V
THE SEVEN DEGREES OF INITIATION
The First Sign
In a
consideration of the Gospel of St. John, we should never lose
sight of that most important point which was brought out in
the lecture yesterday namely, that in the original writer of
the Gospel we have to do with the “Beloved
Disciple,” initiated by Christ-Jesus Himself. One might
naturally ask if, aside from occult knowledge, there exists,
perhaps, some external proof of this statement by means of
which the writer of this Gospel has intimated that he came to
a higher order of knowledge about the Christ through the
“raising,” through the initiation which is
represented in the so-called miracle of the raising of
Lazarus. If you will read the Gospel of St. John carefully,
you will observe, that nowhere previous to that chapter which
treats of the raising of Lazarus is there any mention of the
“Disciple whom the Lord loved.” In other words,
the real author of the Gospel wishes to say: What precedes
this chapter does not yet have its origin in the knowledge
which I have received through initiation, therefore in the
beginning you must disregard me. Only later does he mention
the “Disciple whom the Lord loved.” Thus the
Gospel falls into two important parts, the first part in
which the Disciple whom the Lord loved is not yet mentioned
because he had not yet been initiated, and that part which
comes after the raising of Lazarus in which this Disciple is
mentioned. Nowhere in the document itself will you find any
contradictions of what I have presented in the previous
lectures. Naturally, anyone who considers the Gospel only
superficially will easily pass this by, will not notice it
and at the present time when everything is popularized, when
all manner of knowledge is forced upon us, we can often
experience as an extraordinary spectacle much of a very
doubtful character in this knowledge.
Who would not
consider it a blessing if all kinds of knowledge could be
brought to the people through such inexpensive literature as
the Reclam'sche Universal Bibliothek. Among the last
volumes, one has appeared on the Origin of the
Bible. The author entitles himself a Doctor of Theology.
He is, then, a theologian! He believes that throughout all
the chapters of the Gospel of St. John, from the 35th verse
of the 1st Chapter, John, the author of the Gospel, is the
one referred to. When this little book came into my hands, I
really could not believe my eyes and said to myself: there
must be something very extraordinary under consideration here
that repudiates all previous occult points of view that the
Beloved Disciple is not mentioned before the “raising
of Lazarus.” Still, a theologian ought to know! In
order not to pass judgment too quickly, take up the Gospel of
St. John and see for yourselves what stands there:
“Again the next day after, John stood and two of his
disciples.” Here John the Baptist and two of his
disciples are spoken of. The most generous point of view that
one can take toward this theologian is that his consciousness
was filled with an ancient exoteric tradition which declares
that John, the author of the Gospel, is one of these two
disciples. This tradition is supported by Matthew IV 21. But,
the Gospel of St. John cannot be explained by means of the
other Gospels. A theologian therefore was responsible for
introducing into popular literature a very harmful book. And
if one knows how such a thing which is brought to the people
in just this way continues to spread, it is possible to
measure the harm which arises out of it. This is just an
interpellation, in order that a certain protective wall may
be erected against all kinds of objections which might
perhaps be brought forward in refutation of what has been
said here.
Now let us
hold in mind that what preceded the “raising of
Lazarus” is a communication of weighty matters, but
that the writer has reserved the most profound matters for
the chapters subsequent to that event. Nevertheless, he
wished throughout to indicate that the content of his Gospel
is something which will be thoroughly understood only by one
who has attained a certain degree of initiation. Therefore he
indicates in various passages that what is communicated in
the first chapters has to do with a certain kind and degree
of initiation. You already know that there are different
degrees of initiation. For example, in a certain form of
oriental initiation, seven degrees can be distinguished and
these seven degrees were designated by all sorts of
symbolical names. The first was the degree of the
“Raven,” the second that of the
”Occultist,” the third of the
“Warrior,” the fourth that of the
“Lion.” Amongst different peoples, who still felt
a kind of blood relationship as the expression of their
group-soul, the fifth degree was designated by the name of
the folk itself; thus among the Persians, for example, an
initiate of the fifth degree was called in an occult sense, a
“Persian.” When we understand what these names
signify, then the justification of these titles will soon be
evident.
