external motive, not because he hopes to gain something by so doing, but because he feels within him the impulse to sacrifice, it is then unthinkable that he should feel anything but inner warmth of bliss. If we feel ourselves glowing with this inner warmth of bliss, it is an expression of what can be described in no other way than by saying that the one making the sacrifice feels himself warmed through and through, glowing with bliss. In this way it is possible for us to feel the glow of sacrifice in the outer Cosmic heat. He alone understands what really is who can grasp the thought: Whenever heat appears in the world there is always in some way underlying it something of a soil-spiritual nature which is behind the heat and brings about the warmth through the special bliss. He who can feel all this about the warmth will gradually arrive at the reality of what is concealed behind the illusion of warmth, behind the phenomenon of heat.

Now if we wish to penetrate further, from the life of ancient Saturn to that of the Sun, we must again first form an idea by which we can imagine the substance of the ancient Sun—not our present Sun. For when we read in Occult Science that ancient Sun re-organised heat by adding to it air and light, that again is depicted merely by an external phenomenon. Just as behind the heat we must seek for the glow of sacrifice of the Spirits of Will, so must we look behind ‘air’ and ‘light’ for something ethical if we wish to understand the air and the light which are added to the heat on ancient Sun. Now we can only obtain a feeling of this substance of the ancient Sun through something of a spiritual psychic nature which we may experience in our souls.

We can describe it in the following way as a soul-experience. Let us imagine that a man were to see a real, genuine act of sacrifice, or that he were to picture to himself what we described in the last lecture as the sacrificial act of the Thrones, the Thrones offering up their sacrifice to the Cherubim—so that he is moved by the picture of the beatific sacrifice which he contemplates and which awakens the life in the soul. What would our souls feel through either the vision of the sacrificing Beings themselves, or by the picture we make truly living in our souls? If the feelings of this man are vivid, if the beatific sacrifice does not leave him unaffected, he will feel a profound feeling of bliss at the vision of the sacrifice; he will feel in his soul that it is the most beautiful deed, the most beautiful experience that can be called forth in our souls, the vision of the beatitude of sacrifice! We should be soul-less lumps if this experience did not arouse in the soul a passionate desire to understand inwardly with intensest reverence, what the beatitude of sacrifice is—if we did not learn the spirit of utter devotion. Sacrifice is devotion transformed into activity. The contemplation of active practical devotion may call forth the attuning of the soul's being to self-surrender, to the casting off of self, to self-effacement. Imagine this spirit of disinterested casting off of self wholly flooding the soul through the vision; then we have with this spirit that which can come nearer to us for our understanding, inasmuch as without such a spirit—without at least a hint, a foretaste of such a spirit—never could we really attain to what the higher knowledge gives. He who is unable to feel this spirit of self-surrender can never attain to higher knowledge. For what would be the opposite of this spirit? It would be self-will, assertion of individual will. These are, as it were, the two opposite Cosmic poles; devoted absorption in that which is contemplated, and self-willed assertion of individuality. These are two great opposites. Personal will fatally opposes the permeation of the higher Self with wisdom. In ordinary life we only know self-will in the form of prejudice, and prejudices always destroy the higher insight. But we must imagine what is here called self-surrender as intensified; for this can only be conceived when a man has worked his way up to the higher worlds. There he must be able to experience this casting off of self—at least as a frame of mind. Therefore it must always be emphasised that we can never attain higher knowledge so long as we work after the fashion of ordinary science and trivial thought. Let us be clear; ordinary science and everyday thought work out whatever self-will has created by means of the ordinary will of man, through the inherited or educated sensations and feelings. We can deceive ourselves greatly as to this. For instance, people may say: ‘Suppose one takes up any science, such as that set forth in spiritual science or Theosophy; I will not accept anything that does not agree with my thought, I will accept nothing unproved.’ Certainly we should not accept anything unproved. But neither do we advance a single step further if we only accept what is proved. And a man who wishes to be clairvoyant will never say that he can only accept what he has first proved. He must be completely free of all self-seeking and must wait what comes to him from the Cosmos, and which can only be designated by the word ‘grace.’ From the grace which illuminates he expects everything. For how do we acquire clairvoyant knowledge? Only by eliminating everything we have ever learnt. As a rule a man says, I have my own opinion. But what he ought to say is: This only comes because I have revived what my ancestors have thought, or what my desires have aroused in me, etc. For there can never be any question of these being his own opinions, and those who attach most value to their own opinions are not in the least aware that they are being led by the leading-strings of their prejudices. All this must be done away with when we wish to attain to higher knowledge. The soul must be empty able to wait quietly for what may enter into it from the concealed secret world free from space and time, free from things and deeds. And we must never believe that we can acquire any conception of clairvoyant knowledge except by creating a suitable frame of mind through which we may receive what may be offered to us as revelation or illumination, so that we can never expect anything to come to us except from the grace which approaches and brings gifts.

How then does such knowledge reveal itself? How is that which comes to us revealed when we have prepared ourselves sufficiently? It reveals itself as the feeling of being endowed with grace through the gifts that come to meet us from the spiritual world. If we wish to describe what thus approaches us, bringing us grace and pouring knowledge into us, we can only make use of the expression: it is that which comes to meet us, an active inspiring with grace; a bestowing, a giving. Let us grasp the nature of a being chiefly characterised by what I have just described, so as to say of him: he is a bestower, a giver, an offerer of gifts. Such a being whose chief characteristic is the showering of grace around him, the shedding forth of grace from himself. Let our conception of this being show us that in order to attain this possibility of giving forth grace there must be the vision of the sacrifice made by the Thrones to the Cherubim; let us suppose that he was present when the sacrifice was being offered. Let us clearly imagine a being such as this, who through having had this vision is stimulated to shower the gifts of his grace around him. Suppose we were to see a rose and were charmed by it, experiencing the feeling of one enraptured by what we call ‘beautiful.’ Suppose another being through the vision of what we have described as the sacrifice by the Thrones to the Cherubim, were inspired to pour forth into the world, to offer to the world as a gift, everything ho possessed—we should thus be describing those beings spoken of in Occult Science as Spirits of Wisdom who on the Sun were added to the beings with whom we become acquainted on ancient Saturn. If now we were to put the question, what is the character of these Spirits who appeared on the Sun in addition to the Saturn Spirits? We must reply: The principal characteristic of these spirits is the virtue of giving, of pouring forth grace. If we wish to find a title for them, we must say: These are the Spirits of Wisdom, the great Bestowers, the great Givers of the Universe. Just as we have called the Thrones ‘The great Sacrificers,’ so we must say of the Spirits of Wisdom, they are ‘the great Givers’ who so devote their gift that it weaves and lives in the universe, flowing out into it and first bringing about its order.

That is the activity of the Spirits of Wisdom on the Sun, they endow their environment with their own being. And what is presented to the external view when we look up and wish to have a higher sense-perception of what takes place on the Sun?

When we look at it, it is as described in Occult Science. Besides heat, the Sun consists externally of air and of light. But when we say this, it is as though someone were to say: ‘In the distance I see a grey cloud.’ And if he were an artist he would paint the impression; but if he were to come nearer he might perhaps see, instead of the grey cloud, a swarm of midges. Thus in reality, what he took for a grey cloud is nothing but a number of living beings. In like manner do we confront the ancient Sun-existence. Seen from afar it appears as the illusion of a body consisting of light and air; but if we approach nearer, we have no longer a body of light and air but it appears as the great bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom. And no one learns the real nature of air who only describes it according to its external physical properties. That is only maya and illusion, only outer manifestation. For wherever there is air in the world, the deeds of the Spirits of Wisdom lie behind it. Weaving, active air means the manifestation of the bestowing virtue of the macrocosm, and only he looks rightly upon air who says: ‘I see air in this way,’ in reality within it something is bestowed by the Spirits of Wisdom, something streams out into their environment.

And now we know what was meant by describing ancient Sun as consisting of air. We now know that what appears outwardly as air is a gift which the Spirits of Wisdom allow to flow forth from their own being. But now something wonderful is seen by the clairvoyant. We must clearly understand how we obtain from our own soul-life a still more accurate idea of this virtue of giving. Let us bring home to our mind the feeling we may ourselves have if through the above-described mode of devotion we are able to permeate ourselves with a perception, with an idea; such an idea may produce in us a distinct perception of which the best is the artistic longing to master colour or form in some way or other, to send it forth into the world, thus to give to the world something having an independent existence. We may describe the nature of such a capacity of giving by saying that productivity and creative activity is connected with it; this giving is self-creative. Anyone who has an idea and feels that he can give it forth for the good of the world, and can represent it in a work of art, has the right conception of this productivity of the virtue of giving. This it is which as air weaves through the Sun. When we think of this creative idea in the mind of the artist, and how it imprints itself into matter (besides everything else), this is the spiritual being of air. Wherever there is air we are concerned with it in some such way. But from the living productivity having been on the Sun, proceeds the following.

Let us hold firmly in mind that on ancient Saturn the Spirits of Time had been born, therefore ‘time’ could be present on the Sun; for it came over from Saturn. Thus on ancient Sun there was the possibility of giving, which could not have been found on ancient Saturn. For just imagine. How could there have been any giving if there had been no time? It would not have been possible, for giving must include acceptance, the one is not to be thought of without the other. Thus giving must consist of two actions, giving and accepting, otherwise giving has no object. On the Sun, however, giving and accepting occupied a peculiar relation to one another, for—as time was already there—the gifts offered to the environment on ancient Sun had been, as it were, stored up in time: as it were, guarded in time so that the Spirits of Wisdom pour forth their gift—and it endures. But now something must enter to accept this. This occurs comparatively speaking at a later time than the gifts of the Spirits of Wisdom. They give at an earlier moment, and that which is necessarily connected with receiving appears later. We can only obtain a correct conception of this if here too we use our own soul-experience as a foundation.

