LECTURE IV Dornach, April 15, 1921
A study I
began before our course started will become fully
comprehensible only if we go back even further in considering
the development of humanity in recent history. Basically, we
have only given a few indications concerning the developments
in the nineteenth century. It will be our purpose today to
follow the spiritual development of mankind further back in
time, giving special attention to an extraordinarily
important and incisive event in the evolution of Western
civilization. It is the turning-point that came about in the
fourth century. There emerged at that time a figure still
vivid in the memory of Western civilization, namely, Aurelius
Augustinus.
[Note 1]
We find in him a
personality who had to fight with the great intensity, on the
one hand, against what had come down from ancient times,
something attempting during those first Christian centuries
to establish Christianity on the basis of a certain ancient
wisdom. On the other hand, he had to struggle against another
element, the one that eventually was victorious in Western
civilization. It rejected the more ancient form and limited
itself to comprehending Christianity in a more external,
material way, not to penetrate Christianity with ideas of
ancient wisdom, but simply to narrate its events factually
according to the course it had taken since its establishment,
comprehending it intellectually as well as that was possible
at that time.
These
conflicts between the two directions — I would like to
say, between the direction of a wisdom-filled Christianity
and a Christianity seemingly tending toward a more or less
materialistic view — these conflicts had to be
undergone particularly by the souls of the fourth and the
early fifth century in the most intense way. And in
Augustine, humanity remembers a personality who took part in
such conflicts.
In our time,
however, we have to understand clearly that the historic
documents call forth almost completely false ideas of what
existed prior to the fourth century
A.D.
As clear as the
picture may be since the fifth century, as unclear are all
the ordinary ideas concerning the preceding centuries. Yet,
if we focus on what people in general could know about this
period prior to the fourth century
A.D.,
we are referred to
two areas. One area is that of knowledge, cultivated in the
schools; the other is the area of ritual, of veneration, of
the religious element. Something belonging to very ancient
times of human civilization still extends into these two
areas. Though cloaked in a certain Christian coloring, this
ancient element was still more or less present during the
first Christian centuries in both the stream of wisdom and
that of ritual.
If we look
into the sphere of wisdom, we find preserved there a teaching
from earlier times. In a certain sense, however, it had
already begun to be replaced by what we today call the
heliocentric world system — I have spoken of this in
earlier lectures here. Nevertheless, it still remained from
former astronomical teachings, and might be designated as a
form of astronomy, but now not from the standpoint of
physical cosmological observation. In very ancient times,
people arrived at this astronomy — let us call it
etheric in contrast to our physical astronomy — in the
following way: People of old were still fully aware of the
fact that human beings by nature belong not only to the earth
but also to the cosmic surroundings of the earth, the
planetary system. Ancient wisdom had quite concrete views
concerning this etheric astronomy. It taught that if we turn
our attention to what makes up the organization of the upper
part of the human being — and here I make use of
expressions that are familiar to us today — insofar as
we view the etheric body of man, the human being stands in
interaction with Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars. People thus
considered certain reciprocal effects between the upper part
of the human etheric body and Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars.
Furthermore, people found that the part of the human being
that is of a more astral nature has a sort of
interrelationship with Venus, Mercury, and the Moon. The
forces that then lead man into his earthly existence and that
bring it about that a physical body is fitted into this
etheric body, these are the forces of the earth. Those
forces, on the other hand, that cause the human being to have
a certain perspective leading beyond his earthly life, are
the forces of the sun.
Thus it was
said in those ancient times that the human being comes out of
unknown spiritual worlds he passes through in prenatal life
but that it is not as if he merely entered into terrestrial
life. Rather, he enters from extraplanetary worlds into
planetary life. The planetary life receives him as I have
described it, relating him to the sun, moon, earth, Mercury,
Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The orbit of Saturn was
considered to be the approximate sphere the human being
enters with his etheric body out of extraplanetary into
planetary life. Everything that is etheric in the human being
was definitely related to this planetary life. Only insofar
as the etheric body then expresses itself in the physical
body, only to that extent was the physical body related to
the Earth. Insofar as the human being in turn raises himself
with his ego beyond the etheric and astral body, the ancients
related this to the sun.
Thus, one had
a form of etheric astronomy. It was certainly still possible
for this etheric astronomy not merely to look upon the
physical destinies of the human being in the way physical
astronomy does. Instead, since people viewed the etheric
body, which in turn stands in a more intimate relationship to
the spiritual aspect of the human being, in an interplay with
the same forces of the planetary system, the following
possibility existed. Since the forces of destiny can express
themselves out of the planetary system by way of the etheric
body, it was possible to speak of the human constitution and
to include in the latter the forces of destiny.
