|
|
|
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
|
|
From Jesus to Christ (single lecture)
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
|
|
From Jesus to Christ (single lecture)
Schmidt Number: S-2447
On-line since: 12th April, 2004
A lecture by
Rudolf Steiner
Carlsruhe, October 4, 1911
GA 131
A public lecture, delivered at Karlsruhe, on October 4th 1911. This
single lecture is not found in any other publication ... it stands
alone. It is in Vol. 131 (perhaps 54?) in the Bibliographical Survey,
1961, and is presented here in agreement with the Rudolf Steiner
Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach, Switzerland.
Copyright © 1930
This e.Text edition is provided through the wonderful work of:
The Rudolf Steiner Publishing Co. London
|
Some editions and/or translations of this book are available for purchase from:
search
for related titles available for purchase at
Amazon.com!
[ Cover Text | Lecture ]
|
Thanks to an anonymous donation, this lecture has been made available.
|
FROM JESUS TO CHRIST
A public Lecture
Delivered at Carlsruhe, 4th October, 1911
by
DR. RUDOLF STEINER
(AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION)
PRINTED IN ENGLAND
AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION
LONDON
RUDOLF STEINER PUBLISHING CO, 54 BLOOMSBURY STREET, W.C.I
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
MADE AND PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY HENDERSON AND SPALD1NG LTD
LONDON S E 15
|
by DR. RUDOLF STEINER
Delivered at Carlsruhe, 4th October, 1911
As our subject is arousing the very widest interest everywhere, it seems
justifiable to approach it from an anthroposophical standpoint. The manner
in which it is being discussed and brought to public notice is, of course,
very far removed from this point of view. If it is true that Anthroposophy
[‘Theosophy’
was the original term, but in later lectures Dr. Sterner changed the word
to ‘Anthroposophy’]
is little understood and liked to-day, it may be said at once that the
treating of this theme in an anthroposophical manner presents peculiar
difficulties. It is unusual in our age for the feelings to be so attuned
as to appreciate anthroposophical truths bearing on the more obvious
matters of spiritual life, and it is directly repugnant to our present-day
consciousness when a topic has to be discussed which calls for the
application of Anthroposophy or Spiritual Science to the most difficult
and holiest subjects.
It may be safely affirmed at the outset that the Being around Whom our
thoughts are about to centre has been for many centuries the turning
point of all thought and feeling, and moreover that He has called forth
widely differing judgments, emotions and opinions. Countless as are
those who for centuries have held firmly as a rock to all that is
connected with the Name of Christ and of Jesus, beyond number also are
pictures of Him which have moved souls and occupied thoughtful men ever
since the Event in Palestine. Always the picture has been modified
according to the general views of the times, to what was felt and
considered true at any given period. Thus, when the way had been prepared
by the intellectual currents of thought of the eighteenth century, it
came about in the course of the following century that what could be
intellectually grasped as “Christ” withdrew into the background
as compared with what was called later the “Historical Jesus.”
It is around the “Historical Jesus” that the widely extended
controversy has arisen, and which has here in Carlsruhe its most important
protagonists and its most vigorous combatants. For this reason it is as
well to give a short indication of the actual position of the controversy
before entering on the subject of “Christ Jesus.”
We might say that the Historical Jesus of nineteenth century thought
originated under the influence of the intellectual current that takes
a merely external view of spiritual life and judges it by means of
external documents: that there is evidence of His having lived at the
beginning of our era in Palestine, that He was crucified and, according
to the faithful, rose again. It is quite in line with the character and
nature of the present era, now approaching its termination, that in the
case of theological research, faith limited itself to what it was thought
could be confirmed by historical documents in the same way as any ordinary
event is confirmed by independent writings. It may be said that all the
historical written traditions elsewhere than in the New Testament could,
in the opinion of one of the most important judges, be “easily
contained in a quarto page.” All the other references to the
historical Jesus in any documents whatever, such for example as in
Josephus or Tacitus, may be put out of court, for they can never be
used from the standpoint of that historical science which holds good
to-day. Beyond these there are only the Gospels and the Pauline Epistles.
How did the historical research of the nineteenth century examine the
Gospels? Regarded purely externally how do they appear? If taken like
other records, such as those of military engagements and so forth, they
seem to be very contradictory documents of the physical plane, the
fourfold presentation of which cannot be brought into harmony. In face
of what we call historical criticism these records fall to pieces. For
it must be allowed that everything which the earnest and diligent
research of the nineteenth century collected out of the Gospels
themselves, in order to gain a true picture of Jesus of Nazareth, has
crumbled away through the presentation of the kind of research brought
forward by Professor Drews. As to all that can be said against the
Gospels as facts of history, it is evident that nothing can come to
light about the Person of Jesus of Nazareth if we apply the methods
whereby accurate science and strict criticism ratify other historical
facts. We can only be considered very dilettante scientists if we do
not make this concession to the science of the day.
