LECTURE 10
We saw
yesterday how a part of the life shared by Jesus and His
chosen disciples is missing in the Mark Gospel, and indeed
also in the others. Just those most closely connected with
Him did not take any part in the events beginning with the
period following His arrest, that is, the trial, condemnation
and crucifixion of Christ Jesus. This again is a feature of
the Gospel that is intentionally emphasized. To some extent
the intention was to show how a path can be prepared to
enable human beings to come to an understanding of the
Mystery of Golgotha, how after the Mystery of Golgotha had
been accomplished it would be possible to come to an
understanding of the Mystery. For it is true that this
understanding has to be acquired in a totally different way
than is needed for the understanding of any other historical
fact of human evolution. From what has happened just in our
own times we can grasp this point most clearly.
Since the
eighteenth century modern consciousness has been seeking, as
we might say, a support for a belief in the Mystery of
Golgotha; and this attempt has been made from various
viewpoints and the search has gone through various phases.
Until the eighteenth century actually very few questions were
asked about how the historical documents, historical in the
usual sense, were compiled and if they are capable of
confirming a belief in the existence of Christ Jesus. Too
much still lived in human souls that had radiated down from
the working of the Mystery of Golgotha. People had been able
to perceive for themselves, so to speak, only too clearly the
influence proceeding from the name of Christ Jesus through
the centuries for them to think it necessary to ask whether
any document was extant capable of proving the existence of
Christ Jesus. To those who professed Him in any way His
existence was entirely self-evident; and more than is
generally believed today it was just as self-evident that
they ought to hold firmly to the belief in His being as both
human and superhuman, and at the same time spiritual and
divine.
However, as
time went on materialism came into being, and with it
something entered mankind's evolution that necessarily
belongs to the materialistic point of view. The materialistic
world conception cannot tolerate the idea that something like
a higher individuality lives in man. It cannot accept the
notion that one can penetrate behind the outer personality to
something spiritual in man. If you look at human beings
materialistically, and this happens most radically in our
time, then from a materialistic viewpoint all human beings
will appear to you to be much the same. They all walk on two
legs, all have a head, and a nose situated at a particular
point on the face, all have two eyes and a part of the head
covered with hair, and so on. From this materialistic
viewpoint all human beings look much the same. So why should
this age look for anything behind the outer man? This idea
seriously offends someone who cannot bring himself to admit
that in his present incarnation there is within him something
that is equally important also in other human beings.
Materialism will not admit that. So the possibility was lost
of understanding that the Christ could have lived within the
man Jesus of Nazareth; and the more the eighteenth century
wore on the more any idea at all of the Christ was lost.
Attention was directed more and more toward Jesus of
Nazareth, who must have been born in Nazareth or somewhere
else, who lived like a man, doing nothing but proclaim fine
principles and in some way or another may have died the death
of a martyr. More and more the man Jesus replaced the Christ
Jesus of earlier centuries. This, from the point of view of
materialism, was a self-evident fact.
It was also
entirely natural that in the course of the nineteenth century
there should have developed what may be called
“research into the life of Jesus.” Enlightened
theology also carries out research into the life of Jesus,
that is to say, it tries to establish the facts about Jesus
of Nazareth in just the same way as facts are established
about Charlemagne, Otto the Great and similar personalities.
However, it is very difficult to establish the facts about
Jesus of Nazareth. In the first place all the principal
documents that must come under consideration are the Gospels
and the Pauline letters. But it is obvious that documents
such as the Gospels cannot be counted as historical. There
are four Gospels and from the external materialistic point of
view they all contradict each other. All kinds of ways out of
this dilemma have been sought in the course of
“research into the life of Jesus.” A certain
phase of this research can first of all be disregarded.
Because this research fell into the materialistic period
there was no longer any desire to believe in miracles. As a
result some of the miracles are explained in the most
peculiar way, as for example the kind of interpretation that
tried to explain the appearance of Christ Jesus on the lake
by suggesting that He did not walk on the lake with physical
feet — we have dealt with this story earlier — but
the disciples were simply unaware of the physical laws of the
world. One far-fetched explanation from this Jesus research
suggested that the apostles went by ship while Christ Jesus
was accompanying them on the shore and that the people on the
opposite shore could easily have been mistaken and believed
that Jesus was walking on the water! To say nothing of other
peculiarities thought up by rationalists, for example that
when water was transformed into wine something like a
wine-essence was smuggled into the water! Someone actually
tried to explain the baptism by John in the Jordan by saying
that just at that moment a dove happened to fly by! All this
does exist. You would scarcely believe what has been put
forward on the basis of strict objective science. But we may
entirely disregard these aberrations, and look instead at the
kind of research which tried to look at the super-sensible
from a materialistic viewpoint, not being able to handle the
super-sensible. This research regarded the super-sensible
elements as simply ornamentation. It decided that if anyone
cannot believe in Christ Jesus, nor that someone was born as
a carpenter's son in Nazareth, was in the temple at the age
of twelve and so on, nevertheless if everything super-sensible
is removed and if everything that harmonizes or does not
harmonize in the various Gospels is combined, then it is
possible to produce something like a biography of Jesus of
Nazareth. The effort was made to do this in the most varied
ways, but it was really inevitable that each biography was
different when so many different people tried to write a
biography of this kind. But we cannot enter here into such
details. There was also a period when during this
“research into the life of Jesus” it was supposed
that Jesus of Nazareth was a superior human being, something
not unlike a higher Socrates, higher in the sense attributed
to that word by materialists.