In this
teaching of antiquity, this etheric astronomy, which was
continued even after people already had developed the
heliocentric system as a kind of esoteric-physical science, a
last wisdom teaching had emerged from ancient instinctive
wisdom investigations and had been retained as a tradition.
People spoke of the influences of heaven in no other way but
by saying, Indeed, these influences of heaven exist; they
bear not only the affairs of nature but also the forces of
human destiny. Thus, there certainly existed a connection
between what we might call a teaching of nature, namely
cosmology, and what passed over later into all that people
now consider as astrology, something that in ancient times,
had a much more exact character and was based on direct
observation.
It was
thought that when the human being has entered the planetary
sphere on his way to a new birth and has been received by it
insofar as his etheric body is concerned, he subsequently
enters the earth. He is received by the earth. Yet, even
here, people did not merely think of the solid earth. Rather,
they thought of the earth with its elements. Apart from the
fact that the human being is received by the planetary sphere
— whereby he would be a super-earthly being, whereby he
would be what he is only as a soul — it was said that
like a child he is received by the elements of the earth, by
fire or warmth, by air, water, and the solid earth. All of
these elements were considered the actual earth.
Consequently, it was thought, the human being's etheric body
is so tinged by these external elements, so saturated, that
now the temperaments originate in it. Thus, the temperaments
were pictured as closely tied to the etheric body, hence to
the life organization of the human being. Therefore, in what
is actually physical in man — at least, in what manifests
through the physical body — this ancient teaching also
saw something spiritual.
The most
human aspect of this teaching, I would say, was something
that can still be clearly discerned in the medical science
period. The remedies and the teaching of medicine were
certainly a product of this view of the relationship of the
etheric body to the planetary system as well as of the way
the etheric human being penetrates, as it were, into the
higher spheres, into air, water, warmth, and earth, so that
the physical impressions of the etheric soul temperaments
found their way into his organization: black gall, white
gall, and the other fluids, phlegm, blood, and so on.
According to this commonly held view the nature of the human
constitution can be known from the body fluids. It was not
customary in medicine in those days to study the individual
organs, of which drawings could be made. The intermingling of
the permeation with fluids was studied, and a particular
organ was viewed as a result of a special penetration of
fluids. People then thought that in a healthy person the
fluids intermingled in a specific manner; an abnormal
intermingling of fluids was seen in a sick person. Thus we
may say that the medical insight resulting from this teaching
was definitely founded on the observation of the fluid human
organism. What we call knowledge of the human organism today
is based on the solid, earthly organism of man. In regard to
the view of the human being, the course taken has led from an
earlier insight into the fluid man to a more modern insight
into the solid human being with sharply contoured organs.
The direction
taken by medicine runs parallel to the transition from the
ancient etheric astronomy to modern physical astronomy. The
medical teaching of Hippocrates
[Note 2]
still corresponds essentially to
etheric astronomy, and, actually, the accomplishments of this
medical conception concerned with the intermingling of fluids
in man remained well into the fourth century
A.D.
in an exact
manner, not only in tradition as it was later. Just as this
ancient astronomy was subsequently obscured after the fourth
century and physical astronomy took the place of the old
etheric astronomy in the fifteenth century, so, too,
pathology and the whole view of medicine was then based on
the teachings of the solid element, of what is bounded and
expressed by sharp contours in the human organism. This is in
essence one side of humanity's evolution in the inorganic
age.
Now we can
also turn our attention to what has remained of those ancient
times in cultic practices and religious ceremonies. The
religious ceremonies were mainly made available to the
masses; what I have just been describing was predominantly
considered to be a treasure of wisdom belonging to centers of
learning. Those cultic practices that found their way from
Asia into Europe and that, insofar as they are religious
endeavors, correspond to the view I have just explained, are
known as Mithras worship.
[Note 3]
It is a worship we find even as late as the first Christian
centuries extending from East to West; we can follow its path
through the countries of the Danube as far as the regions of
the Rhine and on into France. This Mithras worship, familiar
to you as far as its outer forms are concerned, may be
briefly characterized by saying that along with the earthly
and cosmic context the conqueror of the Mithras-Bull was
depicted imaginatively and pictorially in the human being,
riding on the bull and vanquishing the bull-forces.
