LECTURE FIVE
THE TWO MAIN STREAMS OF POST-ATLANTEAN
CIVILISATION
The last
lecture began by speaking of the distinctive character of St.
Mark's Gospel. It became clear that here, almost more
than in the other Gospels, we can find in indications drawn
from the deepest Christian mysteries, an opportunity to
penetrate into many profound secrets and laws of the
evolution of Man and of the Cosmos.
I had
originally thought that during the winter it would be
possible to make important and intimate references to matters
of which we have not yet heard in our Movement, or perhaps
better said, to matters at spiritual levels we have not yet
reached. But we shall have to abandon this original plan for
the simple reason that the Berlin Group has grown in numbers
so astonishingly in recent weeks that it would now not be
possible to make everything properly intelligible. We take it
for granted that in mathematics and science some grounding is
necessary if we want to reach a certain grade; and the same
holds good to an even greater extent in the case of Spiritual
Science. Later on, therefore, we shall have to consider how
to present the parts of St. Mark's Gospel which are not
suitable subjects for so large a Group.
In any attempt
to understand a text such as that of the Gospel of St. Mark
we must keep clearly in mind the factors which have
influenced the evolution of humanity. I have always
emphasised as a very general, abstract truth, that in all
ages there have been certain leading figures among men who,
because they were connected in some way with the Mysteries
and with the spiritual, supersensible worlds, were in a
position to implant into evolution certain impulses for its
further progress. Now there are two main and fundamental ways
in which a man can establish relationship with the
supersensible worlds. One of these ways can be illustrated by
the case of Zarathustra, the great Leader of mankind of whom
I shall shortly be speaking in a lecture for the public. The
other way in which such Leaders of men establish relationship
with the spiritual worlds can be envisaged if we think of the
characteristic features of the path followed by the great
Buddha. These two outstanding figures differ widely in the
whole manner of their work and activity.
What Buddha
and Buddhism call contemplation or meditation ‘under
the Bodhi tree’ — a symbolic expression for a certain
mystical deepening of Buddha's consciousness — is a
path by which the human Ego can penetrate into its own,
inmost being. This path, opened up in so glorious a way by
the Buddha, is a descent of the ‘I’ into the
depths, into the abyss, of its own nature.
You will get a
clearer idea of what this means if you remember that we have
followed the evolution of man through four stages. Three of
these stages have been concluded and we are living now in the
fourth. The first three evolutionary periods were those of
Old Saturn, Old Sun and Old Moon, the fourth being that of
the Earth proper. In the first three periods man's
physical, etheric and astral bodies were brought into
existence and in the present stage of Earth-evolution his
‘I’, or Ego, is developing as an integral member
of his constitution. We have described the human being from
various points of view as an ‘I’ enveloped in
three sheaths — the astral sheath, the etheric sheath and
the physical sheath, deriving respectively from the three
previous evolutionary periods of Old Moon, Old Sun and Old
Saturn.
At his normal
stage of development to-day man has no consciousness of his
astral, etheric or physical bodies. You will naturally insist
that he is certainly conscious of his physical body. But that
is not so. For what is normally regarded as man's
physical body is an illusion, a maya. What is taken to be the
physical body is the product of the interworking of the four
members of man's constitution: physical, etheric and
astral bodies, and the ‘I’. As the product of
this interworking the physical body is visible to the eyes
and can be touched by the hands. If you want to see the
physical body as it really is, you must isolate it, as in a
chemical analysis, by separating off and disregarding the
‘I’ and the astral and etheric bodies. But
present conditions of earthly existence make this impossible.
Although you may think that it happens whenever a man dies,
this is not correct. What a man leaves behind at death is not
his physical body, but a corpse. The physical body could not
exist under the laws which come into operation after death
has taken place for these laws do not properly belong to it;
they belong to the external world. If you follow these
thoughts through to their conclusion you will have to agree
that what is usually called man's physical body is the
complex of laws by which the physical body is created within
our mineral world, just as their own laws of crystallisation
create, let us say, quartz or emerald.
