LECTURE TWO
The Mystery of Golgotha for which I have
already prepared the ground in recent lectures will be the
subject of our enquiry today.
Let us recall
the main points for consideration. I mentioned on the last
occasion that in order to arrive at a true understanding of
the world we must study the tripartite division of the cosmos
and man in the light of the three principles of body, soul
and spirit. It is most important to be aware of this fact at
the present time, especially in the field of Anthroposophy. I
should like to remind you that this idea of trichotomy forms
the central theme of my book
Theosophy.
No doubt you have all read this book and will know that this
idea forms the nucleus of the whole book. I quote the relevant
passage:
“The
spirit is eternal; the body is subject to life and death in
accordance with the laws of the physical world; the soul-life
which is subject to destiny mediates between these two (body
and spirit) during life on Earth.”
Now at the
time of the publication of this book I felt it was necessary
to define clearly this idea of trichotomy. For by laying
special, even decisive emphasis upon this idea we are really
in a position today to understand the cosmos and at the same
time to understand the central event of our Earth evolution
— the Mystery of Golgotha.
In my last
lecture I spoke of the solid body of opposition we encounter
today when we set out to study both cosmos and man in the
light of the threefold principle of body, soul and spirit,
not simply as something of secondary importance, but as the
central theme of our study. I have shown how the idea of the
spirit was lost in the course of the spiritual evolution of
the West. I mentioned that the idea of the spirit was
proscribed by the eighth Ecumenical Council of Constantinople
and that this proscription not only influenced the
development of religious ideas and sentiments, but left a
deep impression upon the thinking of recent times. In
consequence there are few modern philosophers who are able to
distinguish clearly between soul and spirit. And even amongst
those who imagine themselves to be objective, one encounters
everywhere the dogmatic assertion, stemming from the eighth
Ecumenical Council, that man consists of body and soul alone.
He who is familiar with the spiritual life of the West, not
only as it is reflected in the more superficial realms of
philosophy, but as it has implanted itself in the thinking
and feeling of all men, even of those who have not the
slightest interest in philosophical ideas, sees everywhere
the effects of the proscription of the idea of the spirit.
And when, in recent times, a tendency developed to draw upon
certain aspects of the wisdom teaching of the East as a
corrective to Western teachings, the borrowings were
presented in such a light that one would scarcely suspect
that the cosmos and man are founded on the threefold
principle of body, soul and spirit. For in the division of
man into gross body, etheric body and astral body, derived
purely from astral observation, Sthula Sharira, Linga Sharira
— Prâna as it was then called — Kâma,
Kâma-Manas and the various other divisions introduced
from the East — in all these divisions which are an
arbitrary collocation of seven principles, there is no
indication of what should be regarded of vital importance,
namely, that our “Weltanschauung” should be
permeated with this idea of trichotomy.
There is no
doubt that this idea of man's threefold nature has been
suppressed. The spirit, it is true, has often been a focus of
discussion today, but the discussions are little more than
empty words. People are unable to distinguish nowadays
between mere words and realities. Hence many expositions are
taken seriously which are little more than a farrago of
words, such as the philosophy of Eucken.
We cannot
understand the essential nature of the Mystery of Golgotha if
we decide to reject the tripartite division of man. As I
pointed out in my last lecture, the abolition of the spirit
was first decreed by the eighth Ecumenical Council, but
preparations had been underway for some time. The ultimate
abolition of the spirit is connected with a necessary stage
in the spiritual evolution of the West. We shall perhaps be
able to approach the Mystery of Golgotha most easily from the
standpoint of the tripartite division of man if we recall how
Aristotle, the leading representative of Greek thought,
envisaged the soul. The Middle Ages were also dominated by
Aristotelian philosophy and though people are unwilling to
admit it, modern thought still draws upon the concepts of the
Middle Ages. Furthermore, the later evolution of thought was
already anticipated in Aristotle a few centuries before the
Mystery of Golgotha, and it was with the help of his ideas
that the leading minds of the Middle Ages sought to
understand the Mystery of Golgotha. These things are of
paramount importance and we must really make an effort to
investigate them with an open mind.
What was
Aristotle's conception of the human soul? I will tell
you as briefly as possible the Greek view of the soul as
presented by an enlightened mind such as Aristotle. His
conception of the soul — and we have here the views of
the most famous European of the
fourth century B.C.