Nowadays, we
are easily inclined to think that such images — all
cultic pictures, religious symbolizations which, if we may
say so, have emerged organically out of the ancient wisdom
teachings — are simply the abstract, symbolic product
of those teachings. But it would be absolutely false if we
were to believe that the ancient sages sat down and said, Now
we must figure out a symbol. For ourselves we have the
teaching of wisdom; for the ignorant masses we have to think
up symbols that can then be employed in their ceremonial
rites, and so on. Such assumptions would be totally wrong. An
assumption approximately like that is entertained by modern
Freemasons; they have similar thoughts about the nature of
their own symbolism. But this was certainly not the view of
the ancient teachers of wisdom.
I should now
like to describe the view of these sages of old by referring
in particular to the connections of the Mithra worship to the
world view I have just outlined above. A fundamentally
important question could still be raised by those who had
retained a vivid view of how the human being is received into
the planetary world with his etheric body, of how man is
subsequently received into the sphere of earthly elements
into warmth or fire, air, water, and earth, of how through
the effects of these elements on the human etheric being
black gall, white gall, phlegm, and blood are formed. They
asked themselves a question that can occur now to a person
who truly possesses Imaginative perception. In those times,
the answer to this question was based on instinctive
Imaginative perception, but we can repeat it today in full
consciousness. If we develop an Imaginative conception of
this entrance of the human being from the spiritual world
through the planetary sphere into the terrestrial sphere of
fire, air, water, and earth, we arrive at the realization
that if something enters from the spheres beyond into the
planetary sphere, hence into the earth's sphere, and is
received there, this will not become a true human being. If
we develop a picture of what is actually evolving there, if
we have an Imaginative view of what can be beheld in purely
Imaginative perception outside the planetary sphere, then
enters into and is received by the planetary sphere and is
subsequently taken hold of by the influences emanating from
the earth sphere, we see that this does not become a human
being. We do not arrive at a view of man; instead we attain
to a conception that can be most clearly represented if we
picture not a human being but a bull, an ox.
The ancient
teachers of wisdom knew that no human beings would exist on
earth if there were nothing besides this extraplanetary being
that descends into the planetary sphere of evolution. They
saw that at first glance one does arrive at the conception of
the gradual approach of an entity out of extraplanetary
spheres into the planetary and hence the earth sphere. But if
one then proceeds from the content of these conceptions and
tries to form a vivid Imaginative view, it does not turn into
a human being; it becomes a mere bull. And if one comprehends
nothing more in the human being but this, one merely
comprehends what is bull-like in human beings. The ancient
teachers of wisdom formed this conception. Now they said to
themselves, In that case, human beings must struggle against
this bull-like nature with something still higher. They must
overcome the view given by this wisdom. As human beings, they
are more than beings that merely come from the
extra-planetary sphere, enter into the planetary sphere, and
from there are taken hold of by the terrestrial elements.
They have something within them that is more than this.
It is
possible to say that these teachers of wisdom came as far as
this concept. This was the reason they then developed the
image of the bull and placed Mithras on top of it, the human
being who struggles to overcome the bull, and who says of
himself, I must be of far loftier origin than the being that
was pictured according to the ancient teaching of wisdom.
Now these
sages realized that their ancient teaching of wisdom
contained an indication of what is important here. For this
teaching did look upon the planetary sphere, upon Saturn,
Jupiter, Mars, Mercury, Venus, moon, and so on. It also said
that as the human being approaches the earth, he is
constantly lifted up by the sun so as not to be submerged
completely in the terrestrial elements, so as not to remain
merely what proceeds from the etheric body and the mixture of
black and white gall, phlegm, and blood when it is received
by the planetary sphere and when the astral body is received
by the other planetary sphere through Mercury, Venus, moon.
What lifts man upward dwells in the sun. Therefore, these
sages said, Let us call man's attention to the sun forces
dwelling in him; then he will turn into Mithras who is
victorious over the bull!
This then was
the cultic image. It was not meant to be merely a thought-out
symbol but was actually to represent the fact, the
cosmological fact. The religious ceremony was more than a
mere outer sign; it was something that was extracted, as it
were, out of the essence of the cosmos itself.
This cultic
form was something that had existed since very ancient times
and had been brought across from Asia to Europe. It was, in a
sense, Christianity viewed from one side, viewed from the
external, astronomical side, for Mithras was the sun force in
man. Mithras was the human being who rebelled against the
merely planetary and terrestrial aspects.