Suppose you are trying very hard to understand something, or to form some sort of thought. Suppose you have formed the thought. The next day you will make your mind as clear as possible so that the thought you formed yesterday may come back into it. What you formed yesterday is received by you to-day. Thus it was on ancient Sun; what was given at an earlier time was guarded till a later moment and was then received. What then was this acceptance? It was a deed, an occurrence only distinguished from the other occurrence in that it occurred later. The giving comes from the Spirits of Wisdom. Who then accepts? If there is to be an acceptance there must be someone to accept! In the same way as the Spirits of Time arose from the sacrifice of the Thrones to the Cherubims on ancient Saturn—through an act of nativity—so through ‘an act of giving’ to the world by the Spirits of Wisdom on the Sun, the Spirits we call Archangels or Archangeloi, came into being. They are these who accept on ancient Sun. But they receive in a very special way, for they do not retain for themselves the gift received from the Spirits of Wisdom, but reflect it, just as a mirror reflects an image. Thus the task of the Archangels on the Sun was to collect at a later epoch what had been given earlier, what was still there and could be reflected by the Archangels. Thus we have on the Sun an earlier act of giving and a subsequent accepting, but this accepting is a reflection back. Just suppose that the earth were not as it is now, but that what occurred at an earlier age could be reflected again at the present time. We actually know that something of the sort does take place. We are now living in the fifth post-Atlantean age of civilisation, when the events of the third, the ancient Egyptian-Chaldean age are being reflected. What formerly was received is now reflected. Everything that formerly existed is recapitulated. So that we have to think of the Archangels on the one side and as the recipients on the other the Spirits of Wisdom who in the ancient Sun-period were the bestowers. From this something quite special arises, which can only be properly conceived by thinking of a globe complete in itself and radiating forth from its centre that which is given. It radiates out to the periphery—whence it is radiated back to the centre. Thus we have to think of what comes from the Spirits of Wisdom as proceeding from the centre; this radiates forth in all directions, is collected by the Archangels and reflected back. What is thus reflected back into space is the gift from the Spirits of Wisdom. It is light that re-conducts the radiations of the Spirits of Wisdom, and the Archangels are at the same time creators of light. Light is not in the least the external illusion presented to us; but wherever light appears we have the gifts of the Spirits of Wisdom radiated back to us. And the beings whose existence must be presumed behind all light are the Archangels. Hence we must say: Wherever light appears to us, behind it are the Archangels; but they are only able to ray forth light to us because they reflect back what has streamed out to them—namely, the bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom.

In this way we obtain a picture of ancient Sun: We think of a centre in which is focussed what came over from ancient Saturn; the sacrificial acts of the Thrones to the Cherubim. Absorbed in contemplation of these acts of sacrifice are the Spirits of Wisdom. This vision causes them to radiate forth from themselves that which is their real being: streaming, flowing wisdom is the virtue they give. However, as this is radiated through by ‘time’ it is sent forth and sent back again, so that we have a globe, inwardly illuminated by the virtue returning to it; for we must not think of the ancient Sun as outwardly but as inwardly luminous, because the Spirits of Wisdom radiate outwards. Thus something new is created which we may describe as follows: Let us imagine the Spirits of Wisdom as sitting at the centre of the Sun absorbed in contemplation of the vision of the sacrificing Thrones; and by reason of this vision, radiating forth their own being; and receiving back their radiating being which they sent forth, receiving it reflected back from the surface, so that they receive it back as light. Everything is illuminated. What then do they receive back! Their own being surrendered by them became a gift to the Macrocosm, it was their inner being. Now it rays back to them; their own being meets them coming back from outside. They see their own inner being outspread in the Cosmos—and reflected back as light, as the reflection of their own being.

The inner and the outer are the two opposites which we now meet. The earlier and the later are transformed into the inner and the outer; and space is born! Space comes into existence through the bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom on ancient Sun. Before that, space could only have pictorial value. Now we have space—but consisting at first of only two dimensions. There was as yet no above and below, no right or left, nothing but an outer and an inner.—In reality these opposites appear at the end of ancient Saturn; but they repeat themselves as space-creation on ancient Sun. And if we wish to obtain a conception of all these occurrences, as we did of the last when the picture appeared before our soul of the sacrificing Thrones, giving birth to the Spirits of Time, we must not even picture a body consisting of light, for the light within it was only a reflection. We must think of it as a globe of inner space, in the centre of which the picture of Saturn is recapitulated: the Thrones as Spirits as though kneeling before the Cherubim, those winged beings, sacrificing their own being, and, in addition to these, the Spirits of Wisdom, absorbed in the vision of the sacrifice. And now it is also possible to have the vision of the heat of the sacrifice being so transmitted that we may think of it objectively as the incense of sacrifice, as air ascending from the sacrifice as incense. We obtain a complete picture if we imagine: the sacrificing Thrones kneeling before the Cherubim, and as though participating, the Spirits of Wisdom, absorbed in the contemplation of what they perceive in the centre of the Sun as the sacrifice of the Thrones, and thereby ascending in their conception to the idea of the sacrificial incense pouring forth and spreading out on all sides, and finally condensing, while from its clouds proceed the figures of the Archangels,--who reflect back the incense from the periphery as light, illuminating the interior of the Sun, returning the gift of the Spirits of Wisdom, and in this way creating the sphere of the Sun. This sphere consists of the outpoured gift of glowing heat and sacrificial incense. At the outer periphery are the Archangels, the creators of the light, who, later depict what was first on the Sun; it then returns as light. What then, do these Archangels preserve! They guard the beginnings, what was formerly there, the earlier. The gifts they receive they reflect. That which was there in the beginning they radiate forth at a later time, and in as much as they do this, they are the Angels of the Beginning, because they bring into activity in later times what was previously there. ‘Archangeloi’ ‘Messengers of the Beginning’!

It is very wonderful when such a word arises from the depths of true occult knowledge and we remember that this word comes across to us from primeval traditions, along the path of the School of Dionysius the Areopagite, who was the pupil of Paul. It is wonderful to see that this word is so deeply stamped that when we evolve it again, independently of what is written, what stands there arises before us. And we then feel ourselves united with the ancient holy schools of Initiation-Wisdom, of the science of Initiation, so that we feel as though this ancient time were streaming into us, we picture it with understanding after having ourselves created the possibility of accepting it Independently of what we have heard. Anyone feeling even a little of the spirit of these old expressions which have descended to us without our having paid attention to them, will feel himself within the current of the mighty power of the Spirits of Time passing through humanity. What is thus felt in contemplation of these things is in marvellous connection with the whole human evolution, it makes us feel one with it. The Archangels preserve the memorial of the primordial beginnings; but whatever takes place on any one planet is always recapitulated later, only when it occurs later there is always something added to it. So that we meet with the being of the Sun again in what we find on our own earth.

The whole conception, the whole feeling that we are thus able to acquire—which gives us a picture of the sacrifice of the Thrones, of the Cherubim receiving the sacrifice, of the glow given forth by the sacrifice, of the sacrificial incense spreading out as air, of the light radiated back by the Archangels who preserve for later ages what took place at the beginning—this feeling is something that can call up inns a true understanding of everything connected with the creation of such a feeling, with the sacrifice proceeding from it.

We have now contemplated in a more spiritual sense, what I have just described as a soul-sphere whereas previously we considered it from a physical aspect. And we shall now see that the Being who appeared on earth as the Christ-being when we grasp the idea of the bestowing virtue, the grace-bestowing virtue in its reflection in the light of the universe in the inner substance of the Sun-body, which was permeated and illuminated through and through by this light. If we can exalt our conception of what has just been described and transform that into an imagination, bearing in mind that something of all that was brought to the earth by the Christ-Being is on the earth, fulfils its life on the earth, we can then go still more deeply into the actual spiritual nature of the Christ-impulse. We are then able to understand the dim idea that can stir in a human soul on hearing such an account, when it dawns on the soul that what has been described may in a certain sense again come to life on earth. Just imagine all that has been described of the Sun as absolutely concentrated in the soul of one Being, suppose all this gathered up and taken away to reappear at a later period and so to reappear and work, that He would bring with Him an extract of what came into existence through the ancient primordial sacrificial deed and the smoke of sacrifice through the light-creating time and the bestowing Virtue and would reflect it out of the universe of radiant light. Imagine all this concentrated in one soul, think of that soul as giving all this to the Earth-existence; around Him are assembled those who now as earth-beings are destined to radiate this back again and preserve it for the remainder of the earth-existence. In the centre is the One Who comes forth from the Sacrifice and Who bestows through the sacrifice, and around Him are gathered those who are to receive it—on the one side all that the sacrifice is and everything belonging to it, as it were translated into earthly life; on the other hand the possibility of destroying the sacrifice for everything that can be given to the human being in the way of Divine grace may be either accepted or rejected. If we think of all this as embodied in an intuition, we can, on looking at the ‘The Last Supper’ by Leonardo da Vinci, have somewhat the following feeling. The entire Sun with the sacrificial Beings the Beings of Bestowing Virtue, the Beings of warmth-giving bliss, of the radiant light, spiritually grasped, radiated back by those selected to preserve into later ages what belongs to the earlier, and so ordained for the earth that it may also be rejected by the traitor. We may feel that this is the Earth-Being, in as much as the Sun-Being reappears on the Earth. If this is felt—not in an external intellectual manner, but in true artistic way; then something of the actual driving-force of such a great work of art can be felt, a work which reflects, as it were, the extract of the Earth existence. When we see this picture again, and see how the Christ grows forth from the Sun-Sphere, we shall better understand what I have often said: If a spirit were to come down to the Earth from Mars, while he would not be able to understand everything that he saw here, he would understand the actual mission of the Earth if he allowed the ‘Last Supper’ of Leonardo da Vinci to work upon him. The inhabitant of Mars would then see that the Sun-existence must lie concealed within that of the Earth; and thereby everything he might be told concerning the meaning of the Earth would become clear to him. He would understand that the Earth had a meaning, and he would know what was involved. He would say to himself: ‘What is taking place on the Earth may perhaps be only of importance to one part of it: but could the deed represented in the colouring of this picture really take place? When I concentrated on the central Figure with those other around Him, I feel what the Spirits of Wisdom felt on the Sun, and what is re-echoed here in the words; “This do in remembrance of me.”‘ The earlier preserved in the later: this saying will only be comprehensible to us when we grasp it in its whole cosmic connection, as we have just learnt to do.

In the next lecture it will be our task to study the Christ-Being in the spiritual nature of the Sun, in order to pass on from that to the spiritual nature of the Moon.

Zweiter Vortrag

Aus unseren letzten Auseinandersetzungen werden Sie entnommen haben, daß die Beschreibung jener früheren Zustände unserer Entwickelung, die noch vor der Entstehung unserer Erde selbst liegen, außerordentlich schwierig ist. Denn wir haben gesehen, daß wir uns die Begriffe und Ideen erst heranbilden müssen, durch die wir zu solchen fremdartigen, fernen Zuständen unserer Weltentwickelung kommen können. Ich habe schon darauf aufmerksam gemacht, daß eine solche Beschreibung, wie sie in meiner «Geheimwissenschaft im Umriß» von der alten Saturnzeit und auch von den folgenden planetarischen Verkörperungen unserer Erde gegeben wird, nicht nur keine erschöpfende ist, sondern sich in gewissem Sinne damit begnügen muß — damit die Öffentlichkeit, der auch dieses Buch übergeben werden sollte, nicht zu stark schockiert wird -, dasjenige, worauf es eigentlich ankommt, in Bilder zu kleiden, die von Naheliegendem und auch von Gewohntem hergenommen sind. Man gibt damit natürlich nicht eine unrichtige Beschreibung, aber in gewissem Sinne doch eine solche, die sehr bildhaft in Maja, in Illusion getaucht ist, und man muß sich erst durch die Illusion hindurcharbeiten, um immer mehr und mehr in die Wahrheit der Sache eindringen zu können. So ist zum Beispiel die alte Saturnzeit so beschrieben — wie es innerhalb gewisser Grenzen durchaus richtig ist —, daß gesagt wird, der alte Saturn sei ein Himmelskörper gewesen, der im wesentlichen nicht aus den Bestandteilen bestanden hat, die wir alsErde, Wasser oder Luft kennen, sondern nur aus Wärme. Und wenn von «Raum» gesprochen wird, so ist das nur eine bildhafte Beschreibung, denn wir haben das letzte Mal gesehen, daß es auf dem alten Saturn nicht einmal eine «Zeit» gegeben hat. Wenn wir also von Raum sprechen, so ist das auch ein Bildhaftes. Raum gab es auf dem alten Saturn auch nicht in unserem Sinne; und die Zeit entsteht erst auf dem Saturn. Wir sind durchaus, wenn wir uns auf den alten Saturn zurückversetzen, in dem Bereich der raumlosen Ewigkeit. Wenn also doch etwas gesagt wird, was uns ein Bild geben kann, so müssen wir uns klar sein, daß es ein Bild ist.