Such was the
kind of research into the life of Jesus of Nazareth whose
principal aim was to create a biography of Jesus. However,
such an effort was bound to give rise to criticism,
especially on two counts, in the first place because of the
documents themselves; for the Gospels are not documents at
all in the sense that one speaks of historical documents, as
they are evaluated by historians. This is primarily due to
the many contradictions to be found in them and the way in
which they have been preserved. Secondly, in recent years
something new was added to this “research into the life
of Jesus” because those who went deeply into certain
passages in the Gospels discovered certain constantly
recurring remarks, which, as you know, refer to super-sensible
facts. But these men, in spite of being in the clutches of
materialism, when they found these things could not simply
disregard them, as was done by the researchers into the life
of Jesus. So they moved on to something different, to the
“Christ research,” which in recent years has come
into prominence, by contrast with the “research into
the life of Jesus,” which culminated in the term coined
by a present day professor: the “plain man from
Nazareth.” This was found very agreeable by many
people; it was flattering to them not to have to recognize
anything higher in the Gospels. It suited them better to
speak of the “plain man from Nazareth” rather
than to ascend to the “God-Man.”
Then the
God-Man was really found, and there followed “research
into Christ.” This was a most peculiar phenomenon,
appearing in an especially grotesque form in the work
Ecce Deus of Benjamin Smith,
[ Note 21 ]
and in other works by the same author. The attempt
was made to prove that Jesus of Nazareth never really
existed; he is only a legend. Nevertheless, the Gospels give
an account of Jesus Christ. What is this Jesus Christ? Well,
he is a fictional God, an ideal image. From this point of
view it is certainly not unreasonable to deny the real Jesus
of Nazareth, for the Gospels speak of Christ and they
attribute to Him qualities that, according to materialistic
interpretations, do not exist. Then evidence follows that He
cannot have existed historically, so He must be fictional, a
fiction that originated in the period assigned to the Mystery
of Golgotha. So there has been a kind of return from Jesus to
Christ in recent years. But Christ is in no sense real; He
lives only in human thoughts. So we may say that everything
in this realm today rests without solid foundations.
Naturally the
general public does not know much about the things that are
happening in this realm. Everything connected with the
Mystery of Golgotha has been totally undermined on scientific
grounds; there is no longer any firm foundation. The
“research into the life of Jesus” has collapsed
because it can prove nothing, and the “Christ
research” is not worth even discussing. The crucial
point is the tremendous effect that emanates from that being
with whom the Mystery of Golgotha is linked. If the whole
thing is a fiction, then this materialistic age should agree
to cease to look at it as soon as possible, for a
materialistic age cannot believe in a “fiction”
that is supposed nevertheless to have fulfilled the most
important mission of all time! Yes, our enlightened age has
surely been successful in accumulating contradictions, and is
scarcely aware how much it is in need, just in the scientific
field, of the saying, “Lord, forgive them for they know
not what they do.” This indeed is equally applicable to
all current research regarding Jesus and Christ which has no
wish to place itself in a serious and dignified way on a
spiritual base.
The Gospel
itself clearly points to what has appeared in our time in the
manner just described. Those people who wish to remain
materialists and to believe in nothing whatever beyond what
can be attained by materialistic consciousness based on sense
perception can find no path leading to Christ Jesus. For this
path has been closed because those who stood closest to
Christ left Him just at the time the Mystery of Golgotha was
taking place. It was only later that they met Him again, thus
failing to participate in what happened in Palestine on the
physical plane. And everyone knows for certain that no
credible documents have been furnished by the other side of
the threshold. Yet in the Mark Gospel and in the other
Gospels descriptions of this very Mystery of Golgotha have
been given.
How then did
these descriptions come into being? It is of the utmost
importance for us to picture this to ourselves. Let us
consider the descriptions given in one instance, in the
Gospel of St. Mark. Even though the description is short and
concise, it is in fact indicated to us quite adequately how
after the scene of the Resurrection the youth in the white
garment, that is to say, the cosmic Christ, again showed
Himself to the disciples after the Mystery had been
accomplished, and gave certain impulses to them. As a
consequence the apostles, among whom we should include Peter,
could be enkindled to clairvoyant vision, so that afterward
they could see clairvoyantly what they had been unable to see
with their physical eyes because they fled. The eyes of
Peter, and of others who were permitted to be their pupils
after the Resurrection of Christ Jesus, were opened
clairvoyantly so that they could through clairvoyance behold
the Mystery of Golgotha.