Is it not the case that those who in the nineteenth century presented
the teaching of Jesus of Nazareth, and wanted to arrive at an historical
portrait of Him, had an entirely false conception of the Gospels? Were
the Gospels really intended to be historical records in the sense
understood in that century?
Whatever was to be said on this subject I endeavoured to state many
years ago in my work,
Christianity as Mystical Fact,
and our present question, as to what was the real object of the Gospels,
was intended to receive its answer not merely through the contents of
that book but through the tide itself. For the title was not ‘The
Mysticism of Christianity,’ nor ‘The Mystical Contents of
Christianity:’ its object was rather to show that Christianity in
its origin and its whole being is not an external fact but a Fact of
the Spiritual world, and one that can only be comprehended by an insight
into a realm lying behind the world of sense and behind what can be
corroborated by historical records. It was shown that the forces and
causes which brought about the Event of Palestine were not to be found
in that region wherein external historical events take place, and thus
that possibly not only may Christianity have a mystical content but that
Mysticism — the actual gazing into the spiritual — is necessary
to disentangle the threads that were woven behind the Event in Palestine
and made it possible.
In order to realize what Christianity is, and what it can and must be
in the soul of man to-day if he is to understand it aright, let us see
how deeply grounded in the spiritual facts of human development were
the words of St. Augustine: “That which we now call the Christian
Religion already existed among the ancients and was never absent from
the beginning of the human race up to the time when Christ appeared in
the flesh, from which time forward the true religion which was already
there received the name of the Christian Religion.” Thus does a
standard authority point to the fact that it was not something new which
came into humanity with the events of Palestine, but that in a certain
sense a transformation had taken place in that which from time immemorial
the souls of men had sought and striven for as knowledge. Something was
given to humanity which had always been in existence, though hitherto
along other lines than the Christian. If we wish to test the other way
in which the preceding ages could come to the truths and wisdom of
Christianity, we are referred by the historical development of humanity
to the Mysteries of Antiquity or the Ancient Mysteries. What is meant
by these expressions is little understood to-day, but it will become
clearer the more men grasp the conception of the cosmos as presented
by Spiritual Science.
Not merely upon the external religions of the people of antiquity must
attention be focused, but upon what was practised in pre-Christian times
in those mystic abodes designated by the name of the Mysteries. In the book
Occult Science
is to be found an explanation from the aspect of Spiritual Science, and
there are also numbers of secular writers who have declared publicly
what was the secret of mankind in antiquity. We read that only a few
were admitted to the schools which were designated “The Mysteries,”
and that these schools were the homes of the cults. Also there was a
small circle of men admitted to the Mysteries by the priestly sages,
and for them this meant a kind of retirement from the outer world:
they realized that if they were to reach what was to be attained they
must lead a different life than they had so far lived openly, and above
all that they must accustom themselves to another way of thinking.
These Mysteries existed all over the world, among the Greeks and Romans
and other peoples, as may be confirmed by referring to extensive
literature which still exists. The pupils admitted to the Mysteries
were taught something comparable with what is now called science or
knowledge, but they did not receive it in the same way, for by what
they experienced they became quite other beings. To them came the
conviction that in every man there lives, deeply hidden and slumbering
so that the ordinary consciousness knows it not, a higher man. As the
ordinary man looks through his eyes upon the world and with his
thought-power thinks over what he experiences, so can this other man
— at first unknown to external consciousness, but capable of
being awakened in the depths of his nature recognize another world
unattainable by external sight and thought. This was called “The
birth of the inner man.” The expression is still used, though in
these days it is dry and abstract in character and regarded lightly,
but when the disciple of the Mysteries applied it to himself it stood
for a tremendous event to be compared in some measure with being born
in the physical sense. As man in the physical world is born out of a
dark substratum (be it one of nature according to the materialistic
idea, or a spiritual sub-stratum in the view of Spiritual Science)
so, physically speaking, there was really born through the processes
of the Mysteries a higher man who previously had been as little
present as was the human being before birth or conception. The
disciple was a new-born being. The present view of knowledge, as
given everywhere in answer to a deeply philosophic question, is
exactly the opposite of that which formed the central point of the
whole idea and outlook of the Mysteries. It is now asked in the sense
of Kant and Schopenhauer, “Where lie the limits of knowledge?