Wenn wir den Raum des alten Saturn betreten hätten, so würden wir nicht einmal eine so feine Substanz gefunden haben, die wir als «Gas» hätten bezeichnen können, sondern nur Wärme und Kälte. In Wirklichkeit ist es so, daß man von dem Kommen aus einem Raumteil in einen anderen nicht sprechen kann, sondern daß nur die Empfindung von dem Ablauf von wärmeren und kälteren Zuständen waltete, so daß also auch der Hellseher, wenn er sich in die alte Saturnzeit zurückversetzt, den Eindruck empfängt von auf und ab flutenden raumlosen Wärmezuständen. Aber das ist nur der äußere Schleier des Saturnzustandes. Denn diese Wärme oder dieses Feuer, wie man im Okkultismus sagt, hat sich uns ja enthüllt in seinen geistigen Untergründen; und wir haben gesehen, daß geistige Taten, geistige Verrichtungen in Wahrheit das waren, was auf dem alten Saturn wirklich vorhanden war. Und wir haben uns ein Bild gemacht von dem, was da an geistigen Taten auf dem Saturn vorhanden war. Wir haben gesagt, daß die Geister des Willens oder die Throne Opfertaten verrichtet haben, so daß, wenn wir zurückschauen auf das, was konkret auf dem Saturn geschah, wir die Cherubim haben und die von den Thronen fließenden Opfer. Opfer fließen von den Thronen zu den Cherubim, und diese Taten des Opfers sind es, die, gleichsam von außen angeschaut, als Wärme erscheinen. Wärmezustände sind der äußere physische Ausdruck, überhaupt der äußere sinnliche Ausdruck für Opfer. Und in der ganzen Welt, wo wir Wärme wahrnehmen, ist Wärme der äußere Ausdruck für das, was hinter der Wärme ist. Wärme ist Illusion; dahinter sind die Opfertaten von Wesenheiten. Wenn wir daher die Wärme in Wahrheit charakterisieren wollen, werden wir sagen müssen: Die Weltenwärme ist die Offenbarung des Weltenopfers oder der Weltenopfertaten.

Dann haben wir gesehen, daß aus dieser Tat des Opfers, das die Throne gegenüber den Cherubim darbringen, gleichsam herausgeboren wird — aber ich habe schon darauf aufmerksam gemacht, daß es wieder ein modernes Wort ist, das nicht recht paßt -, das, was wir die «Zeit» nennen. Aber die Zeit ist damals noch nicht das «Früher oder Später», nicht jenes Abstraktum, als welches sie heute der Mensch wahrnimmt, sondern eine Summe von geistigen Wesenheiten: das sind die Geister der Persönlichkeit, die wir dann auch kennengelernt haben als die Zeitgeister. Die Zeitgeister sind die wirkliche alte Zeit, und sie sind die Kinder der Throne mit den Cherubim. Aber die Verhältnisse, durch welche die Wesen des Zeitlichen auf dem alten Saturn entstehen, sind Opfer. Wenn gesagt wird: Der alte Saturn besteht in Wärme -, so müssen wir uns, um ein eigentliches Verständnis dafür zu gewinnen, was dahinter liegt, nicht bloß äußere physische Begriffe aneignen — denn «Wärme» ist ein physischer Begriff —, sondern Begriffe, die wir nur aus dem Seelenleben selber gewinnen können, aus dem moralischen, weisheitsvollen Seelenleben. Niemand kann wissen, was Wärme ist, der nicht in der Lage ist, sich eine Vorstellung zu machen von dem, was heißt opferfähige Hingabe dessen, was man besitzt, was man hat, ja nicht nur opferfähige Hingabe dessen, was man hat, sondern dessen, was man selber ist. Die Hinopferung des eigenen Wesens, das SichEntäußern des eigenen Wesens seelisch gefaßt, so daß man es sich zugleich so denkt, daß man bereit ist, sein Bestes hinzugeben zum Heile der Welt; nicht für sich sein Bestes behalten, sondern es gern hinopfern zu wollen auf dem Altar des Weltalls: das als einen lebendigen Begriff gefaßt und mit einem Gefühl unsere Seele durchdringend, führt allmählich zum Verständnisse dessen, was hinter der Erscheinung der Wärme ist. Man vergegenwärtige sich einmal, was im modernen Leben auch heute mit dem Begriff des Opfers verknüpft ist: man kann sich nicht recht denken, daß der, welcher mit Verständnis opfert, dies jemals tut gegen seinen Willen. Wenn jemand opfert gegen seinen Willen, so müßte er dazu aus irgendeinem Grunde gezwungen sein; es müßte ein Zwang walten. Dann aber würden wir es beileibe nicht mit dem zu tun haben, was hier gemeint ist. Hier ist aber gemeint, was als Opfer selbstverständlich fließt aus dem Wesen, das opfert. Und wenn jemand etwas opfert, nicht weil er aus irgendeinem äußeren Grunde dazu gedrängt wird, auch nicht, weil er hofft, etwas zu erringen, sondern weil er sich aus seinem Inneren heraus gedrängt fühlt zu opfern, dann ist es undenkbar, daß er etwas anderes empfindet als innere Wärmeseligkeit. Fühlen wir uns durchglutet mit innerer Wärmeseligkeit, dann haben wir schon das ausgesprochen, was wir nicht anders bezeichnen können als: der Opfernde fühlt sich durchwärmt, durchglutet mit der Seligkeit. Da haben wir die Möglichkeit, selbst zu empfinden, wie die Opferglut uns in der Maja der äußeren Weltenwärme entgegentreten kann. Nur der versteht wirklich, was Wärme ist, der den Gedanken fassen kann: Wenn Wärme in der Welt auftritt, liegt zugrunde in irgendeiner Weise ein Seelisch-Geistiges, das hinter der Wärme ist und das die Wärme bewirkt durch die Seligkeit des Opfers. Wer so die Wärme empfinden kann, der kommt allmählich zu der Realität, welche sich hinter der \Wärmeerscheinung, hinter der Wärmeillusion verbirgt.

Wenn wir nun weiterdringen wollen von dem alten Saturndasein zum alten Sonnendasein, so müssen wir uns erst wieder einen Begriff zurechtlegen, durch den wir von der Substanz der alten Sonne - nicht der jetzigen Sonne — eine Vorstellung bilden können. Denn, was wir in der «Geheimwissenschaft» lesen: Die alte Sonne hat die Wärme heraufgebildet, indem sie hinzugefügt hat zu der Wärme Luft und Licht, das ist wieder nur durch eine äußere Erscheinung dargestellt. Wie wir hinter der Wärme suchen müssen die Opferglut der Geister des Willens, so müssen wir hinter der Luft und dem Licht etwas Moralisches suchen, wenn wir Luft und Licht, die auf der Sonne zu der Wärme hinzukommen, verstehen wollen. Nun können wir nur eine Idee, eine Vorstellung, eine Empfindung davon bekommen, was Luft und Licht auf der alten Sonne waren, wenn wir uns an etwas halten, was wir in uns selbst geistig-seelisch erleben können.

Da gibt es ein Erlebnis, das wir in folgender Weise als ein Seelenerlebnis beschreiben können. Denken wir uns, daß irgendein Mensch sehen würde eine richtige, echte Opfertat, oder daß er sich vorstellen würde, wie wir es das letzte Mal bei der Betrachtung des alten Saturndaseins als Opfertat der Throne geschildert haben, die Throne hinaufsendend ihre Opfer zu den Cherubim, so daß der Mensch angeregt würde durch das Bild des beseligenden Opfers, das er anschaut und das die Seele lebendig machen würde. Was würde unsere Seele fühlen entweder durch den Anblick des opfernden Wesens selbst oder durch das Bild, das wir in unserer Seele recht inbrünstig lebendig machen? Ein solcher Mensch würde, wenn er lebendige Gefühle hat, wenn er nicht mehr oder weniger gefühllos der Opferseligkeit gegenüberstehen würde, eine tiefgehende Anregung empfinden müssen beim Anblick des Opferbildes; er würde in seiner Seele empfinden müssen: das ist die schönste Tat, das schönste Erlebnis, das überhaupt aus unserer Seele hervorgerufen werden kann, Opferseligkeit anzuschauen! Das ist aber auch eine solche Empfindung: man müßte ein Stück Holz sein, wenn nicht da in der Seele der Trieb entstehen würde, mit höchster Ehrfurcht anzuschauen, was Opferseligkeit ist, wenn man nicht davon lernen könnte die Stimmung der völligen Hingabe. Hingabe! — Opfertat ist aktive, in Aktivität sich umsetzende Hingebung. Die Anschauung von dem aktiven, dem tätigen Hingeben kann die Stimmung des Hingegebenseins, des Sich-Verlierens, des Sich-Vergessens in der Anschauung hervorrufen. Denken wir uns diese Stimmung des selbstlosen SichVerlierens in der Anschauung ganz in der Seele ausgegossen, dann haben wir mit dieser Stimmung dasjenige, was insofern uns näher kommen soll für unser Verständnis, als wir ohne eine solche Stimmung, wenigstens ohne eine Ahnung und einen Anklang an eine solche Stimmung, in Wahrheit niemals zu dem kommen könnten, was die höhere Erkenntnis gibt.

Wer niemals solche Stimmung des Hingegebenseins haben kann, der kann nicht zu höheren Erkenntnissen kommen. Denn, was wäre das Gegenteil dieser Stimmung? Es wäre der Eigenwille, Geltendmachen des Eigenwillens. Das sind überhaupt wie zwei Pole des Seelenlebens: hingegebene Verlorenheit an das, was man anschaut, und eigenwilliges Geltendmachen dessen, was in einem ist. Das sind zwei große Gegensätze. Für wirkliche Erkenntnis, für ein Sich-Durchdringen mit Weisheit ist Eigenwille tötend. Im gewöhnlichen Leben kennt man Eigenwillen nur als Vorurteil, und Vorurteile zerstören immer höhere Einsicht.