Although the
Mystery of Golgotha took place on the physical plane, the
only path to it is that of clairvoyance; and we must keep
this firmly in our minds. The Gospel points this out quite
clearly when it tells us how those who had been summoned fled
at the decisive moment, so that it was only after it had
received the impulse of the Risen One that in such a soul as
that of Peter the memory flashed up of what had happened
after the flight. In ordinary life man remembers only what he
has experienced in sense existence. The kind of clairvoyance
that now appeared in the disciples differs from ordinary
memory in that they were able to remember physical material
events, just as if these events had been in their memories,
although they were not present. Just imagine how memory shone
forth in the soul of a man like Peter, when he remembered
events at which he had not been directly present. And so
Peter, for example, taught those who wished to hear him about
the Mystery of Golgotha, from memory, taught them
what he remembered, even though he had not been
present.
It was in
this way that the teachings, the revelations about the
Mystery of Golgotha came into being. But the impulse that
emanated from the Christ to such disciples as Peter could
also be communicated to those who were pupils of these
disciples. The man who originally compiled, even though in an
oral form, the Gospel called the Gospel of St. Mark, was just
such a pupil of Peter. So the impulse that had manifested
itself in Peter himself passed into the soul of Mark, with
the result that within Mark's own soul there flashed up what
had been accomplished in Jerusalem as the Mystery of
Golgotha. Mark remained a pupil of Peter for some time. Then
he came to an area where he truly had the external milieu, so
to speak, the outer environment which enabled him to give the
particular coloring needed for this Gospel.
Through all
that we have presented to you — and perhaps in the
future it will be possible to say more on the subject —
one thing has been shown in particular: that the Mark Gospel
allows us to feel most clearly the whole cosmic greatness and
significance of Christ. It was possible for the original
author of this Gospel to be stimulated to give his
description of the cosmic greatness of Christ precisely
because of the place to which he had moved after he had been
Peter's pupil. He moved to Alexandria in Egypt and lived
there at a period when in a certain way
Jewish-philosophical-theosophical learning in Alexandria had
reached a certain culmination. He could take up in Alexandria
what at that time were the best aspects of pagan gnosis. He
could absorb views that were also in existence there about
how the human being has come forth from the spiritual, and
how he came into contact with Lucifer and Ahriman, and how
luciferic and ahrimanic forces are taken up into the human
soul. From the pagan gnosis he could accept everything that
was told him about the origin of man out of the cosmos when
our planet came into being. But Mark could also see,
especially when he was living in an Egyptian locality, how
strong the contrast was between what had originally been
destined for man, and what he had by this time become.
This was
shown most strikingly in Egyptian culture, which had
originated from the loftiest revelations that had then become
manifest in Egyptian architecture, especially in the pyramids
and palaces, in the culture of the Sphinx, which, however was
falling ever more into corruption and decadence. Thus it was
particularly the greatest works of Egyptian culture that sank
down, still during the third cultural epoch, into the worst
aberrations of black magic, and the worst depravities of
spiritual corruption. If one had the spiritual eyes for it,
it was possible in a certain way to see in what was practised
in Egypt the most profound secrets because this culture
emanated from the pure original Hermes wisdom. But only a
soul that looked at the foundation, and not at the existing
corruption, could see this. Already by the time of Moses
corruption was far advanced, and he had to extract from
Egyptian culture the good which was scarcely visible even to
such a noble soul as Moses. It could then be passed on
indirectly to posterity through the soul of Moses. Thereafter
the corruption in Egypt continued unabated.
Mark's soul
was alive to the possibility that mankind could sink down and
become engulfed in materialism, especially in regard to its
view of the world. And he experienced in particular one thing
that men can again today experience in a different, though in
some respects similar, form — though only by men who
possess the necessary feeling and perception. For we are
really today experiencing the reemergence of Egyptian
culture. I have often emphasized the peculiar nature of these
linkages between cultures in human evolution, and I have
explained how among the seven successive cultural epochs of
the post-Atlantean era the fourth cultural epoch that
contains Hellenism and the Mystery of Golgotha stands by
itself. However, the third cultural epoch, that of the
Egypto-Chaldean culture, emerges once more, though in an
unspiritual manner, in the culture, especially the science of
today. Within our materialistic culture, even in its outer
manifestations, we have in this fifth age a certain
reawakening of the culture of the third epoch. In a certain
way the second will also reappear in the sixth and the first
in the seventh. So do these spans of time encircle and
include each other, as we have often emphasized. Today we are
experiencing something that a spirit like Mark could
experience in a most intensive way.
