LECTURE THREE
In our
lecture today I should like to remind you how easy it is to
misunderstand the real nature of the Mystery of Golgotha
because we fail to recognize how difficult it is to achieve a
deeper insight into that Mystery with our present mode of
cognition. We may readily believe, for example, that through
mystical contemplation, by turning inwards to seek the divine
within, we shall find the Christ. The majority of those who
have followed the path of mysticism have not found the
Christ. We shall not find the Christ if we maintain, as many
Theosophists maintain, that we must first become aware of the
divine within and we shall then experience the Christ. That
is not so. What, at most, under these circumstances may
suggest the presence of an inner light, can never, if rightly
understood, be called the Christ, but might be called a
Universal Divine Being. And because we are not accustomed to
differentiate today, even theoretically, many mystics believe
that they can find the Christ through what is usually called
mysticism, through a mysticism that is relatively
uncontrolled. This is a delusion. And it is important to bear
this in mind, just as it is important to note that the
philosophies of the late nineteenth century down to our own
times have developed, as subsidiary branches of philosophy,
philosophies of religion which imagine that they are in a
position to speak of the Christ. In effect, they portray
— and can only portray — what may be called a
Universal Divine Being, but not the Christ. The philosopher
Lotze, for example, who attempted to probe deeply into this
question speaks of such a Universal Being, but he would never
dream of calling this Divine Being the Christ. Neither the
mystical path nor the path followed by such philosophers can
lead to an understanding of the true nature of the Mystery of
Golgotha. In order to arrive at a fuller understanding of
this Mystery I propose to call attention to certain
characteristics of the conceptions attaching to it. Let us
regard these conceptions in the first place purely as
expressions of opinion.
It pertains
to the essence of the Mystery of Golgotha, if it is to answer
to the historical evolution of mankind, that Christ, by His
death on the Cross, has thereby established a relationship
with the whole cosmic order. If we deny the universality of
Christ we are no longer in touch with Him. We may, in that
event, speak of some kind of Universal Divine Being, but we
cannot speak of the Christ.
There are
many problems to be elucidated in connection with the Mystery
of Golgotha and I propose to refer to some of them today. If
we are to understand this Mystery aright we must come to
terms with the problem: what did Christ Jesus mean by faith
or trust? We have a far too theoretic, a far too abstract
conception of faith today. Consider for a moment man's
usual conception of faith
[original note 1]
when he speaks of the antithesis between faith and knowledge.
Knowledge is that which can be demonstrated or proved; faith
is that which is not susceptible of proof, and yet is held to
be true. It is a question of the particular way in which we
know or understand something. It is only when we speak of
knowledge as faith or belief that we think of it as something
which is not susceptible of final proof.
Compare this
idea of faith with the conception which Christ Jesus
preached. Let me refer you to this passage in the Gospels:
“If ye have faith and doubt not ... but also if ye
shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed and be thou
cast into the sea; it shall be done.”
(Matt. XXI, 21.)
How great is the contrast between this conception of faith,
paradoxically yet radically expressed in the words of Christ,
and the present-day conception which in reality sees in faith
simply a substitute for knowledge. A little reflection will
show what is the essence of Christ's conception of
faith. Faith must be an active force, a force that
accomplishes something. Its purpose is not simply to evoke an
idea or to awaken knowledge. He who possesses faith shall be
able to move mountains. If you refer to the Gospels you will
find that wherever the words “faith” or
“trust” appear, they are associated with the idea
of action, that one is to be granted a power through which
something can be effected or accomplished, something that is
productive of positive results. And this is extremely
important.
I should like
to draw your attention today to another important question.
The Gospels often speak of the mysteries of the Kingdom of
God or the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven. In what sense
do they speak of mysteries? It is somewhat difficult to
grasp this idea. Those who have made a careful study of the
Gospels from the occult standpoint are increasingly of the
opinion that every sentence in the Gospels is immutable,
every detail is of the greatest moment. All criticism is
reduced to silence as one penetrates ever more deeply into
the Gospels from the standpoint of Spiritual Science. Now
before speaking of the mystery of the Kingdom of Heaven I
must draw your attention to something that is highly
characteristic.
In my earlier
lectures on the Gospels I referred to that important passage
which deals with the healing, or, one might call it, the
raising of the twelve-year-old daughter of Jairus. Since we
can speak openly here, I am able to refer to the deeper
medical knowledge of an occult nature which is disclosed to
those who study this miracle of healing from the standpoint
of Spiritual Science. Christ went into the ruler's
house and took Jairus’ daughter who was thought to be
dead by the hand in order to heal her
(Matt. IX, 22-25;
Mark V, 22;
Luke VII, 41).
