LECTURE SIX
We shall the better understand the real
nature of the events of today and especially of the immediate
future if, from a spiritual angle, we see them as the
continuation of the events which took place during the early
years of Christianity. This may seem paradoxical today. It is
difficult to bring home to the majority of people how certain
forces which at that time had been implanted in, and had made
a deep impact upon the evolution of the Earth and Man, are
still operative today, because, in the present climate of
contemporary thought they fail to perceive the deeper
impulses, the deep underlying forces that are at work in
contemporary events. They prefer to approach everything from
a purely superficial standpoint. These deeper spiritual
forces are not accessible to mankind today because people are
not prepared to investigate them. Anyone who wishes to
penetrate a little beneath the surface events of our time
will find, in many a published document and in the
vicissitudes of fortune that befall those who are unaware of
the motives that determine their actions, impulses that are
often a continuation, a resurgence of certain impulses that
were manifested especially in the early centuries of the
Christian era. It is not even possible to characterize the
outstanding examples of the resurgence of ancient impulses in
our present age because people cannot endure their
characterization. But those who study the first Christian
centuries in Europe from a certain standpoint will be able to
detect the forces that are emerging once again and are
actively at work. I have therefore attempted to draw your
attention to certain phenomena connected with the expansion
of Christianity in the
first centuries A.D.,
because, through the appropriate use of the ideas derived from
them, much that is taking place today will immediately become
clear to you.
I propose to
add further information based upon our recent investigations
which we can discuss in detail later. Let us first look at
this new material so that our later enquiry may bear
fruit.
I have often
spoken to you of the remarkable fact that the early Roman
emperors acquired Initiation by constraint and this explains
many of their actions. Consequently they gained knowledge of
certain facts connected with the great impulses of cosmic
events, but they exploited this knowledge derived from the
Mysteries to their own advantage.
It is most
important to realize that the intervention of the Christ
Impulse into the historical life of mankind was not merely an
event on the physical plane which we can apprehend through a
study of the historical facts, but was a genuinely spiritual
event. I have already pointed out that the Gospel report that
Christ was known to the devils has deeper implications than
is usually recognized. We are told that Christ performed acts
of healing which are described in the Gospels as the casting
out of evil spirits. And we are constantly reminded that the
devils knew who Christ was. On the other hand Christ Himself
rebuked the devils and “suffered them not to speak for
they knew He was the Christ.”
(Mark I, 34;
Luke IV, 41).
The appearance of Christ therefore was not only a matter
for the judgement of men. It is possible that at first people
did not have the slightest inkling of what the coming of
Christ presaged. But the devils — beings belonging to a
super-sensible world — recognized Him. The super-sensible
world therefore knew of His advent. The more informed leaders
of the early Christians were firmly convinced that the coming
of Christianity was not merely an event on the terrestrial
plane but something that was related to the spiritual world,
something which evoked a radical change in the spiritual
world. Without a shadow of doubt the leading spirits of early
Christianity were firmly persuaded of this.
Now it is a
remarkable phenomenon that the Roman emperors, because of
their forced initiation which gave insight into the spiritual
world, had a presentiment of the far-reaching importance of
the Christ Impulse. There were some emperors. however, who
despite their irregular initiation, understood little of
these secrets; but there were others who understood so much
that they were able to divine something of the power and
effectiveness of the Christ Mystery. And it was these more
talented, the more perspicacious emperors who began to pursue
a definite policy towards Christianity which was then gaining
ground. Indeed the first emperor to adopt this policy was
Tiberius who succeeded Augustus, though the objection might
be raised that Christianity was not as yet widely diffused.
This objection, however, is not valid for, when he learned of
Christ's birth in Palestine, Tiberius — who had
received a partial initiation into the ancient
Mysteries — realized its significance. Let us consider
for a moment that policy towards Christianity which began
under Tiberius and was pursued by all the initiated emperors.
Tiberius announced his intention to admit Christ to the Roman
pantheon.
The Roman
empire pursued a deliberate policy towards the worship of the
gods. In essence it was as follows: when the Romans conquered
a people they received the gods of the newly conquered people
into their Olympus. They declared that these gods were also
deserving of veneration and they were added to the Roman
pantheon. The object of this policy therefore was to
appropriate not only the material or temporal goods, but also
the spiritual forces of the conquered peoples. The initiated
Caesars saw in the gods something more than the mere external
images; they had a deeper understanding than the people.