What is it in the power of man to know?” We need only take up
a newspaper to meet the answer that here or there lie the limits and
that beyond them it is impossible to go. Certainly it was admitted in
the Mysteries that there were problems which man could not solve, but
it would never have been held in the sense of Kant or in Schopenhauer's
Theory of Cognition
that “Man cannot know” this or that! What would have been
appealed to was man's capability of development, to the powers lying
dormant within him which must be evoked so that he might rise to higher
capacities of knowledge. The question in those times resolved itself
into what was to be done in order to get beyond that which in normal
life is the boundary of knowledge; how to develop deeper powers in
human nature.
Something more is needed if we are to feel the whole magic charm of the
Mysteries that, like a breath, pervades the works of the exoteric
writers, Plato, Aristides, Plutarch and Cicero. Here we must be clear
that the kind of mental comprehension present in the forming of the
disciples of the Mysteries was quite different from that of the men of
to-day when they confront scientific truths. What we now call science
is open to anybody and everybody in any condition of receptivity
whatever. It is just here that we recognize the characteristic of
Truth, that it is independent of mood and feeling. For the pupil of
the Mysteries the most necessary thing was that, before he was brought
to the great Truths, he should go through something whereby his soul
was transformed in his feelings and impressions. What to-day appears
as a simple scientific truth would not have been put to him so that he
could grasp it externally with his understanding, but his natural
temperament would have been prepared beforehand so that he could draw
near with reverential awe to what could approach him. Consequently his
preparation was not one of learning; it was a gradual and radical
transformation and education of his soul. The question was how the
soul approached the great Truths and Wisdom and how it reacted to
them, and hence arose the conviction that through the Mysteries man
was bound up and united with the very foundations of the Cosmos and
with what flowed from the springs of all cosmic beginnings. Thus was
the disciple prepared for the experiencing of something which is
described by Aristides. He who, according to what is to be found in my
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment
has lived through what these disciples experienced can himself bear
witness. He knows that the words of Aristides correspond with the
truth when he writes, “I seemed to be approaching God, I seemed
to feel His Presence, and I was in a state between waking and
sleeping; my spirit was quite light — so light that no one who
was uninitiated could describe or understand it.” There was a
way, therefore, to the divine foundations of the Universe which was
neither Science nor one-sided Religion, but consisted in a thorough
preparation of the soul for the realization of the ideas about the
Evolution of the Universe so that it might draw near to God and those
spiritual foundations. As we take in the external air with our breath
and make it a part of our body, so did the disciple of the Mysteries
receive into his soul that which pulsates spiritually through the
Universe until he was united with it and so became a new man permeated
by the Divinity.
Now, however, Anthroposophy or Spiritual Science shows that what was
then possible was only an historical phenomenon in human evolution,
and when the question arises as to whether the Ancient Mysteries of
pre-Christian times are still possible in the same way it can only be
said that historical research verily proves that what has just been
described did really exist but that it exists no longer in the same
form. The pre-Christian method of Initiation is not now possible. A
man must indeed be short-sighted if he believes that the human soul is
the same in all epochs, or that the spiritual path of the olden times
holds good for the present. The path to the divine and primal sources
of the world has now become another, and intellectual historical
research shows that it did so in its very essence at the time ascribed
by tradition to the Events of Palestine. These Events made a deep
incision in the evolution of man. Something entered into human nature
in the post-Christian period which entirely differed from what was
there before. Such a method of thinking as is possible nowadays —
the method of drawing nearer to the Universe through scientific
thought — did not exist in pre-Christian ages. The Mysteries did
not conduct man in the manner described to the very highest treasures
of Wisdom in order that he might do something in secret, or acquire
something special for himself as a member of a small circle, but
because our modern way of combining thoughts through logic was not
possible at that time. A glance at the history of humanity will show
that in the course of two centuries, during the time of the Greek
philosophers, the present mode of thinking was gradually prepared, and
that only now has it reached the point of embracing external nature so
wonderfully. Thus the entire form our consciousness takes and the way
we create our conceptions of the Universe differ entirely from
pre-Christian times. For the moment we are only concerned with this
fact as showing that human nature has changed. A careful review of
human evolution makes it clear that the entire consciousness has
altered in the course of evolution (the results arising from research
are to be found in my
Occult Science.
The men of old did not regard things and think about them as we do
with our senses and understanding; they had a kind of clairvoyance,
but this was of a dim and dreamlike nature (not such as is described
in my
The Way of Initiation).
Herein lies the import of evolution, that an old clairvoyance which in
primitive times was spread over all humanity gave way to that form of
thought which we possess to-day. The ordinary inhabitants of every
country had this kind of clairvoyant power, and a path leading from
that to higher stages was provided in the Mysteries. Thereby
development was given to the normal soul-faculties of man.