Now I must remind you that we can never
arrive at an understanding of such matters if we do not
relate the passage in question to the earlier and later
passages. People are only too ready to detach certain
passages from their context and study them in isolation,
whereas they are interdependent. You will recall that as
Jesus was summoned to the daughter of Jairus, a woman who was
diseased with an issue of blood for twelve years came behind
Him and touched the hem of His garment and was healed. Christ
felt that “virtue” had gone out of Him. He turned
round and said: “Daughter, thy faith hath made thee
whole.” We can understand these words only if we grasp
in the right way the idea of faith referred to above:
“Thy faith (or trust) hath made thee whole.” Now
this passage in the Gospels has deep implications. The woman
had suffered from an issue of blood for twelve years.
Jairus’ daughter was twelve years old. She was sexually
retarded and was unable to develop the maturity of the woman
who had suffered from hemorrhage for twelve years. When
Christ healed the woman He felt that “virtue” or
power had issued from Him. When He entered the ruler's
house He took the girl by the hand and transferred this power
to her and so enabled her to reach sexual maturity. Without
this power she must have wasted away. And thus she was
restored to life. This shows that the real living Being of
Christ was not confined to His person, but was reflected in
His whole environment, that Christ was able to transfer
powers from one person to another by virtue of His selfless
regard for others. He was able to surrender the self in
active service for others and this is reflected in the power
which He felt arise in Him when the woman who had great faith
touched the hem of His garment.
This mystery
is related to the observation He frequently made to His
disciples: “Unto you it is given to know the mystery of
the Kingdom of God; but unto them that are without all these
things are done in parables.”
(Mark IV, 11.)
Let us assume that the mystery of which I have just spoken —
I do not mean simply the theoretic description I have given of
it, but the power that was necessary before this transference
could be effected — had been imparted to the Scribes
and Pharisees. What would have happened if they had been able
to transfer powers from one person to another? They would not
always have transferred them wisely. It is evident from the
Gospels that Christ did not expect the Pharisees, still less
the Sadducees, to act responsibly. When transferring this
force from one person to another they would have abused it,
for such was their mentality, and would have caused untold
harm. This mystery therefore had to remain a secret of the
Initiates.
There are three
significant factors to be considered in connection with the
Mystery of Golgotha. I could mention many others. I will say
more about this in my next lecture but for the moment I will
confine myself to the essentials.
We must have
a clear idea of what is meant by the expression: the Mystery
of the Kingdom of Heaven. This has a quite precise meaning,
as I was able to show in the example I quoted. Now when John
the Baptist was about to baptize Jesus in the Jordan. he
said: “The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.” Here is
the idea I want you to grasp. What did John the Baptist do?
We are told — and this is clear from the context
— that he baptized with water, as he himself said
because the Kingdom of Heaven was nigh. He baptized with
water for the remission of sins, saying “There cometh
one mightier than I ... I have indeed baptized you with
water, he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost”
(Mark I, 7 and 5).
What is the difference between the baptism of
John and the baptism with the Holy Ghost?
We cannot
understand what is meant by the baptism with water, nor what
it alludes to — I have often described the manner in
which the ceremony was performed — unless we summon to
our aid the teachings of Spiritual Science. For many years I
have been at great pains to elucidate this mystery by means
of spiritual investigation.
It suddenly
dawned on me that the way in which John the Baptist is
presented to us in the Gospels carries most important
implications. What was the significance of baptism with
water? Externally, of course, John the Baptist baptized with
the waters of Jordan. We know that the candidates for baptism
suffered total immersion. During the immersion they
experienced a kind of loosening of the etheric body, which
bestowed on them a temporary clairvoyance. This is the real
significance of the baptism by John and of similar baptisms.
But when John spoke of baptism with water he was referring
not only to this form of baptism, but more especially to the
passage in the Old Testament which says: “The Spirit of
God moved upon the face of the waters.” What was the
purpose of the baptism with water in Jordan? It was intended
that through the loosening of their etheric bodies and the
experiences they underwent the candidates for baptism should
feel themselves transposed into the condition of
consciousness of the time before the “Fall”.
Everything that had occurred since the Fall was to be erased
from their consciousness. They were to be restored to their
pre-lapsarian state in order that they might experience the
condition of man before the Fall. They were made aware that
through the Fall man had entered upon a wrong path and that
to continue on this path would be to court disaster. He had
to return to his original state of innocence, to cleanse his
soul of the evil which this aberration had brought.
Many people
at that time felt an urge to return to the age of innocence
— history is far from accurate on this question —
to forgo their errant ways, to start life afresh as it had
been before the Fall; to refuse participation in the changes
and developments of the social order and national life which
had taken place since the Fall up to the time of the Roman
Empire or the time of Herod the Tetrarch when John the
Baptist preached in the wilderness. Those who felt that they
must break with the past withdrew from the world and became
anchorites. John the Baptist is a case in point. We are told
that his meat was locusts and wild honey and his raiment was
of camel hair
(Matt. III, 4).
He is depicted as the typical desert father, the typical anchorite.
Compare this
with a widespread movement of the time which reflected in
various ways what was indicated in the
Gospel of St. John.
