by Rudolf Steiner
Lecture
I Oslo, Norway October 1, 1913
The
theme I intend to speak about during these [next] 4
days seems to me to be especially important in view of the
times and conditions in which we live. I would like to
emphasize from the start that it is not due to a wish for
sensationalism or similar things that the theme is The
Fifth Gospel. For I hope to show that in fact, given our
present circumstances, it is especially important, in the
sense that is meant, that no other name is more appropriate
than “The Fifth Gospel”. This Fifth Gospel, as
you will hear it, does not yet exist in a recorded
document, although in the future of humanity it will
certainly exist in a specific record. But in a certain
sense this Fifth Gospel is as old as the other four
Gospels.
In order
that I may speak about this Fifth Gospel, however, an
introduction is necessary in order to clarify certain
important points for a complete understanding of what we
will now call the Fifth Gospel. And I want to start by
saying that the time is not too far distant in which in the
lowest school levels, in the most primitive instruction,
the content of the subject usually called History will be
taught in a quite different way than is the case today.
Namely the concept of Christ will play a different and a
much more important role in the future of historical
considerations – even in the most elementary
historical considerations — than has been the case
until now. I realize that in saying this I am describing an
enormous paradox. But let's just consider that we can
go back to a not so far distant time when countless hearts
directed their feelings to Christ in a much more intensive
way than is the case today by the most learned faithful in
western countries. That was the case to a huge extent in
the past.
If we study
today's books and observe what interests contemporary
people, where their hearts are, we have the impression that
the enthusiasm, the emotion and feelings for the Christ
idea is in abatement, especially where claims to
contemporary learning are involved. Nevertheless, as I have
already emphasized, the Christ idea will play a much more
important role in future historical considerations than has
been the case until now. Does this seem to be a
contradiction?
Let's
then approach the other side of these thoughts. I have
often spoken here in this city about the meaning of the
Christ idea. And in books and lecture cycles we find
diverse elaborations from spiritual science about the
secrets of the Christ Being and the Christ concept. Each
must come to the conclusion that when he absorbs what is
contained in our books and lecture cycles a large amount of
knowledge is required for a full understanding of the
Christ Being; that one must depend on the profoundest
concepts and ideas for a full understanding of what Christ
is and what the impulse is which has traversed the
centuries as the Christ-Impulse. One could even come to the
conclusion – were it not otherwise contradicted
– that it is necessary to know all of Theosophy or
Anthroposophy in order to work one's way up to a
correct concept of Christ.
If we put
that aside though, and look at spiritual development during
the past centuries, we see from century to century a
detailed, well-grounded science with the goal of
understanding Christ and his appearance on earth. For
centuries men have utilized their highest, most meaningful
ideas in order to understand Christ. Here also it would
seem that only the most significant intellectual
activity would be sufficient to understand Christ. Has it
been the case though? A very simple consideration can prove
that it has not.
Let us place
on a spiritual balance all that has contributed until now
to the understanding of Christ by scholarship, science,
also Anthroposophy. Let us place all that on one scale of
the spiritual balance and let us place on the other scale
in our thoughts all the deep feeling, all the impulses in
people's souls which have aimed at what we call
Christ, and we will find that all the science, all the
scholarship, even all the Anthroposophy which we can muster
to explain Christ, surprisingly springs up, and all the
deep feelings and impulses which have directed people to
the Christ Being push the other scale far down. It is no
exaggeration to say that a tremendous impact has come from
Christ and that the knowledge of Christ has contributed
least to this impact.
It would
have gone most badly for Christianity if people had to
depend on all the learned disputes of the Middle Ages, the
Scholastics, the Church fathers; or if people were only to
depend on what we are able to muster through Anthroposophy
for an understanding of the Christ idea. If that were all,
it would be very little indeed. I don't think that
anyone who has objectively followed the path of
Christianity through the centuries could seriously contest
these thoughts.
Let us
direct our attention to the times when Christianity did not
yet exist. I need only remind you of what most of you are
familiar with. I need only remind you of the Greek
tragedies in ancient Greece, especially in their older
forms, when they presented the battling gods, or the men in
whose souls the battling gods acted; also how the divine
forces were directly visible on the stage. I need only to
indicate how Homer thoroughly weaved his significant poetry
with the working of the spirit; I have only to point to the
great figures of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle. With these
names a spiritual life of the highest order appears before
our souls. If we put all else aside and look only at the
great figure of Aristotle, who lived centuries before the
founding of Christianity, we realize that in a certain
sense no increase, no advancement has taken place up to our
time. Aristotle's thinking, his scholarliness is so
awesome that it is possible to say that he reached a peak
in human thinking which has not been improved upon until
now.