An initiate of
the first degree is one who constitutes an intermediary
between the hidden and the outer life, one who is sent from
place to place. In this first degree the neophyte must devote
himself with complete resignation to the outer life, but what
he ascertains there, he must bring back into the Mystery
Places. One speaks of the “Raven” when words have
something to communicate to the inner world of the Mystery
Places from the world outside. Just call to mind the ravens
of Elias, or the ravens of Wotan, even the ravens of the
Barbarossa Saga, that had to discover when it was time to
come forth. The initiate of the second degree stood fully
within the occult life. One who was of the third degree was
allowed to defend occult knowledge. The degree of the
“Warrior” does not mean one who fights, but one
who defends occult teaching, what the occult life has to
give. One who is a “Lion” embodies the occult
life within himself in such a way that he defends occultism,
not only in words, but also in acts, that is, with deeds of a
magical sort. The sixth degree is that of the
“Sun-hero” and the seventh that of the
“Father.” The fifth degree is the one we shall
now consider.
The human
being of ancient times was especially a part of his community
and therefore when he was conscious of his ego, he felt
himself more as a member of a group-soul than as an
individual. But the initiate of the fifth degree had made a
certain sacrifice, had so far stripped off his own
personality that he took the folk-soul into his own being.
While other men felt their souls within the folk-soul, he
took the folk-soul into his own being, and this was because
all that belonged to his personality was of no importance to
him but only the common folk-spirit. Therefore an initiate of
this kind was called by the name of his particular folk.
Now we know
that in the Gospel of St. John it is said that Nathaniel also
was one of the first disciples of Christ-Jesus. He was
brought before the Christ. He is not so highly developed that
he is able to comprehend the Christ. The Christ is, of
course, the Spirit of all-inclusive Knowledge which cannot be
fathomed by a Nathaniel, an initiate of the fifth degree. But
the Christ could fathom Nathaniel. This was shown by two
facts.
How did Christ
designate him? “This man is a true Israelite!”
Here we have the designation according to the name of the
folk. Just as among the Persians, an initiate of the fifth
degree is called a Persian, so among the Israelites, he is
called an Israelite. Therefore Christ calls Nathaniel an
Israelite. He then says to him: “Even before Philip
called thee, when thou wast under the fig-tree, I saw
thee!” That is a symbolical designation of an initiate
like the Budha sitting under the Bodhi Tree. The fig-tree is
a symbol of Egyptian-Chaldean initiation. He meant with these
words: I well know that thou art an initiate of a certain
degree, and canst perceive certain things, for I saw thee!
Then Nathaniel recognized Him: “Rabbi, Thou art the Son
of God; Thou art the King of Israel!” This word
“King” signifies in this connection: Thou art one
who is higher than I, otherwise thou couldst not say,
“I saw thee when thou sattest under the
fig-tree.” And Christ answered, “Thou believest
in me because I said that I saw thee under the fig-tree: thou
shalt see greater things than these.” The words
“verily, verily” we shall speak about later. Then
He said: “I say unto you, ye shall see the angels of
Heaven ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.”
Yet greater things than they had already seen would be seen
by those who were able to recognize the Christ. Again, one
may ask: What significant words are these?
In order to
make this clear, let us call to mind what the human being
really is. We have said that he is a different creature by
day than by night. During the day his four human members,
physical body, ether body, astral body, and ego are bound
closely together. They react upon each other. We may say that
when the human being is awake during the day, in a certain
way his physical and etheric bodily parts are permeated and
cared for by his astral and ego spiritual parts. But we have
also shown that something else must be active within the
etheric and physical bodily parts in order that the human
being be able to exist at all in his present phase of
evolution. For we have called attention to the fact that
every night he draws out those members which care for this
physical and ether body, namely, the astral body and ego,
thus leaving his physical and ether bodies to their own fate.