Was hier als Hingegebensein gemeint ist, muß man sich aber gesteigert denken, denn nur durch dies gesteigerte Hingegebensein kann der Mensch sich zu höheren Welten hinaufarbeiten. Da muß er jenes SichVerlieren wenigstens als Stimmung erleben können. Daher muß es immer wieder und wieder betont werden, daß wir nie zu einer höheren Erkenntnis kommen, wenn wir so arbeiten wie die gewöhnliche Wissenschaft oder das alltägliche Denken. Seien wir uns klar: wie die gewöhnliche Wissenschaft und das alltägliche Denken arbeiten, so arbeiten sie aus dem gewöhnlichen Willen des Menschen heraus, durch alles dasjenige, was den Eigenwillen geschaffen hat: durch die vererbten oder anerzogenen Empfindungen, Gefühle und Vorstellungen. Darüber kann man sich sehr täuschen; diese Täuschungen sind eine Alltäglichkeit. Es kommen zum Beispiel Leute und sagen: Da soll man aufnehmen irgendeine Wissenschaft, wie sie geboten wird in der Geisteswissenschaft, aber ich will nichts aufnehmen, als was dem entspricht, was ich mir schon denken kann, ich will nichts ungeprüft aufnehmen! -— Gewiß, ungeprüft soll man nichts aufnehmen. Aber wenn man allem nur sich selbst entgegenbringt, nur das, was man weiß, aufnimmt — damit kommt man auch keinen Schritt weiter! Und der, welcher Hellseher werden will, wird nie sagen, daß er nur das aufnehmen will, was er vorher geprüft hat, sondern er muß vollständig frei werden von allem Eigensüchtigen und muß alles erwarten von dem, was aus der Welt an ihn herantritt, und was man nicht anders bezeichnen kann als mit dem Worte «Gnade». Er erwartet alles von der Gnade, die erleuchtet. Denn wie erwirbt man hellseherische Erkenntnisse? Nur dadurch, daß man alles ausschalten kann, was man jemals gelernt hat. Gewöhnlich denkt der Mensch: Ich habe mein eigenes Urteil. Er müßte sich aber sagen: Das besteht nur daraus, daß du auffrischst, was deine Vorfahren gedacht haben, oder was deine Triebe anregen und so weiter. Denn davon ist nie die Rede, daß dies der Menschen eigene Urteile sind; und die ihre eigenen Urteile am meisten geltend machen, wissen gar nicht, wie sie am Gängelbande, sklavisch am Gängelbande ihrer Vorurteile geführt werden. Das muß alles fort, wenn man zu höheren Erkenntnissen kommen will. Leer muß die Seele werden und ruhig warten können auf das, was sich aus der raum- und zeitfreien, ding- und tatsachenfreien, verborgenen, geheimen Welt an die Seele heranbegeben kann. Und nie dürfen wir glauben, daß wir an uns heranreißen können, was hellseherische Erkenntnis ist, sondern nur, daß wir in uns eine Stimmung reifen lassen, durch die wir entgegennehmen, was sich uns darbietet als Offenbarung oder Erleuchtung. So daf3 wir nie anders als von der Gnade, die an uns herantritt und uns etwas gibt, das erwarten können, was an uns herantreten soll.

Wie also offenbart sich eine solche Erkenntnis? Wie offenbart sich das, was da herantritt, wenn wir uns genügend vorbereitet haben? Es offenbart sich als die Stimmung des Begnadetwerdens durch die uns entgegenkommende Gabe aus der geistigen Welt. Wenn wir das, was an uns herantritt — sei es als Wesen oder was immer —, um uns gnadenvoll entgegenzukommen und in uns die Erkenntnis einzugießen, bezeichnen wollten, so könnten wir nur den Ausdruck gebrauchen: es ist das, was uns da entgegentritt, ein Gnadewirkendes, ein Schenkendes, ein Gebendes. Fassen wir die Natur eines Wesens, dessen Hauptcharakterzug in dem bestehen würde, was ich jetzt eben mit diesen Worten bezeichnet habe: es ist ein Schenkendes, ein Gebendes, ein Darbietendes; ein solches Wesen, mit dem Hauptcharakterzug des Gnade-umsich-Streuens, des Gnade-von-sich-Ausgießens - fassen wir es so, daß es, um in diese Möglichkeit des Gnadegebens zu kommen, brauchte den Anblick des Opfers der Throne an die Cherubim! Denken wir uns einmal, es würde hinzutreten zu dem, was da geschieht, wenn die Throne den Cherubim opfern, ein Wesen, welches durch diesen Anblick veranlaßt würde zu einem Schenkenden, zu einem seine Gaben in Gnade um sich Ergießenden zu werden. Stellen wir uns das ganz genau vor. Denken wir uns, wir würden eine Rose anschauen und entzückt werden davon, also das Gefühl eines Beseligenden empfinden über das, was wir «schön» nennen. Denken wir, ein anderes Wesen würde durch den Anblick dessen, was beschrieben ist als das Opfer der Throne an die Cherubim, veranlaßt werden, alles, was es hat, um sich herum zu schenken, schenkend in die Welt zu ergießen: dann würden wir damit diejenigen Wesenheiten beschrieben haben, von denen in der «Geheimwissenschaft» die Rede ist als den «Geistern der Weisheit», die auf der Sonne hinzutreten zu denjenigen Wesenheiten, die wir schon auf dem Saturn kennengelernt haben. Würden wir also die Frage aufwerfen: Welches ist der Charakter der Geister der Weisheit, die auf der Sonne auftraten und zu den Saturngeistern hinzutraten? — so müßten wir antworten: Diese Geister haben als ihren Hauptcharakterzug die schenkende, gnadenwirkende, gebende Tugend. - Und wollten wir ein Beiwort haben, so müßten wir sagen: Sie sind die Geister der Weisheit, die großen Schenkenden, die großen Gebenden des Weltalls! - Wie wir von den Thronen gesagt haben: Die großen Opferer —, so müßten wir von den Geistern der Weisheit sagen: Die großen Gebenden, die ihre Gabe so Hingebenden, daß dieselbe von ihnen aus das Weltall durchwebt und durchlebt, indem sie einströmt in das Weltall und in dasselbe erst Ordnung hineinschafft.

Das ist die Tat auf der Sonne, die Wirkung der Geister der Weisheit auf der Sonne. Das tun sie: schenken ihr eigenes Wesen an ihre Umgebung. Und was ist das, was sich dem äußeren Anblick darbietet, wenn man so hinblickt und wie eine höhere Sinnesempfindung wahrnehmen will, was da auf der Sonne geschieht?

Wenn man es ansieht, ist es so, wie es beschrieben ist in der «Geheimwissenschaft»: Die Sonne besteht außer aus Wärme auch noch aus Luft und Licht. Aber wenn man das sagt: Die Sonne besteht außer aus Wärme auch noch aus Luft und Licht -, dann ist es so, wie wenn jemand sagte: In der Ferne sehe ich eine graue Wolke -, und würde er als Maler den Eindruck, den er hat, hinmalen, so würde er eine solche graue Wolke malen; wenn er aber näher hinzuginge, würde er vielleicht statt der grauen Wolke einen Mückenschwarm vor sich haben. In Wirklichkeit ist dann das, was er für eine graue Wolke hielt, eine Summe von lauter lebendigen Wesen. In ähnlicher Weise stehen wir von ferne dem alten Sonnendasein gegenüber: Indem wir es von ferne anschauen, erscheint es als die Illusion eines Luft- und Lichtkörpers; wenn wir es aber näher betrachten, haben wir nicht mehr einen Luft- und Lichtkörper, sondern da erscheint es als die große schenkende Tugend der Geister der Weisheit. Und niemand lernt die Luft richtig kennen, der sie nur ihren äußeren, physischen Eigenschaften nach beschreibt. Das ist nur Maja oder Illusion, das ist nur die äußere Offenbarung. Denn überall wo Luft ist in der Welt, sind die Taten der schenkenden Geister der Weisheit dahinter. Webende, wirkende Luft heißt Offenbarung der schenkenden Tugend der Geister des Makrokosmos. Und nur der sieht die Luft richtig an, der sich sagt: Ich nehme hier Luft wahr, in Wahrheit aber wird da geschenkt von den Geistern der Weisheit an die Umgebung, wird etwas ausgestrahlt an die Umgebung.

Jetzt wissen wir, was es eigentlich ist, was wir von der alten Sonne beschrieben haben, indem wir sagten, sie besteht aus Luft. Wir wissen jetzt, daß es Schenken ist: daß die Geister der Weisheit ihr eigenes Wesen ausfließen lassen und daß es äußerlich als Luft erscheint. Aber eine merkwürdige Sache trat nun ein auf der alten Sonne, die sich dem Hellseher darbietet. Wir müssen uns klarmachen, wie wir von dieser schenkenden Tugend eine noch genauere Vorstellung bekommen können aus unserem Seelenleben heraus. Vergegenwärtigen wir uns dazu jenes Gefühl, das wir selbst haben können, wenn es uns gelingt, aus der eben geschilderten Stimmung von Hingabe uns zu durchdringen mit einer Erkenntnis, mit einer Idee. Von einer solchen Idee, die uns dann kommt, haben wir immer eine bestimmte Empfindung. Eine solche Idee ist keine wissenschaftliche; die beste Empfindung davon hat man noch, wenn man das Künstlerische ins Auge faßt, wo die Idee den Drang hat, zum Beispiel Farbe oder Form irgendwie zu bemeistern, also in der Welt auszuströmen, so daß sie ein selbständiges Dasein der Welt geschenkt hat. Das Wesen einer solchen schenkenden Fähigkeit ist damit zu charakterisieren, daß man sagt: Produktivität, Schöpferisches ist damit verbunden, denn dieses Schenken ist selbst schöpferisch. Wer eine Idee hat, von der er empfindet, daß sie der Welt zum Heile gereichen kann und die sich darstellt in Kunstwerken und so weiter, der hat von dieser Produktivität der schenkenden Tugend einen richtigen Begriff. Das ist es, was als Luft die Sonne durchwebt. Wenn wir uns denken die schaffende Idee im Kopfe des Künstlers, wie sie sich einfügt in den Stoff - von allem anderen abgesehen -, dann ist dies das geistige Wesen der Luft. Wo Luft ist, haben wir es mit so etwas zu tun. Aber dadurch, daß diese lebendige Produktivität auf der Sonne da war, stellte sich die folgende Tatsache heraus.

