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An Imagination on the Celestial Gestures of 2020

— Steiner Center New Mexico


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An Imagination on the Celestial Gestures of 2020


By Mary Stewart Adams

…and thus having opportunity to consider better of Astronomy, I found that this present Night
there would happen such a conjunction of planets, the like to which was not otherwise suddenly to
be observed…

~Day Five, “The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz”

Every year there are culminating celestial rhythms that lend themselves to the mood of the year, as
though they were a starry cloak or garment in which the Being of the Year adorns itself, and each
year we are tasked with discerning that mood, in the waking and sleeping of the forces of the year.

But why discuss this now, months after the New Year has begun? In ancient systems of reckoning
time, and until at least the rule of Julius Caesar during the ancient era of the Roman Republic, the
New Year was celebrated as the return of the Sun at Vernal Equinox in March, when, as Claudius
Ptolemy described it in his Tetrabiblos of the 1st century AD: “The point of the Vernal Equinox has
been consequently designated by them (the ancient Egyptians) as the beginning of the year;
because, from that time, the duration of the day begins to exceed that of the night, and because
the season then produced partakes highly of moisture, which is always a predominant quality in all
incipient generation and growth.”

In early Christian tradition, the Earth was created on March 25th, 5229 years before the Christ
event. In the ancient world, the moment of Equinox would have occurred around that time in
March, and in the later, Christianized calendar, that date became the observance of the Feast of
the Annunciation, when Gabriel appeared to the Virgin Mary bearing the lily, symbol of divine
communication, proclaiming the birth of the Christ Child. Should she choose to accept the
annunciation, she would thereby inaugurate fulfillment of the sublime turn in human becoming that
had been prepared for through the centuries (see Gospel of St. Luke, ch. 1 verse 38 Behold the
handmaid of the Lord: be it unto my according to thy word).

In the ancient era, the time prior to this season of the conception, or beginning of the New Year,
was as though without form, until the Spring Moon appeared. This Moon’s month was named for
Mars, originally an agricultural god, who was believed to have dominion over the first sign of the
zodiac, Aries, the region where the sunlight begins to grow stronger, which makes this region of
starry sky commensurate with that which comes first. It is interesting to note that January and
February were not included as months in the ancient Roman calendar, the wintry season they later
defined regarded as the time for purging and cleansing and preparation. It isn’t until 700 BC that
these two months are included in the calendar round, and not until nearly the 4th century BC that
they mark the first and second month of the New Year in the calendar.

In 2020, there are several strong rhythms culminating, including the once-every-20- years Great
Conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter at Winter Solstice December 21st. In the Middle Ages, these
Great Conjunctions gave rise to conjunctionist astrology which fueled sensationalism in the public
arena around fears concerning apocalyptic cataclysm and plague, so much so that the Church
finally forbid the practice of prognosticating based on celestial phenomenon. Prior to this abolition
by the Church, the 14th century poet Dante anticipated great revelation in the conjunctions of his
era, which he believed would lead to a reformation of the Church. It is no coincidence that his
Divine Comedy began on March 25.

Later, the 17th century astronomer Johannes Kepler sought to prove that it was just such a
conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter, occurring in the 5th century BC, that the wise men of the East
regarded as the sign indicating that the birth of the Christ Child was at hand.

The Great Conjunctions recur every 20 years, 1/3 of the way through the zodiac from one another,
so that after 60 years, they seem to form a triangle around the Earth. Every third sign of the zodiac
shares the same element (fire, earth, air, water), so that over a period of about 200 years, and
given the rhythm of their coming together, the Great Conjunctions of Saturn and Jupiter will
occupy one element only. Since there are four elements, it will take 800 years for the conjunctions
to recur in each element, which means that the conjunctions of our era are the first recurrence
since the 1200s, when Dante was born (in 1265, the year of Dante’s birth, there was a Great
Conjunction in the sign Gemini, an air sign. Rendered in the topical zodiac, this year’s Great
Conjunction occurs at 0 degrees of Aquarius, also an air sign, thereby inaugurating the recurrence
of air sign conjunctions that will continue for 200 years).

Just over six months prior to the Great Conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter, the planet Venus will
come to inferior conjunction with the Sun (June 3, 2020), and in doing so, the planet of love and
beauty completes its circuit of five retrograde loops (a motion that takes eight years). The
significance of Venus’ fulfilling her eight-year season of retrograde circuits in June 2020 is that it
puts Venus very near to where it was in June 2012, when the planet made its rare Transit of the
Sun, an event that takes place in eight-year pairs that only recur every 120 years. At Transit, Venus
appears to move directly in front of the Sun, and can be imagined in her Promethean aspect,
gathering a spark of flame from Helios for weaving around the Earth, inspiring the human being
with civilizing forces.