They knew that the visible image of the gods concealed real
spiritual powers pertaining to the different Hierarchies.
Their policy was perfectly consistent and comprehensible, for
the authoritarian principle of Rome was consciously
reinforced by the power which was believed to derive from the
assimilation of other gods. And, as a rule, the worship of
other gods was accepted not only in an outward and exoteric
way, but the Mystery-teachings of other peoples were also
taken over by the Roman Mystery-centres and merged with the
Mystery-cult of the ancient Roman empire. And since, at that
time, it was generally held that it was neither right nor
possible to govern without the support of the spiritual
powers symbolized by the gods, this practice was taken for
granted.
The aim of
Tiberius therefore was to integrate the power of Christ, as
he conceived it, with the impulses proceeding from the other
deities recognized by him and his peoples. The Roman Senate
thwarted his intention and nothing came of it. None the less
the initiated emperors, Hadrian among them, made repeated
efforts to achieve this goal, but constantly met with
opposition from the dignitaries who could make their
influence felt. And when we examine the objections raised
against this policy of the initiated emperors we can form a
good idea of what happened at this decisive turning-point in
human evolution.
We witness
here a remarkable coincidence. On countless occasions Roman
writers, influential personalities and large sections of the
Roman populace accused the Christians of profaning what
others held to be sacred, and vice versa. In other words, the
Romans repeatedly emphasized that the Christians were
radically different in thought and feeling from the Romans
and other peoples — for the other peoples together with
their gods had been assimilated by the Romans. Thus everyone
looked upon the Christians as people with a different
make-up, people with different feelings and responses. Now
this view could be dismissed as a calumny; suchlike
accusations are always ready to hand, of course, when one
takes a superficial view of history. But we cannot regard
this view as a calumny when we realize that many of the
opinions of earlier times and many of the contemporary
opinions concerning the Mystery of Golgotha have passed over
verbatim into Christian teaching. To put it more clearly, the
Christians expressed their sentiments in words that could be
found amongst many of their contemporaries. One of these was
Philo of Alexandria
(note 1),
a contemporary of Christ, who probably had first-hand knowledge
of what was later found in the Christian writings. Philo makes
the following remarkable statement: “According to
traditional teachings I must hate that which others
love” (he is referring to the Romans) “and love
that which others hate.” If you bear this statement in
mind and turn to the
Gospel of St. Matthew,
you will find
countless passages which echo this statement of Philo. And so
we can say that Christianity has developed, as it were, out
of a spiritual aura which required people to say, “we
love what others hate”. This means — and this
saying was quoted in the early Christian communities and
served as one of the fundamental principles of Christian
teachings — that Christians themselves openly
acknowledged what others reproached them with. It was not
therefore a calumny; it accorded with the Roman view:
“the Christians love what we hate and hate what we
love”. And the Christians, for their part, said exactly
the same of the Romans.
It is clear
therefore that something wholly different from anything that
had been known before now entered human evolution —
otherwise it would not have had so great an impact. Of
course, if we wish to understand this whole situation we must
realize that the new impulse had come from the spiritual
worlds. Many who were contemporaries of the Mystery of
Golgotha, such as Philo, caught fleeting glimpses of it which
they described each after his own fashion. And so many of the
passages from the Gospels which are interpreted expediently
today, as in the case of Barres, whom I mentioned at the
conclusion of my last lecture, will be seen in their true
light when we cease to interpret them to suit our
convenience, but when our interpretation is determined by the
whole spirit of the age. There are strange interpretations in
Barres; indeed Biblical exegesis assumes very strange forms
nowadays. Much that Philo says agrees closely with the
Gospels and I would like to quote a passage which shows that
because he was not inspired to the same extent as were the
Evangelists later, his style was rather different from
theirs. As a talented writer in the popular sense he made
less heavy demands upon the reader than the Evangelists. In
one notable passage Philo gave expression to something that
was occupying the hearts and minds of the men of his time. He
says: “Do not concern yourselves with the genealogical
records or the documents of despots, take no thought for the
things of the body; do not attribute to the citizen civic
rights or civil liberties, which you deny to those of humble
origin or who have been purchased as slaves in the market,
but give heed only to the ancestry of the soul!” If the
Gospels are read with understanding one cannot fail to
recognize that something of this attitude of mind, albeit
raised to a higher level, pervades the Gospels and why
therefore an opportunist like Barres can write the passage I
quoted to you in my last lecture. We should do well to bear
his words in mind and I propose therefore to read them to you
once again.