The physical
body of man functions as an organism in the mineral-physical
world and this is the sense in which it is always spoken of
in Spiritual Science. What we know of the world to-day is
nothing but the result of what the senses perceive, and such
perception is only possible in an organism in which there is
an Ego, an ‘I’. The superficial methods of
observation now in vogue presume that an animal, for example,
perceives the external world exactly as man perceives it
through his senses. But this is a misguided view and people
would be much astonished if — as will inevitably happen one
day — they were shown how a horse, or a dog, or some other
animal, pictures the world. If a picture were painted of the
environment as perceived by a dog or a horse it would be very
different from a man's picture of the world. We could
not perceive the world as we do if the ‘I’ did
not pour itself over the surrounding world, filling the
sense-organs — the eyes, the ears, and so on. Only an
organism in which an ‘I’ is present can perceive
the world as man perceives it, and the outer human organism
is itself an integral part of this picture. We must therefore
conclude that what is usually called the physical body of man
is only a result of our sense-observation, not the
reality.
When we speak
of physical man and of the physical world around him it is
the ‘I’ that is viewing the world, with the help
of the senses and the brain-bound mind. Hence man knows only
that over which his ‘I’ extends, that which
belongs to his ‘I’. As soon as the
‘I’ cannot be present there is no longer any
perception of the world-picture — in other words, man falls
asleep. There is no picture of the world around him and he
loses consciousness.
Wherever you
look, your ‘I’ is bound up at every point with
what you are perceiving; it is poured over the perception so
that in reality you can know only the content of your
‘I’. A normal man of modern times is aware of the
content of his ‘I’ but he is not aware of his
astral, etheric and physical bodies into which he penetrates
every morning, for when he wakes he has no perception of his
astral body. He would indeed be horrified if he had, for his
astral body displays the sum-total of all the urges, desires
and passions accumulated in the course of successive lives on
Earth. Nor does he perceive his etheric body — there again
he could not endure the sight. When he penetrates into his
own intrinsic nature — into his physical, etheric and astral
bodies — his attention is at once deflected to the external
world; and there he sees what beneficent Divine Beings spread
over the surface of his vision in order to safeguard him from
descending into the core of his inner nature — an experience
which he could not endure.
Therefore when
we speak of this in terms of Spiritual Science, we rightly
say that the moment a man wakes in the morning he passes
through the portal of his own being. But at this portal
stands a Watcher, the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold, who
does not allow him to penetrate into his own being but
diverts him immediately to the external world. Every morning
a man meets this Lesser Guardian. Knowledge of him comes to
anyone who, on waking, consciously passes into his astral,
etheric and physical sheaths. And in the mystical life it is
only a question of whether this Lesser Guardian benevolently
dims our consciousness of our own inner being so that we
cannot descend into it, diverting our ’I’ to the
environment, or whether he allows us to enter through the
portal into our own nature and being. The mystical life
consists essentially in passing the Lesser Guardian of the
Threshold and entering into our inmost self.
In the case of
the great Buddha, what is described symbolically as
‘sitting under the Bodhi tree’ is nothing else
than this descent into the inner core of being through the
portal that is otherwise closed. Buddhism describes what the
Buddha had to experience in order to complete this descent.
The narratives are not mere legends but presentations of
deeply felt truths, profound realities experienced by the
soul.
The
experiences encountered by the Buddha in descending into his
inmost nature are described as his ‘temptations’.