— was roughly as follows.
When an
individual incarnates he owes his physical existence to his
father and mother. But he owes only his physical inheritance
to his parents. The whole man, according to Aristotle, could
never come into being solely through the union of father and
mother, for this whole man is endowed with a soul. Now one
part of the soul — let us remember that Aristotle
distinguishes two parts of the soul — is tied to the
physical body, expresses itself through the body and
apprehends the external world through sense-perception. This
part of the soul arises as a necessary by-product of
man's parental inheritance. The spiritual part of the
soul, on the other hand, the “Active Reason” as
Aristotle calls it which participates through intellection in
the spiritual life of the Universe, in the
“nous”, is immaterial and immortal and could
never come into being through parental inheritance, but
solely through the participation of God — or the
“Divine” as Aristotle calls it — in the
procreation of man through the parents.
It is thus
that the whole man comes into existence. The whole man is
born of the co-operation of God with the father and mother,
and it is most important to realize that Aristotle
understands the word “man” in this sense. From
God man receives his spiritual soul or “Active
Reason” as Aristotle calls it. This “Active
Reason” which comes into being with each individual
through Divine co-operation, evolves during life between
birth and death. When man passes through the gate of death
the physical body is given over to the Earth, and, with the
body, the lower part of the soul, the “Passive
Reason” in Aristotelian terminology, which is
associated with the physical organism. The spiritual part of
the soul, the “Active Reason”, on the other hand,
subsists according to Aristotle, and when “separated,
appears just as it is”, withdraws to a world remote
from the phenomenal world and enjoys immortality. Now this
immortal life is such that the man who performed good deeds
whilst in the body is able to look back upon the fruits of
his good deeds, but cannot change the karma of his past
actions. We only understand Aristotle aright when we
interpret his ideas as implying that through all eternity the
soul looks back on the good or evil it has wrought.
In the
nineteenth century especially, scholars were at pains to
grasp this idea, for the style of Aristotle is economical to
the point of obscurity. In his controversy with Eduard
Zeller, the late Franz Brentano
[original note 1]
endeavoured throughout his life to gather every scrap of
evidence which could throw light upon Aristotle's
conception of the relationship between the spiritual part of
man and the whole man. Aristotle's views passed over
into the philosophy which was taught throughout the Middle
Ages down to recent times and which is still taught in
certain ecclesiastical circles today. Franz Brentano, who was
actively interested in these ideas, in so far as they stemmed
from Aristotle, came to the following conclusion.
The mind of
Aristotle which, by virtue of its inherent disposition
towards reflective thought transcended the limitations of
materialism, could not have subscribed to the notion that the
spiritual part of the soul was in any way material or could
have evolved from man's parental inheritance. There
were only two possible ways therefore, Brentano thought, in
which Aristotle could envisage the soul. On the one hand, to
accept the idea that the spiritual part of the soul was a
direct creation of God working in conjunction with the
parental inheritance, so that the spiritual part of the soul
arose through Divine influence upon the human embryo and that
this spiritual part did not perish at death, but entered upon
eternal life. What other possibility was open to Aristotle,
Brentano asks, if he rejected this idea? And he believed that
Aristotle was right to accept this idea. There was only a
second possibility; a third did not exist — and this
was to admit not only the post-existence, but also the
pre-existence of the soul before birth or conception. Now
Brentano realized clearly that once we admit the possibility
that the soul exists before conception then we are forced to
concede that the soul does not experience a single
incarnation only, but undergoes successive incarnations. And
since, in later life, Aristotle rejects palingenesis, i.e.
reincarnation, he had no option but to accept creationism,
the doctrine that the soul is created ex nihilo with each
embryonic life. This accepts post-existence, but denies
pre-existence. Franz Brentano who had been a priest may be
regarded as one of the last representatives of the positive
side of Aristotelian scholastic philosophy. He thought it was
eminently reasonable on the part of Aristotle to reject the
doctrine of reincarnation and to recognize only creationism
and post-existence.