“It
is a waste of time to look for the after-life. Perhaps it
does not even exist. No matter how we approach the question
we are never vouchsafed an answer. Let us leave all
occultism to adepts and charlatans. Mysticism of every kind
is totally irrational. Let us submit to the authority of
the Church because, with the traditional teaching and
practical experience of centuries she prescribes the code
of ethics in which nations and children must be instructed.
And finally we must submit because, far from exposing us to
the dangers of mysticism, she actively protects us against
them, silences the voices of the mystery teachings,
expounds the Gospels and tailors the liberal anarchy of the
Saviour to the needs of modern society.”
In the
passage which I quoted from Philo we can see, since it is
echoed again and again in the New Testament, what lies behind
this whole movement. Philo's reference to the ancestry
of the soul carries profound implications; he implies
something that is opposed to the leading ideas of the Roman
empire. For the Roman empire recognized only physical
inheritance in its various forms, and the whole social order
was founded on this principle. And suddenly the cry was
raised: “Take no thought for the ancestry of the body
but give heed only to the ancestry of the soul!” One
could hardly imagine a more radical breach with the
fundamental principles of the Roman empire, a greater
contrast. And this contrast was raised to a higher level by
the advent of Christ Jesus — indeed the world had been
waiting for this moment — and was vigorously opposed to
the existing world order of that time.
The Roman
emperors would have been only too pleased to receive Christ
into their pantheon as a new god amongst the other gods
though He struck at the very roots of their society, for the
Christ God who embodies a far deeper reality would thereby
have become one of their own gods. But the initiated emperors
soon realized that the advent of the Christ would be fraught
with difficulties for them. When initiation of the emperors,
as was the case in Rome after Augustus had been made
obligatory by imperial decree, the forces of initiation
exercised a powerful influence in the external world. They
influenced the policies of the emperors and were operative in
the measures and impulses which shaped society. The aims and
intentions of the initiated emperors were more clearly
defined, more uncompromising than those of the ordinary
initiate. Suppose, for example, that one of the emperors who
had received initiation had said: “Now John the Baptist
baptized with water. Through this baptism by water the
etheric body was loosened” (the initiated emperors were
of course aware of this) “and the candidates for
baptism thereby gained insight into the inner structure of
the spiritual world.” They were aware that a decisive
turning-point in the history of the world had now been
reached. This was known to those whose etheric bodies had
been loosened through total immersion. Let us now suppose
that one of these emperors had said: “I accept the
challenge” — such things were not unknown in the
Mysteries “I am prepared to do battle against that
which has entered the world at this decisive moment in
history!” — One must realize how autocratic,
self-willed, these emperors were. But they never dreamt for a
moment that they might be powerless against the will of the
gods; they were determined — and it was for this
purpose they had themselves initiated — to try issue
with the spiritual world-impulses and to stem the tide of
world-evolution. Such things had already happened before; and
they are happening before our eyes today, only people are
unaware of it.
Here is a
historical incident that confirms the hypothesis I have
suggested above. In the age of Constantine, Licinius ruled
over the Eastern part of the empire. He took it upon himself
to challenge the gods. He decided to celebrate a cult act,
for these ritual performances symbolized the struggle against
the spiritual powers. The ceremony was intended to
demonstrate publicly that he had undertaken to challenge the
gods. In other words, he wished to ridicule baptism in the
eyes of his fellow men (for it was baptism that had made
known to the world that the turning-point in world-history
had come), and so challenge Christianity and blunt the force
of the Christian impulse. To this end a festival was
organized at Heliopolis. It was arranged that an actor,
Gelasius, should be dressed in the white robes of a priest
and be immersed in water. It was to be presented as a
spectacle, as a burlesque of Christian baptism. Gelasius,
clothed in white, was immersed in the water and was taken out
again. He was then exposed to the assembled populace as an
object of ridicule. And what happened? Gelasius turned to the
people and said: “I have now become a Christian and I
will remain a Christian with all the strength at my
command.” Licinius had received his answer from the
spiritual world. Baptism was no longer an object of ridicule;
the effects of baptism were demonstrated for all the world to
see. He (Licinius) recognized that the critical moment in
world history had arrived. This inititated Emperor had taken
it upon himself to challenge the gods and had received his
answer.