In his account of these temptations Buddha speaks of beings
— even those he loves — who draw near to him the moment he
attempts the mystical descent; they urge him to some
particular activity, for instance, to practise exercises
which would lead him astray. We are told that the figure of
the mother of Buddha appears to his spiritual vision and
urges him to practise a false kind of asceticism. It was not,
of course, his real mother; indeed his temptation consisted
precisely in the fact that at the first stage of his
developing vision, what appeared to him was an illusion, a
mask. Buddha resisted this temptation and then a host of
demonic figures appeared, who are described as the cravings
one experiences in hunger and thirst or as passions, urges,
pride, arrogance, vanity, ambition. All these forms confront
him — but how? They still lurked in his astral body, in his
astral sheath, but in his stronger moments, as he sat in
meditation ‘under the Bodhi tree’, he had already
overcome them. This temptation of the Buddha shows us in a
wonderful way how all the forces and powers of our astral
body produce their effect because through the downward trend
of evolution in our successive incarnations, we have steadily
deteriorated. In spite of the sublime height to which he had
risen, the Buddha still saw the demons which tempt the astral
body and at the final stage of attainment he had perforce to
conquer them.
When a man
descends through the region of the astral body, through
temptations, into the physical and etheric bodies — when,
that is to say, he really gets to know these two members of
human nature, what does he find? Our attention must here be
called to experiences connected with the descent. In the
course of his incarnations on the Earth, man has been able to
do severe damage to his astral body, but less damage has been
caused to his etheric and physical bodies. The astral body is
injured by all lower urges, by every form of egoism in human
nature — envy, hatred, selfishness, arrogance, pride, and so
on. A normal man of to-day cannot do much more in the way of
injury to the etheric body than through lying or at most
through unconscious error. But even so, only a part of the
etheric body can sustain injury. A certain part of the
etheric body is so strong that however hard a man might try
to injure it, he would be unable to do so; it would always
resist. Through his individual powers a man cannot descend
deeply enough into his own nature to be able to injure the
etheric or the physical body. It is only in the course of
repeated incarnations that the faults for which he is
directly responsible have an effect upon these bodies and
then they appear as illnesses, defects and dispositions to
illness in the physical body. But a man cannot work directly
from his individuality upon his physical body. A cut finger
or a bodily infection is not the result of any activity of
the soul. In the course of his incarnations man has become
capable of working upon the astral body and part of the
etheric body; but upon his physical body he can work
indirectly only, never directly.
Hence we can
say that when a man descends into the region of the etheric
body upon which he still has some direct influence,
everything that is part of him from his successive
incarnations becomes manifest. By sinking into the depths of
his own being, a man finds the way to his incarnations in the
near or more distant past. And when the descent is as intense
and complete as it was in the case of the great Buddha, this
vision of the incarnations extends farther and farther.
Man was
originally a wholly spiritual being. In course of time
sheaths gathered around this spiritual being. Man was born
out of the spirit, of which everything external is a
condensation. Hence through penetrating into his own being he
finds the way to the spirit of the universe. This descent
into the sheaths enfolding the physical body is a path
leading to the spiritual texture of the universe, enabling
man to see how the physical has been built up in the course
of his incarnations. And when he can go far enough back into
the past, to the times when with his primitive clairvoyance
he was in a certain respect one with the spiritual world, he
then had direct vision of that world.
In tradition
— which again is not merely legendary — we learn of the
stages reached by the Buddha as he penetrated through his own
being. Of these stages he himself says: When I had attained
the stage of Illumination — that is to say, when he could
feel part of the spiritual world — I beheld that world
outspread before me like a cloud; but as yet I could
distinguish nothing in it, for I was not yet perfect. I
advanced a step further and then not only could I see the
spiritual world outspread like a cloud but I could
distinguish particular forms. But still I could not see what
the forms actually were, for I was not yet perfect. Again I
ascended a step and now not only could I distinguish the
spiritual Beings but I could also recognise what order of
Beings they were. — This process continued until the Buddha
beheld his own archetype which had passed down from
incarnation to incarnation, and could see its true
relationship with the spiritual world.
This is the
one way, the mystical way; it is the descent through a
man's own nature and being to the point where the
bounds beyond which lies the spiritual world are broken
through. It is by following this path that certain leading
Individualities acquire the powers they need in order to give
an impetus to the evolution of humanity.