Observation of the world by what we call reasoning and logic having
displaced the old clairvoyance, the latter is no longer a natural
faculty, but it lasted right through the historical period and reached
its culmination in the Greco-Roman era during which the Appearance of
Christ occurred. At that point of time collective humanity everywhere
had come so far in its evolution that the old clairvoyance had passed
away and the old Mysteries were no longer possible. What then took the
place of the old Mysteries and what did man acquire through the
Mysteries?
These were of two kinds: the one proceeded from that centre of
civilization which was afterwards occupied by the ancient Persians,
and the other was to be met with in its purest form in Egypt and
Greece. They were entirely different throughout those times. It was
the endeavour of all the Mysteries to produce in man an extension of
his soul-powers, but this was achieved in a different way in Greece
and Egypt, than in Persia. In the two former, which agreed
essentially, the object was to effect in the disciples a
transformation of their soul-powers. This transformation took place
under a certain supposition which must be understood before anything
else. It was that in the depths of the soul there slumbers another, a
divine man; that from the same sources whence the rock forms into
crystal and the plants break forth in the Spring the hidden man
originated. Plants, however, had already utilized all that was
contained within them, whereas man, in so far as he had understood
himself and worked with his own powers, had remained an imperfect
being, and that which was within him had only come to the fore after
much endeavour. Appeal, therefore, in the Egyptian and Greek Mysteries
was made to a spiritual, a divine inner man, and when this was
referred to, allusion was made also to the powers within the Earth.
For according to the views held the Earth was not regarded as the
lifeless cosmic body of modern astronomy, but as a spiritual planetary
being. In Egypt reference was made to the wonderful spirit-forces and
nature-forces, called by the names of Isis and Osiris, when it was
desired to contemplate the origin and source of what could be
experienced as manifestation in the inner man. In Greece this primal
source was referred to under the name of Dionysos. As a consequence of
this, profane writers asserted that the nature and being of things
were the objects sought for, and in the Greek Mysteries they called
what was found of the forces of human nature the “sub-earthly”
portion of man, not the “super-earthly.” The Nature of the
great “Daemons” was spoken of, and under this tide was
represented all that worked on the Earth of the nature of spiritual
forces. The nature of these daemons (in a good sense) was sought
for through that which man was to bring forth from himself.
Then the disciple had to go through all the feelings and
perceptions that were possible for him in the course of
evolution. He had to experience what was meant by “going down
into the depths of his soul;” to learn that a fundamental feeling
so dominated all soul-being that in ordinary life no conception of it
could be formed, and that that feeling was a deep egoism — the
almost unconquerable selfishness lying within the inner recesses of a
human being. By means of struggling against and conquering all
selfishness and egoism the disciple had to go through something for
which we have to-day only an abstract expression, i.e., the feeling of
all inclusive love and sympathy for men and beings. Sympathy, in so
far as the human soul was capable of it, was to take the place of
selfishness. It was clearly understood that if the disciple evoked
this sympathy, which belonged in the first place to the hidden forces
of the world of feeling, it could draw out from the depths of his soul
the divine powers slumbering therein. It was held moreover that as he
looked out upon the world with his ordinary understanding he must soon
become aware of his powerlessness as a man with reference to the
Cosmos, and that the further he projected his conceptions and ideas
the stronger this feeling grew until in the end he was led to doubt
what indeed could be called knowledge, i.e., Gnosis. Arrived at that
point he must then overcome this feeling of emptiness in his soul
whenever he desired to encompass the Cosmos with his ideas. This
consciousness of a void was accompanied by fear and anxiety, and
consequently the Greek disciple of Mysticism first filled himself with
a dread of the unknown and then by coupling this with sympathy drew
forth the divine powers lying within him. So did he learn to transform
fear into awe and reverence, and to realize how the highest kind of
awe and reverential devotion for all the phenomena of the Universe was
able to penetrate every substance and conception that lay beyond the
scope of ordinary knowledge.
Thus the Greek Mysteries, as also those of Isis and Osiris in the
Egyptian Mysteries, worked outwards from the inmost nature of man and
sought to lead him into the spiritual worlds. It was a living
apprehension of the “God in Man.” A real acquaintance was
formed between man and God, and immortality ranked not as mere
abstract theory and philosophy but as something known, something as
firmly grounded as the knowledge of external colours, and this was
experienced as an intimate connection with external things. With no
less certainty was this experienced also in the Persian or Mithraic
Mysteries. Whereas man was led in the Greek and Egyptian Mysteries
through the unfettering of his soul-powers, he was confronted at once
with the Universe itself in the Mithraic Mysteries; not only did the
Universe work upon him through the great and mighty Nature which is
overlooked by those who regard the world in its external aspect, but
by gaining a deep intimacy with Nature, he could gaze upon phenomena
that lay outside the limits of the human understanding. By the methods
then used the most terrible and magnificent powers were brought before
the pupil from Universal Space. Whereas the Greek disciple was
affected by a deep feeling of reverence, to the Mithraic disciple
alone was given the knowledge of the terrible and awe-inspiring powers
in Nature so that he felt himself infinitesimally small in comparison.