If we
consider the culture of today, we should not describe it in
this way to the outside world because it could not bear it;
even if we overlook the most radical forms of corruption we
can still say that everything is mechanized. And within our
materialistic culture it is only mechanism that is
worshipped, even if we do not call it prayer or devotion. It
is true that our soul forces that in former times were
directed toward spiritual beings are now directed only toward
machines, toward mechanisms. One can truly say that they
receive the attention that once was given to the gods. This
is especially the case in the realm of science, this science
which is totally unaware of how little it is concerned with
truth, with real truth, and at the same time how little it is
concerned with true logic. If we look at it from a higher
point of view we can certainly say that there is today a
deeply serious and intense striving, an intense longing. I
spoke already in Munich (in August, 1912, Ed.) in a lecture
about the longing in our time, and especially how this
longing has taken root in individual souls. But in present
day “official” science such a longing is missing,
and instead one might say that there is a certain satisfied
contentment. Yet this contentment has something strange about
it, since it is a contentment with what is unreal and
illogical. Nowhere is this science capable of recognizing how
deeply it is entrenched in what is opposed to all logic. All
this can easily be seen and experienced, and it is indeed
true that in human evolution one pole must be enkindled by
the other. It is the very inadequacy of external science and
its unreality and illogicality, the way it prides itself on
its knowledge and its total unawareness of its deficiencies,
that will and must gradually give rise to the noblest
reaction within human souls: the longing for the spiritual
that is manifesting itself in our time.
For a long
time still to come people who remain attached to this
unreality and lack of logic may well make fun of spiritual
science, will scoff at it, or label it dangerous in all sorts
of ways. Nevertheless through the inner power of the facts
themselves the other pole will be enkindled, entirely of its
own accord. And if those who understand something of it would
only refrain from relapsing into the sickness of compromises
and were to see clearly, then the time might well come much
more quickly than seems likely now. For again and again it is
our experience that if a learned man turns up and says
something that someone else thinks is “quite
anthroposophical,” then a great fuss is immediately
made of it. More so still if someone or other preaches from a
pulpit something that is thought to be “quite
anthroposophical.” What is important is not that such
compromises are made, but that we should place ourselves
clearly and sincerely in the spiritual life, and allow it to
affect us through its own impulses. The more clearly we are
aware that the inner vitality of spiritual life must be
enkindled, and the more we become convinced that we have no
right to accept from the materialistic thinking of our time
anything that is not well grounded in fact, the better it
will be. This is a very different thing from demonstrating
that truly progressive science is in harmony with spiritual
research.
It can be
shown how at every step science commits logical blunders on
every page of its literary works, of the kind often referred
to by one of our friends in a humorous manner. A certain
Professor Schlaucherl (“clever fellow”) a
character in the comic paper Fliegender Blätter
wished to prove just how a frog hears. To this end the
Professor causes the frog to jump on a table, then he hits
the top of the table. The frog jumps away, thus proving he
heard the tap. Then he proceeds to tear off the frog's legs,
and again hits the table. But this time the frog does not
jump away, proving clearly that the frog hears with his legs.
For when he still had legs he jumped away, but when he had
lost his legs he no longer jumped. Learned men do indeed make
all kinds of experiments with frogs. But in other domains
their logical inferences are just like this example, as, for
instance, in their much lauded brain research. Attention is
drawn to the fact that words can be remembered and certain
thoughts may be produced if this or that part of the brain is
present. But if this part of the brain is missing then words
can no longer be remembered nor is it possible to have
thoughts — exactly the same logic as in the case of the
frog who hears through his legs. Indeed there are no better
grounds for saying that a man can think with one part of his
brain or cannot think if this part of the brain is missing,
than there are for saying that the frog can no longer hear
when his legs have been torn off. The two cases are entirely
parallel, only people do not notice that the whole inference
rests on nothing but faulty reasoning. We could continue to
point out faulty reasoning piled on more faulty reasoning in
all the results of what science believes to be firmly
established. And the more mistakes that are made the more
proud people are of science, and the more they scoff at
spiritual science.
This will
have the result of generating the noblest of reactions, a
longing for spiritual science. Such a reaction that belongs
to our era is the same as what must have been experienced by
Mark in his own age when he was able to perceive how mankind
had descended from its former spiritual height and had become
enmeshed in materialism. Through this experience he gained a
profound understanding of how the greatest impulse lives in
the super-sensible, and this understanding was further
strengthened by his teacher. What Peter had given him
regarding the Mystery of Golgotha was not something that
could have been based on sense perception and then handed
down by tradition, as if someone had seen with his own eyes
what had happened at Jerusalem. The events described were
investigated later through clairvoyance; and it is in this
way that all information about Christ Jesus and the Mystery
of Golgotha was gained.