Very different
is the path by which men such as the original Zarathustra
came to be leaders of mankind. If you will recall what I have
said about the Buddha, you will realise that having become a
Bodhisattva in his earlier incarnations he must already have
risen through many stages. Through the illumination known as
‘sitting under the Bodhi tree’ — an expression
which must be understood in the sense I have indicated — a
man can develop vision of the spiritual worlds and rise to
great heights through the faculties of his own Individuality.
But if humanity had always been obliged to depend upon
leaders of this kind only, the progress that has actually
been made would not have been possible. There were leaders of
a different type altogether, of whom Zarathustra was one. I
am not speaking now of the Individuality of
Zarathustra but of the ‘personality’ of the
original Zarathustra, the herald of Ahura Mazdao. If we study
such a personality at the point where he stands in
world-history, we realise that this is not a human being who
has risen through his own intrinsic merits. On the contrary,
he is a personality who has been chosen to be the bearer, the
sheath, of a spiritual Being who cannot himself incarnate in
the flesh, who can only send his illumination into and work
within a human sheath.
In my
Rosicrucian Mystery Play,
The Portal of Initiation,
I have indicated how at a certain point of time, when it is
necessary for world-evolution, a human being is inspired by a
higher spiritual Being. This is not poetic imagery but a
poetical presentation of an occult reality.
The
personality of the original Zarathustra was not one which
through its own merits had reached as lofty a stage of
development as that attained by Buddha; the personality of
Zarathustra was chosen to be the abode of a higher Being and
was filled with living spirituality. Such personalities were
chiefly to be found in the early, pre-Christian civilisations
which had arisen throughout Europe, in North-Western and
Mid-Western Asia but not in the other civilisations which
spread through Africa, Arabia and Asia Minor, into Asia. In
these latter territories the predominant mode of Initiation
was the one I have just described as having been achieved in
its highest form by the great Buddha. Taking Zarathustra as a
particular example among the peoples of the Northern stream,
I shall now speak of the mode of Initiation which was to be
found, too, in our own part of the world. Three or four
thousand years ago this was the only kind of Initiation that
it was possible to attain.
The
personality of Zarathustra was chosen in somewhat the
following way to be the bearer of a higher Being who was not
himself actually to incarnate. It was decreed by the higher
worlds that into this child there was to descend a
divine-spiritual Being who when the child matured could work
in him, make use of his brain, his faculties and his will. —
To this end the circumstances of the life of such a human
being must be quite different from those otherwise prevailing
in the development of an ordinary individual. The happening I
shall now briefly describe must be thought of as belonging to
the whole life of such a human being, not confined to the
physical realm of sense. Although the symptoms will not be
perceptible to the ordinary senses, it will be clear to
anyone with finer powers of observation that from the very
beginning there is evidence of conflict between the
soul-forces of such a child and the external world; that in
this child there is a will and an inner driving power at
variance with what goes on in the environment. But such is
the destiny of a personality thus filled with a
divine-spiritual Being. He grows up as a stranger, for those
around him have no insight or feelings which would help them
to understand him. Generally there are only very few —
perhaps only one — with any inkling of what is developing in
such a child. On the other hand, conflicts with the world
around will easily arise and in such a case what I described
to you in the story of the temptations accompanying
Buddha's descent into his own being, will take place at
an earlier age of life.
In the normal
way the individuality of a human being is born into the
sheaths provided by his parents and his people. These sheaths
do not always entirely conform with the individuality and on
this account such men feel a certain dissatisfaction with
destiny. A conflict of such force and intensity as was
associated, for example, with Zarathustra, could not be
endured by an individuality developing in the normal way.
When a child such as Zarathustra is observed clairvoyantly he
will be found to have feelings, faculties and forces of
thought which will be quite different from those developing
in the people around him. Above all it will be evident — it
is in fact always evident but it passes unheeded because
little attention is paid nowadays to the life of
soul-and-spirit — that those around such a child know
nothing about his real nature; on the contrary, they feel an
instinctive hatred of him; they can make nothing of what is
developing within him. There is no sharper conflict visible
to clairvoyance than that between a child born to be a
saviour of mankind and the storms of hatred that are
unleashed around him. This is inevitable, for it is just
because such a child is different that the great impulses can
be given to humanity. Similar stories are also told about
personalities other than Zarathustra.