And this
view, despite its many modifications, forms the core of all
Christian philosophy in so far as this philosophy rejects the
idea of reincarnation. It is a strange phenomenon, both
touching and tragic, to see how such an eminent scholar as
Franz Brentano, who had resigned from the ministry,
resolutely strove to clarify his ideas about creationism and
yet could not bridge the gap which separated him from the
doctrine of reincarnation. What was the reason for this? It
was evident that, despite his profound erudition, despite the
vigour and acuity of his mind, the door to the spirit was
closed to him. He could never attain to the idea of the
spirit or recognize the spirit as separate from the soul. It
is not possible to attain to the idea of the spirit without
accepting the idea of reincarnation. The idea of
reincarnation is inseparable from the idea of the spirit. In
Aristotle's day the idea of the spirit had already
begun to decline. In the key passages of Aristotle's
writings we observe that when he touches upon the question of
preexistence he becomes obscure or ambiguous.
All this is
connected with something of the greatest importance,
something which carries profound implications, namely, that a
few centuries before the Mystery of Golgotha man had entered
upon a stage of evolution when something akin to a mist
shrouded the soul whenever the spirit was mentioned. This
mist was not so dense then as it is now, but the first signs
of the corruption of man's thinking in matters of the
spirit were already manifest at that time. And this is
connected with the fact that in the course of time mankind
had undergone an evolutionary process. Over the centuries
man's soul had changed and was no longer the same as it
had been in primeval times. Because man possessed atavistic
clairvoyance in those remote times he had direct experience
of the spirit. He could no more doubt the existence of the
spirit than he could doubt the existence of the phenomenal
world. It was simply a question of the degree of spiritual
perception he could attain. That it was possible to find the
path to the spirit in past ages was never in doubt. Nor was
there ever any doubt that during the life between birth and
death the spirit dwelt in the souls of men so that by virtue
of this spiritual endowment the human soul could participate
in divine life. And this conviction which was founded on an
immediate awareness of the spirit was at all times expressed
in the cult of the Mysteries. It is a remarkable fact that
one of the earliest Greek philosophers, Heraclitus, speaks of
the Mysteries in such a way that we realize he is aware that
in olden times they were of immense importance to mankind,
but that they had already fallen into desuetude. Thus
enlightened Greeks had already begun in the fifth century
B.C. to speak of the decline of the Mysteries.
Rites of
various kinds were enacted in the Mysteries, but it is only
the central idea of these Mysteries which is of particular
interest to us today. Let us dwell for a moment on this
central idea of the Mysteries as they were practised up to
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha and as late as the reign
of the Emperor Julian the Apostate. In recent times attention
has been called to the anti-Christian nature of many aspects
of these Mystery Cults. It has been pointed out that what we
know as the “Easter Legend”, the keynote to the
Passion, the Death and Resurrection of Christ, can be found
everywhere in the Mysteries. And the conclusion drawn from
this was that the Christian Easter Mystery was simply a
transference of the ancient pagan myth and ritual cults to
the Person of Jesus of Nazareth. Indeed these legends and
rites were so alike that many no longer questioned their
identity and said: “What the Christians say of Christ,
that He suffered, was crucified and rose again, that His
resurrection gave promise of hope and salvation for man
— all these Christian ideas are to be found in the
Mystery Cults!” Pagan usages, they claimed, had been
collected together, fused into the “Easter
Legend” and transferred to the Person of Jesus of
Nazareth.
Indeed in
recent times people have gone even further. Strangely enough,
even in the sphere of orthodox Christianity — one need
only recall certain (Protestant) sects in Bremen —
there was no longer any interest in the historicity of Jesus.
They said that the various Mystery cults and legends had been
collected over the years and had been centralized, so to
speak, and that in the early Christian community the Christ
legend had been developed out of them. I recall a discussion
which took place here in Berlin a few years ago. During the
tragic years of recent times past events have become unreal
and seem a distant memory, although the discussion took place
only a few years ago. In the course of this discussion the
official representatives of Christianity declared that the
real issue was not the historical Jesus, but simply the
“Idea of Christ” which arose in the primitive
Christian community through the impact of divers social
impulses.
Now in
studying the pagan Mystery cults there is always a dangerous
temptation to compare them with the Christian Easter Mystery.