Now, a
certain endeavor arose, traces of which can be observed
everywhere when we look back at the first Christian
centuries. The tendency arose to connect the historical fact,
the Mystery of Golgotha, with the Mithras worship. Great were
the numbers of people at that time, especially among the
Roman Legions, who brought with them into the lands on the
Danube and far into central Europe, indeed even into western
Europe, what they had experienced in Asia and the Orient in
general. In what they brought across as the Mithras worship
there lived feelings that, without reflecting the Mystery of
Golgotha, definitely contained Christian views and Christian
sentiments. The worship of Mithras was considered as a
concrete worship relating to the sun forces in man. The only
thing this Mithras worship did not perceive was the fact that
in the Mystery of Golgotha this sun force itself had
descended as a spiritual entity and had united itself with
the human being Jesus of Nazareth.
Now there
existed schools of wisdom in the East up until the fourth
century
A.D.
that by and by received reports and became aware
of the Mystery of Golgotha, of Christ. The further east we go
in our investigations, the clearer this becomes. These
schools then attempted to spread a certain teaching
throughout the world, and for a time there was a tendency to
let flow into the Mithras cult what agrees with the following
supersensory perception: The true Mithras is the Christ;
Mithras is his predecessor. The Christ force must be poured
into those forces in man that vanquish the bull. To turn the
Mithras worship into a worship of Christ was something that
was intensely alive in the first Christian centuries up until
the fourth century. One might say that the stream intending
to Christianize this Mithras worship followed after the
spreading of the latter. A synthesis between Christendom and
the Mithras worship was striven for. An ancient, significant
image of man's being — Mithras riding on and
vanquishing the bull — was to be brought into
relationship with the Christ Being. One might say that a
quite glorious endeavor existed in this direction, and in a
certain respect it was a powerful one.
Anyone who
follows the spread of Eastern Christianity and the spread of
Arianism
[Note 4]
can see a Mithras
element in it, even though in already quite weakened form.
Any translation of the Ulfilas-Bible
[Note 5]
into modern languages remains
imperfect if one is unaware that Mithras elements still play
into the terminology of Ulfilas (or Wulfila). But who pays
heed nowadays to these deeper relationships in the linguistic
element? As late as in the fourth century, there were
philosophers in Greece who worked on bringing the ancient
etheric astronomy into harmony with Christianity. From this
effort then arose the true Gnosis, which was thoroughly
eradicated by later Christianity, so that only a few
fragments of the literary samples of this Gnosis have
remained.
What do
people really know today about the Gnosis, of which they say
in their ignorance that our anthroposophy is a warmed-over
version? Even if this were true, such people would not be
able to know about it, for they are familiar only with those
parts of the Gnosis that are found in the critical,
Occidental-Christian texts dealing with the Gnosis. They know
the quotes from Gnostic texts left behind by the opponents of
the Gnosis. There is hardly anything left of the Gnosis
except what could be described by the following comparison.
Imagine that Herr von Gleich would be successful in rooting
out the whole of anthroposophical literature and nothing
would remain except his quotations. Then, later on, somebody
would attempt to reconstruct anthroposophy based on these
quotes; then, it would be about the same procedure in the
West as that which was applied to the Gnosis. Therefore, if
people say that modern anthroposophy imitates the Gnosis,
they would not know it even if it were the case, because they
are unfamiliar with the Gnosis, knowing of it only through
its opponents.
So,
particularly in Athens, a school of wisdom existed well into
the fourth century, and indeed even longer, that endeavored
to bring the ancient etheric astronomy into harmony with
Christianity. The last remnants of this view — man's
entering from higher worlds through the planetary sphere into
the earth sphere — still illuminate the writings of
Origen; they even shine through the texts of the Greek Church
Fathers. Everywhere one can see it shimmer through. It shines
through particularly in the writings of the genuine Dionysius
the Areopagite.
[Note 6]
This Dionysius left behind a teaching that was a pure synthesis
of the etheric astronomy and the element dwelling in
Christianity. He taught that the forces localized, as it
were, astronomically and cosmically in the sun entered into
the earth sphere in Christ through the man Jesus of Nazareth
and that thereby a certain previously nonexistent
relationship came into being between the earth and all the
higher hierarchies, the hierarchies of the Angels, of Wisdom,
the hierarchies of the Thrones and the Seraphim, and so on.
It was a penetration of this teaching of the hierarchies with
etheric astronomy that could be found in the original
Dionysius the Areopagite.