The story goes
that as soon as he was born, Zarathustra could smile —
something that is usually not possible for several weeks. We
are told that Zarathustra's smile came from his
consciousness of the harmony of the world. The smile was said
to be the first sign of the difference between this child and
all the others around him.
There is a
second story, to the effect that an enemy, as it were another
Herod, named Duransarun, lived in the region where
Zarathustra was born and that when the birth of the child was
divulged to him by Chaldean Magi, he tried to kill the infant
with his own hands. The legend tells that as he raised the
sword his arm was paralysed and he was obliged to give up the
attempt. — These are pictures of spiritual realities which
could have been revealed only to supersensible consciousness.
We are further told how this enemy of the infant Zarathustra
then caused him to be carried by a servant out into the
desert to become the prey of wild beasts. But when a search
was made it was found that no wild beast had touched the
child and that he was sleeping peacefully. This attempt
having also failed, the child's enemy caused him to be
laid where a herd of cows and oxen would pass and trample him
to death. Instead, so the legend tells, the first beast took
the child between its legs, carried him off and set him down
when the whole herd had passed by. The same thing was
repeated with a herd of horses. And the enemy's final
attempt was to expose the child to wild animals robbed of
their young. But when the parents sought news of the child
they found that again the animals had done him no harm:
indeed according to the legend he had been suckled by the
‘heavenly cows’.
These
indications are to be understood as showing that through the
presence of the spiritual Being, of the Individuality who
passes into such a soul, very special forces are called into
play. Such a child is brought into disharmony with his
environment. This is necessary in order that evolution may be
given an upward impetus. Disharmonies are always inevitable
if there is to be real progress towards perfection. It must
also be realised that these forces help to bring such a child
into his destined relationship with the spiritual world. But
how does the child himself experience all these
conflicts?
Try to think
of this penetration of a man's soul into his own being,
as an awakening. When the soul can experience the physical
body and etheric body it achieves the development we saw in
the Buddha. But now imagine going to sleep in full
consciousness. As things are to-day, a man loses
consciousness when he goes to sleep and the Void engulfs him.
But if he were to retain consciousness he would be surrounded
by a spiritual world into which his being pours. But here
again there are obstacles. When we go to sleep, before the
portal through which we must pass there also stands a
Guardian. This is the Greater /Guardian of the Threshold, who
denies us entrance into the spiritual world as long as we are
not ready for it. The reason for this is that if without
being inwardly strong enough we attempt to pour our Ego over
the spiritual world into which we pass on going to sleep, we
face certain dangers.
The dangers
are these. — Instead of perceiving objective reality in the
spiritual world we should perceive only the effect of the
fantasies which we ourselves take into that world; we take
into it the worst that is in us — everything that is not in
keeping with truth. Hence any premature entry into the
spiritual world would mean that instead of reality, a man
would see grotesque, fantastic images and forms, said by
Spiritual Science to be a sight that does not belong to his
humanity. Whereas if he had objective vision of the spiritual
world he would reach a higher stage and would see what is
human. It is always a sign that what are seen are fantasies
if on rising into the spiritual world, animal forms appear.
These animal forms are indications of our own irresponsible
play of fancy; they appear because inwardly we have not a
firm enough foundation. Faculties in us which at night are
unconscious must be strengthened if we are to have a really
objective vision of the outer spiritual world. Otherwise we
see it subjectively and we take our fantasies into it. They
do, of course, accompany us, but the Guardian of the
Threshold protects us from sight of them. To be surrounded by
animal forms which attack us and try to force us into error
as we ascend into the spiritual world is all a purely inner
process. To enter the spiritual world safely we need only
develop greater and greater strength.