Let me illustrate this by a faithful description of the
Phrygian Easter festivals. In addition to the Phrygian
festivals I could also cite other festivals for these were
equally widespread. In a letter to the sons of Constantine,
Firmicus
(note 1)
gives the following account of the Phrygian
Easter festival. The statue of the God Attis was bound to the
trunk of a fir tree and carried round in solemn procession at
midnight. Then the sufferings of the God were re-enacted. At
the same time a lamb was placed at the foot of the tree. At
dawn the resurrection of the God was proclaimed. Whilst on
the previous night when the God was bound to the tree and
seemingly given over to death the multitude broke out in wild
lamentations as was customary during the ritual; now, when
the resurrection of the God was announced at sunrise the
lugubrious chants were suddenly transformed into wild
outbursts of joy. The statue of the God, Firmicus tells us,
was buried elsewhere. During the night when the melancholy
dirges reached their climax, a light shone in the darkness
and the tomb was opened. The God had risen. And the priest
addressed the assembled populace in these words: “Take
comfort, ye faithful, for the God is saved and ye too will be
saved.”
There is no
denying that these religious festivals, celebrated untold
centuries before the Mystery of Golgotha, show great
similarity to the Easter Mystery of Christianity. Because
this idea was so attractive many believed that these ideas of
the suffering, death and resurrection of the God were
widespread and had been, to some extent, welded into a unity
under Christian influence and transferred to Jesus of
Nazareth.
Now it is
important to understand the real origin of these pagan,
pre-Christian rites. They date far back into the past and
sprang from those profound and original insights into the
nature of man and his relation to the cosmos as revealed
through atavistic clairvoyance. Of course at the time when
the Phrygian festivals were celebrated, people did not
understand their real meaning any more than the Freemasons of
today understand the significance of the rites they practise.
None the less all these ceremonies date back to a time when
an ancient wisdom, a grandiose knowledge of the universe and
man existed, a knowledge which is exceedingly difficult to
understand today. Remember that not only is man dependent
upon his environment in relation to his physical body, but
that his spirit and soul also are an integral part of his
environment. He draws on his environment for his ideas and
representations, they become routine responses, second nature
to him and for various reasons he cannot escape them.
Therefore with the best will in the world it is difficult to
understand certain knowledge which, for reasons I have
already mentioned, has been lost in the course of the
spiritual evolution of mankind.
The natural
science of today — there is no need to repeat my
admiration for its achievements, though I harbour certain
reservations about it — is concerned only with the
superficial aspect of things. It can make only a minimal
contribution to an understanding of their true nature. It is
true that science has made great advances in certain spheres
— but it all depends upon what one understands by
“great advances”. The invention of wireless
telegraphy and many other discoveries which are important
contributions to our life today are certainly deserving of
admiration. But, one may ask, where does that take us? If we
were to pursue this question we should come face to face with
what is forbidden territory today. Modern science naturally
considers the primordial wisdom, the last corrupt remnants of
which survived in the Mystery cults I have mentioned, to be
sheer folly. That may well be. But what is foolishness in the
eyes of men may often be wisdom in the sight of God.
True insight
into the nature of the universe and man discloses amongst
other things — I propose today to emphasize those
aspects which are important for an understanding of the
Mystery of Golgotha — a certain conception of the human
organism which modern science regards as the height of
absurdity, i.e. that the human organism is fundamentally
different from the animal organism. (I have already mentioned
many of these differences, but today I will confine myself to
the difference which bears upon the Mystery of Golgotha.)
When we make a serious study of the animal organism in the
light of Spiritual Science we find that it bears within it
the seeds of death. In other words, spiritual investigation,
when applied to the animal organism recognizes that, by
virtue of its constitution, this organism must inevitably
suffer death, that it disintegrates and finally returns to
the mineral kingdom. The death of an animal is not something
mysterious and inexplicable. When we study its organism we
realize that, for the animal, death is as natural to it (i.e.
the organism) as the need for food and drink. That death is a
necessity for the animal lies in the nature of its
organism.
This is not
the case with man, for his organism is differently
constituted. Here we touch upon a sphere that must remain a
total enigma to modern science. When we study the human
organism in the light of Spiritual Science we find nothing in
the human organism itself which suggests that death is
inevitable. We must accept death in man as something he
experiences and which cannot be explained, for, originally,
neither man nor his physical organism were made for death.
The fact that death occurs in man from within cannot be
explained from the being of man itself. The inner being as
such provides no explanation of death.
I realize
that this view will be regarded as folly by the scientific
pundits of today. Generally speaking it is extremely
difficult to arrive at an understanding of these problems for
they touch upon profound mysteries. And even today, if we
wish to understand these problems we can only treat of them
after the fashion of Saint-Martin
[original note 2]
in his book
Des Erreurs et de la Vérité.