You all, as astral body and ego, faithlessly desert your
physical and ether bodies every night. Hence you will see
that Spiritual Science points out with a certain correctness
that divine-spiritual powers and forces stream through the
physical and ether bodies during the night so that they are,
as it were, invested by these divine-spiritual forces and
beings. We have also pointed out that when the astral body
and ego were outside the physical and ether bodies in those
periods which we call the Jahve or Jehova epochs, that Jehova
was active as an inspirer. But it was the true Light, the
Fullness of the Godhead or of the Elohim, the Pleroma, that
was also constantly radiating through the physical and ether
bodies. However, the human being, not having yet received the
necessary impulse from the Christ-principle before the
appearance of this Principle upon the earth, was not able to
recognize it. Those principles which are to come to
expression in the physical body, dwell in the higher
spiritual regions of Devachan. The spiritual beings and
powers which work upon the physical body are at home in the
higher heavenly spheres, in higher Devachan, and those powers
which work upon the ether body are in their own sphere in the
lower heavenly realms. So we may say that in this physical
body there are constantly active, beings from the highest
regions of Devachan and in the ether body, beings from the
lower devachanic regions are active. Men can recognize them
only after having received the Impulse of the Christ into
themselves. “If you truly understand the Son of Man,
you will perceive how the spiritual forces descending from
and ascending to the heavenly spheres work upon mankind. This
you will know through the impulse which the Christ gives to
the earth.”
What now
follows, was mentioned in the lecture yesterday. The Marriage
at Cana in Galilee is often called “the first of the
miracles” — it were better to call it “the
first sign” which Christ-Jesus made. Now in order that
we may understand the stupendousness of the significance of
the Marriage at Cana, we shall need to consider as a whole,
much of what we have been hearing in the last lectures.
In the first
place we have here a marriage — but why a marriage in
Galilee? We shall understand why it is a marriage in Galilee
if we call to mind once more the whole mission of the Christ.
His mission consisted in bringing to mankind the full force
of the ego, an inner independence in the soul. The individual
ego should feel itself fully independent and separate,
existing completely within itself and people should be united
in marriage because of a love which they freely and
voluntarily bestow upon one another. Through the
Christ-Principle there should come into the earth-mission a
love that would rise ever higher and higher above the
material and constantly mount toward the Spirit. Love had its
beginning in its lowest form which was bound up with the
senses. In the earliest periods of human evolution, those who
were bound together by the tie of blood loved each other and
they made a great deal of the idea that love was based upon
this material blood relationship.
The Christ
came in order to spiritualize this love; in order, on the one
hand, to loosen the bonds in which love had been entangled
through the blood-relationship and on the other hand to give
force and intensity to spiritual Love. Among the
followers of the Old Testament we still see expressed most
completely what we may call membership in the group-soul
acting as the foundation of the individual ego within the
Universal Ego. We have seen that the expression “I and
Father Abraham are one” had a definite meaning for the
adherents of the Old Testament. It meant that they felt
themselves safe in the consciousness that that blood which
ran through the veins of Father Abraham flowed on down even
to themselves. Therefore they felt themselves secure within
the whole and only those were considered members of the whole
who came into being through human propagation maintained by
means of this blood relationship. In the very beginning of
human evolution upon the earth, marriage took place only
within very narrow circles, within families related by blood.
Endogamy, (marriage within the tribe) was closely adhered to.
Then the narrow blood-circle gradually widened and men began
to marry outside the family, but not yet within other peoples
or folk. The folk of the Old Testament held fast to the idea
that the folk blood relationship should be maintained. One is
a “Jew” who in his blood is a Jew.
Christ Jesus
did not advocate this principle. He appealed to those who had
broken this principle of mere blood relationship, and the
important thing He had to demonstrate, He demonstrated not in
Judea, but outside in Galilee. Galilee was the region where
peoples of every race and tribe had mixed together. The term
Galilean means “mixed-breed,”
“mongrel.” Christ Jesus went to the Galileans, to
those who were most mixed. Out of a human reproduction such
as this, brought about by a mingling of blood, something
arose that was no longer dependent upon a physical basis of
love. Therefore what He wished to say, was said at a
marriage. But why at a marriage? Because at the time of a
marriage reference can be made to the reproduction of human
beings. And what He wished to demonstrate, He did not wish to
show at a place where marriage took place within narrow
boundaries, within the blood-bond, but where it was entered
into independently of the tie of blood. Therefore what He had
to say was said at a marriage — and at a marriage in
Galilee. If we wish to understand what is expressed here, we
must again turn our attention to the whole of human
evolution.
