IN THIS BOOK Rudolf Steiner traces the path leading from the secret
rituals of ancient Mystery sanctuaries to their ultimate fulfillment
in the Mystery of Golgotha, accomplished by Christ on the great stage
of world history as an external fact. Steiner shows how the currents
of spiritual experience forming the science, art and religion of the
ancient world, found their highest expression in the Passion, Death
and Resurrection of Christ the Mystery of Golgotha. In the latter
Steiner saw the central event in the evolution of cosmos, earth and
man, the culminating point of the prehistorical and historical
process, which began with the divine word, Let there be light. In
Christ's Deed of Freedom he recognized the spiritual impulse in which
alone can be found the significance and the destiny of all created
things. Steiner considered the Logos which became flesh as the
foundation for all contemporary religious striving, stating plainly,
Today it is no longer possible to find the spiritual unless we grasp
the Mystery of Golgotha. This book is a first step on the way to a
truly modern comprehension of the Mystery of Golgotha of the events
leading up to it, and of the consequences of it in the early years of
our era. It carries the reader from that time when men still
recognized as concrete, living reality the birth of all things out of
the divine Will, through the central moment of the Death on Golgotha,
to the awakening of new possibilities for creation in the dawning
light of the Spirit.
How Steiner came to this profound insight into the nature and
significance of Christ, how he prepared for it by long and arduous
schooling in natural science, philosophy, and above all in the
development of his own inner life is shown in the introduction to this
book. The Rev. Dr. Alfred Heidenreich met Rudolf Steiner personally
and attended a number of his lecture courses. His impressions of this
outstanding thinker of our time are a valuable contribution to this
volume of the Centennial Edition of the Written Works of Rudolf
Steiner.
The present translation of Christianity as Mystical Fact is the fruit
of the joint effort of three students of Steiner's writings one of
them an active clergyman. The translation, together with their
explanatory and reference notes, bear the marks of careful
scholarship, and will be valued by the serious student.
In his use of the word mystical in the title of this volume, Steiner
refers indirectly to a modern spiritual training, leading to what he
termed exact cognition of the spirit. Although he cited numerous
writers of the late classical and early Christian centuries, he
depended first of all upon this exact cognition rather than
traditional or historical sources From the vantage-point of his
conscious perception of spiritual reality, he saw in Christianity a
Mystical Fact of a scope and significance beyond the powers of
ordinary human conception.
In addition to sharing with others the fruits of his own spiritual
perception by means of books such as this, Steiner outlined a science
of the spirit, involving a method of training suited to the capacities
of men and women of today. He indicated how a person can awaken
dormant faculties within himself, can learn to open his spiritual
eyes, thus attaining a clear, conscious grasp of higher reality.
The first step on this path of spiritual training is to be found in
the injunction of the ancient world: Know thyself. From early times,
self-knowledge has been recognized as the indispensable first goal of
spiritual achievement. In an early Christian century one of the Desert
Fathers wrote: Great is one who can raise the dead; great is one who
can see angels with his physical eyes; but really great is one who is
able to see himself. Such a one has his spiritual eyes open. Rudolf
Steiner sets self-knowledge as the sine qua non for those today who
would begin the pilgrimage out of the darkness, who would strive
toward an opening of their spiritual eyes to a conscious perception of
The Light of the World.
PAUL MARSHALL ALLEN
Alvastra,
South Egremont, Massachusetts
September 1961
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