So powerful was this impression, consequent upon his alienation from
the primal source of being, that he felt that in its vastness the
Universe could at any moment overwhelm and annihilate him. The first
impulse came from his being led through a comprehensive astronomy and
science away from external things to the greatness of the phenomena of
the Universe, and what he further developed in the Mysteries was then
more a consequence of the Truth in all its ramifications when Nature
in her details (science in the old sense of the word) worked upon his
soul. The Greek disciple became fearless through the setting free of
his powers. The Mithraic disciple was brought so far that he drank in
the greatness of Cosmic Thought, and thereby his soul also became
strong and courageous. A knowledge of the dignity and value of a human
being was gained, and with it a feeling for truth and fidelity; the
disciple learned to recognize that man must always hold himself under
control during his earthly existence.
Such were the benefits obtained especially through the Mithraic
Mysteries, and whereas the Greek and Egyptian Mysteries are to be
found spread over Greece and Egypt, the Mithraic are diffused from
Persia as far as the Caspian Sea, along the Danube into Germany, and
even to the South of France, to Spain and to England. Europe was
indeed permeated by the Mithraic Mysteries, and everywhere it was seen
clearly that something streamed into man from the Universe if only he
could learn to understand it, and this that could be received was
Mithra, the God that streams through the world in all worlds. It was
through this power of action that courage was aroused: the warriors,
the Roman legionaries, were filled with the Mithraic service or cult
of Mithra. Both leaders and men were initiated into the Mysteries.
Thus was God sought on the one hand by the freeing of the individual
soul-powers, and it was quite evident that through this process
something streamed out from the depths of the soul. On the other hand,
however, it was equally evident that when man sought God by devoting
himself to the great cosmic phenomena, something streamed into his
soul as the essence, the finest life-sap contained in the world. There
were found the primordial forces of the Universe. God came as it were
into human souls through this development which was attained in the
Mystery schools. A veritable process is to be seen here: each soul
became a door for the entrance of the Godhead into human evolution on
earth. Few were able to undergo such a development, and a special
preparation for it was necessary. The teaching consisted in showing
that what was hidden in external nature (Mithra) as also in the inner
man of the Greek, poured through the world as a stream of divine
consecration.
The evolution of man has now changed, and the entire method of
Initiation is different. Here we touch upon what must be called the
Mystical Fact of the Christ Event. To penetrate deeply into history is
to see that the early Christians were more or less dimly conscious
that the same force which entered the soul only through devotion to
the Mysteries, to the Divine Principle of the Universe (streaming
forth from Cosmos as the Mithra or out of the depths of the soul as
the Dionysos), was as the deed of a unique Cosmic Divinity in one
single Fact in the evolution of the Earth. That which was sought for
beyond this, and was not to be found except by those who alienated
themselves from outer life in the Mysteries, was at a given time
incorporated into the Earth by the Divinity. No human effort was
needed, for the Divinity once and for all permeated the Being of the
Earth, and henceforth even those who had lost the power to penetrate
to the Divine Principle of the Cosmos could meet Him in another way.
The God Who could now penetrate into the human soul (neither as Mithra
from without nor Dionysos from within) was Himself a fusion of Mithra
and Dionysos, and also was related to human nature in its depths. He
was embraced and encompassed by the Name of CHRIST. Mithra and
Dionysos were united in the Being Who entered humanity in the Event of
Palestine, and Christianity was the confluence of both Cults. The
Hebrews, who were chosen that they might provide the necessary body
through which this Event might take place, had become acquainted with
the Mithraic and Dionysian Cults, but they remained far removed from
either. The Greek thought of himself as a weak man who must develop
deeper powers before he could penetrate into the depths of his soul,
while the follower of Mithra felt that by letting the whole
surrounding sphere of the air work upon him he might become united
with the divine qualities of the Universe. The Hebrew, on the other
hand, held that the deeper human nature, with all that was hidden
within it, was already there in the first Man, and the ancient Hebrews
called this Primal man Adam. According to old Hebraic ideas that which
man could seek, and which joined him with the divine, was present
originally in Adam, but in course of evolution the descendants of each
generation became further and further removed from the Source of
Existence. Being “subject to original sin,” as they put it,
meant that man had not remained as he was and had been ejected from
the sphere of the Divine; regarding himself as standing below Adam he
sought the reason in original sin. But though less than that which
lived in the depths of human nature, he could unite himself with the
deeper powers and thereby be raised again. This point of view, that
once man had stood higher and that through the qualities connected
with the blood-ties he had lost something, was an historical one. What
the adherent of the Mithraic Mysteries saw in humanity as One Whole
the Hebrew saw in his own nation and was conscious that its original
source had been lost. So that while among the Persians there was a
kind of training of the consciousness, there was among the ancient
Hebrews a consciousness of a historical development; Adam, by falling
into sin, had fallen from the heights where he once stood.