Then, in the
sixth century, the attempt was made to obliterate the traces
even of the more ancient teachings by Dionysius the
Areopagite. They were altered in such a way that they now
represented merely an abstract teaching of the spirit. In the
form in which the teaching of Dionysius the Areopagite has
come down to us, it is a spiritual teaching that no longer
has much to do with etheric astronomy. This is the reason he
is then called the “Pseudo-Dionysius.” In this
manner, the decline of the teaching of wisdom was brought
about. On the one hand, the teachings of Dionysius were
distorted; on the other hand, the truly alive teaching in
Athens that had tried to unite etheric astronomy with
Christianity was eradicated. Finally, in regard to the cultic
aspect, the Mithras worship was exterminated.
In addition,
there were contributions by individuals such as
Constantine.
[Note 7]
His actions were
intensified later by the fact that Emperor Justinian
[Note 8]
ordered the School of Philosophers in
Athens closed. Thus, the last remaining people who had
occupied themselves with bringing the old etheric astronomy
into harmony with Christianity had to emigrate; they found a
place in Persia where they could at least live out their
lives. Based on the same program, according to which he had
closed the Athenian Academy of Philosophers, Justinian also
had Origen declared a heretic. For the same reason, he
abolished Roman consulship, though it led only a shadowy
existence, people sought in it a kind of power of resistance
against the Roman concept of the state, which was reduced to
pure jurisprudence. The ancient human element people still
associated with the office of consul disappeared in the
political imperialism of Rome.
Thus, in the
fourth century, we see the diminishing of the cultic worship
that could have brought Christianity closer to man. We
observe the diminishing of the ancient wisdom teaching of an
etheric astronomy that tried to unite with the insight into
the significance of the Mystery of Golgotha. And in the West,
we see an element take its place that already carried within
itself the seeds of the later materialism, which could not
become a theory until the fifteenth century when the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch began, but which was prepared in the main
through taking the spiritual heritage from the Orient and
imbuing it with materialistic substance.
We must
definitely turn our minds to this course of European
civilization. Otherwise, the foundations of European
civilization will never become quite clear to us. It will
also never become really clear to us how it was possible
that, again and again, when people moved to the Orient, they
could bring back with them powerful spiritual stimuli from
there. Above all else, throughout the first part of the
Middle Ages, there was lively commercial traffic from the
Orient up the Danube River, following exactly those routes
taken by the ancient Mithras worship, which, naturally, had
already died away at the beginning of the Middle Ages. The
merchants who traveled to the Orient and back again, always
found in the East what had preceded Christianity but
definitely tended already towards Christianity. We observe,
moreover, that when the Crusaders journeyed to the Orient,
they received stimuli from the remnants they could still
discern there, and they brought treasures of ancient wisdom
back to Europe.
I mentioned
that the ancient medical knowledge of fluids was connected
with this old body of wisdom. Again and again, people who
traveled to the Orient, even the Crusaders and those who
journeyed with the Crusades, upon their return always brought
back with them remnants of this old medicine to Europe. These
remnants of an ancient medicine were then transmitted in the
form of tradition all over Europe. Certain individuals who at
the same time were ahead of their age in their own spiritual
evolution then went through remarkable developments, such as
the personality we know under the name Basilius Valentinus.
[Note 9]
What kind of
personality was he? He was somebody who had taken up the
tradition of the old medicine of fluids from the people with
whom he had spent his youth, at times without understanding
it from this or that indication. Until a short time ago
— today it is already less often the case — there
still existed in the old peasant's sayings remnants of this
medical tradition that had been brought over from the Orient
by the many travelers. These remnants were in a sense
preserved by the peasantry; those who grew up among peasants
heard of them; as a rule they were those who then became
priests. In particular those who became monks came from the
peasantry. There, they had heard this or that of what was in
fact distorted treasure of ancient wisdom that had become
decadent. These people did undergo an independent educational
development. Up until the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
the educational development an individual went through by
means of Christian theology was something much more liberal
than it was later on. Based on their own spirituality, these
priests and monks gradually brought a certain amount of order
into these matters. They pondered what they had heard; out of
their own genius, they connected the various matters. Thus
originated the writings that have been preserved as the
writings of Basilius Valentinus.