In an important passage, when speaking of the evolutionary
consequences that follow from a supernal event that took
place in the spiritual world before man first incarnated on
the physical plane, he wrote the following words which will
be readily understood by everyone who is familiar with such
matters:
“However much I may desire to enlighten you, the
obligations I have undertaken do not permit me to comment in
any way upon this subject; and furthermore, I, for my part,
would rather blush for man's transgressions than speak
of them.”
For
Saint-Martin is here alluding to a transgression committed by
man before his first incarnation on Earth. He was forbidden
to speak of this openly. But today we are in a position to
speak of many things that Saint-Martin could not discuss in
his time — not because mankind has progressed since
that time, but for other reasons. But if we were to discuss a
truth such as “man is not intended to die”,
together with all the relevant factors, we would have to
touch upon matters which may not be disclosed today. Man is
not born to die and yet he dies! These words express
something which is obviously an absurdity to the pundits of
modern science, but which, to those who seek to penetrate to
a true understanding of the world, must be reckoned amongst
the most profound mysteries.
This
realization that man was not born to die and yet dies, lies
concealed in those ancient Mysteries, including the Attis
Mysteries which I have already mentioned. Man looked to the
Mysteries for an answer to this enigma that man was not born
to die and yet dies. Now why were the Mysteries celebrated?
They were celebrated in order that man should be reminded
afresh each year of something he wished to hear, something he
wished to experience and realize within his soul. He wished
to be reassured that the time had not yet come when he would
have to face the inexplicable problem of his death. What did
the neophyte hope for from the Attis Mysteries? He had the
instinctive feeling that a time would one day come when
mankind would seriously have to face the reality of death
which remained an enigma. But this time had not yet come. And
whilst the priest celebrated the death and resurrection of
the god, man felt reassured and consoled, for the time had
not yet come when he would have to come to terms with the
reality of death.
It was common
knowledge in ancient times that the event described in the
first chapter of Genesis, and which is understood
symbolically today, referred to a reality. The men of ancient
times knew this instinctively. It was modern materialism that
first outgrew the instinctive feeling that the temptation of
Lucifer referred to an actual occurrence. On this question
the materialist interpretation of Darwin, which is
intellectually so perverse, is very far removed from the
truth. This crude, perverted thinking believes that by a
gradual and continual process over long periods of time man
has developed from animal ancestry. In such a materialist
hypothesis the story of the temptation can have no place. For
only a “brow villanous low” could believe that an
archetypal ape or guenon
[original note 3]
could have been tempted by Lucifer!
Instinctively
men knew at the time of the Mysteries that the story of
Creation concealed a “fact” that had once been
common knowledge. They felt that man, as originally created,
was not mortal. And because of this “fact” they
felt that something had entered into his physical organism
and had corrupted it and so opened the doors to mortality.
Man became mortal through a moral defect, through what is
called original sin. I will recur to this later. Man became
mortal, not after the fashion of other forms of organic life,
not as the inevitable consequence of natural law, but through
a moral defect. The soul was the seat of his mortality.
The animal
soul as species-soul is immortal. It incarnates in the
individual animal which is mortal in virtue of its organism.
The species-soul (or group-soul) relinquishes the animal
organism which is subject to death without having undergone
any transformation. From the outset the nature of the animal
organism is such that, as individual organism, it is ordained
to die. This does not apply to the human organism to the same
extent. In the case of the human organism, the species-soul
or group-soul which lies at the root of this organism is able
to manifest in the individual man, and as independent human
organism ensures him immortality. Man could only become
mortal through a moral act originating in the soul. In a
certain sense man had to be endowed with a soul before he
could become mortal. The moment one treats these ideas as
abstractions they become meaningless. We must endeavour to
attain to a concrete knowledge of spiritual realities.
Now in
ancient times — and also in the period shortly before
the Mystery of Golgotha — men never doubted for a
moment that the soul brought death to man. The soul has
evolved through the ages. In the course of this evolution the
soul has progressively corrupted the organism and in
consequence has worked destructively upon the organism. Man
looked back to ancient times and said to himself: A moral
event took place in olden times and its effect upon the soul
is such, that whenever the soul now incarnates, it corrupts
the body. And because it corrupts the body man can no longer
live between birth and death in a state of innocence. In the
course of hundreds and thousands of years the condition of
the soul has grown progressively worse and the body has
suffered continuous corruption! Thus it is increasingly
difficult for man to find his way back to the spirit. The
further evolution advances, the more the body is corrupted by
the soul and the more the seeds of death are sown in the
body. And a time must come when it will no longer be possible
for man, once he has lived his alloted span, to find his way
back to the spiritual world.