People declared that one must renounce the world and follow
the life of the spirit. An echo of this desire to
“withdraw from the world” is still to be found in
Gnosis and in monachism. Now why did this powerful impulse of
the Baptist which was a comparatively recent development
become so widespread? The answer is found in the words:
“The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.”
At this point
we must recall what was said in the last lecture about the
soul — that since the Fall it had progressively
deteriorated, was less and less fitted to perform its
function as intermediary between the spirit and the body.
This continuous decline could persist for a certain period of
Earth evolution but ultimately had to be arrested. This
moment will arrive when Divine evolution takes over Earth
evolution. Men such as John the Baptist had a prophetic
intimation of this moment. The time is now at hand, he felt,
when souls can no longer be saved, when souls must perish
without some special dispensation. He realized that either
the souls of men would have to withdraw from life as it had
been since the Fall, the cause of their corruption —
and in that event Earth evolution would have been in vain
— or something else must supervene. And this
realization found expression in the following words:
“He that cometh after me shall baptize you with the
Holy Ghost.” John felt that only by withdrawing from
the world could man be saved from the consequences of the
Fall. Christ wished to save mankind in another way: he wished
them to remain in the world and yet find salvation. He had no
wish that mankind should return to the time before the Fall,
but that they should experience the further stages of Earth
evolution and yet participate in the Kingdom of Heaven.
A further
question calls for an answer: What was Christ's real
intention? His purpose breathes through every page of the
Gospels and we must seek to feel and experience it with all
the earnestness at our command. Despite apparent
contradictions in the Gospels each contains a core of facts
and truths which were announced or proclaimed by Christ
Jesus; but the core of each Gospel has its own particular
atmosphere. I must remind you of what I said in reference to
Richard Rothe, namely, that we must change our whole approach
to the reading of the Gospels. We must read them in the
spirit that breathes through them, become responsive to the
atmosphere that pervades them. People who read the Gospels
today invest them with their own preconceived picture of a
generalized human ideal. The age of
“enlightenment” envisaged Christ Jesus as an
enlightened man. Protestant groups or sects have created an
image of Jesus which depicts Him as a typical representative
of nineteenth-century Protestantism. Ernst Haeckel even
managed to depict Jesus as a thorough-going monist of his own
brand. Now these are attitudes which mankind must learn to
outgrow. It is important that we should really respond to the
contents of the Gospels in the atmosphere and setting of
their own time.
Let us take
first of all the
Gospel of St. Matthew
and ask ourselves:
what is the purpose of this Gospel? It is so fatally easy to
be misled by all kinds of things which we readily accept in
the Gospels, but which we interpret falsely. We find, for
example, the statement that “not one jot or tittle of
the law shall be changed”. In spite of this statement,
perhaps even because of it, the fact remains that the
Gospel of St. Matthew
was written to discredit traditional Judaism.
It is a polemic against Judaism, a challenge to traditional
Judaism, and the author declares that it was the will of
Christ that it should be suppressed.
Now the
Gospel of St. Mark,
on the other hand, was written for the
Romans. It was directed against the Roman Empire, the
“kingdom of the world”. It was an attack upon the
legal ordinances of the Empire and its social order. The Jews
realized full well what they meant, or rather what they felt,
when they said: We must kill Him, otherwise our people will
follow Him and then the Romans will come and seize our land
and our kingdom. The
Gospels of St. Matthew
and
St. Mark
were directed therefore against Judaism and Romanism respectively.
They were broadsides directed not against the real essence of
Judaism or Romanism, but against their outward forms as
“kingdoms of the world”, in contradistinction to
the “Kingdom of Heaven”. The special
characteristics of these two Gospels are not taken today with
the seriousness they deserve. A few years before the War, the
Czar, who has now been deposed, wrote in his own hand on one
of his edicts the following words: “Intellectual
giants, giants of action will appear one day — of this
I am firmly convinced — and bring salvation to Russia
and provide for her greatest good.” Had these giants of
thought and action in whom the Czar had implicit confidence,
materialized, you can well imagine that he would promptly
have imprisoned them in the Peter and Paul Fortress, or have
exiled them to Siberia. So much for the reliance we can place
upon words today. With such an attitude we cannot fathom the
inner meaning of the Gospels.
Let us now
turn to the third Gospel, the
Gospel of St. Luke.
Its real meaning becomes apparent if we study the passage where
Jesus went into the synagogue: “And there was delivered to
him the book of the prophet Esaias. And when he had opened
the book he found the place where it was written: The spirit
of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach
the Gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the
broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and
recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that
are bruised.”
(Luke IV, 17-18.)
Jesus then
explained the deep inner meaning of these words, contrasting
their spirit with the spirit which He found in the world
around Him. He wished to contrast the Kingdom of Heaven with
the kingdom of the world and characterized this difference in
these words when He addressed the assembled Jews in the
synagogue: “Ye will surely say unto me this proverb,
Physician, heal thyself: whatsoever we have heard done in
Capernaum, do also here in thy country. Verily I say unto
you, no prophet is accepted in his own country. But I tell
you of a truth, many widows were in Israel in the days of
Elias when the heaven was shut up three years and six months,
when great famine was throughout all the land; but unto none
of these was Elias sent, save unto Sarepta, a city of Sidon,
unto a woman that was a widow. And many lepers were in Israel
in the time of Eliseus the prophet; and none of them was
cleansed, saving Naaman the Syrian.”