Or as Byron said of Prometheus: Thy godlike crime was to be kind, to render with thy precepts
less the sum of human wretchedness, and strengthen man with his own mind…
Further, the five retrograde loops that Venus makes during its eight-year cycle create the form of
the pentagram, or five-pointed star, around the Earth, a dynamic form that is understood
esoterically as one that sustains the human physical form (as witnessed in Leonardo da Vinci’s
Vetruvian Man), and which also informs the platonic solid known as the dodecahedron, the 12-
sided object where each flat surface is a pentagon. This is the form that was chosen by Rudolf
Steiner for the Foundation Stone of the First Goetheanum, which also lives rhythmically in the
structure of the Foundation Stone Meditation.

Another celestial rhythm that culminates this year, and which completes every 19 years, is the
Metonic Cycle. Meton was an ancient Athenian astronomer living in the 5th century BC who was
able to figure out that it takes 19 years for the Sun and Moon to come into the same relationship
on the same day in the solar cycle. In other words, the Moon will not achieve the same phase on
the same day of the year from one year to the next until 19 years have lapsed. This rhythm matters
significantly in calendar making, especially when an attempt is made to predict the movable
festival days into the future. For instance, knowing when the first Full Moon of the Spring occurs is
prerequisite to knowing when to celebrate Easter Sunday, and while there are several other factors
that contribute to the challenge of determining such a date, this 19-year rhythm between Sun and
Moon is part of it.

Every year we are 19 years later from the time 19 years prior, but it is the unique rhythm of five 19
year rhythms that is significant this year. Five 19 year rhythms equals 95 years, which means that
in 2020, the Sun and Moon are, for the fifth time, completing a relationship they had 95 years ago,
beginning in 1925. In the history of the Anthroposphical movement, the year 1925 is significant as
the year that Rudolf Steiner died, on March 30th of that year. At the time of Rudolf Steiner’s death,
the Sun had already crossed the Vernal Equinox moving north, but the Moon had not yet come to
Full Phase. The first Full Moon of the Spring is the first to occur below the Celestial Equator since
the time of Michaelmas, and it serves as a witness to the return of the light, of the Sun, and serves
to identify which is the correct Sunday for celebrating the sacred mystery of this return of light and
life at Easter. One can hardly imagine the profound majesty the experience of this Mystery must
have presented to Rudolf Steiner’s contemporaries that first Easter after his death, which was on
April 12, 1925, following the Vernal Full Moon at 18 degrees Libra in the tropical zodiac.

Here in 2020, the Vernal Moon will again come to Full Phase at 18 degrees Libra in the tropical
zodiac, followed by Easter sunrise on Sunday, April 12. In this we can imagine a sounding out
through these degrees of the zodiac, instigated by the recurrence of Sun and Moon in the same
positions as they occupied in 1925, calling us to bear witness, to hear, and to respond to the call
to awaken spiritual consciousness in humanity that was the gesture of Rudolf Steiner’s life.

So here we have three culminating rhythms:


1. The fifth 19-year Metonic Cycle since 1925, the year of Rudolf Steiner’s death
2. The completion of the fifth Venus retrograde circuit since its rare Transit of the Sun in 2012
3. The Great Conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter at Winter Solstice December 21, 2020, which only
occurs every 20 years

When Saturn and Jupiter come together in the star field, bearing Cosmic Memory and Cosmic
Thought, it is as though the gods have gathered to take council with one another, in consort with
the Earth, who bears with us our sacred memories while giving ground to our hopes and dreams
for the future. Venus has brought the gift of fire, while Sun and Moon sound out a rhythm in accord
with the spiritual deeds of the initiate.

To augment the picture, and to encourage our striving to engage with the Being of the Year as it
expresses itself through current celestial gestures, it is good to take note of the sky at the end of
March 2020. During the week of the Vernal Equinox (March 19 in 2020), the Moon will be a waning
crescent, sweeping past the morning planets Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, respectively. Mars will
appear spectacularly close to Jupiter on March 18, and will follow in the tracks of the Moon to
appear with Saturn a few days later, on March 31st. Between the 18th and the 31st, the Moon will
come to New Phase, on March 24, 2020 at 7:41 am eastern time. March 24 is the Feast of the
Archangel Gabriel, who announces the New Year with this Spring Moon, nine months ahead of the
Great Conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter at Winter Solstice in December. Also on March 24, the
planets Venus and Mercury will be at greatest elongation, which means they are each as far away
from the Sun as they can get. In my imagination, it is as though these two are forming a chalice
around the Sun and Moon, with Mercury in the morning sky and Venus in the evening sky,
embracing the horizon (and our consciousness), and giving a form into which the Moon may carry
the spiritual New Year intentions of the planets Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn into the cycle of time.
Ours is to give witness, and, as Rudolf Steiner described, become aware of our role in these great
cosmic mysteries, knowing the foundation has been laid.

The more abundantly the harmony of the cosmos fills the soul, the more peace and harmony there
will be on the earth. ~Rudolf Steiner

Mary Stewart Adams


On retreat at Rudolf Steiner House, “a scholar’s monastery” Ann Arbor, MI
2.21.20

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