It has often
been said that for the occultist there is no such thing as
the merely external, the purely material. All materiality is
for him the expression of something of a soul-spirit nature,
and just as your face is the expression of something of a
soul-spirit nature, so too is the light of the sun the
expression of a soul-spirit light. All that occurs apparently
only in the material physical world is at the same time the
expression of deeper spiritual processes. Occultism does not
deny matter. For it, even the grossest matter is the
expression of a soul-spirit something. Thus material facts
correspond to the spiritual evolutionary processes of the
world, always running parallel with them.
If in spirit
we look back over human evolution to the time when mankind
still lived upon an ancient Continent lying between Europe
and America, upon ancient Atlantis, passing over from there
into the later post-Atlantean period, we can see how
generation after generation has at last led right up to
ourselves. If we consider from the standpoint of race the
whole significance of human evolution from the 4th to the 5th
Root-race, we can see, as it were, that out of an Atlantean
humanity, wholly or completely immersed in the group-soul,
the individual ego of the human personality gradually evolved
and slowly matured in the post-Atlantean period. What the
Christ brought spiritually through His powerful spiritual
impulse had to be prepared gradually through other impulses.
What Jahve did was to implant the group-soul ego in the
astral body and by gradually maturing it, prepare it for the
reception of the fully independent “I AM.” But
men could only comprehend this “I AM” when their
physical body also became a fit instrument for sheltering It.
You can easily imagine that the astral body might be ever so
capable of receiving an ego, but if the physical body is not
a fit instrument for truly comprehending the “I
AM” with a waking consciousness then it is impossible
to receive it. The physical body must also always be a
suitable instrument for what is imprinted upon it here upon
the earth. Therefore when the astral body had been matured,
the physical body had to be prepared to become an instrument
of the “I AM,” and this is what occurred in human
evolution. We can follow the processes through which the
physical body was prepared to become the bearer of the
self-conscious, ego-endowed human being.
Even in the
Bible it is pointed out that Noah who, in a certain sense was
the progenitor of his race in the post-Atlantean period, was
the first wine-drinker, the first to experience the effect of
alcohol. Then we come to a chapter which may be really very
shocking for many people. In the post-Atlantean period an
extraordinary cultus arose; this was the worship of Dionysos.
You all know that this worship was connected with wine. This
extraordinary substance was first introduced to human beings
in the post-Atlantean period and produced a certain effect
upon them. You know that every substance has some effect upon
the human creature and alcohol had a very definite action
upon the human organism. In fact, in the course of human
evolution, it has had a mission. Strange as it may seem, it
has had the task, as it were, of preparing the human body so
that it might be cut off from connection with the Divine, in
order to allow the personal “I AM” to emerge.
Alcohol has the effect of severing the connection of the
human being with the spirit world in which he previously
existed. It still has this effect today. It was not without
reason that alcohol has had a place in human evolution. In
the future of humanity, it will be possible to see in the
fullest sense of the word that it was the mission of alcohol
to draw men so deeply into materiality that they become
egoistic, thus bringing them to the point of claiming the ego
for themselves, no longer placing it at the service of the
whole folk. Alcohol performed a service, the contrary of the
one performed by the human group-soul. It deprived men of the
capacity to feel themselves at one with the whole in the
spirit world. Hence the Dionysian worship which cultivated a
living together in a kind of external intoxication, a merging
into the whole without observing this whole. Evolution in the
post-Atlantean period has been connected with the worship of
Dionysos, because this worship was a symbol of the function
and mission of alcohol. Now, when mankind is again
endeavouring to find its way back, when the ego has been so
far developed that the human being is again able to find
union with the divine spiritual powers, the time has come for
a certain reaction, an unconscious one at first, to take
place against alcohol. This reaction is now taking place and
many persons today already feel that something which once had
a very special significance is not forever justified.