Consequently the Hebrews were the best prepared for the thought that
that which had happened at the initial point of evolution (and which
had brought about a deterioration in humanity) could only be raised
again through an historical Event, i.e., by something actually taking
place in the spiritual sub-strata of the Earth's being. The ancient
Hebrew who rightly understood evolution felt that the Mithra God,
equally with the God Who is evoked from the depths of the human soul,
could come down without man going through a development in the
Mysteries.
Thus in these people, and above all in the case of John the Baptist,
there arose a consciousness of the fact that the same which the
Mysteries had handed down in the form of Dionysos and Mithra was born
at one and the same time in One Man. Those of them who felt this in a
deeper sense held that even as through Adam the descent of man into
the world was brought about (all men having descended from one
forefather and inherited from him all the deeper forces that lead to
sin and error) so, through One Being Who descends from the spiritual
worlds as the union of Mithra and Dionysos, must the initial point be
formed to which men can look when they have to rise again. As in the
Mysteries human nature was developed through the setting free of the
deeper soul forces or through a view of the Cosmos, the Hebrews now
saw in the God Who came down into physical being Him on Whom the soul
must look and believe, for Whom it must develop the deepest love, and
Who as the Great Example could lead them back to their divine origin.
He who had the profoundest knowledge of this fact of Christianity was
Paul. The Apostle recognized that as men looked to Adam as their
physical progenitor they could, through the Christ Impulse, look to
the Christ as the Great Example, and so attain to what was striven for
in the Mysteries and must be born again if they were to know their own
original nature. The knowledge that was kept within the recesses of
the Temples, and could only be attained after ascetic training, was
set forth neither in mundane document nor as some external fact but as
having been accomplished as a mystical fact, the God Who pervaded the
world having actually appeared in one single Form. What the disciples
of the Mithraic Mysteries acquired through looking upon the Greatest
Model had now been attained through Christ. The courage, self control
and energy acquired by those disciples had also to be acquired by
those who could no longer be initiated in the old Mithraic sense;
through the Model of the historical Christ and the gazing upon Him the
impulse towards this fortitude was now to pour itself out upon the
soul. In the Mithraic Mysteries, as has been shown, the whole Universe
was in a certain sense born in the soul of the disciple, and the
courageous soul was fired with all the inner forces of initiative. In
the Baptism of John something was poured down from above of which
human nature could be the vehicle; when a man was permeated with the
thought that his nature was capable of assimilating the profoundest
harmony of the Universe, the view of the Baptism aroused within him
the understanding that Mithra could be born in human nature. Those,
therefore, who grasped the original meaning of Christianity,
acknowledged that the end of the Mysteries had come: the God Who
formerly had poured Himself into the Mysteries had now flowed directly
into the being of the Earth through the Personality Who stood at the
beginning of a new era (our present one).
The connection with the Greek or Dionysian Mysteries has now to be
considered. Through the fact that the human gaze was guided to Jesus
of Nazareth in Whom Mithra lived and Who then passed through death, an
indication was given that Mithra (the bestower of courage, self
control and energy) had Himself died with the death of Jesus. It was
further seen that because Mithra had so vanished that which man found
in his deepest nature, and had attained earlier through the Dionysian
Mysteries, had now become in Jesus of Nazareth the immortal conqueror
over death. Herein lies the true Christian meaning of the Resurrection
if it is grasped in its spiritually scientific sense. The Baptism by
John in [the] Jordan demonstrated that the old Mithra had entered into man,
that thereby human nature had won the victory over death, and that by
the example so created the soul could unite itself in the deepest love
in order to come to that which lived in its own depths. In the Risen
Christ was seen the fact that man, by living according to the event
that had taken place in history, could rise above the level of
ordinary humanity.