Indeed, these
conditions also gave rise to a school of thought from which
Paracelsus
[Note 10]
even Jacob Boehme
[Note 11]
learned. Even these
individuals still took up the treasure of ancient medical
wisdom that lived, I might say, in the folk group soul. One
can notice this primarily in Jacob Boehme, but also in
Paracelsus and others, even if one considers their writings
only in a superficial way. If you look closely at, for
example, Jacob Boehme's text
“De Signatura Rerum,”
you will find in the manner of his presentation
that what I have said is very obvious. It is a form of old
folk wisdom that basically contained distorted ancient
wisdom. Such old folk wisdom was by no means as abstract as
our present-day science; instead, there still existed a
sensitivity for the objective element in words. One felt
something in the words. Just as one tries to
know through concepts today, one felt in
the words. One knew that the human being had drawn the words
out of the objective essence of the universe itself.
This can
become evident in Jacob Boehme's efforts to feel what really
lies concealed in the syllable, “sul,” or again
in the syllable, “phur” of “sulphur”.
See how Jacob Boehme struggles in
“De Signatura Rerum,”
to draw something out of a word, to draw out an
inner word-extract, to draw something out of the word
“sulphur” in order to come to an entity. The
feeling is definitely present there that when one experiences
the extract of words, one arrives at something real. In
former times, it was felt, something had settled into the
words the human soul absorbed when it moved from spheres
beyond through the planetary sphere into earthly existence.
But what the soul placed into the words due to its closeness
to the intermingling of fluids when the child learned to
speak was still something objective. There was still
something in speech that was like instruction by the gods,
not merely like human instruction. In Jacob Boehme we see
this noble striving that can be expressed somewhat as if he
had felt, I would like to consider speech as something in
which living gods work behind the phenomena into the human
organization in order to form speech and, along with speech,
a certain treasure of wisdom.
Thus we see
that the ancient body of wisdom does indeed continue on into
later ages, though already taken up by modern thinking,
which, it is true, is yet barely evident in such original and
outstanding minds like Jacob Boehme and Paracelsus. Into what
has thus been brought forth the purely intellectualistic,
theoretical element is now imprinted, the element that is
based on man's physical thinking and takes hold only of the
physical realm. We see how, on the one hand, purely physical
astronomy arises, and how, on the other hand, physiology and
anatomy come about, which are directed exclusively upon the
clearly defined organs of man — in short, the whole
medical adumbration.
Thus, the
human being gradually finds himself surrounded by a world that
he comprehends only in a physical sense and in which he
himself as a cosmic being certainly has no place. Concerning
himself, he grasps only what he has become by virtue of the
earth; for it is thanks to the earth that he has become this
solidly bounded, physical, organic being. He can no longer
reconcile what is revealed to him of the universe through
physical astronomy with what dwells in his form and points to
something else. He turns his attention away from the manner
in which the human form indicates something else. He finally
loses all awareness of the fact that his striving for erect
posture and the special manner and means by which he attains
to speech out of his organism cannot originate from the
Mithras-Bull, but only from Mithras. He no longer wishes to
occupy himself with all this, for he is sailing full force
into materialism. He has to sail into materialism, for
religious consciousness itself, after all, has absorbed only
the external, material phenomenon of Christianity. It has
then dogmatized this external, material phenomenon without
attempting to perceive through some wisdom how the Mystery of
Golgotha took place, but instead trying to determine through
stipulations what truth is.
Thus we
observe the transition from the ancient Oriental position of
thinking based on cosmic insight to the specifically
Roman-European form of observation. How were matters
"determined" in the Orient, and how could something be
“determined” about the Mystery of Golgotha based
on Oriental instinctive perception? If we take the insight
coming out of the cosmos, looking up at the stars, that
insight, though it was an instinctive, elemental insight,
should lead to, or was at least supposed to lead to, the
meaning of the Mystery of Golgotha. This was the path taken
in the Orient. Beginning with the fifth century, there was no
longer any sensitivity for this path. By replacing the
Asiatic manner of determination more and more with the
Egyptian form, earlier Church Councils had already pointed
out that the nature of the Mystery of Golgotha should not be
determined in this manner, but that the majority of the
Fathers gathered at the Councils should decide. The juristic
principle was put in the place of the Oriental principle of
insight; dogmatism was brought into the juristic element.
People no longer had the feeling that truth must be
determined out of universal conscience. They began to feel
that it was possible to ascertain, based on resolutions of
the Councils, whether the divine and the human nature in
Christ Jesus was two natures or one, and other such things.
We see the Egypto-Roman juristic element pervading the
innermost configuration of Occidental civilization, an
element that even today is deeply rooted in human beings who
are not inclined to permit truth to determine their
relationship to it. Instead, they wish to make decisions
based on emotional factors; therefore, they have no other
measure for determining things except majority rule in some
form.
We shall say
more about this tomorrow.
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