No one should
interpret what has been said concerning the mission of
alcohol at a special period of time as, perhaps, favoring
alcohol, but it should be understood that this has been
stated in order to make clear that this alcoholic mission has
been fulfilled and that different things are adapted to
different periods. In the same period in which men were drawn
most deeply into egotism through alcohol, there appeared a
force stronger than all others which could give to them the
greatest impulse for re-finding a union with the spiritual
whole. On the one hand men had to descend to the lowest level
in order that they might become independent and on the other
hand a strong force must come which can give again the
impulse for finding the path back to the Universal. The
Christ indicated this to be His mission in the first of His
signs. In the first place He had to point out that the ego
must become independent; in the second place, that He was
addressing Himself to those who had freed themselves from the
blood relationship. He had to turn to a marriage where the
physical bodies came under the influence of alcohol, because
at this marriage wine would be drunk. And Christ Jesus showed
how His mission had to proceed in the different earthly
epochs. How often we hear extraordinary explanations of the
meaning of the changing of water into wine. Even from the
pulpit one hears that nothing else is meant than that the
insipid water of the Old Testament should be superceded by
the strong wine of the New. In all probability it was the
wine-lovers who always liked this kind of an explanation, but
these symbols are not so simple as that. It must be kept
constantly in mind that the Christ said: My mission is one
that points toward the far distant future when men will be
brought to a union with the Godhead — that is to a love
of the Godhead as a free gift of the independent ego. This
love should bind men in freedom to the Godhead while formerly
an inner compelling impulse of the group-soul had made them a
part of It.
Let us now
grasp in accordance with the prevailing thought of that time
what men then experienced. Let us especially understand the
thoughts that they held. It was declared that people were at
one time united with the group-soul and felt their union with
the Godhead. Then they developed a downward tendency and this
was considered as an entanglement in matter, as a
degeneration, a kind of falling away from the Divine, and the
question was asked: whence came originally what the human
being now possesses? From what has he fallen away? The
further we go back in earthly evolution, the more we find the
solid, earthly matter passing over into a fluidic state under
the influence of warmer conditions. But we know that when the
earth was much more fluidic than it became later on, human
beings also existed, but they were much less detached from
the Godhead than at a subsequent period. To the degree that
the earth hardened, human things became materialized. At the
time the earth was in a fluidic condition, the human being
was contained within the watery element, but he could only
walk about upon the earth after it had already deposited
solid portions. Therefore, people felt the hardening of the
physical body and could say: the human being was born out of
the earth when it was still in its fluidic state, but at that
time he was still wholly united with the Godhead. All that
brought him into matter defiled him. Those who are to
remember this ancient connection with the Divine were
baptized with water. This was its symbol: Let yourself become
conscious of your ancient union with the Godhead, conscious
that you have become defiled, that you have descended to your
present condition.
The Baptist
also baptized in this way in order to bring mankind into a
closer union with the Godhead. And this is what all baptism
signified in ancient times. It is a radical expression, but
one which brings to our consciousness what is meant. Christ
Jesus had to baptize with something different. He had to
direct men, not to the past, but to the future through the
development of a spirituality in their inner being. Through
the “holy,” the undimmed and undefiled Spirit,
the human spirit could be united with the Godhead. Baptism by
water was a baptism of remembrance, that of the Holy Spirit
is one of prophecy pointing to the future. That relationship
which has been wholly lost, and which baptism by water
recalls to mind has also been lost in all that was expressed
in the symbol of the wine, of the sacrificial wine. Dionysos
was the dismembered God who was drawn into the individual
souls, separate parts no longer knowing anything of one
another. Humanity was split into many pieces and thrown into
matter through what alcohol has brought to the world, alcohol
the symbol of Dionysos. In the Marriage at Cana, a great
principle was preserved, the instructive principle of
evolution. There are, to be sure, absolute truths, but they
cannot at all times be revealed to men without preparation.
Each age must have its special function, its special truths.
Why is it that we can speak today of reincarnation, etc.? Why
are we able to sit together in such an assembly as this and
foster Spiritual Science? We can do so, because all of the
souls which are present within you today have been incarnated
upon the earth in so and so many bodies and so and so many
times. Very many of the souls which are within you now lived
at one time in the Germanic countries where the Druid priests
walked among you and brought to your souls Spiritual Wisdom
in the form of myth and saga. And because your soul received
it in that form at that time, it is now in the position to
receive it in another form, the Anthroposophical. At that
time it was in the form of pictures — today it is in
the form of Anthroposophy. But then it would not have been
possible to impart truth in its present form. Do not imagine
that the ancient Druid priest would have been able to impart
the truth in the form in which it is presented today.