The Mystery
of Golgotha is an event that occurred on the physical plane,
but it could be seen afterward only through clairvoyance. I
want you to bear in mind most particularly that the Mystery
of Golgotha is a physical-material event, but the path
leading toward understanding it must nevertheless be looked
for in a superphysical, super-sensible way and in spite of the
documents that have come down to us. People who do not
understand this may argue about the merits of this or that
Gospel. But for one who is aware of the true state of
affairs, such questions do not exist. Such a one knows how
necessary it is for us to look beyond the often imperfect
traditions represented by the various Gospels, and reach what
clairvoyant investigation alone can tell us today. And if we
investigate the truth of what actually happened by
reconstructing it with the aid of the Akasha Chronicle, then
we shall see how we must interpret the Gospels and what we
have to read in individual passages. We shall see how we must
read about what was then placed before humanity as man's true
dignity, his true being, at a time when mankind had descended
most deeply from its former heights.
The divine
spiritual powers have given to man his outer image, his outer
form. But since the old Lemurian epoch what lived in this
outer form stood always under the influence of the luciferic
forces, and then, during the later phases of evolution also
under the ahrimanic forces. It was under these influences
that what men have called science, knowledge and
understanding have come into being. It is no wonder that just
exactly at that time the true super-sensible being of man
appeared before mankind, and men were least able to recognize
it, and were least able to know what mankind had become.
Man's knowledge and understanding had become ever more deeply
enmeshed in sense existence, and gradually became ever less
capable of penetrating close to the true being of man.
This is the
important point we must take into consideration when we turn
again to the forsaken Son of Man, to the form of the man who
stands before us at the moment when, according to the Mark
Gospel, the cosmic Christ was only loosely connected with the
Son of Man. There, before all humanity, stood the man, the
man in the form originally given to man by divine spiritual
powers. There He stood, but ennobled and spiritualized by the
three-year sojourn of the Christ within the body of Jesus of
Nazareth. Here He stood before His fellow-men. But man's
understanding had reached only as far as was possible through
the thousands of years during which Lucifer and Ahriman had
penetrated his understanding and knowing. Yet here stood the
man who in those three years had driven out of Himself the
influences of Lucifer and Ahriman. Here in front of other men
stood restored what man had been before the coming of Lucifer
and Ahriman. Only through the impulse of the cosmic Christ
was man once again what he had been when he left the
spiritual world and was brought down into the physical world.
Here stood the spirit of mankind, the Son of Man, in the
presence of men who at that time were the judges and
executioners in Jerusalem. He stood there in the form that
man can become if all that has debased him were to be driven
out from his nature. Here stood the man at the moment when
the Mystery of Golgotha was being accomplished, in the image
of His fellowmen. Before such a man His fellowmen should have
stood and worshipped, saying, “Here am I in my true
nature, here is my highest ideal. Here am I, in the form to
which I can attain only through my most ardent striving, a
striving that can come only from the depths of my soul. Here
I stand before that in myself which is alone worthy of
reverence and worship, the divine in me.” And the
apostles, if they had been able to practice self-knowledge,
would have been compelled to say, “In the whole expanse
of space there is nothing in existence that can be compared
in greatness with what is before us in the Son of
Man!”
At that
moment in history mankind ought to have possessed that
self-knowledge. But what did this mankind do? It spat upon
the Son of Man, it scourged Him, and led Him forth to the
place of execution. That was the dramatic turning point
between what ought to have been, the recognition that
something was there with which nothing in the world is
comparable, and what was described as actually happening.
Instead of recognizing himself, man is described as having
crushed himself under foot, as having killed himself because
he did not recognize himself. Yet through this lesson, this
cosmic lesson he is able to receive the impulse to attain
gradually for himself his true being within the wider
perspective of earth evolution!
This
therefore was the world-historical moment, and this is the
way we must characterize it if we want to do so in the right
way entirely in accord with the powerful, striking sentences
of the Gospel of St. Mark. It not only needs to be
understood, it needs to be felt, sensed. Out of this
crushing under foot of man's own nature there came forth what
was described in my lecture cycle
From Jesus to Christ
[ Note 22 ]
in Karlsruhe as the “phantom.” Because man crushed his
own being under foot, that which was the outer image of the
divine was transformed into the phantom which multiplies, and
multiplying during the further development of mankind is able
to penetrate into the souls of men, as was described in the
Karlsruhe cycle.
If we look at
things in this way, then the great difference becomes visible
between what the Mark Gospel really wishes to describe, and
what is so often made of it today. Anyone who understands a
Gospel, and particularly the Mark Gospel, in such a way that
he can sense and feel what is described in accordance with
its artistic composition and its deep content, will have the
experience that this feeling will become a true inner fact,
the kind of inner fact that must be present if we wish to
attain to a relationship with Christ Jesus. The soul must
really dedicate itself, at least in some small measure, to
the kind of reflection filled with feeling and emotion that
can arise from a reading of the Mark Gospel and that may be
characterized somewhat as follows, “How greatly deluded
were my fellowmen who stood around the Son of Man, when in
truth they should have perceived there the highest ideal of
themselves!”