Halten wir fest, daß auf dem alten Saturn schon die Geister der Zeit geboren waren, daß also auf der Sonne «Zeit» schon sein konnte, denn diese ist herübergekommen von dem Saturn. Zeit ist da. Also es gibt jene Möglichkeit auf der alten Sonne, die es auf dem alten Saturn noch nicht gegeben hätte, daß ein solches Schenken eintrat. Denn denken Sie einmal, was es wäre mit einem Schenken, wenn es keine Zeit gäbe: da könnte man nicht schenken; denn Schenken besteht im Geben und im Entgegennehmen. Ohne das zweite ist das Schenken gar nicht zu denken. Also es muß das Schenken aus zwei Akten bestehen: aus Geben und Nehmen, sonst hat das Schenken keinen Zweck. Auf der Sonne stehen sich aber Geben und Nehmen ganz sonderbar gegenüber, so nämlich, daß, weil nun schon die Zeit da ist, die Gabe, die dargereicht wird auf der alten Sonne an die Umgebung, in der Zeit aufbewahrt wird, gleichsam bewahrt wird in der Zeit, so daß die Geister der Weisheit ihr Geschenktes ausgießen, dann bleibt es in der Zeit. Aber nun muß etwas eintreten, was das nimmt. Das arbeitet im Verhältnis zu den Geistern der Weisheit in einem späteren Augenblick. So daß die Geister der Weisheit im früheren Augenblicke geben, und das, was notwendig damit verbunden sein muß als Nehmen, tritt im späteren Augenblicke ein.

Davon können wir nur eine richtige Vorstellung bekommen, wenn wir wieder das eigene Seelenerleben zugrunde legen. Stellen Sie sich vor, Sie bemühen sich, irgend etwas zu verstehen, oder irgendeinen Gedanken zu bilden. Jetzt haben Sie diesen Gedanken gebildet. Morgen besinnen Sie sich, machen rein Ihren Geist, damit alles, was Sie gestern an Gedanken gebildet haben, zurückkommen kann in Ihren Geist. Dann ist das, was gestern gebildet worden ist, von Ihnen heute aufgenommen. So ist es auf der alten Sonne, indem das, was früher geschenkt ‚wird, bewahrt bleibt für einen späteren Augenblick und später entgegengenommen wird. Was ist denn dann dieses Entgegennehmen? Es ist auch auf der alten Sonne eine Tat, ein Geschehen, das sich nur dadurch von dem anderen Geschehen unterscheidet, daß es später ist. Das Geben kommt den Geistern der Weisheit zu. Wer nimmt denn nun? Damit jemand nehmen kann, muß erst jemand da sein. In derselben Art wie gleichsam durch einen Geburtsakt, nämlich aus den Opfern der Throne an die Cherubim, die Geister der Zeit auf dem Saturn entstehen, so entstehen durch Schenken an die Welt von seiten der Geister der Weisheit auf der Sonne diejenigen Geister, die wir die Erzengel nennen: Archangeloi. Und sie sind auf der alten Sonne die Nehmenden. Aber sie nehmen auf eine ganz besondere Weise, so nämlich, daß sie, was sie als Gabe erhalten von den Geistern der Weisheit, nicht für sich behalten, sondern es zurückstrahlen, wie der Spiegel Ihr Bild zurückstrahlt. So haben die Erzengel auf der Sonne die Aufgabe, dasjenige, was in einem früheren Zeitpunkt geschenkt worden ist, in einem späteren Zeitpunkte aufzufangen, so daß es in einem späteren Zeitpunkte noch da ist und widergestrahlt wird durch die Erzengel. Wir haben also auf der Sonne ein älteres Geben und ein späteres Nehmen, aber dieses Nehmen als Widerstrahlung dessen, was war in einer früheren Zeit.

Denken Sie einmal, daß die Erde nicht so wäre, wie sie jetzt ist, sondern daß folgendes eintreten würde: daß in dem jetzigen Zeitpunkt widerstrahlen könnte, was in einem früheren Zeitpunkt geschehen ist. Nun wissen wir aber, daß so etwas wirklich geschieht. Wir leben jetzt im fünften nachatlantischen Kulturzeitraum; da strahlen wider die Ereignisse des dritten nachatlantischen Kulturzeitraumes, der alten ägyptisch-chaldäischen Zeit. Was früher da war, wird aufgefangen und strahlt jetzt zurück. Das ist eine Art Wiederholung des Gebens und Nehmens auf der alten Sonne. So haben wir uns gegenüber den Geistern der Weisheit, die in den älteren Sonnenzeiten die Gebenden, Schenkenden sind, in den Erzengeln die Aufnehmenden zu denken. Dadurch wird etwas ganz Besonderes hervorgerufen, was Sie sich nur richtig vorstellen können, wenn Sie sich denken das Bild einer innerlich geschlossenen Kugel, wo vom Mittelpunkte etwas ausgestrahlt wird, was geschenkt wird; das strahlt bis zur Peripherie hin und strahlt von dort zurück zum Mittelpunkte. An der Oberfläche, innen an der Kugel lagern die Erzengel, die strahlen es zurück. Außen brauchen Sie sich nichts vorzustellen. - Wir haben uns also von einem Zentrum ausgehend zu denken das, was von den Geistern der Weisheit kommt: das wird ausgestrahlt nach allen Seiten, wird aufgefangen von den Erzengeln und zurückgestrahlt. Was ist das, was da zurückstrahlt in den Raum hinein, dieses zurückgestrahlte Geschenk der Geister der Weisheit? Was ist die ausgestrahlte Weisheit in sich selbst zurückgeleitet? — Das ist das Licht. Und damit sind die Erzengel zugleich die Schöpfer des Lichtes. Licht ist ebensowenig das, als was es uns in der äußeren Illusion erscheint, sondern wo Licht auftritt, haben wir die zurückgestrahlten Gaben der Geister der Weisheit. Und die Wesen, die wir überall hinter dem Licht vermuten müssen, das sind die Erzengel. Daher müssen wir sagen: Hinter dem flutenden Lichtstrahl, der uns trifft, stecken die Archangeloi; daß sie uns aber Licht zuströmen können, das kommt nur davon her, daß sie zurückstrahlen, was ihnen entgegenstrahlt, nämlich die schenkende Tugend der Geister der Weisheit.

So bekommen wir ein Bild der alten Sonne. Wir denken uns gleichsam einen Zentralsitz, wo vereinigt ist das, was vom alten Saturn herübergekommen ist: die Opfertaten der Throne gegenüber den Cherubim, im Anblick dieser Opfertaten versunken die Geister der Weisheit. Durch den Anblick dieser Opfertaten werden sie veranlaßt, von sich auszustrahlen, was ihr eigenes Wesen ist: strömende, flutende Weisheit als schenkende Tugend. Das aber wird, weil es zeitdurchstrahlt ist, ausgesandt und wieder zurückgesandt, so daß wir einen Globus, einen durch die zurückstrahlende Tugend innerlich erleuchteten Globus haben. Denn wir müssen uns die alte Sonne nicht nach außen, sondern nach innen leuchtend denken. Damit ist ein Neues geschaffen, das wir folgendermaßen beschreiben können. Denken wir uns diese Geister der Weisheit, sitzend im Mittelpunkte der Sonne, im Anblick der opfernden Throne versunken und ausstrahlend, was ihr eigenes Wesen ist, wegen des Anblickes der opfernden Throne, und zurück erhalten sie ihr ausstrahlendes Wesen, indem es ihnen von der Oberfläche zurückstrahlt, so daß sie es als Licht wieder zurückbekommen. Alles ist durchleuchtet. Aber was bekommen sie zurück von denen, die da im Nehmen zurückstrahlen? — Ihr eigenes Wesen wurde, indem sie es hingegeben haben, zum Geschenk an den Makrokosmos, da war es ihr Inneres. Jetzt strahlt es zurück: ihr eigenes Wesen tritt ihnen von außen entgegen. Sie sehen ihr eigenes Inneres in die ganze Welt verteilt und widergestrahlt von außen als Licht, als die Widerspiegelung ihres eigenen Wesens.

Inneres und Äußeres sind die zwei Gegensätze, die uns jetzt entgegentreten. Das Frühere und Spätere verwandelt sich und wird so, daß es sich verwandelt in Inneres und Äußeres. Der «Raum» ist geboren! Durch die schenkende Tugend der Geister der Weisheit entsteht der Raum auf der alten Sonne. Vorher kann «Raum» nur eine bildliche Bedeutung haben. Jetzt haben wir den Raum, aber zunächst nur in zwei Dimensionen: noch nicht oben und unten, noch nicht rechts und links, sondern nur Äußeres und Inneres. - In Wirklichkeit treten diese beiden Gegensätze schon gegen Ende des alten Saturn auf, aber sie wiederholen sich in ihrer eigentlichen Bedeutung, als raumschaffend auf der alten Sonne.

Und wenn wir jetzt von all diesen Vorgängen wieder eine Vorstellung gewinnen wollen in der Weise, wie wir es das letzte Mal getan haben, wo das Bild der opfernden Throne vor unsere Seele trat, die Zeitgeister gebärend, so werden wir nicht hinmalen einen Körper, der aus Licht besteht, denn nach außen strahlt dieses Licht noch nicht, es ist nur im Widerstrahlen im Inneren vorhanden. Eine Kugel als inneren Raum haben wir uns zu denken, in dem Mittelpunkt zunächst sich wiederholend das Bild des Saturn: die Throne als Geister wie kniend vor den Cherubim, den geflügelten Wesen, opfernd ihr eigenes Wesen; und hinzukommend die Geister der Weisheit, in dem Anblick des Opfers versinkend. Und nun kann man als Anblick haben, daß die Glut, die im Opfer liegt, sich in der Hingabe der Geister der Weisheit verwandelt, so daß sie sinnenfällig vorzustellen ist als Opferrauch, als Luft, die aufsteigt von der Opfertat als Opferrauch. Und wir bekommen ein vollständiges Bild, wenn wir uns vorstellen: Die opfernden Throne kniend vor den Cherubim, und zu dem Opfer hinzukommend wie im Reigen die Geister der Weisheit, hingegeben in ihrer Stimmung dem, was sie erblicken im Mittelpunkte der Sonne an dem Opfer der Throne; dadurch in ihrer Stimmung erwachsend zu dem Bilde des Opferrauches, der sich verbreitet nach allen Seiten, der ausströmt, sich am Ende ballt und aus seinen Wolken herausschafft die Gestalten der Erzengel, die zurückstrahlen von der Peripherie das Geschenk des Opferrauches als Licht, das Innere der Sonne durchleuchtend, das Geschenk der Geister der Weisheit zurückgebend und die Sphäre der Sonne in dieser Weise schaffend. Sie besteht schenkend aus Glut und Opferrauch. An der äußeren Peripherie sitzen die Erzengel, die Schöpfer des Lichtes, die das, was zuerst auf der Sonne da ist, später abbilden; es braucht Zeit, dann aber kommt es zurück als Licht. Was bewahren also die Erzengel? Sie bewahren das Frühere; die Gaben der Geister der Weisheit, die sie nehmen, strahlen sie zurück; aber was in der Zeit war, geben sie zurück als Raum, und indem sie es als Raum zurückstrahlen, geben sie zurück das, was sie selbst durch die Archai, die Anfänge, erhalten haben. Dadurch sind sie die Engel des Anfanges, weil sie das in späteren Zeiten wirksam machen, was früher war. Archangeloi, Boten des Anfanges sind sie!