(Luke IV, 23-27.)
None of the
Jews was healed by Elias or Eliseus, but only the Gentiles.
This was the interpretation Jesus gave to His words in order
to distinguish between the Kingdom of Heaven and the kingdom
of the world. What was the result? — “And all
they in the synagogue, when they heard these things, were
filled with wrath, and rose up and thrust him out of the
city, and led him unto the brow of the hill whereon their
city was built, that they might cast him down headlong. But
he, passing through the midst of them, went his way.”
(Luke IV, 28-30.)
Here is the
essential difference between the Luke Gospel and the other
Gospels. Here the Jews are not condemned as in Matthew, nor
the Romans as in Mark, but this Gospel condemns the passions
and emotions of mankind as reflected in those who were
associated with Christ Jesus. We must therefore give heed to
that powerful and significant impulse behind the words of
Christ Jesus, an impulse that was not of this world, but
which proceeded from the Kingdom of Heaven.
The John
Gospel aims to go much further. In this Gospel it is not
simply a small nation such as the Jews which is condemned,
nor a great nation such as the Romans, nor even the whole of
mankind with the negative characteristics it has developed
since the Fall, but this Gospel is directed against those
spirits behind the physical world in so far as they have
turned aside from the true path. The
Gospel of St. John
can only be rightly understood when we realize that, as the
Gospel of St. Matthew
is concerned with the Jews, the
Gospel of St. Mark
with the Romans and the
Gospel of St. Luke
with all those who had succumbed to the Fall, so the
Gospel of St. John
is concerned with the spirits of men and those spirits
bordering on humanity who fell along with man, whilst Christ
Jesus is concerned with the spiritual world itself. It is
very easy for our materialistic epoch to say that whoever
holds these views is a fanatic. We must be prepared to put up
with this criticism. Nevertheless what I have said is the
truth; and we are the more convinced of this, the more
closely we look into these things.
This powerful
impulse which found fourfold expression in the Gospels shows
that Christ was destined to introduce into the world
something that had not existed before. The world disapproves
and has always disapproved of change, but a new impulse must
be given from time to time. It is amply demonstrated in the
Gospels that we can only understand the message of these
Gospels aright if we see it in the context of the entire
Cosmos, as an expression of cosmic events. This is best
illustrated — I refer you to the Mark Gospel, the
shortest and most pregnant of the Gospels — if we turn
to this Gospel for an answer to the question: who were the
first to recognize that Christ Jesus had given to the world
that sublime impulse which I have described above? Who first
recognized this? One might be tempted to answer: John the
Baptist. But he divined it rather, and this is clearly seen
in the description of the meeting between Christ Jesus and
John in the fourth Gospel. Who, then, were the first to
recognize Him? None other than those that were possessed with
devils whom Christ had healed. They were the first to cry
out, saying, “Thou art the Son of God” — or
“Thou art the Holy One of God. And Christ suffered not
the devils to speak because they knew Him.” Spiritual
beings therefore were the first to recognize Him, and we are
here shown the connection between the word of Christ and the
spiritual world. Out of their super-sensible knowledge the
demons revealed Christ's contribution to the world long
before mankind had the slightest inkling of it. They knew it
because He was able to cast them out.
Let us now
relate the concrete case described above (the raising of
Jairus’ daughter) to the mysteries of the Kingdom of
Heaven to which Christ owed His powers of healing. If we
employ the usual technique of modern historical research in
order to explore the source of the special supernatural power
through which Christ worked, we shall never find an answer,
for times have changed much more than people imagine. Today
they assume that three or four thousand years ago men were to
all appearances much the same as they are now, that though
they have become far cleverer, they have changed very little
on the whole. Such people then count back in time until they
arrive at millions of years. As I mentioned recently in a
public lecture, they count the millions of years ahead until
they reach the end of time. They have calculated to a nicety
the nature of individual substances millions of years hence:
milk will be solid and luminous — I wonder how this
milk will be obtained, but we will not go into that now
— albumen will be used to decorate the walls so that it
will be possible to read the newspaper in its phosphorescent
light. Dewar put forward this idea a few years ago in a
lecture before the Royal Institute when he discussed the end
of the world as envisaged by physicists. At the time I made
use of the following comparison in referring to these
calculations. I said that if someone were to observe the
changes that occur in the human stomach and heart over a
period of two or three years, were then to multiply the
figure arrived at and calculate the changes that would occur
in two hundred years and what the body would look like in two
hundred years’ time, then this would be comparable to
the calculations of the physicists. Such calculations maybe
ingenious, but in two hundred years the person will long have
been dead. The same applies to the Earth. Those confident
calculations on the part of physicists as to what will happen
millions of years hence may be mathematically correct, but
physically the inhabitants of the Earth will have perished
long before this time. To estimate the geological conditions
of the Earth millions of years ago on the same principle is
comparable to deducing from the condition of a child's
stomach at the age of seven what its condition had been
seventy-five years before. People simply fail to realize how
confused their thinking is, for man as a physical entity did
not exist in that primordial time to which geologists look
back. Because strong measures are necessary to combat the
many errors of our time which have the weight of authority
behind them, one must not be afraid on occasions to react
strongly against such methods. One retorts to such people:
you calculate from the organic changes in the human organism
today what it will be like two hundred years hence. But in
two hundred years, of course, the human organism will have
ceased to exist. One can also reply that from the results of
purely occult investigations — I am aware of course
that modern science will regard this as nonsense, but it is
none the less true — man as he is today cannot possibly
exist six thousand years hence, any more than it is possible
for a man who is now twenty years old to be alive in two
hundred years time. We can discover through occult
investigation that in the sixth millennium women as they are
constituted today will become sterile and that an entirely
different reproductive process will exist by that time. I
realize that this will sound the purest nonsense to those who
think along the lines of modern science; nevertheless the
fact is undeniable. In our present materialistic age people
have very confused ideas about history and historical
evolution. Therefore we no longer understand even subtle
indications transmitted by external history of differences in
the constitution of the human soul which have taken place in
relatively recent times.