Thus in the centre of the history of the world was set an historical
event in the place of that which had been sought in the Mysteries
times without number. The great revelation that came to St. Paul was
that human nature had thereby become different, and this was concealed
within what is known as “The Event of Damascus.” Writing of
what he experienced before Damascus, the Apostle relates how he
learned to understand, not from external documents but through a
purely spiritual clairvoyant experience, that the moment when the
Incarnation itself should take place in an historical personage had
already passed. The existence of Christ as a real man could never be
experienced by Paul through an external fact, and what he could learn
in Palestine did not convince him that the Union of Mithra and
Dionysos had lived in Jesus of Nazareth. But when, before Damascus,
his spiritual sight was opened, it became clear that a God Who could
be called by the Name of Christ not only worked through the world as a
super-sensible Being but had actually come to earth and conquered
death. Henceforth he preached that what for the Initiates had
previously been a streaming substance was now to be found as
continuous historical fact. This lies at the basis of his words,
“If Christ be not risen then is our preaching vain, and your
faith is also vain.”
Such was the path by which Paul came to Jesus by the indirect way of
Christ, it being clear to him that something had taken place in
Palestine which previously could only be experienced in the Mysteries.
And this still applies to-day. Because Christ is the focus of all
human development and the highest example for the inmost powers of the
soul the bond established with Him must be of the most intimate kind.
To become a disciple it is required of a man that he set little value
upon his own life, and so it must be regarded as of small importance
to lay aside all documentary evidence and historical traditions in
order to come to Christ. Indeed there is cause for thankfulness that
the fact that there ever was an historical Christ Jesus cannot be
established, for no document could prove that He was the most
significant of all that has passed into humanity.
The connection between Christ and the ancient Mysteries is therefore
quite clear. The disciples of the latter had to go through what may be
called intimate soul experiences in order to come to God; their inner
feelings and sensations were more lively and intense than those of the
ordinary man, and so they became aware that they were set fast in a
lower nature which hindered them from arriving at the Sources of
Being. This lower nature was indeed a seducer leading them away from
the upward path, and that which so allured them had also become their
own lower nature, and herein lay the “Temptation” that came
to every disciple of the Mysteries. At the moment when God awoke
within them they became aware also of their lower or sensual natures.
It was as though some strange unknown being were urging them not to
follow the unsubstantial and airy heights of the spiritual world, but
to seize the coarse and material things that lay close at hand. Each
disciple had to pass through a time when everything spiritual seemed
unreal in comparison with the ordinary way of looking at things, and
all that was connected with the senses appeared alluring as against
the stress of spiritual effort. At another stage in mystic development
these lower forces were overcome, a higher outlook being attained with
the growth of invigorated powers of courage and so forth. All this
teaching was clothed in certain instructions that may be verified from
the writings of exoteric authors, as also in the methods of Initiation
given by Spiritual Science and set forth in
Occult Science.
There were various methods both in the Greek and the Mithraic
Mysteries. Finally the disciples experienced the
“at-one-ment” with Him Who was the Divine Man, but here the
methods were different and varied widely in the many countries where
Initiation existed.
In my
Christianity as Mystical Fact
the purpose is to show that in the Gospels nothing is to be met with
but a rebirth of old Initiation instructions. What took place
externally had already taken place similarly in the course of the
Mysteries, and therefore the Divine Being Who was in Jesus of Nazareth
after the descent of the Mithra Being had to experience the
“Temptation.” As the Tempter came on a small scale to the
pupil of the Mysteries so did he also confront the God become man. All
that was true in the Mysteries is to be found repeated in the Gospel
records which were new versions of the old inscriptions and
instructions given in the Initiations. The writers of the Gospels saw
that once that which hitherto had lain only in the Mysteries had been
enacted on the plane of Cosmic History, it was permissible to describe
it in the same words as those in which their directions for Initiation
were recorded. It is for this very reason that the Gospels were not
intended to be biographies of Him Who was the vehicle for the Christ.
This is just the mistake of all modern criticisms of the Gospels. At
the time they were written the sole object was to lead the human soul
to a real love for the Great Soul, the Source of the world's
existence. Strangely enough a clear consciousness of this prevailed
almost to the end of the eighteenth century. It is pointed out in
isolated writings of remarkable interest that through the Gospels the
soul can be so transformed as to find the Christ. Old Meister Eckhardt
writes, “Some people want to look at God with their eyes as they
look at a cow, and want to love God as they love a cow. They love God
as an outward possession and an inward comfort, but these people do
not love Him aright ... Simple folk imagine they ought to see God as
if He stood there and they here; it is not so; God and I are One in
recognition.” In another passage he writes, “A Master says,
‘God has become man, and thereby the whole human race is raised
in dignity. We may rejoice that Christ our Brother has through His own
power passed beyond the choir of angels, and sits at the right hand of
the Father.’ This Master has spoken rightly, but verily I do not
pay much attention to it. What help would it be to me if I had a
brother who was a rich man, and I was at the same time a poor one? How
would it help me if I had a brother who was a wise man, and I myself a
fool? ... The heavenly Father begat His only Son in Himself and in me.