Es ist ganz wunderbar, wenn aus der wirklichen okkulten Erkenntnis heraus ein solches Wort wieder auftaucht und wir uns dann überlegen, wie dieses Wort aus uralten Traditionen — auf dem Wege über die Schule Dionysius’ des Areopagiten, der ein Schüler des Paulus war - uns überkommt. Es ist wunderbar zu sehen, daß dieses Wort so geprägt ist, daß, wenn wir es unabhängig von dem, was da steht, wiederentwickeln, das entsteht, was da war. Das muß mit der größten Ehrfurcht erfüllen, und wir fühlen uns dann verbunden mit den alten heiligen Schulen der Weiheweisheit, der Weihewissenschaft, so daß wir gleichsam fühlen, wie wenn dieses Alte in uns einströmen würde, indem wir es verständnisvoll ergreifen, nachdem wir uns selbst die Möglichkeit geschaffen haben, es unabhängig von dem Alten aufzunehmen. Wer nur ein wenig fühlen kann das Stimmen der alten Ausdrücke, die uns überliefert sind, ohne daß wir auf diese Ausdrücke Rücksicht nehmen, der fühlt sich hineingestellt in das Walten der Zeitengeister durch den Menschengeist hindurch. Es ist eine wunderbare Art des Sich-verbunden-Fühlens mit der ganzen menschlichen Evolution, was da herauskommt; ein Sich-sicher-Fühlen bei diesen Dingen.

Das Andenken an die Urbeginne bewahren die Erzengel. Was aber auf irgendeinem der Planeten vorhanden war, das wiederholt sich in einer späteren Zeit, nur daß das Spätere immer anderes noch hinzufügt, so daß uns das Wesen der Sonne in gewisser Weise wieder entgegentritt in dem, was uns auf unserer Erde entgegentritt.

Die ganze Vorstellung, die ganze Empfindung, die wir uns hier aneignen konnten, die uns ein Bild gibt von den opfernden Thronen, von den opferempfangenden Cherubim, von der Glut, die aus dem Opfer ausströmt, von dem Opferrauch, der sich luftartig verbreitet, von dem Licht, das zurückgestrahlt wird von den Erzengeln, die das bewahren, was in den Anfängen geschehen ist, für die späteren Zeiten: diese Empfindung ist etwas, was in uns hervorrufen kann ein richtiges Verständnis alles dessen, was zusammenhängt mit den Schöpfungen, die aus einer solchen Empfindung hervorgehen.

So haben wir an diesem Milieu, das ich eben als Seelenmilieu geschildert habe, mehr geistig aufgefaßt, was wir früher an einem mehr physischen Bilde gewonnen haben. Und wir werden nun sehen, daß aus diesem Milieu heraus geboren wird, was auf der Erde als ChristusWesenheit aufgetreten ist; und wir werden nur verstehen, was auf die Erde durch die Christus-Wesenheit gebracht wird, wenn wir uns aneignen den Begriff derschenkenden Tugend, der gnadewirkenden Tugend in ihrer Zurückstrahlung in dem Lichte des Weltenalls in der inneren Substanz des Sonnenmäßigen, die durchdrungen und durchleuchtet ist von diesem Licht. Wenn wir dies zum Bilde erheben, was wir eben beschrieben haben, und in eine Imagination umwandeln und uns denken, daß das alles von diesem Wesen mitgebracht wird auf die Erde, auf der Erde sich auslebt, dann werden wir das eigentliche geistige Wesen des Christus-Impulses wieder noch tiefer empfinden können. Wir werden dann verstehen, welche dunkle Ahnung in der Menschenseele leben kann, wenn diese Menschenseele gegenüber irgendeiner Darstellung empfindet, daß das, was eben beschrieben worden ist, in einer gewissen Weise wieder lebendig werden kann auf der Erde.

Denken wir uns einmal, es könnte das, was eben von der Sonne beschrieben worden ist, in eines Wesens Seele ganz und gar sich konzentrieren, könnte sich zusammendrehen und mitgenommen werden, um später wieder zu erscheinen. Und es würde wieder erscheinen auf der Erde und so wirken, daß es aus dem, was aus der uralten Opfertat und dem Opferrauch, der lichtschaffenden Zeit und der schenkenden Tugend geschaffen ist, den Extrakt der Gnadewirkung überbringen und ihn widerspiegeln würde aus dem Weltall der Wärmeseligkeit, der Lichtesherrlichkeit. Denken wir das alles in einer Seele konzentriert, es gebend dem Erdendasein, um sich versammelt die, welche jetzt als Erdenwesen berufen sein sollen, dies wieder zurückzustrahlen, dies zu bewahren für den Rest des Erdendaseins: In der Mitte der aus dem Opfer heraus und durch das Opfer Schenkende, um ihn herum die, welche es empfangen sollen; damit verbunden zugleich das, was das Opfer ist, und alles, was damit zusammenhängt, gleichsam übersetzt in irdisches Dasein. Und andrerseits die Möglichkeit, dieses Opfer zu zerstören, so daß alles, was dem Menschenwesen gegeben werden kann als Gnadewirkung, ebensogut angenommen wie zurückgewiesen werden kann. Denken wir uns das alles in eine Intuition verkörpert, dann kann man eine solche Empfindung haben gegenüber dem «Abendmahl» des Leonardo da Vinci: die ganze Sonne mit den Opferwesen, mit den Wesen der schenkenden Tugend, mit den Wesen der Wärmeseligkeit, der Lichtesherrlichkeit seelisch gefaßt — zurückgestrahlt von denen, die erkoren sind, zu bewahren aus den früheren Zeiten in die späteren Zeiten; für die Erde hergerichtet dadurch, daß es auch zurückgewiesen werden kann in dem Verräter.

Das Wesen der Erde, insofern das Wesen der Sonne auf der Erde wiedererscheint, man kann es so empfinden, Und wenn dies nicht in äußerlicher, intellektueller Weise, sondern in wahrhaft künstlerischer Weise gefühlt wird, dann hat man etwas von dem empfunden, was die eigentlich treibende Kraft in einem so großen Kunstwerke ist, das gleichsam den Extrakt des Erdendaseins wiedergibt. Und wenn wir das nächste Mal sehen werden, wie herauswächst aus dem Sonnenmilieu der Christus, dann werden wir noch besser das verstehen, was schon öfter gesagt ist: Wenn ein Geist aus dem Mars herunterkäme auf die Erde und alles sehen würde, was er nicht verstehen würde, dann würde er vielleicht kein Stück der Erde begreifen, aber er würde die eigentliche Erdenmission verstehen, wenn er das «Abendmahl» von Leonardo da Vinci auf sich wirken lassen könnte. Da würde ein solcher Marsbewohner sehen können, wie das Sonnendasein hineingeheimnißt sein muß in das Erdendasein, und alles, wovon man ihm sagen würde, daß es die Erde bedeutet, würde ihm dadurch klar werden. Daß die Erde etwas bedeutet, das würde er verstehen, und er würde wissen, um was es sich auf der Erde handelt: Er würde sich sagen: Da mag sonst auf der Erde vorgehen, was nur für irgendeinen Winkel des Erdendaseins Bedeutung hat. Aber konnte diese Tat wirklich dargestellt werden - die Tat, die mir hier entgegenstrahlt aus den Farben, wenn ich die Mittelgestalt mit den umgebenden zusammenhalte —, dann fühle ich, was die Geister der Weisheit empfunden haben auf der Sonne, was uns hier wieder entgegentönt in dem Wort: «Dies tut zu meinem Angedenken!» Die Bewahrung des Früheren in dem Späteren: dieses Wort wird uns erst verständlich, wenn wir es begreifen aus dem ganzen Weltenzusammenhange heraus, den wir jetzt kennengelernt haben. — Ich wollte nur andeuten, wie so etwas wie eine künstlerische Tat allerersten Ranges zusammenhängt mit dem ganzen Weltenwerden.

Das nächste Mal wird es unsere Aufgabe sein, das Christus-Wesen aus dem geistigen Wesen der Sonne heraus zu begreifen, um dann überzugehen zu dem geistigen Wesen des Mondes.

Second Lecture

From our last discussions, you will have gathered that it is extremely difficult to describe those earlier stages of our development that preceded the formation of our Earth itself. For we have seen that we must first develop the concepts and ideas that enable us to arrive at such strange and distant states of our world's development. I have already pointed out that such a description as is given in my “Outline of Secret Science” of the old Saturn period and also of the subsequent planetary incarnations of our Earth, is not only incomplete, but must in a certain sense be content with this — so that the public, to whom this book is also intended, is not too greatly shocked — to clothe what is actually important in images taken from the familiar and the customary. This is not, of course, an incorrect description, but in a certain sense it is one that is very pictorially immersed in Maya, in illusion, and one must first work one's way through the illusion in order to penetrate more and more into the truth of the matter. For example, the old Saturn period is described—as is entirely correct within certain limits—by saying that the old Saturn was a celestial body that did not essentially consist of the elements we know as earth, water, or air, but only of heat. And when we speak of “space,” this is only a figurative description, for we have seen last time that there was not even “time” on ancient Saturn. So when we speak of space, this is also a figure of speech. Space did not exist on the old Saturn in our sense of the word; and time only came into being on Saturn. When we transport ourselves back to the old Saturn, we are definitely in the realm of spaceless eternity. So if we say something that can give us an image, we must be clear that it is an image.

If we had entered the space of the old Saturn, we would not even have found a substance so fine that we could have called it “gas,” but only heat and cold. In reality, it is not possible to speak of coming from one part of space to another, but only of the sensation of the passage of warmer and colder states, so that even the clairvoyant, when he transports himself back to the old Saturn time, receives the impression of spaceless states of warmth flowing up and down. But that is only the outer veil of the Saturn condition. For this warmth or fire, as it is called in occultism, has revealed itself to us in its spiritual foundations; and we have seen that spiritual deeds, spiritual activities, were in truth what really existed on the old Saturn. And we have formed a picture of what spiritual deeds existed on Saturn. We have said that the spirits of the will, or the thrones, performed acts of sacrifice, so that when we look back at what actually happened on Saturn, we have the cherubim and the sacrifices flowing from the thrones. Sacrifices flow from the thrones to the cherubim, and it is these acts of sacrifice that, viewed from the outside, appear as warmth. Heat states are the outer physical expression, indeed the outer sensory expression, of sacrifice. And throughout the world, wherever we perceive heat, heat is the outer expression of what lies behind it. Heat is illusion; behind it are the acts of sacrifice of beings. If we therefore want to characterize heat in truth, we will have to say: The warmth of the world is the revelation of the world sacrifice or the world sacrificial acts.