There is a
very fine passage in the writings of the Church Father
Tertullian
(note 1)
at the turn of the
second century, that touches upon this problem. He writes
that he himself had seen the pulpits of the Apostles from
which their successors had read aloud the epistles that were
still in the Apostles’ handwriting. Whilst these
epistles were being read, Tertullian tells us, the assembly
of the faithful seemed to hear once again the living voices
of the Apostles and when they examined the epistles, the
features of the Apostles seemed to rise up before them. For
those who investigate these matters clairvoyantly, these are
not empty words. As they sat before the pulpit the faithful
felt that they detected in the timbre of the voices of the
Apostles’ successors the voices of the Apostles
themselves and that from the handwriting of the Apostles they
were able to picture the actual features of the Apostles.
Thus, at the beginning of the third century, people were
still able to evoke a living image of the Apostles and,
metaphorically speaking, to hear their voices. And Clement I
who occupied the Papal See from
A.D. 92 to 101
also knew personally those pupils of the Apostles who had seen
Christ Jesus. At this time, therefore, a continuous tradition
was already in existence. And in this passage from Tertullian
we catch an echo of something that can be investigated
clairvoyantly. Those pupils of the Apostles who listened to
the Apostles could detect from the tone and modulation of
their voice the manner in which Christ Jesus spoke. This is
something of great importance. We must bear in mind this tone
of voice, this peculiar timbre characteristic of
Christ's speech if we are to understand why those who
heard Him spoke of the magic power that lay in His words.
When He spoke, something akin to an elemental force gripped
His listeners. His words possessed an elemental power that
had never been known before. How is one to account for
this?
I have
already referred to Saint-Martin. He was one of those who
still recognized the evocative or magical power of the words
— (the Freemasons of the nineteenth century of course
no longer had any understanding of this) — of that
language which was once upon a time common to all mankind
before it was split into separate languages and which was
closely related to the “inner word”. Christ, of
course, had to express Himself externally in the language of
His day; the inner word which He felt within His soul
however, differed from the spoken word of ordinary speech; it
was imbued with the power which words have lost, with the
power that the universal language once possessed before it
was split into separate languages. Unless we are able to form
some conception of this power which is independent of these
separate languages and which is found in those whose words
are fully inspired, we cannot understand the power that dwelt
in Christ, nor the significance of what is meant when we
speak of Christ as the incarnated “Word” through
which He worked and by which He performed His acts of healing
and cast out evil spirits. The loss of the “Word”
was inevitable, for it was in accordance with human evolution
after the Mystery of Golgotha. We must endeavour to recover
the “Word” that has been lost. But meanwhile we
have reached a stage of evolution which holds little prospect
that our efforts will be rewarded.
I would like
to remind you of an important fact that is evident in all the
Gospels, namely, that Christ Jesus never committed anything
to writing. Indeed scholars have disputed amongst themselves
whether He could write at all. Those who claim that He could
write can only quote the passage from the story of the woman
taken in adultery: “And again he stooped down and wrote
on the ground.”
(John VIII, 6.)
But apart from this one
instance there is no evidence that Christ could write. The
fact remains that in contrast to other founders of religion,
He never recorded His teachings in writing. This is not
fortuitous but is inwardly connected with the full and
inexhaustible power of the word.