A typical man
of this materialistic age may write down or let slip such a
remark as can often be heard or read today, especially from
superstitious monists, I mean enlightened monists, “Why
is existence as it is? Why do we suffer pain? These questions
no one has ever been able to answer. Buddha, Christ,
Socrates, Giordano Bruno, none of them have been able to lift
a corner of this veil.” People who write in this way do
not realize that in so doing they are placing themselves much
higher than Buddha, Christ, Socrates and the rest, nor that
they in working on this assumption understand everything. How
could it be otherwise in an age when any beginning university
lecturer possesses an unrivalled understanding of everything
that has happened in history, and is obliged for the sake of
his career to write books on the subject?
It might be
thought that this is said out of a desire to criticize our
age. This is not the reason. But such things ought to be
visible to our souls because only if we allow them to be
perceived by our souls do we keep a true perspective on the
overpowering greatness of the Gospels, as, for instance, the
Gospel of St. Mark. These things are constantly misunderstood
for no other reason than that people can approach such a
height only slowly, and usually only caricatures are
presented to them. In every detail the Gospels are great, and
in essence every detail teaches us something
extraordinary.
We can
therefore learn something also from the last chapter of the
Mark Gospel. Of course if I were to point out all the great
thoughts in this Gospel I should have to go on speaking for a
long time yet. But one such detail immediately at the
beginning of the sixteenth chapter shows us how deeply the
evangelist has penetrated into the secrets of existence. So
the author of the Mark Gospel knew, as we have described, how
humanity had declined, sinking from the spiritual heights
into materialism. He knew how little human beings were truly
able to grasp the nature of the being of man, and how little
people at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha were capable of
understanding what happened then.
At this point
I should like to remind you of something I have often pointed
out with regard to the difference between male and female,
pointing out the fact that to some extent the female element
— not the single individual woman but rather
“womanhood” — has not entirely descended to
the physical plane, whereas the man — again not a
single individuality, not man in a particular incarnation but
“manhood” — has crossed the line and
descended lower. As a result true humanity lies between man
and woman; and it is for this reason that a human being also
changes sex in different incarnations. But it is already the
case that the woman, as such, because of the different
formation of her brain and the different way in which she can
use it, is able to grasp spiritual ideas with greater
facility. By contrast the man because of his external
physical corporeality is much better adapted to think himself
into materialism, because, if we wish to express the matter
crudely, his brain is harder. The female brain is softer, not
so stubborn, that is to say in general — I am not
referring to individual personalities. In the case of
individual personalities there is no need to flatter oneself,
for many truly obstinate heads sit on many a female body
— to say nothing of the reverse! But on the whole it is
true that it is easier to make use of a female brain if one
is to understand something exceptional, as long as the will
to do so is also present. It is for this reason that the
evangelist after the Mystery of Golgotha allows women to
appear first.
And now, as
the Sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of
James, and Salome, brought spices, so that they could go
and anoint him.
(Mark 16:1.)
And it was to
them that the youth, that is, the cosmic Christ, first
appeared; and only afterward to the male disciples. True
occultism, true spiritual science is interwoven into the
composition and details of the contents of the Gospels, and
especially of the concise Mark Gospel.
Only if we
feel what speaks to us from the Gospels and allow ourselves
to be stirred by what we feel and sense can we find the way
to the Mystery of Golgotha. And then there will be no longer
any question as to whether these Gospels are genuine or false
from the external historical point of view. Those who
understand nothing of the matter can be left to their
investigations. But those who ascend by means of spiritual
science to a feeling for and understanding of the Gospels
will gradually realize that they are not in the first place
intended to be historical documents but rather documents that
flow into our souls. And when they pour out their impulses
into our souls, then our souls, without the aid of any
documents, are taken hold of by what they feel and experience
when they turn their gaze to the Mystery of Golgotha, and
recognize how human understanding, knowledge and cognition
when directed to the being of man have fallen short —
how men spat on and crucified this being of man that they
should have revered in the wisdom of self-knowledge as their
highest ideal. And from this recognition the soul will win
for itself the supreme strength needed to rise upward to the
ideal that radiates across from Golgotha and shines upon all
who are willing to feel and perceive it. For only then will
men truly grasp the reality that the earth is linked with the
spiritual worlds, when they understand how the spiritual
reality, the Christ, lived as a cosmic being in the body of
Jesus of Nazareth; and when they understand that all the
leaders of humanity that the world has ever known were sent
out by the Christ as His forerunners with the task of
preparing the way for Him so that He could be recognized and
understood. All this preparation turned out to be virtually
useless when the Mystery of Golgotha took place, for at the
decisive moment everything failed. But ever more and more in
the future the time will come when people will understand not
only the Mystery of Golgotha itself but all the other events
that accompanied it, by means of which the Mystery will be
ever more fully understood.