When an infant
such as the Zarathustra-child is filled by a higher Being the
little body is naturally immature and has to develop to
maturity. The organic system of intellect and sensory
activity is also disturbed. Such a child is in a world in
which he may truly be said to be ‘among wild
beasts’. I have often emphasised that in descriptions
of this kind the historical and pictorial elements represent
two aspects of the same thing. The happenings take place in
such a way that when the spiritual forces work from outside
in the form of hostility, as in the case of the
Zarathustra-child, they are personified in the figure of King
Duransarun. Everything also exists in archetype in the
spiritual world and the external events correspond to what is
taking place in that world. It is not easy for the modern
mind to grasp such a thought. If we say that the events
occurring around Zarathustra have significance in the
spiritual world, people think that they cannot be real. If we
show that the events are authentic history, we then incline
to regard the personality concerned as being no more highly
developed than anyone else. Thus the liberal theologians of
to-day tend, for instance, to regard the figure of Jesus of
Nazareth as on a par with, or not greatly excelling, what
they may picture as their own ideal. It disturbs the lazy
materialism of men's souls if they have to picture a
really great Individuality. There must not be anything in the
world superior to the professor or theologian seeking to
attain his own ideal! In dealing with great events, however,
we are concerned with something that is both historical and
symbolic; the one aspect does not exclude the other. Those
who do not understand that external events have a
significance other than their surface appearance will never
grasp their essential reality.
The soul of
the infant Zarathustra was actually exposed to great dangers;
but at the same time, as the legend relates, the
‘heavenly cows’ stood at his side to succour him
and give him strength.
Similar stories can be found over the whole area from the
Caspian Sea, through our own region, and into Western Europe,
in connection with all great founders of world-conceptions.
Such personalities, without having risen to lofty heights
through their own development, are indwelt by a spiritual
Being in order to become leaders of men. There were a number
of such traditions among the Celts. It is related of Habich,
an important figure in Celtic religion, that he too was
exposed to dangers and suckled by heavenly cows; that he was
attacked by hostile animals who had to give way before him.
The descriptions of the perils confronting Habich, the Celtic
leader, read just as if extracts had been made from the seven
‘miracles’ of Zarathustra — for Zarathustra is
to be regarded as the greatest personality among leaders of
this kind. Certain features of his miracles are to be found
all through Greece and on into the Celtic regions of the
West. As a well-known example you have only to think of the
story of Romulus and Remus.
This is the
second way in which leaders of mankind arise. Certain deeper
features of the two great streams of culture in the
post-Atlantean epoch have now been characterised. After the
great Atlantean catastrophe, one of these streams of
civilisation spread and developed through Africa, Arabia and
Southern Asia; the other spread in a more Northerly course
through Europe, to Northern and thence to Central Asia. There
the two streams united; and the outcome is our post-Atlantean
culture. The Northern stream had leaders such as I have
described in the figure of Zarathustra; in the Southern
stream, on the other hand, there were leaders of the type
revealed in its loftiest form by the great Buddha.
If you now
recall what you already know about the Christ-event, you will
want to understand what really happened at the Baptism by
John in the Jordan. As in the case of all the leading figures
and founders of religious thought in the Northern stream —
of whom Zarathustra had been the greatest — a
diving-spiritual Being, the Christ, descended into a human
being. The process was the same but carried out at the
highest level. Christ descended into a human being in his
thirtieth year, not in his childhood, and the personality of
Jesus of Nazareth was specially prepared for this event. In
the Gospels the secrets of both types of leadership are shown
us in synthesis, in harmony with each other. Whereas the
accounts of the Evangelists St. Matthew and St. Luke are
mainly concerned to show how the human personality into whom
the Christ entered had been evolved, the Gospel of St. Mark
describes the nature of the Christ Himself, the element in
this sublime Individuality which could not be confined within
the human vehicle. That is why the Gospels of St. Matthew and
St. Luke describe with wonderful clarity a story of
temptation different from that related by St. Mark. He is
describing the Christ who had entered into Jesus of Nazareth.