The fact that
Christ confined His message to the spoken word and left no
record in writing applies only in His case, but such
limitation would be totally unacceptable to our epoch. If
Christ had written down His words and translated them into
the current language of the day, Ahrimanic forces would have
entered into them, for all set forms are Ahrimanic. The
written word has a different effect from that of the spoken
word when a group of pupils is gathered together and is
entirely dependent upon the power of the spirit. One must not
imagine that the author of the John Gospel sat beside Christ
when He was speaking and recorded His words in shorthand like
our stenographers who are recording this lecture. That this
did not occur is of immense significance. We only realize the
full significance of this when we learn from the Akashic
Chronicle what really lies behind Christ's condemnation
of the Scribes, of those who derived their knowledge from
documents. He objected to the Scribes because their knowledge
was derived from documents, because their souls were not
directly in touch with the source from which the living word
flowed. And this led, in Christ's opinion, to the
debasement of the living word.
But we miss
the significance of this if we think of memory at the time of
the Mystery of Golgotha as that “psychic sieve”
which passes for memory today. Those who heard the words of
Christ cherished them faithfully in their hearts and knew
them verbatim. For the power of memory was totally different
at that time; so too was the constitution of the soul. It was
essentially a period when, in a brief space of time, great
changes had taken place. We completely overlook the fact that
the history of the East was written in such a way that men
saw it either in terms of the present or at best in terms of
borrowings from Greek history. The course of Greek history
was very similar to that of the Jews, but oriental history
followed a different course, because in the East the soul was
differently constituted. Hence people have no idea of the
great changes that have taken place in a short space of time,
that the abnormally retentive memory was rapidly lost in the
age of declining atavistic clairvoyance, so that of necessity
men had to record the words of Christ in writing. In
consequence, the words of Christ suffered the same fate that
Christ Jesus suffered at the hands of the Scribes whom He
opposed. And I leave it to your imagination to picture what
would happen if some disciple, even remotely resembling
Christ Jesus, were to speak today with the same impulse with
which Christ spoke. Would those who call themselves
Christians today act in any way differently from the high
priests at that time? I leave you to judge.
Bearing these
assumptions in mind, let us now look more closely into the
mystery of the incarnation of the Christ in Jesus. Let me
remind you of what I said earlier, that we must retrace our
steps along the path we have followed since the time of the
Eighth Ecumenical Council and rediscover the tripartite
division of man into body, soul and spirit. Unless we
recognize this we cannot understand the Mystery of
Golgotha.
First let us
consider the physical body. We only know the body as an
object in the external world. We can observe it only from
without. We owe our perception of the external world to the
body. And it is with the body that science — or what is
commonly called science — is concerned.
Let us now
turn to the soul. I tried to indicate the nature of the soul
when I referred you to Aristotle. In speaking of the soul we
must realize that Aristotle's ideas were not far
removed from the truth, for the psychic life, that which
pertains to the inner life, originates more or less with each
individual. Aristotle, however, lived in an age when he could
no longer fully comprehend the soul's relationship to
the Cosmos. He declared that with the birth of a human being
a new soul is created. He was an advocate of
“creationism”, but accepted that after death the
soul continues to survive in some undefined way. He did not
enter into further details because in his day knowledge of
the soul had already become somewhat nebulous. The manner in
which the soul lives after death is in fact bound up with
what is called, more or less symbolically, “original
sin” — or whatever we prefer to call it, the
terminology is not of the slightest importance — for
“original sin” has undoubtedly modified the whole
life of the soul. Consequently, at the time of the Mystery of
Golgotha the souls of men were in danger of such wholesale
corruption that they could not find their way back to the
Kingdom of Heaven. They were chained to earthly existence, to
the destiny of the Earth. This psychic life therefore follows
its own separate path which will be described in further
detail later.
The third
member of man's being is the spirit. The physical or
corporeal is expressed in the line of descent from father to
son. The son becomes a father and this son in his turn
becomes a father and so on through the generations. In this
way inherited characteristics are transmitted from one
generation to another. The psychic life as such is created
with the birth of the individual and persists after death.
Its destiny is determined by the extent to which the soul can
remain in touch with the Kingdom of Heaven. The spirit
persists through repeated incarnations on Earth and
everything depends upon the kind of bodies it can find in the
course of its successive lives on Earth. On the one hand
there is the line of descent on the physical plane, in which
the spirit participates; but the line of descent is permeated
with physically inherited characteristics. What
potentialities the spirit finds in the course of its
successive incarnations depends upon whether mankind has
progressed or deteriorated. Out of the spirit one cannot
create bodies to order; one can only select those which are
relatively best suited to the spirit that is about to
incarnate; one cannot tailor them to measure.
I tried to
express this in my book
Theosophy,
in which I described the three paths leading to the spirit
— the paths of body, soul and spirit. This is something
that must be clearly understood. For if we follow to its conclusion
the path of sense-perception alone, if we recognize only the
physical or corporeal, then we arrive at the idea of a
Universal God, an idea that was known only to the
philosophers and mystics whom I mentioned at the beginning of
this lecture. If, however, we wish to study the soul, then we
must needs follow the path that leads to that Being whom we
call the Christ who is not to be found in nature, although He
is related to nature. He must be found in history as an
historical being. If we follow the path of self-observation,
this leads to the spirit and to the repeated incarnations of
the spirit.