Anthroposophy is the form befitting the humanity of the
present or of the immediate future. In later incarnations
truth will be proclaimed, and men will work for it in quite
different forms, and what is now called Anthroposophy will be
related as something remembered, just as we now relate the
Sagas and Fairy-tales. Anthroposophists should not be foolish
enough to say that in ancient times there existed only
stupidities and childish ideas, and that we alone have
advanced the world so gloriously. Those, for example, who
pretend to be monists do this. But we are working in
Spiritual Science in preparation for the next epoch. For if
our present age were not here, the next would likewise not
come. No one should, however, make the future an excuse for
present conduct. Much nonsense is indulged in also in respect
of the teaching of Reincarnation. I have met people who said
that in their present incarnation they did not need to be
respectable human beings, because for this they had time
enough later on. If, however, one does not begin with it
today, the consequences will appear straightway in the next
incarnation.
So we must
understand clearly that there is nothing absolutely fixed in
the forms of truth, but that what corresponds to a particular
epoch of human evolution, always becomes known. That greatest
impulse of evolution had, as it were, to descend even into
the life customs of that time. For it had to clothe the
highest truth in language and functions befitting the
understanding of the particular period in question. Therefore
by means of a kind of Dionysian rite or wine sacrifice, the
Christ had to tell how mankind could raise itself to the
Godhead. One should not fanatically ask why Christ changed
the water into wine. The age should be taken into
consideration. Through a sort of Dionysian rite, Christ had
to prepare for what was to come.
Christ goes to
the Galileans who are jumbled together out of all kinds of
nationalities that were not bound by the blood-tie and there
He performed the first Sign of His mission and He adapted
Himself so fully to their habits of life that he turned water
into wine for them. Let us hold clearly in mind what the
Christ really wished to say by this: Those who have descended
to the stage of materialism, symbolized by the drinking of
wine, will I also lead to a union with the Spirit. — So
He will be there, not alone for those who can be raised by
means of the symbol of baptism, by water. It is very
significant that we are shown at once that here are six
vessels of purification. We shall return to this number.
Purification is what is accomplished by means of baptism. If
in those epochs in which the Gospel had its origin one wished
to express the fact of baptism, it was spoken of as a
purification. The word “baptism” was never
actually used, but they said “to baptize,” and
what resulted through baptism was called
“purification.” Never will you find in the Gospel
of St. John the corresponding
ΒαπτιζΩ, except
in verb form. But when it is used as a noun, it is the
cleansing that is always meant, the process through which the
human being is reminded of his state of purification, his
relationship with the Godhead.
Even to the
symbolical vessels of the rite of purification, Christ-Jesus
undertook the Sign through which He indicated His mission as
far as it was possible at that time. Thus in the marriage at
Cana in Galilee, something of the profound mission of the
Christ is expressed. He said: “My time will come in the
future, it is not yet come. What I have to accomplish here
has to do in part with what must be overcome through My
mission.” He stands in the present and at the same time
points to the future, thereby showing how He works for the
age, not in an absolute but in a cultural, educational sense.
It is the mother, therefore, who besought Him and said,
“They have no wine.” But He replied: “What
I have now to accomplish has still to do with ancient times,
with me and thee, for My proper time has not yet come when
wine will be transformed back again into water.” How
could it have had any meaning at all to say, “Woman,
what have I to do with thee?” when He then complied
with what the mother had asked! It only has a meaning if we
are shown that the present condition of humanity has been
brought about because of the blood relationship and that a
Sign has been performed in accordance with ancient usages
which still needs the employment of alcohol in ordcr to point
to the time when the independent ego shall have risen above
the tie of the blood; it has a significance only when we are
shown that for the present we must still reckon with ancient
times which are symbolized by wine, but that a later time is
coming which will be “His time.”