And now for
a moment we would like to consider a curious hypothesis,
one which is necessary for the following days. Let us
imagine that there are no Gospels from which we can learn
something about Christ. We want to imagine that the
documents known as the New Testament do not exist, that
there are no Gospels. We will ignore what has been said
about the founding of Christianity and will only consider
the facts about Christianity's historical process in
order to see what occurred during the following centuries.
This means that without the Gospels, the Acts of the
Apostles, the Pauline Letters and so forth, we only want to
consider what has really happened. This is of course only a
hypothesis. What has happened?
If we look
first at Southern Europe, we find a profound spiritual
development at a certain point in time, as we have just
seen in its representative Aristotle – a highly
developed spiritual life, which in the subsequent centuries
went through a special schooling. Yes, at the time
Christianity began to make its way through the world there
were many people educated in the Greek way, people who had
absorbed Greek culture. Even including a certain unusual
man who was an energetic opponent of Christianity, Celsus, and who
later persecuted the Christians. We find in the Italian
sub-continent up to the second, third Christian century,
highly educated men who adopted the profound ideas which we
find in Plato, whose brilliance really appears as a
continuation of Aristotle's brilliance –
refined, strong figures with Greek culture – Romans
with Greek culture, which added Greek cultural delicacy to
Roman aggressiveness.
The
Christian impulse pushed itself into this world. At that
time the representatives of the Christian impulse were
truly uneducated people in respect to intellectuality, to
knowledge of the world, compared to the many Greek-Roman
educated people. People without education pushed into the
middle of a world of mature intellectuality. And now we can
observe a strange scene: those simple, primitive natures
who were the bearers of early Christianity were able to
propagate it in a relatively short time in Southern Europe.
And when we approach these simple, primitive souls who at
that time spread Christianity, we may say: Those primitive
natures understood the Being of Christ. (We don't
have to consider the great cosmic Christ thoughts, but only
much simpler Christ thoughts.) The bearers of the Christ
impulse who entered into the arena of highly developed
Greek culture didn't understand it at all. They had
nothing to bring to the market of Greek-Roman life except
their personal inwardness, which they had developed as
their personal relationship to their beloved Christ; for
they loved as a member of a beloved family just through
this relationship. Those who brought Christianity to Greece
and Rome were not educated theosophists; they were
unlettered. The educated theosophists of that time, the
Gnostics, had elevated ideas about Christ, but they could
only give what we would have to place on the rising scale
of the weighing balance. If it had depended on the
Gnostics, Christianity would surely not have made its way
through the world. It was no particularly educated
intellectuality which came from the east and in a
relatively short time brought ancient Greece and Rome to
their knees. That's one side of the story.
From the
other side we see intellectually superior people such as
Celsus, Christianity's enemy, and even the
philosopher on the throne, Marcus
Aurelius, who used every contrary argument imaginable.
Look at the immensely learned Neo-Platonists, who
formulated ideas compared to which contemporary philosophy
is child's play, and which surpasses our current
ideas in profundity and horizon. And look at how these
highly cultured people argued against Christianity, how
they argued from the standpoint of Greek philosophy, and we
have the impression that none of them understood the
Christ-impulse. We see that Christianity was spread by
bearers who understood nothing of the essence of
Christianity; it was fought against by a high culture which
could not understand what the Christ-impulse meant. It is
noteworthy that Christianity entered the world in such a
way that neither its adherents not its enemies understood
its underlying spirit. Nevertheless those people had the
strength in their souls to spread the Christ-impulse
triumphantly throughout the world.
And such as
Tertullian,
who represented Christianity with a certain greatness. We
see in him a Roman who was in fact, when we look at his
language, almost a re-creator of the Roman language, who
with an unerring accuracy enlivened words to the extent
that we recognize him as an important personality. When we
ask ourselves, however, about Tertullian's ideas,
it's something else. We find that he showed very
little intellectuality or high culture. Even
Christianity's defenders didn't accomplish
much. Nevertheless, such as Tertullian were effective,
effective as personalities, for which reason educated
Greeks could not really do much. He was awe-inspiringly
effective through something. But what? That is the
important thing. We feel that this is really all important.
Through what did the bearers of the Christ-impulse work
when they themselves didn't understand much about
what the Christ-impulse is? Through what did the Christian
Church Fathers work, even Origenes, who is
considered unskillful. What is it that even Greek-Roman
culture could not understand about the essence of the
Christ-impulse? What is it all about?