For the time
being the peoples of Europe can easily perhaps be misjudged
because they do not act like many other peoples who recognize
as the true religion only those religious creeds that have
sprung from their own nation and race, as for example, in
India in particular, where only that is considered valuable
that has sprung from their own blood. How often in
theosophical circles one talks about how the equality of all
religions ought to be recognized, whereas in reality one
wishes only to promote one's own religion and looks upon that
as the only real wisdom-religion. The Europeans are totally
unable to do this because not a single people of Europe has
retained any national deity, any deity growing out of its own
soil of the kind that the peoples of Asia possess. Christ
Jesus belongs to Asia, and the peoples of Europe have adopted
Him, and allowed Him to influence them. In the acceptance of
Christ Jesus there is no egoism; and it would be a complete
distortion if someone were to wish to compare the way a
European speaks about Christ Jesus with the way other peoples
speak about their national deities, for example the way a
Chinese speaks about Confucious or the way an Indian speaks
about Krishna or the Buddha.
And we can
speak of Christ Jesus from a purely objective historical
standpoint. This objective history is concerned with nothing
else but the great appeal to man's self-knowledge, a
self-knowledge that was so completely distorted into its
opposite while the Mystery of Golgotha was taking place. Yet
through this Mystery the possibility was given to man to
receive the impulse to find his own true being, whereas, as
far as knowledge, external knowledge, was concerned, humanity
totally failed to grasp the meaning of the Mystery of
Golgotha, as we have seen. And so all the world's religions
will one day rightly understand each other and work together
to understand what the Mystery of Golgotha contains, and to
make its impulse accessible to men.
If it is once
realized that when Christ Jesus is spoken of this has nothing
to do with any egoistic creed, but with something that, as a
historical fact in human evolution, can belong to every
religious creed, then, and then only, will the kernel of
wisdom and truth in all religions be grasped. And to the
extent to which we still do not accept spiritual science in
its true sense, it is to the same extent that we refuse to
accept the true understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. And
to the extent that we understand spiritual science, it is to
that extent that a human being can understand the Mystery of
Golgotha. So a Christian who accepts spiritual science can
really come to an understanding with all the peoples of the
world. And if representatives of other religions with a
somewhat excessive, though understandable and even
justifiable pride were to say, “You Christians have
only one single incarnation of God, but we can offer several,
and thus are richer than you,” no Christian should try
to rival him by claiming something similar for Christ Jesus,
since this would show his lack of understanding for the
Mystery of Golgotha. The correct thing would be for a
Christian to say in reply to someone who is able to show that
the founder of his own religion had many incarnations,
“Yes, of course, but all those who had many
incarnations could not have fulfilled the Mystery of
Golgotha. Look where you will, in no other religion will you
ever find it in the way it is presented in
Christianity.”
On other
occasions in the past I have already shown how, if we follow
the life of the Buddha we shall reach the point described in
the Mark Gospel as the scene of the Transfiguration of
Christ. At this point the Buddha's life has come to its final
end, and he dissolves into light, as it is described, and
this description in truth corresponds to the occult fact. In
the case of Christ, as you will find it stated in
Christianity as Mystical Fact,
[ Note 23 ]
He does indeed reach the scene of the Transfiguration. But He
was not transfigured alone, by Himself; He converses with
Moses and Elijah on the mountain, where cosmic events occur.
Only after the scene of the Transfiguration does the
Mystery of Golgotha begin. This emerges so clearly from
the documents themselves that it is fundamentally impossible
to deny the fact, once one has recognized it from a
comparison between the lives of Christ and the Buddha. And in
essence all that I was able to tell you today about the
feelings that arise in us when we think of the great
misunderstanding of the Son of Man by human beings is only a
consequence of what you will find already pointed out in
Christianity as Mystical Fact.
And now, at
the conclusion of our studies on the Mark Gospel I may in a
certain respect say that the program laid down at the
beginning of the anthroposophical movement in Central Europe
insofar as it related to Christianity has in all essentials
been completed in every detail. When we started, our main
task was to show how in the course of time religions have
developed, culminating in the problem of Christ. We have
considered the individual Gospels and various cosmic
revelations; we have tried to penetrate ever more deeply into
the depths of occult life in order to carry out what we
indicated we should do at the beginning. We have tried to
work consistently, but in essence all we have done is
complete in detail what we said we would do when we started.
Was this not the most natural development with respect to the
Christ problem within the theosophical movement of Central
Europe? In view of all this that has happened, other people
who became converts to an impossible conception of Christ
within the framework of Christianity can scarcely demand that
we who have done this consistent work for years should be
converts to their conception of Christ devised three years
ago! It has often been emphasized of recent years that the
Theosophical Society ought to be hospitable to all opinions.
Of course it should be. But the matter appears in a quite
different light if it is to be hospitable to the successive
different opinions of the same personality, if that
personality now maintains something different from what it
did four years ago, and now demands that the Theosophical
Society should provide a home for this latest opinion. Such a
thing may be possible, but there is no need for us to go
along with it. Nor should one be considered a heretic if one
doesn't take part in such things. In Central Europe people go
further still, going so far as to call white black and black
white!