And chapter
after chapter of the Gospel reveals to us two things. First
it shows that what was communicated was for those who, in a
certain way, were able to comprehend occult truths. In our
times, exoteric Spiritual Science is presented in lectures,
but at that period spiritual-scientific truths could only be
understood by those who had been in a certain way actually
initiated into this or that degree. Who were those who were
able to understand something of what Christ-Jesus was saying
about profound truths? Only those who were able to perceive
outside of the physical body — those who could withdraw
from the body and become conscious in the spirit world. If
Christ-Jesus wished to speak to those who could understand
Him, it had to be to those who were in a certain way
initiated, those who could see spiritually. When, for
example, He speaks of the re-birth of the soul in the chapter
concerning His conversation with Nicodemus, we see that He is
revealing these truths to someone who perceives with
spiritual senses. You only need to read the following
words: —
But there
was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the
Jews; the same came to Jesus by night.
Let us
accustom ourselves to accuracy in dealing with words. We are
told that Nicodemus came to Jesus “by night;”
this means that he received outside of the physical body what
Christ-Jesus had to communicate to him. “By
night” means that when he makes use of his spiritual
senses, he comes to Christ-Jesus. Just as in their
conversation about the fig-tree, Nathaniel and Christ-Jesus
understood one another as initiates, so too a faculty of
understanding is indicated here also.
The second
thing shown us in the Gospel is that Christ has always a
mission to perform that has nothing to do with the mere blood
tie. That is very clearly shown by His approaching the
Samaritan woman at the well. He gave her the instructions
which He gave those whose ego had been lifted above the
common blood tie:
Then cometh
He to a city of Samaria which is called Sychar, near to the
parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph.
Now Jacob's
well was there. Jesus, therefore, being wearied with His
journey, sat thus on the well: and it was about the sixth
hour.
There cometh
a woman of Samaria to draw water: Jesus saith unto her,
“Give me to drink,” for His disciples were gone
away into the city to buy meat.
Then saith
the woman of Samaria unto Him, “How is it that thou,
being a Jew, asketh drink of me, which am a woman of
Samaria, for the Jews have no dealings with the
Samaritans.”
Here is
indicated that it was something very strange that Christ
should go to a people whose egos had been withdrawn, uprooted
from the group-soul. That is the important thing.
In the
narrative about the nobleman, we read further that the Christ
not only breaks the bond of blood that binds men together in
a marriage within the folk, but he breaks also that bond that
separates them into classes. He came to those whose ego had
been uprooted. He healed the son of the nobleman who,
according to the interpretation of the Jews, was a stranger
to Him. Throughout the Gospel it is pointed out that Christ
is the missionary of the independent ego which is present in
every human individual. Therefore, He could say: —
“When I speak of Myself in a higher sense, of the I AM,
I do not at all refer to my own ego residing within me, but
to a being, to something which everyone possesses
within himself. My ego is one with the Father, but in general
the ego present in every personality is also one with the
Father.” That is also the deeper meaning of the
instructions which the Christ gave to the Samaritan woman at
the well.
I should like
to call your attention especially to a passage, which if
rightly understood will enable you to come to a deep
understanding. It is the passage from the 31st to the 34th
verse of the 3rd chapter which naturally must be read so that
the reader is conscious of its being John the Baptist who
speaks these words: —
He that
cometh from above is above all: he that is of the earth is
earthly and speaketh of the earth; he that cometh from
heaven is above all. And what he hath seen and heard, to
that he testifieth: and no man receiveth his testimony.
But he that
hath received his testimony hath set his seal that God is
true.
For he whom
God hath sent speaketh the words of God: for God giveth not
the Spirit by measure unto him.
I should like
to meet anyone who understands these words according to this
translation. What a contradiction! “He whom God hath
sent, speaketh the word of God, for God giveth not the Spirit
by measure unto him.” What is the sense of these
words?
In countless
utterances, Christ says: “When I speak of My Ego, I
speak of the Eternal Ego in men which is one with the
spiritual foundations of the world. When I speak of this Ego,
I speak of something which dwells in the innermost depths of
the human soul. If any man hears Me (and now He is speaking
only of the lower ego which feels nothing of the Eternal) he
receiveth not My testimony. He understands nothing of what I
say, for I can speak of nothing that flows from Me to him.