But
let's go farther. The phenomenon becomes more
pronounced as we consider subsequent history. We see how
over the centuries Christianity spread within Europe to
peoples who, like the Germanic, derived from completely
different religious traditions and who were united as a
people, or at least seem to be united in their religious
traditions. Nevertheless they accepted the Christ-impulse
with all their strength, as though it were their own life.
And when we consider the most effective messengers of faith
in the Germanic peoples – were they the scholastic
theologically educated ones? By no means! They were
relatively primitive souls who went about among the people
and in a primitive way, using ordinary ideas, speaking to
the people, and captured their hearts completely. They knew
how to use words in such a way that they touched the
deepest heart strings of their listeners. Simple people
went out to all regions, and it was they who worked most
effectively.
So we see
the spread of Christianity over the centuries. But then we
wonder at how this same Christianity is the grounds for so
much significant scholarship, science and philosophy. We
don't underestimate this philosophy, but today we
want to direct our attention to an extraordinary phenomenon
— that up until the Middle Ages Christianity spread
among peoples who had quite other ideas in their minds,
until it belonged to their souls. And in the not too
distant future still other things will be emphasized about
the spread of Christianity. When we consider the effect of
the Christian impulse, it is easy to understand that in a
certain time enthusiasm arose through the spreading of
Christianity. But when we come to modern times this
enthusiasm seems to be muted.
Let us
consider Copernicus
and natural science up to the nineteenth century. It could
seem that this natural science, which since Copernicus has
penetrated western culture, was opposed to Christianity.
Certain facts can substantiate this. The Catholic Church,
for example, placed Copernicus on the so-called Index
until the twenties of the nineteenth century. But that
didn't change the fact that Copernicus had been a
canon. And when the Catholic Church burned Giordano
Bruno at the stake, it didn't change the fact
that he was a Dominican. Both of them came to their ideas
through Christianity. They acted from the Christian
impulse. Those who held to the Catholic Church and thought
that these things weren't the fruits of Christianity,
understood wrong. It only proves that the Catholic Church
did not understand the fruits of Christianity.
Whoever
looks more deeply will recognize that everything the
peoples did, also in later centuries, is a result of
Christianity; that through Christianity humanity looked up
from the earth to the vastness of the heavens, as a result
of the Copernican Laws. That was only possible within
Christian culture and the Christian impulse. And he who
does not consider only the surface, but delves into the
profundities of spiritual life, will find something which
seems paradoxical, but is nevertheless true. For such a
deeper consideration, it would seem impossible that a
Haeckel
could appear in all his animosity towards Christianity
without his having appeared from out of Christianity. Ernst
Haeckel is not even possible without the prerequisite of
Christian culture. And modern natural scientific
development, despite being so occupied with animosity
towards Christianity, is a child of Christianity, a direct
continuation of the Christian impulse.
Once the
teething problems of natural science have been overcome,
humanity will realize what it means that the starting point
of modern natural science, logically followed, leads
directly to spiritual science, that there is a logical path
from Haeckel to spiritual science. When that is understood,
it will be accepted that Haeckel has a Christian mentality,
even though he doesn't realize it. Not only what is
called and has been called Christian has been brought forth
by the Christian impulse, but also what has agitated
against Christianity has been brought forth from the
Christian impulse. One must not only investigate things
according to their concepts, but also according to their
reality in order to arrive at this knowledge.
Darwin's Theory of Evolution leads directly to the
teaching of repeated earth lives, as you can read in my
book “Reincarnation and Karma”.
In order to
stand on solid ground in relation to these things, one must
in a certain sense observe the force of the Christian
impulse impartially. Whoever understands Darwinism and
Haeckelism and is familiar with what Haeckel does not know
(Darwin knew quite a bit), knows that the Darwinist
movement is only possible as a Christian movement.
Understanding that, one comes quite logically to the
reincarnation idea. And if he has the help of a certain
clairvoyant power, he will arrive on this path quite
logically to the spiritual origin of the human race. It is
of course a detour, but when clairvoyance is added, it is a
true path from Haeckelism to the spiritual origin of the
earth.
But it is
also possible that one takes Darwinism as it is presented
today, but without being conversant with the principles of
life in Darwinism itself; in other words, if you accept
Darwinism as an impulse and don't realize the
profound understanding of Christianity which lies in
Darwinism, something very peculiar happens. What can happen
is that you have as little understanding of Christianity as
you have of Darwinism. One may then be abandoned by the
good spirit of Christianity as well as by the good spirit
of Darwinism. If one is imbued with the good spirit of
Darwinism, however, then one can be ever so materialistic,
and still be led back to a point in the history of the
earth where it becomes clear that man never evolved from
lower animal forms, that he must have had a spiritual
origin. One goes back to a point in time and sees man as a
spiritual being hovering over the earth. A logical
Darwinism will lead to that.