The Gospel of St. Mark relates the story of temptation which
occurs in other cases already in childhood — the encounter
with wild animals and the help given by spiritual powers.
Thus it can be regarded as a kind of repetition of the
Zarathustra-miracle when St. Mark's Gospel narrates in
simple and impressive words: ‘And immediately the
spirit driveth him into the solitude (wilderness) ... and
he was with the wild beasts; and the Angels’ — that
is, spiritual Beings — ‘ministered unto him.’
St. Matthew's Gospel describes a quite different
process, one which seems like a repetition of the temptations
of Buddha, that is to say the tests and allurements
confronting the soul of a man who is penetrating into his own
inner being.
The Gospels of
St. Matthew and St. Luke describe the path taken by the
Christ when descending into the sheaths He received from
Jesus of Nazareth. St. Mark's Gospel describes the kind
of temptation which the Christ was obliged to undergo when He
confronted the environment — as happens with all great
founders of religion who had been inspired from above by a
spiritual Being. Christ Jesus experienced both these kinds of
temptation, whereas earlier leaders of humanity had
experienced only one. Christ united in Himself the two ways
of entering the spiritual world. — That is the all-important
point. What had formerly taken place in two separate streams
into which smaller streams then flowed, was now united in
one.
It is only
from this point of view that we can understand the apparent
or real contradictions in the Gospels. The writer of St.
Mark's Gospel had been initiated into Mysteries which
enabled him to describe the temptation presented in his
Gospel, namely the encounter with wild beasts and the help of
spiritual Beings. St. Luke was initiated into the other
aspect. Each of the Evangelists writes of what he knew and
understood. Hence their Gospels present different aspects of
the events in Palestine and of the Mystery of Golgotha.
In all this I
have been wanting to indicate from a point of view we have
not hitherto adopted, how we have to understand the course of
the evolution of humanity and the intervention of particular
Individualities: whether those who rise from the rank of
Bodhisattva to that of Buddha, or those whose significance
lies not so much in themselves as in what has come down into
them from above. It is in the figure of Christ alone that
these two types unite; and it is only when we know this that
we can rightly understand the Christ.
It will now be
clear why incongruities are apparent in mythical
personalities. When we are told that one of them behaved in a
matter of right or wrong as, for instance, Siegfried behaved,
someone will certainly protest that after all, he was said to
have been an Initiate! But in the case of a personality such
as Siegfried, through whom a spiritual Being was working, the
individual development is not a factor that comes into
consideration. Siegfried may well have had faults. What
really mattered was that an impetus should be given to the
evolution of humanity, and for this purpose it was a question
of choosing the most suitable personality. The same standard
cannot be adopted universally and Siegfried cannot be judged
as you would judge a leader arising from the Southern stream
of culture, for a figure such as Siegfried differs radically
in character and type from men who penetrate into their own
inner self.
It can
therefore be said that the leading figures belonging to the
Northern stream are permeated by a spiritual Being who drives
them out of themselves, enabling them to rise into the
Macrocosm. Whereas in the Southern cultures a man sinks into
the Microcosm, in the Northern stream his being pours into
the Macrocosm and in this way he comes to know all the
spiritual Hierarchies, as Zarathustra came to know the
spiritual essence of the Sun.
We may
therefore sum up all that has been said, as follows. — The
mystical path, the path of the Buddha, leads to such depths
in a man's inmost being that in breaking through to
them he comes into the spiritual world. The path of
Zarathustra draws a man out of the Microcosm and his being is
diffused over the Macrocosm so that its secrets become
transparent to him. The world has as yet little understanding
of the great spirits whose missions are to unveil the secrets
of the Macrocosm. There is very little understanding, for
example, of the essential nature and being of Zarathustra.
And we shall find how greatly what we have to say of him
differs from what is usually said at the present time.
This again is
a digression intended to convey to you the intrinsic
character of St. Mark's Gospel.
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