Study of the
cosmos and nature leads to a knowledge of the Universal Being
to whom we owe our incarnation:
Ex Deo Nascimur.
The study of
true history, if pursued in sufficient depth, leads to the
knowledge of Jesus Christ, to the knowledge which is
necessary if we wish to know the destiny of the soul:
In Christo Morimur.
Inward
contemplation, experience of the spirit, leads to the
knowledge of the fundamental nature of the spirit in repeated
lives on Earth and, when united with the spiritual element in
which it dwells, leads to the intuitive perception of the
Holy Ghost:
Per Spiritum Sanctum Reviviscimus.
Not only does
the trichotomy of body, soul and spirit lie at the root of an
understanding of man, but a trichotomy determines the path we
must follow if we really wish to arrive at an understanding
of the universe. Our epoch which is so chaotic in thought
does not easily grasp such ideas and for the most part is
indifferent to them. As you know, there are atheists, those
who deny the existence of God; there are also deniers of
Jesus; and there are materialists, deniers of the spirit. To
be an atheist is possible only for those who are wholly
insensitive to the phenomena of external nature. For if the
physical forces in us are not blunted, we are continually
aware of the presence of God. Atheism is really sickness of
the soul, a disease of the human personality. To deny Christ
is not a sickness; we must make every effort to find Him in
the unfolding of human evolution. If we do not find Him we
are lost to the power that redeems the soul from death. This
is a misfortune of the soul. Atheism is a sickness of the
soul, of the human personality. To deny Christ is a
misfortune of the human soul. Note the difference. To deny
the Spirit is to be guilty of self-deception.
It is
important to meditate upon these three conceptions. Sickness
of the soul, misfortune of the soul, deception of the soul,
i.e. self-deception — these are the three significant
aberrations of the human soul.
It is
necessary to be aware of all this if we are to develop an
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha, for we must learn
to recognize the relationship of Christ to the human soul. We
must carefully follow the destiny of the soul itself in the
course of terrestrial evolution. We must also bear in mind
the reaction upon the human spirit of the impulse that Christ
transmits to the human soul.
To conclude
my lecture today I can perhaps best offer you a few
suggestions in order to prepare the ground for what is to
follow, so that we can all meditate upon them and so arrive
at a deeper understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha.
Today man
approaches nature in the light of the education he has
received. Nature proceeds in obedience to natural laws. We
think of the birth, maturity and death of the Earth in terms
of natural laws. Everything is seen from the standpoint of
natural laws. In addition to the laws of nature there is the
moral law. We feel — and especially the Kantians, for
example — that we are subject to the categorical
imperative, that we are an integral part of the moral world
order. But think how anaemic has become the idea today that
this moral world order has, like nature, its own objective
reality. After all, even Haeckel, even Arrhenius and others,
for all their materialism, were convinced that the Earth was
moving towards a new glacial epoch or towards entropy. But
they also believed that the little “idols” they
called atoms are dissociated and cannot be destroyed —
hence the conservation of matter! This accords more or less
with the modern scientific outlook. But these ideas about
matter ignore the following problem: if, one fine day, the
Earth becomes glaciated or reaches total entropy, what
becomes of the moral world order? It has no place in Earth
conditions of this nature! Once the human species has died
out, what becomes of the moral order? In other words, the
moral ideas which man feels to be an integral part of
himself, the source of his moral values and the goal of his
conscience, appear to be a necessity; but if we are really
honest, moral ideas are unrelated to the natural order, to
that which natural science regards as fundamental realities.
Moral ideas have become emasculated. They are powerful enough
to determine men's actions and the dictates of
conscience; they are not strong enough, however, to give the
impression that what one imagines to be a moral idea today is
a concrete, vital force in the world. Something more is
needed to realize this. Who is it that can awaken our moral
conceptions to vigorous and active life? It is the Christ!
This is one aspect of the Christ Being.
Though all
that lives in stone, plant, animal and the human body, all
that lives in the elements of warmth and air, may perish (as
science foretells), though all human bodies will taste of
death at the end of time — for according to natural
science all our moral values must ultimately become — one
cannot say dust and ashes, for that would be going too far
— yet, according to Christian belief there lives in the
Christ Being a power that lays hold of our moral conceptions
and creates out of them a new world: “Heaven and Earth
may pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” This
is the power that will carry over to Jupiter the moral
element developed on the Earth.
Now picture
the Earth as an organism, like a plant, the moral law as the
seed which is formed within the organism, and the Christ
force as the impulse which stimulates the seed to grow into
the future Earth, into Jupiter. We then have a totally new
conception of the Gospels from the standpoint of Spiritual
Science.
But how can
this be? How can that which belongs solely to the realm of
thought according to the materialist, which is only an idea
or theory towards which one feels a moral obligation —
how can that be tranformed into real force such as the one
which burns in coal or which causes the bullet to fly through
the air? How can such ideas which are so tenuous possess
solid reality? To achieve this transformation a new impulse
is needed and these moral ideas must be inbued with the
impulse. What impulse is this? You will recall that we said
earlier that faith must not be merely a substitute for
knowledge: it must be an active agent that effects something.