Why in Himself and in me? I am one with Him, and it is not possible
for Him to exclude me. In the same work the Holy Ghost received His
Being, and is from me as from God. Why? I am in God, and if the Holy
Ghost does not receive His Being from me neither does he receive it
from God. I am in no way excluded.”
That is the point: that man through mystic development, without
external mysteries but through the simple evolution of the soul, will
in later times be able to experience that which was once experienced
in the Mysteries. This, however, will only be possible because the
Christ Event took place. Even if there were no Gospels, no records and
no traditions, he who experiences the Christ in himself along with the
being filled with Christ has the certainty, as St. Paul had it, that
at the beginning of our era Christ was incarnated in a physical body.
An historical biography of Jesus of Nazareth can never be gathered out
of the Gospels, but through the right unfolding of his soul powers man
can and must raise himself up to the Christ, and through the Christ to
Jesus. Thus only can be understood what was the aim of the Gospels and
what was lacking in the whole of the nineteenth century researches on
the subject of Jesus. The picture of the Christ was allowed to recede
into the background in order to present a tangible Jesus quite
externally from the historical records. The Gospels were
misunderstood, and consequently the methods of investigation crumbled
to pieces.
Herewith the way is at the same time made clear to Spiritual Science.
Its object is to show what are the deeper powers that have lain in man
since the coming of Christ, and which he can develop. Not in the
depths of externally appointed Mysteries, but in the stillness of his
room, man can attain by devoting himself to what happened in Palestine
that which was attained by the disciples of the Mysteries. By
experiencing the Christ within himself he gains in courage and energy
and in a consciousness of his dignity as man, and comes to the
knowledge of how he has to take his place in humanity in the right
sense. And at the same time he experiences, as could the adherent of
the Greek Mysteries, the Universal Love which lives in Christ and
embraces all external creatures. He learns never to be afraid or to
despair in face of the world, and in full freedom and at the same time
humility is sensible of devotion to the secrets of the Universe.
All this comes to the man who permeates himself with the Mystical Fact
of Christianity, the successor of the old Mysteries. Simply through a
cognitional development of these fundamental thoughts the Historical
Jesus becomes a fact for those who have a deep knowledge of Christ. In
Western philosophy it was said that without eyes none could see colour
nor hear without ears; the Universe would be without light and sound.
True as this is with regard to seeing and hearing, it is equally true
that without light no eye could have come into existence nor could man
have had any perceptions connected with it. As Goethe says, “If
the eye were not born of like nature to the sun it could never look
upon the sun,” and “The eye is a creation of the
light.”
The Mystical Christ, spoken of by those whose spiritual sight is
opened and who behold Him as Paul did, was not always in man. In
pre-Christian times He was unattainable in any development through the
Mysteries in the way in which He was to be found after the Mystery of
Golgotha. That there might be an inner Christ and that the higher man
could be born an historical Christ was needed, the Incarnation of the
Christ in the Jesus. As the eye can originate only through the effect
of light, so in order that there could be a Mystical Christ the
historical Christ must have been there. Had there been no documents
containing a biography of Jesus of Nazareth this could still be said
and felt, for Jesus is not to be recognized through external writings.
This fact was long known in the evolution of the West and will again
be known. Spiritual Science will so formulate that it can draw
together from out its various spheres what will lead to a real
understanding of the Christ, and thereby to an understanding of Jesus.
It has come about that Jesus has been actually alienated from the
world and the methods of the Jesus investigations have melted away,
but the deepening of ourselves in the Christ Being (in the Christ as a
Being) will lead to a recognition of the greatness of Jesus of
Nazareth.
This path, by which the Christ is first recognized through inward soul
experience, leads through what really has developed out of the soul to
the understanding of the Mystical Fact of Christianity, and of the
gradual development of humanity, as being such that the Christ Event
must take place within it as the most significant point in the
evolution of man. The way leads through the Christ to Jesus. The
Christ Idea bears fruitful seed that will bring humanity not merely to
the apprehension of a general pantheistic Cosmic Spirit, but the
individual man to the understanding of his own history; as he feels
his Earth to be bound up with all cosmic existence so will he
recognize that his past is bound up with a super-sensible and
super-historical Event. This Event is that the Christ Being stands as
a super-sensible Mystical Fact at the middle point of human evolution,
and that so will He be recognized by the humanity of the future apart
from all external historical research and documents. Christ will
remain the strong cornerstone of mankind's evolution. Man will bring
the forces out of himself to renew his own history, and therewith also
the history of the evolution of the world.
|
Last Modified: 07-Oct-2024
|
The Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
|