Otherwise he would not then be independent. Every one must
find within himself as his own eternal base, the God which I
proclaim.” A few verses back we find the
passage: —
And John
also was baptizing in Enon near to Salim, because there was
much water there: and they came and were baptized.
Then there
arose a question between some of John's disciples and the
Jews about purification (this means about the form of
baptism).
When such a
question was raised in these circles, they were always
speaking of the union with the Divine and of the submersion
of humanity into matter and of how, according to the old idea
of God, union with the Divine took place through the
group-soul. Thus others came and said to John: “Jesus
also baptizes!” And John had to make it clear to them
that what had come into the world through Jesus was something
very special and this he did by saying that Jesus does not
teach that union symbolized by the ancient form of baptism,
but teaches how men will be their own guides through the free
gift of the now independent ego. And each individual must
discover the “I AM,” the God, within himself.
Only in this way is he in the position to find the Divine in
his inner being. If these words are read thus, then the
reader will be aware that He, the “I AM,” was
sent from God. He who was sent from God, who was sent to
enkindle the Divine in this way, also preached God in the
true sense, no longer according to the blood tie.
Let us
translate these passages according to their true meaning, for
we have now the basis for such a translation, if we
understand how the teachings of the ancients were presented.
They were poetically portrayed in many books. We need only
recall the Psalms of the Old Testament where in beautifully
constructed language, the Divine was proclaimed. At that time
the ancient blood-relationship was spoken of only as a
relationship with a God. This could all be learned, but all
that was learned through it was nothing more than that one
was related to this ancient divinity. But, if there was a
desire to comprehend the Christ, then all the ancient laws,
all the ancient artificialities were unnecessary. What the
Christ taught could be understood to the degree that men
understood the spiritual ego within themselves. At that time,
it is true, it was not possible to have full knowledge of
Divinity, but one could understand what was heard from the
lips of Christ-Jesus. The preliminary conditions for
understanding were there. The Psalms were not then necessary,
nor all the poetically constructed teachings, for all that
was needed was the simplest means of expression. One needed
only to speak in halting words to become a witness of God.
Even in the simplest, stammering words it was possible to
become a witness of the Divine; it need be only single words
without metre. Anyone who felt in his ego that he was sent
from God, even though he were halting in his speech, could
understand the words of the Christ. Anyone knowing only the
earthly relationship with God speaks in the poetic measure of
the Psalms, but all his metre leads him to nothing but the
ancient gods. However, anyone who felt himself deeply rooted
in the spirit worlds is above all, and can bear witness of
what has been seen and heard in those worlds. But those who
accepted a testimony only in the accustomed way did not
accept His. If there were those who accepted it, they showed
by their acceptance that they felt themselves sent from God.
They not only believed, they understood
what the other one said to them, and through their
understanding they bore witness of their words. “He who
feels the ego, reveals even in his stammering words the Word
of God.” This is what is meant, for the spirit here
referred to does not need to express itself in metre, in any
form of syllabic measure, but it can declare itself in the
simplest, halting manner. Such words can easily be taken as a
license for folly. But whoever refuses wisdom just because,
in his opinion, the most sublime mysteries should be
expressed in the simplest form possible, does so, although
often quite unconsciously, merely from an inclination toward
psychic ease. When it is said, “God giveth not the
spirit by measure” (metre), it only means that the
“measure” or metre does not help towards the
spirit. But where the spirit really exists, there also is
“measure.” Not everyone who has
“measure” has the “spirit;” but one
who has the “spirit” will come most certainly to
“measure” or metre. Naturally, certain things
cannot be reversed. It is not an evidence of possessing the
“spirit” if one has no
“measure;” nor is the possession of
“measure” a proof of the “spirit.”
Science is certainly no sign of wisdom, nor is a lack of
science a proof of it.
So we are
shown that Christ appeals to the independent ego in every
human soul. “Measure” you must consider here as
metre, poetically constructed speech. Then the
foregoing sentence will read: “He who finds God in the
‘I AM, bears witness of Divine Speech or God's
language, even in his stammering words” —
and he finds the way to God.
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