This is
indeed a solemn moment when we are bringing to an end the
latest and final phase of the work we have been carrying on
for the last ten years according to plan. So we are
determined to stand firm in this work and neither become
discouraged nor yet lacking in understanding for others. But
we must see very clearly what we have to do, and we must
stand firm on our own ground and not allow ourselves to be
discouraged by anything, even if white is called black and
black white. Even if our anthroposophical Central European
movement — in which everyone strives to do his best
according to his ability, and everyone is called upon to give
his best without submitting to any authority — is said
to be full of fanatics and dogmatizers, we should still not
be discouraged, not even if those who have their own dogma
that is scarcely three years old try to organize an
opposition to the dreadful dogma of Central Europe. It is
painful to witness the kind of mischievous tricks that are
played today in the name of Christ. We are justified in using
words like these, and regard them as nothing more than a
technical term, used objectively. We are doing nothing more
than stating the actual fact, without emotion and without
criticism. If we are obliged to put it this way it is the
fault of the objective fact itself.
But these
facts, when they are set against what can flow to us from a
real understanding of the Gospel of St. Mark, can also lead
to no other course than to continue to work in the way we
have recognized as the right one. This has proved itself in
our general program based on positive facts, and continues to
prove itself again every day as long as we apply it to
individual problems and individual facts. And as we make our
way step by step through the details of the things we have to
investigate, what was said at the beginning is invariably
confirmed. So even when we are studying the loftiest things
we can harbor no other feeling than a true and genuine
feeling for truth. Such things as the contemplation of the
Mystery of Golgotha have within them already the necessary
healing power that dispels error if we approach them in the
spirit. Then we are led to recognize how in essence it is
only an insufficient will to pursue the truth that prevents
us from truly pursuing the path that opens out from the
earthly into the cosmic, when the cosmic Christ within Jesus
of Nazareth is investigated. But He appears to us so clearly
if we understand a work like the Mark Gospel.
For this
reason such works, after they have been opened up to the
understanding of men by means of spiritual scientific
studies, will gradually also reach out to the rest of
mankind, and will be ever more clearly understood. And
attention will be focused ever more on the words of the
Gospels rediscovered without the aid of sense perception
through clairvoyant vision of the Mystery of Golgotha. Those
who wrote the Gospels from clairvoyant observation described
the physical events afterward. This must be understood, as
also the necessity for it. Those people who lived at the same
time as the events in Palestine were incapable of
understanding what happened at that time because it was only
through the impulse given by this event that it could be
understood! Before the event had taken place no one was alive
who could have understood it. It had first to take effect, so
it could be understood only after the event. The key to the
understanding of this Mystery of Golgotha is the Mystery of
Golgotha itself! Christ had first to do all that He had to do
up to the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, and only through
the effects of what He did could the understanding of Himself
come forth. Then through what He was, the Word could be
enkindled which is at the same time the expression of His
true being.
And so
through what Christ was, the primal Word is enkindled which
is communicated to us and can be recognized again in
clairvoyant vision, this Word which also proclaims the true
being of the Mystery of Golgotha. We may also think of this
Word when we speak of Christ's own words, not only those that
He spoke Himself but those which He also kindled in the souls
of those able to understand Him, so that they could both
understand and describe His being from within their human
souls.
As long as
the earth endures men will take up into themselves the
impulses from the Mystery of Golgotha. Then there will come
an interval between “Earth” and
“Jupiter.” Such an interval is always linked to
the fact that not only the individual planet, but all its
surroundings change, pass into chaos, undergo a
“pralaya.” And not only the earth itself will be
different in pralaya, but also the heavens belonging to the
earth. But what has been given to the earth through the Word
that Christ spoke, which He kindled also in those who
recognize Him, is the true essence of earth existence. And a
right understanding allows us to recognize the truth of that
saying that tells us of the development of the cosmos, how
the earth and heaven as seen from the earth will be different
after the earth has reached its goal, and heaven and earth
pass away. But such a Word as could be spoken by Christ about
heaven and earth will remain. If one rightly understands the
Gospels, and feels their innermost impulse, then one feels
not only the truth but also the power of the Word which as
power passes over into us, enabling us to gaze out beyond the
wide world as we take up into ourselves with full
understanding the Word, “Heaven and Earth shall pass
away, but my words shall not pass away.”
(Matt. 24:35.)
The words of
Christ will never pass away, even if heaven and earth pass
away. This may be said in accordance with occult knowledge,
for the truths of the Mystery of Golgotha that have been
spoken will still remain. The Mark Gospel kindles in our
souls the knowledge of the truth that heaven and earth pass
away, while what we can know about the Mystery of Golgotha
will accompany us into the ages that are to come, even if
heaven and earth will have passed away!
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