In ancient
times it was this moment that was anticipated with fear and
dread. Men felt that, after countless generations a
generation would arise whose souls would so corrupt the body
and sow the poisonous seeds of death that man could no longer
reclaim his spiritual heritage. And this generation will one
day appear, they said. And they wanted to be reassured
whether this fatal moment was drawing near, and to this end
the Attis rites and similar ceremonies were enacted. At the
same time they sought to discover whether the souls of men
still had so much of divine plentitude that the time had not
yet come when these souls had abandoned their divine heritage
and could no longer find their way back to the spirit. Great
importance therefore was attached to the words of the priest
when he said: “Take comfort, ye faithful; the God is
saved, your salvation is assured!” With these words the
priest wished to indicate that God was still active in the
world; that the souls of men had not yet severed all
connection with the divine. The priest sought to comfort the
people saying: “The resurrection of the God is ever
renewed. The God is still within you.”
When we touch
upon these questions we become aware of the deep, unplumbed
depth of feelings and emotions which were once characteristic
of a particular epoch in the evolution of man. Today man has
not the slightest inkling of the inner conflicts with which
these men of earlier times had to wrestle. Though they may
have been totally illiterate and have known nothing of what
we call culture today, yet they could not escape these
feelings. And in the Mystery Schools which preserved the old
traditions derived from ancient clairvoyant insight the
neophytes were told that if evolution were to continue
unchanged, if the effects of original sin were to be
prolonged, then a time would come when the souls of men would
turn from God to a world of materialism of their own
creation, and would progressively corrupt the physical body
and rapidly hasten the process of death. These souls would
remain earthbound and be relegated to the limbo; they would
be lost. But since these Schools still preserved a knowledge
of the spirit, the knowledge of the trichotomy of man still
survived. What I am speaking of at the moment, the
seminaries, applied to the soul and not to the spirit. For
the spirit is eternal and follows its own laws. From their
spiritual insight people knew that the soul would be
relegated to the limbo, but the spirit would reappear in ever
repeated Earth-lives. A time in the evolution of the world
was approaching when the spirits of men would incarnate anew
and would look back upon the lost Paradise which once had
existed on Earth. Souls would be lost, never to return.
Spirits would reincarnate in bodies which they would activate
after the fashion of automata. And the way in which this was
done would be neither felt nor experienced by the soul.
But what, on
the other hand, were the feelings bf those who were drawn to
the Christian Easter Mystery? They felt that unless the Earth
received a new impulse, then, in future incarnations, man
would be born without a soul. They awaited something that
Earth evolution could not achieve of itself, something that
was destined to enter earthly life from without, namely the
Mystery of Golgotha. They awaited the incarnation of a Being
who would save the souls of men from death. There was no need
to save the spirit from death, but it was imperative to save
the soul. This Being who entered Earth evolution from without
by incarnation in the body of Jesus of Nazareth was
recognized as the Christ who had come to save the souls of
men. Men were now able to unite spiritually with the Christ,
so that through this union the soul loses its power to
corrupt the body and all that they had lost since the Fall
could gradually be recovered. That is why the Mystery of
Golgotha must be regarded as the central point in human
evolution. From the “Fall” until the Mystery of
Golgotha man experienced a progressive decline of his
spiritual forces. The forces of corruption had increasingly
invaded his soul and threatened to make man an automaton of
the spirit. And from the Mystery of Golgotha until the end of
the Earth cycle all that was lost before the Mystery of
Golgotha will gradually be retrieved once more. Thus, at the
conclusion of Earth evolution, the spirits of men will
incarnate in the physical body for the last time and these
bodies will once again be immortal. It was in expectation of
this redemption that men understood the Mystery of
Easter.