It must make our moral ideas a reality, lift them to a new
plane and create a new world out of them. It is important
that our articles of faith are not simply a form of
unverified knowledge, a blind faith, but that our faith has
the power to transform the seed “morality” into a
cosmic reality. It was the mission of the Mystery of Golgotha
to imbue Earth evolution with this power. This power had to
be implanted in the souls of the disciples. At the same time
they were reminded of the loss suffered by those who
possessed only the written records. It is the power of faith
which is of paramount importance. And if we do not understand
what we owe to Christ when one so often hears the words
“faith” or “belief”, then neither do
we understand what entered Earth evolution at the time of the
Mystery of Golgotha.
You will now
realize that the Mystery of Golgotha has cosmic significance.
That which belongs to the natural order is subject to the
laws of nature. And just as at a certain stage of its
evolution a plant bears seed, so too at a certain point of
time the Mystery of Golgotha will bring a new impulse in
preparation for the new Jupiter evolution in which the future
incarnation of man can participate.
From our
study of the unique nature of the Christ Being I have
indicated the relation of this Being to the whole Cosmos and
how, at a definite point in time, Earth evolution was imbued
with a new vitalizing force, which is revealed from time to
time with impressive effect, but only to those who can
apprehend such manifestations intuitively. The author of the
Mark Gospel, for example, was a case in point. When Christ
was led away after the betrayal by Judas and the author of
that Gospel had a clairvoyant vision of the scene, he saw,
among the multitude that had forsaken Him, a certain young
man clad only in a linen cloth. The linen cloth is torn from
him, but he wrests himself free and flees from them naked
(Mark XIV, 51).
This was the same young man who, according
to the Mark Gospel was sitting clothed in a long white
garment on the right of the sepulchre and announced: Christ
is risen. This is the account given in the
Gospel of St. Mark
as the result of Imaginative cognition. Here is portrayed the
encounter between the former body of Christ-Jesus and the
“seed” of a new world order as seen by
Imaginative cognition.
Try to feel
this in connection with what I said recently — and on
this note I propose to conclude my lecture today —
namely, that the human body, in virtue of its original
constitution, was destined for immortality. Compare this with
the fact that the animal is mortal by virtue of its
organization, whilst this does not apply to man. He is mortal
because of the corruption of his soul and this stain will be
washed away by Christ. If you reflect upon this you will
understand that the physical body must be transformed by the
living force that streams into Earth evolution through the
Mystery of Golgotha. When Earth evolution comes to an end the
power which has been lost through the “Fall” and
which brought death to the body will be restored through the
power of Christ, and the body of man will be seen in its true
physical form. If we recognize the trichotomy of body, soul
and spirit, then the “ressurrection of the body takes
on meaning also, otherwise it cannot be understood. The
modern rationalist will no doubt regard this as a most
reactionary idea, but he who derives his knowledge of
reincarnation from the wellspring of truth is also aware of
the real significance of the resurrection of the body at the
end of time. And when Paul rightly said: “If Christ be
not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also
vain”
(Cor. I.XV. 14),
we know from the investigations
of Spiritual Science that he bore witness to the truth. If
this dictum of Paul be true, then it is equally true to say:
if earthly evolution does not lead to the conservation of the
corporeal form which man can perfect in the course of
evolution, if the human form were to perish, if man could not
rise again through the power of Christ, then the Mystery of
Golgotha would have been in vain and vain also the faith that
it inspired. This is the necessary complement of the words of
Paul.
Original Note:
Note 1.
St. Anselm's remark is interesting in this context:
“Credo ut intelligam” (I believe in order
that I may understand).
NOTES BY
TRANSLATOR
Note 1.
Tertullian
(A.D. 150–c. 220).
Son of a Roman centurion, he was a convert to the African Church.
His writings are doctrinal, apologetic and practical. In
A.D. 202
he joined the Montanist sect which
practised prophesying, a form of extempore preaching which
was connected with ecstasy and trance. Tertullian wrote six
books on ecstasy which are lost. His “Rule of
Faith” was substantially the Apostles’ Creed.
He believed that the Twelve Apostles had founded Apostolic
Churches. All teaching which agrees with these Churches
must be accepted as the truth since it is received from
Christ. He believed that the soul derives from God, is
immortal, corporeal, is endowed with free will, thinks and
wills. The body is its necessary counterpart and swill rise
again, but does not return to Earth. Though we are all
infected with original sin, there is no total corruption.
Tertullian was a voluminous writer, a bitter polemicist and
inclined to fanaticism. To him we owe the famous sayings:
“The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the
Church”, “Christ is truth, not custom”,
“Credo quia absurdum, certum est quia
impossible”. He was the first of the three great
Church Fathers of the African Church; the others were
Cyprian and Augustine.
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