If on the
other hand one is abandoned by the good spirit and goes
back in time as a believer in reincarnation, one can think
that he once lived as an ape during an incarnation. If one
can believe that, it means that he has been abandoned by
the good spirits of both Darwinism and Christianity and
understands nothing of either. For logical Darwinism could
never lead one to believe that. This means that the
reincarnation idea must be quite openly transmitted to this
materialistic culture. It is certainly possible to divest
Darwinism of its Christianity. If not, however, one will
find that the Darwinist impulses were born of Christianity,
and that the Christian impulses also work where they are
denied.
So we have
not only the phenomenon that Christianity spread during the
first centuries irrespective of scholarship and the
knowledge of its followers and believers; that it spread
during the Middle Ages with very little help from the
scholastics; then we have the paradoxical phenomenon that
Christianity appeared as a kind of counterpart in
Darwinism. And the greatness of the idea in Darwinism
derives its force from Christian impulses. The Christian
impulses which underlie it will lead this science away from
materialism.
There is
something curious about the Christian impulses!
Intellectuality, knowledge, learning appear not to have
been present during the spreading of these impulses. One
could say that Christianity spread regardless of what
people think for or against it, so much so that it seems to
have found its antithesis in modern materialism. What is it
then which spreads? Not Christian ideas, not the science of
Christianity. One could still say that the moral feelings
which are planted through Christianity are spread. One has
only to observe the rule of morality in these times and one
will find much justification for the anger of the
representatives of Christianity against real or alleged
enemies of Christianity. Also the morals which could reign
in the souls of the less educated do not impress us much
when we observe to what extent they are Christian. What is
it then which spreads? What is so curious? What is it which
marches through the world like a victorious procession?
What worked in the people who brought Christianity to the
Germanic, to the foreign world? What works in modern
natural science, where the teaching is still veiled? What
works in all those souls, if it isn't intellectual,
not even moral impulses? What is it? It is Christ himself,
who goes from heart to heart, soul to soul, who traverses
the world over the centuries, whether or not people
understand him!
We are
obliged to put aside our ideas and our science and point to
the reality, in order to show how mysteriously Christ
himself changes into many thousands of impulses, immersing
in thousands and thousands of souls and suffusing humanity.
It is Christ himself who strode in the simple men through
the Greek and Italian world; it is Christ himself who stood
at the side of the later teachers who brought Christianity
to the Germanic peoples. It is He, the real, true Christ,
who goes from place to place, from soul to soul, regardless
of what the people think of Christ, and immerses in their
souls. I would like to use a trivial comparison. How many
people are there who know nothing about the composition of
food, yet eat according to all the rules of the art. They
would starve if they had to know about nutrients before
they could eat. Eating has nothing to do with the knowledge
of foodstuffs. The spread of Christianity over the earth
had nothing to do with the knowledge brought to bear on it.
That is what is curious. This is a mystery, which can only
be clarified if the answer is given to the question: How
does Christ work in human minds and feelings? And if
spiritual science, clairvoyant observation, poses this
question, it will be guided to an event which in reality
can only be revealed through clairvoyant observation, which
is in complete agreement with all I have said today.
Firstly, the time is over in which Christ worked as I have
characterized, and the time has come when people must
understand and recognize him.
Therefore it
is necessary to answer the question: Why during the time
which preceded ours, could the Christ-impulse spread
without an understanding of it? And the event to which
clairvoyant consciousness points is the so-called Pentecost
event, the sending out of the Holy Spirit. Therefore the
clairvoyant gaze, inspired by the true Christ-Impulse in an
anthroposophical sense, is directed to the Pentecost event,
the sending out of the Holy Spirit.
What
occurred at that moment in the evolution of the world on
earth, which is presented as the Holy Spirit descending
upon the apostles, which at first seems quite
unintelligible to us? When one views this clairvoyantly,
investigates [it], one arrives at a spiritual scientific answer
as to what is meant with: Simple people, which the apostles
were, suddenly began to speak in various tongues about what
they had to say from the depths of spiritual life, and
which was not expected of them. Yes, then Christianity, the
Christian impulses, began to spread independently of the
people's understanding of them.
The stream
which has been described flowed out from the Pentecost
event. What was then the Pentecost event? The question was
asked of spiritual science, and with the answer to this
question, the spiritual scientific answer to the question:
What was the Pentecost event? the Fifth Gospel begins.
|