Then we have seen that from this act of sacrifice, which the thrones offer to the cherubim, there is born, as it were — but I have already pointed out that this is again a modern word that does not quite fit — what we call “time.” But time at that time is not yet the “sooner or later,” not that abstraction as humans perceive it today, but a sum of spiritual beings: these are the spirits of personality, which we have also come to know as the spirits of the age. The spirits of the age are the real ancient time, and they are the children of the thrones with the cherubim. But the conditions through which the beings of time arise on ancient Saturn are sacrifices. When it is said that ancient Saturn consists of warmth, in order to gain a real understanding of what lies behind this, we must not merely acquire external physical concepts — for “warmth” is a physical concept — but concepts that we can only gain from the soul life itself, from the moral, wise soul life. No one can know what warmth is who is not able to form a conception of what it means to sacrifice what one possesses, what one has, and not only what one has, but what one is. The sacrifice of one's own being, the renunciation of one's own being, understood spiritually, so that one thinks of it at the same time as being willing to give one's best for the good of the world; not keeping one's best for oneself, but willingly sacrificing it on the altar of the universe: when this is grasped as a living concept and penetrates our soul with feeling, it gradually leads to an understanding of what lies behind the phenomenon of warmth. Let us consider what is associated with the concept of sacrifice in modern life today: it is difficult to imagine that someone who sacrifices with understanding would ever do so against their will. If someone sacrifices against their will, they must be compelled to do so for some reason; there must be some kind of coercion. But then we would certainly not be dealing with what is meant here. What is meant here is that sacrifice flows naturally from the nature of the person who sacrifices. And when someone sacrifices something, not because they are compelled to do so by some external reason, nor because they hope to gain something, but because they feel compelled to sacrifice from within, then it is inconceivable that they feel anything other than inner warmth and bliss. When we feel filled with inner warmth and bliss, we have already expressed what we cannot describe in any other way than: the person making the sacrifice feels warmed through, filled with bliss. Here we have the opportunity to feel for ourselves how the fervor of sacrifice can counteract the Maya of the external world's warmth. Only those who can grasp the thought: When warmth appears in the world, there is something spiritual underlying it in some way, something behind the warmth that causes the warmth through the bliss of sacrifice. Those who can feel warmth in this way gradually come to the reality that lies behind the phenomenon of warmth, behind the illusion of warmth.

If we now want to advance from the old Saturn existence to the old Sun existence, we must first again formulate a concept through which we can form an idea of the substance of the old Sun — not the present Sun. For what we read in The Secret Science: The old sun generated heat by adding air and light to it, which is again only represented by an external appearance. Just as we must search behind heat for the sacrificial fervor of the spirits of the will, so we must search behind air and light for something moral if we want to understand air and light, which are added to the sun to produce heat. Now we can only get an idea, a conception, a feeling of what air and light were on the old sun if we hold on to something that we can experience spiritually and soulfully within ourselves.

There is an experience that we can describe in the following way as a soul experience. Let us imagine that someone sees a real, genuine act of sacrifice, or that they imagine, as we described last time when considering the old Saturn existence as an act of sacrifice by the thrones, the thrones sending their sacrifices up to the cherubim, so that the person is inspired by the image of the blissful sacrifice they are looking at, which brings the soul to life. What would our soul feel either through the sight of the sacrificing being itself or through the image that we make vividly alive in our soul? Such a person, if he has living feelings, if he no longer stands more or less insensitive to sacrificial bliss, must feel a profound inspiration at the sight of the image of sacrifice; he must feel in his soul: this is the most beautiful deed, the most beautiful experience that can be evoked from our soul, to behold sacrificial bliss! But there is also another feeling: one would have to be a piece of wood if the impulse did not arise in one's soul to look with the utmost reverence at what self-sacrifice is, if one could not learn from it the mood of complete devotion. Devotion! — Sacrifice is active devotion that is translated into action. The contemplation of active, energetic devotion can evoke the mood of devotion, of losing oneself, of forgetting oneself in contemplation. If we imagine this mood of selfless self-abandonment in contemplation poured out completely into the soul, then we have with this mood that which should bring us closer to our understanding, inasmuch as without such a mood, at least without an inkling or echo of such a mood, we could never in truth attain what higher knowledge gives.

Those who can never have such a mood of devotion cannot attain higher knowledge. For what would be the opposite of this mood? It would be self-will, the assertion of one's own will. These are like two poles of the soul's life: devoted abandonment to what one contemplates, and the self-willed assertion of what is within oneself. These are two great opposites. For real knowledge, for a penetration with wisdom, self-will is deadly. In ordinary life, self-will is known only as prejudice, and prejudices always destroy higher insight.

What is meant here by devotion must be thought of in an intensified sense, for it is only through this intensified devotion that human beings can work their way up to higher worlds. They must at least be able to experience this losing of oneself as a mood. Therefore, it must be emphasized again and again that we will never attain higher knowledge if we work in the same way as ordinary science or everyday thinking. Let us be clear: ordinary science and everyday thinking work out of the ordinary will of human beings, through everything that has created the will itself: through inherited or acquired sensations, feelings, and ideas. One can be very deceived about this; such deceptions are commonplace. For example, people come and say: One should take up some science, as it is offered in spiritual science, but I will not accept anything that does not correspond to what I can already think, I will not accept anything without checking it first! — Certainly, one should not accept anything without checking it first. But if one only brings oneself to everything, only accepts what one knows — then one will not get anywhere! And those who want to become clairvoyant will never say that they only want to accept what they have previously tested, but they must become completely free from all selfishness and expect everything from what comes to them from the world, which can only be described as “grace.” They expect everything from the grace that enlightens. For how does one acquire clairvoyant knowledge? Only by eliminating everything one has ever learned. Usually, people think: I have my own judgment. But they should say to themselves: That consists only of refreshing what your ancestors thought, or what your instincts inspire you to think, and so on. For there is never any question of these being people's own judgments; and those who assert their own judgments most strongly do not even know how they are led by the nose, slavishly led by the nose of their prejudices. All this must be done away with if we want to attain higher knowledge. The soul must become empty and be able to wait quietly for what can come to it from the world that is free of space and time, free of things and facts, hidden and secret. And we must never believe that we can seize clairvoyant knowledge for ourselves, but only that we can allow a mood to mature within us through which we receive what presents itself to us as revelation or enlightenment. Thus, we can never expect anything other than the grace that comes to us and gives us something that we can expect to come to us.

How, then, does such knowledge reveal itself? How does that which approaches us reveal itself when we are sufficiently prepared? It reveals itself as the mood of being blessed by the gift coming toward us from the spiritual world. If we wanted to describe what comes to us—whether as a being or whatever—in order to meet us graciously and pour knowledge into us, we could only use the expression: it is what comes toward us, a grace-giving, a gift, a giving. Let us grasp the nature of a being whose main characteristic would consist in what I have just described with these words: it is a bestowing, a giving, a presenting; such a being, with the main characteristic of scattering grace around itself, of pouring grace out of itself — let us conceive it in such a way that, in order to attain this possibility of bestowing grace, it needed to see the sacrifice of the thrones to the cherubim! Let us imagine for a moment that a being would approach what is happening when the thrones sacrifice the cherubim, a being who would be moved by this sight to become a giver, to pour out his gifts in grace around himself. Let us imagine this very precisely. Let us imagine that we were looking at a rose and were enchanted by it, feeling a sense of bliss at what we call “beautiful.” Let us imagine that another being, prompted by the sight of what is described as the sacrifice of the thrones to the cherubim, was moved to give everything it had, to pour itself out into the world: then we would have described those beings of which the “Secret Science” speaks as the “spirits of wisdom” who approach the sun to join those beings whom we have already encountered on Saturn. If we were to ask the question: What is the character of the spirits of wisdom who appeared on the sun and joined the spirits of Saturn? — we would have to answer: These spirits have as their main characteristic the virtue of giving, of bestowing grace. And if we wanted to have an epithet, we would have to say: They are the spirits of wisdom, the great givers, the great bestowers of the universe! - As we said of the Thrones: The great sacrificers — so we must say of the spirits of wisdom: The great givers, who give their gift so devotedly that it weaves through and permeates the universe, flowing into it and bringing order to it.

This is the deed on the sun, the effect of the spirits of wisdom on the sun. This is what they do: they give their own essence to their surroundings. And what is it that presents itself to the outer view when one looks at it and tries to perceive, as if with a higher sense, what is happening on the sun?

When you look at it, it is as described in The Secret Science: the sun consists not only of heat, but also of air and light. But when you say that the sun consists not only of heat, but also of air and light, it is as if someone said: “I see a gray cloud in the distance.” And if he were a painter and wanted to paint the impression he has, he would paint such a gray cloud; but if he went closer, he would perhaps find a swarm of mosquitoes instead of the gray cloud. In reality, what he thought was a gray cloud is a sum of living beings. In a similar way, we stand at a distance from the old solar existence: when we look at it from afar, it appears as the illusion of a body of air and light; but when we look at it more closely, we no longer have a body of air and light, but it appears as the great bestowing virtue of the spirits of wisdom. And no one can truly know the air who describes it only in terms of its external, physical properties. That is only Maya or illusion, that is only the external manifestation. For wherever there is air in the world, the deeds of the giving spirits of wisdom are behind it. Weaving, active air means the revelation of the giving virtue of the spirits of the macrocosm. And only those who say to themselves, “I perceive air here, but in truth it is being given by the spirits of wisdom to the environment, something is being radiated to the environment,” see air correctly.

Now we know what it actually is that we described about the old sun when we said that it consists of air. We now know that it is giving: that the spirits of wisdom let their own essence flow out and that it appears externally as air. But a strange thing now happened on the old sun, which presents itself to the clairvoyant. We must realize how we can gain an even more precise idea of this gift-giving virtue from our own soul life. Let us recall the feeling we ourselves can have when we succeed in permeating ourselves with a realization, with an idea, from the mood of devotion just described. We always have a certain sensation from such an idea that comes to us. Such an idea is not scientific; the best feeling for it is still to be found in art, where the idea has the urge to master color or form in some way, that is, to flow out into the world so that it has given the world an independent existence. The essence of such a gift-giving ability can be characterized by saying that it is connected with productivity and creativity, because this gift-giving is itself creative. Anyone who has an idea that they feel can benefit the world and that is expressed in works of art and so on has a correct understanding of this productivity of the gift-giving virtue. This is what weaves through the sun like air. When we think of the creative idea in the artist's mind as it fits into the material—apart from everything else—then this is the spiritual essence of air. Where there is air, we are dealing with something like this. But because this living productivity was present in the sun, the following fact became apparent.

Let us note that the spirits of time were already born on ancient Saturn, so that “time” could already exist on the sun, for it had come over from Saturn. Time is there. So there is a possibility on the ancient sun that did not yet exist on ancient Saturn, that such a gift could occur. For think what giving would be if there were no time: one could not give, for giving consists in giving and receiving. Without the second, giving is unthinkable. So giving must consist of two acts: giving and receiving, otherwise giving has no purpose. On the sun, however, giving and receiving stand in a very peculiar relationship to each other, namely, because time already exists, the gift that is given on the old sun to the environment is preserved in time, as it were, so that the spirits of wisdom pour out their gifts, and then they remain in time. But now something must occur that takes them away. This works in relation to the spirits of wisdom at a later moment. So that the spirits of wisdom give in the earlier moment, and what must necessarily be connected with this as taking occurs in the later moment.