Before this
could be realized it was necessary to overcome the power
which had caused the moral corruption of the soul; and this
power was overcome by the decisive event on Golgotha. How did
the early Christians who still possessed occult knowledge
understand the last words of Christ on the Cross? They were
living in expectation of an external event that would bring
to an end this corrupting influence of the soul. The cry of
Christ on the Cross “It is finished” was a sign
to them that the time had now come when the corrupting power
of the soul was a thing of the past. It was a miraculous
event fraught with vast and unsuspected mysteries. For
tremendous questions are involved when we think about the
Mystery of Golgotha. When we pursue our studies further we
shall find that it is impossible to think of the Mystery of
Golgotha without also thinking of the Risen Christ. The Risen
Christ — that is the essential. And in one of his most
profound utterances St. Paul says: “If Christ be not
risen then all our faith is vain.” The Risen Christ is
unique to Christianity and is inseparable from Christianity.
The death of Christ is also an integral part of Christianity.
But how is this death portrayed? And how must it be
portrayed? An innocent man was put to death, He suffered and
died. Those who crucified Him clearly bear a heavy burden of
guilt, for He who died was innocent. What was the
significance of this guilt for mankind? It brought them
salvation. For had Christ not died upon the Cross mankind
could not have been saved. In the Crucifixion we are
confronted by a unique event. The death of Christ on the
Cross was the greatest boon bestowed upon mankind
(cf.
John XI, 49–52).
And the heaviest guilt that mankind has taken
upon itself is this, that Christ was crucified. Thus the
heaviest guilt coincides with the greatest good fortune.
The
superficial mind no doubt will pay little attention to this.
But for those who probe deeper, this question is fraught with
profound mystery. The most heinous crime in the history of
the world proved to be the salvation of mankind. Now we must
understand this enigma, or at least try to understand it, if
we are to comprehend the Mystery of Golgotha. And the key to
the solution of this enigma is found in the exemplary words
spoken by Christ on the Cross: “Forgive them, Father,
for they know not what they do.” The right
understanding of these words provides the answer to the
cardinal question: Why did the most heinous crime become the
source of the salvation of mankind?
If you
reflect upon this you will realize that one must take into
account the trichotomy of man in order to understand the
Mystery of Golgotha. For Christ died in order to redeem the
souls of men. He reclaims the souls of men that would have
been lost but for His advent. Morality would have vanished
from the Earth and the spirit inhabiting a body that reacted
mechanically would have been the victim of necessity in which
morality has no place. Mankind would have been unable to have
psychic experiences. The mission of Christ was to bring man
back to God. It is not surprising, therefore, that three
centuries before Christ, Aristotle, a most enlightened Greek,
failed to understand the nature of the soul and its relation
to the spirit at a time when the crisis of man's soul
was at hand. There were many discrepancies in
Aristotle's view of the soul since he could not have
known of the coming of the Saviour, and it is not surprising
therefore that his views of the soul were illogical. How is
one to account for the fact that the erroneous conceptions of
Aristotle concerning the relationship of soul and spirit
persisted so long? The significance of Christ for the souls
of men is that He demonstrates once again that man is a
threefold being of body, soul and spirit and that an inner
relationship exists between objective events and moral
events. And we shall never fully understand this relationship
unless we accept the idea of the trichotomy of man.
If we wish to
arrive in some measure at an understanding of the Mystery of
Golgotha we must penetrate to the inmost recesses of the
human soul. In the present lecture I have only been able to
offer an introduction to this theme. I believe that it is our
immediate concern to speak of these things at the present
time. We must take advantage of this Easter festival to
enquire more closely into these matters in so far as it is
possible today. Perhaps it may be possible thereby to awaken
in us much that may one day be a seed that will only mature
in future time. For it is only gradually that we come to
realize that we are living in an age when there are many
things we cannot fully comprehend. This is evident from the
difficulty men experience today in developing a clear and
conscious understanding of events that are imminent.
Unfortunately it is not possible to indicate, even briefly,
how one should understand in clear consciousness the painful
event of which the people of Europe, or at least of Central
Europe, have only recently been informed.
[original note 4]
Today we are only half aware of these things.
I only wanted
to touch upon certain questions today in order to relate them
in my next lecture to the Mystery of Golgotha.
Original Notes:
Note 1.
See Note 6, Lecture Eight.
Note 2.
See Note 3, Lecture One.
Note 3.
guenon — a female monkey.
Note 4.
The outbreak of the Russian Revolution.
NOTES BY
TRANSLATOR
Note 1.
Firmicus. His full name was Julius Firmicus Maturnus. A
Sicilian priest of the fourth century. The reference is the
“De errore profanorum religionum”
A.D. 347.
(German translation by A. Müller, 1913.)
|