We can only get a correct idea of this if we again take our own soul experience as a basis. Imagine that you are trying to understand something or to form a thought. Now you have formed this thought. Tomorrow you reflect, clear your mind so that everything you formed in your mind yesterday can return to your mind. Then what was formed yesterday is taken up by you today. This is how it is on the old sun, where what was given earlier is preserved for a later moment and later received. What then is this receiving? On the old sun, it is also an act, an event that differs from other events only in that it is later. Giving belongs to the spirits of wisdom. Who then receives? In order for someone to receive, someone must first be there. In the same way as, through an act of birth, so to speak, namely from the sacrifices of the Thrones to the Cherubim, the spirits of time arise on Saturn, so through giving to the world on the Sun by the spirits of wisdom, those spirits arise which we call the Archangels: Archangeloi. And they are the takers on the old sun. But they take in a very special way, namely, that they do not keep for themselves what they receive as a gift from the spirits of wisdom, but reflect it back, as a mirror reflects back your image. Thus, the archangels on the sun have the task of catching what was given at an earlier time at a later time, so that it is still there at a later time and is reflected back by the archangels. So on the sun we have an earlier giving and a later receiving, but this receiving is a reflection of what was in an earlier time.

Imagine that the earth were not as it is now, but that the following would occur: that what happened at an earlier time could be reflected back at the present moment. But we know that something like this really happens. We are now living in the fifth post-Atlantean cultural epoch; the events of the third post-Atlantean cultural epoch, the ancient Egyptian-Chaldean period, are radiating back. What was there before is being caught up and now radiates back. This is a kind of repetition of the giving and receiving that took place on the old sun. Thus, we must think of ourselves as the recipients, in the archangels, of the spirits of wisdom, who were the givers and bestowers in the older sun epochs. This brings about something very special, which you can only really imagine if you think of the image of an inwardly closed sphere, from the center of which something radiates out, something that is given; it radiates to the periphery and from there back to the center. On the surface, inside the sphere, are the archangels, who radiate it back. You do not need to imagine anything outside. So, starting from a center, we must think of what comes from the spirits of wisdom: it is radiated in all directions, is caught by the archangels, and radiated back. What is it that radiates back into space, this radiated gift of the spirits of wisdom? What is the wisdom that is radiated back into itself? — It is light. And thus the archangels are also the creators of light. Light is not what it appears to us in the outer illusion, but where light appears, we have the gifts of the spirits of wisdom reflected back. And the beings we must assume are everywhere behind the light are the archangels. Therefore, we must say: Behind the flooding ray of light that strikes us are the Archangeloi; but the fact that they can flood us with light comes only from the fact that they reflect back what shines toward them, namely, the gift of virtue from the spirits of wisdom.

This gives us a picture of the old sun. We imagine a central seat, as it were, where everything that has come over from the old Saturn is united: the sacrificial deeds of the thrones toward the cherubim, and the spirits of wisdom, immersed in the sight of these sacrificial deeds. The sight of these acts of sacrifice causes them to radiate from themselves what is their own essence: flowing, flooding wisdom as a gift-giving virtue. But because this is permeated by time, it is sent out and sent back again, so that we have a globe, a globe illuminated from within by the reflected virtue. For we must think of the ancient sun as shining inwardly rather than outwardly. This creates something new, which we can describe as follows. Let us imagine these spirits of wisdom sitting in the center of the sun, gazing at the sacrificial thrones and radiating their own essence because of the sight of the sacrificial thrones, and receiving back their radiant essence as it is reflected back to them from the surface, so that they receive it back as light. Everything is illuminated. But what do they get back from those who reflect back in taking? — Their own essence, by giving it away, became a gift to the macrocosm; it was their inner being. Now it shines back: their own essence comes back to them from outside. They see their own inner being distributed throughout the whole world and reflected back from outside as light, as the reflection of their own essence.

The inner and the outer are the two opposites that now confront us. The former and the latter are transformed and become such that they are transformed into the inner and the outer. “Space” is born! Through the giving virtue of the spirits of wisdom, space arises on the old sun. Before that, “space” can only have a figurative meaning. Now we have space, but initially only in two dimensions: not yet above and below, not yet right and left, but only external and internal. In reality, these two opposites already appear towards the end of the old Saturn, but they repeat themselves in their actual meaning as space-creating on the old Sun.

And if we now want to gain an idea of all these processes again in the same way as we did last time, when the image of the sacrificing thrones appeared before our soul, giving birth to the spirits of the times, we will not paint a body consisting of light, for this light does not yet radiate outward; it is only present in the inner reflection. We must imagine a sphere as an inner space, in the center of which the image of Saturn repeats itself: the thrones as spirits kneeling before the cherubim, the winged beings, sacrificing their own being; and joining them are the spirits of wisdom, sinking into contemplation of the sacrifice. And now we can see that the glow that lies in the sacrifice is transformed in the devotion of the spirits of wisdom, so that it can be sensually imagined as sacrificial smoke, as air rising from the act of sacrifice as sacrificial smoke. And we get a complete picture when we imagine: the sacrificing thrones kneeling before the cherubim, and the spirits of wisdom joining the sacrifice as if in a dance, devoted in their mood to what they see in the center of the sun at the sacrifice of the thrones; thereby awakening in their mood to the image of the sacrificial smoke, which spreads in all directions, which flows out, gathers at the end, and brings forth from its clouds the figures of the archangels, who reflect back from the periphery the gift of the sacrificial smoke as light, illuminating the interior of the sun, returning the gift of the spirits of wisdom, and thus creating the sphere of the sun. It consists of giving embers and sacrificial smoke. On the outer periphery sit the archangels, the creators of light, who later reproduce what is first present on the sun; it takes time, but then it returns as light. So what do the archangels preserve? They preserve what was earlier; they radiate back the gifts of the spirits of wisdom that they receive; but what was in time, they give back as space, and by radiating it back as space, they give back what they themselves have received through the Archai, the beginnings. In this way, they are the angels of the beginning, because they make effective in later times what was earlier. Archangeloi, messengers of the beginning, they are!

It is quite wonderful when such a word reappears from real occult knowledge and we then consider how this word has come down to us from ancient traditions — via the school of Dionysius the Areopagite, who was a disciple of Paul. It is wonderful to see that this word is so distinctive that when we develop it independently of what is written there, what emerges is what was there before. This must fill us with the greatest reverence, and we then feel connected to the ancient sacred schools of consecrated wisdom, of consecrated science, so that we feel, as it were, as if this ancient wisdom were flowing into us as we grasp it with understanding, after we have created for ourselves the possibility of taking it in independently of the old. Anyone who can feel even a little of the voice of the old expressions that have been handed down to us, without paying attention to these expressions, feels themselves placed in the working of the spirits of the times through the human spirit. What emerges is a wonderful way of feeling connected with the whole of human evolution; a feeling of security in these things.

The archangels preserve the memory of the primordial beginnings. But what existed on any of the planets is repeated at a later time, only that the later always adds something else, so that the essence of the sun in a certain sense confronts us again in what we encounter on our earth.

The whole idea, the whole feeling that we have been able to acquire here, which gives us a picture of the sacrificing thrones, of the cherubim receiving the sacrifice, of the glow emanating from the sacrifice, of the sacrificial smoke spreading like air, of the light which is reflected back by the archangels who preserve what happened in the beginning for later times: this feeling is something that can evoke in us a true understanding of everything connected with the creations that arise from such a feeling.

Thus, in this environment, which I have just described as the soul environment, we have gained a more spiritual understanding of what we previously gained from a more physical image. And we will now see that out of this environment is born what appeared on earth as the Christ Being; and we will only understand what is brought to earth through the Christ Being if we acquire the concept of the giving virtue, the grace-working virtue in its reflection in the light of the universe in the inner substance of the solar system, which is permeated and illuminated by this light. If we raise what we have just described to the level of an image, transform it into an imagination, and think that all this is brought to Earth by this Being and lives out its life on Earth, then we will be able to feel the actual spiritual essence of the Christ impulse even more deeply. We will then understand what dark premonitions can live in the human soul when this human soul feels, in response to some representation, that what has just been described can in a certain way become alive again on Earth.

Let us imagine that what has just been described about the sun could concentrate itself completely in the soul of a being, could twist itself together and be taken away, only to reappear later. And it would reappear on earth and have such an effect that, from what was created from the ancient sacrifice and the sacrificial smoke, the light-creating time and the gift-giving virtue, it would convey the essence of the effect of grace and reflect it from the universe of warmth and light. Let us think of all this concentrated in one soul, giving it to earthly existence, so that those who are now called to be earthly beings may gather around it to reflect it back, to preserve it for the rest of earthly existence: In the middle, the giver, emerging from the sacrifice and through the sacrifice, surrounded by those who are to receive it; connected to this at the same time is that which is the sacrifice and everything associated with it, as it were translated into earthly existence. And on the other hand, the possibility of destroying this sacrifice, so that everything that can be given to human beings as an effect of grace can be accepted or rejected. If we imagine all this embodied in an intuition, then we can have such a feeling towards Leonardo da Vinci's “Last Supper”: the whole sun with the sacrificial beings, with the beings of giving virtue, with the beings of warmth and light, spiritually grasped — reflected back by those who are chosen to preserve from earlier times into later times; prepared for the earth by the fact that it can also be rejected in the traitor.

The essence of the earth, insofar as the essence of the sun reappears on earth, can be felt in this way. And if this is felt not in an external, intellectual way, but in a truly artistic way, then one has felt something of what is actually the driving force in such a great work of art, which, as it were, reproduces the essence of earthly existence. And the next time we see Christ emerging from the solar environment, we will understand even better what has often been said: if a spirit came down from Mars to Earth and saw everything it did not understand, it would perhaps not comprehend a single thing on Earth, but it would understand the actual mission of Earth if it could allow Leonardo da Vinci's “Last Supper” to work its magic on it. Such a Martian would be able to see how the existence of the sun must be hidden in the existence of the earth, and everything that would be told to him about the meaning of the earth would become clear to him. He would understand that the earth means something, and he would know what the earth is all about: He would say to himself: Whatever else may happen on Earth may only have meaning for some corner of earthly existence. But if this deed could really be depicted—the deed that shines out at me here from the colors when I hold the central figure together with those surrounding him—then I feel what the spirits of wisdom felt on the sun, what echoes back to us here in the words: “Do this in remembrance of me!” The preservation of the earlier in the later: this phrase only becomes understandable to us when we grasp it from the whole context of the world that we have now come to know. — I only wanted to hint at how something like an artistic act of the highest order is connected with the whole becoming of the world.

Next time, our task will be to understand the Christ being from the spiritual being of the sun, and then move on to the spiritual being of the moon.