It is hardly
possible for us today to form an idea of the significance of
this answer. It was seen by all, even by the heathen, as a
complete vindication of baptism, a valid answer, an answer
that had to be reckoned with. And those who at that time were
initiated into the secrets of world events received a
momentary illumination from another source and were granted
insight into the meaning and import of Christianity. Widely
different customs which had an occult meaning had survived
from ancient times. Under the Antonines, for example, the
Sibyls delivered their oracles. People consulted them and
took their instructions from them. One important oracle of
the time of the Antonines predicted that Rome was doomed to
destruction, that ancient Rome would not survive! Now
oracular utterances, though often ambiguous and open to
various interpretations, can be correctly interpreted. This
particular oracle gave out this strange prophecy: “Rome
will perish and the place where the city once stood will
become the haunt of foxes and wolves.” This was a sign
that had to be reckoned with. People naturally looked for a
deeper meaning but they felt that the turning-point of world
history had arrived. The might of Rome would be extinguished.
Foxes and wolves would lord it amongst the ruins and take
over in her place. Oracles of course often speak ambiguously,
but occasionally, even in those times, the aura of initiation
was transmitted through an ordinary, uninitiated sage, so
that he frequently uttered remarkable prophecies which could
only be construed as referring to the turning-point of world
evolution.
In my last
lecture I spoke of Nero and told you what this initiate
emperor really thought. He wished to set the whole world on
fire so that he might witness its destruction in person. If
Rome as the centre of the world power was to be destroyed, at
least he wished to determine for himself the manner of its
destruction. Seneca once warned him in a remarkable statement
which can be understood only if we are aware that the Roman
emperors who were in possession of the principle of
initiation believed themselves to be endowed with divine
authority which the Christians refused to honour. Seneca, who
knew no other way of bringing his message home to the tyrant,
said to Nero: “You have absolute power, you have
unlimited authority, you can even order the death of those
whom you think may contribute in some way to the world order
that will follow the downfall of Rome. But there is one thing
a despot cannot do, he cannot compass the death of his
successor.” These words had profound implications.
Seneca was referring of course not to the potential successor
if the occasion should arise, but to the actual successor.
Seneca wished to indicate that death set a limit to the
Emperor's power. The belief that Rome was doomed had an
important influence, especially upon imperial circles.
The
Christians reacted differently from the Romans to this
tradition. We are here faced with a paradoxical situation.
The Christians, for their part, championed the idea that Rome
would not perish, that her dominion would endure to the end,
which always implied the end of an era. It was the
Christians, therefore, who upheld the view that the dominion
of Rome would endure, that it would outlive the time of the
foxes and wolves. Not that the Christians would have denied
— if I may risk an oracular statement — that Rome
would become the habitat of wolves and foxes They agreed that
it was possible, but they maintained, on the other hand, that
her power would endure.
We must bear
in mind these different attitudes or opinions. Many of them
in fact have proved to be correct. For example, the mother of
Alexander Severus who was a pupil of Origen — although
suspected of heresy, he was none the less regarded as a kind
of Church Father — had managed to set up a kind of
pantheon for her private use. In her private sanctuary she
revered equally Abraham, Christ, Orpheus and Apollonius of
Tyana and she considered the worship of these four deities
was indispensable for her salvation. As a devoted pupil of
Origen she found that this practice was in no way contrary to
his teaching.
When we
consider these different shades of opinion which I have tried
to outline briefly, we find that they reflect the atmosphere
of the first three centuries of our era. And during this
period we find repeated attempts by initiated emperors to
come to terms with Christianity and to incorporate
Christianity into their religious system. Despite the
recorded persecutions of the Christians this was the Imperial
policy up to the fourth century.
Now in the
fourth century a remarkable personality appeared on the scene
in the shape of the Emperor Constantine
(note 2),
a contemporary of Licinius. He was an
outstanding personality both politically and spiritually. I
have indicated on other occasions how spiritual forces were
at work in the personality of Constantine and to some extent
guided him in the difficult administration of the Western
empire. Today I should like to consider him from another
standpoint.
His spiritual
make-up was such that he was unable to find a right
relationship to the principles of ancient initiation. In
contrast to his predecessors and contemporaries he shrank
from coercing the hierophants into granting him initiation
into the ancient Mysteries. The Sibylline oracles and the
prophecies of Rome's impending downfall weighed heavily
upon his soul. He was also aware of the Christian teaching
that Rome would endure to the end of time. He was well
informed on these matters. But he shrank from initiation into
the Mysteries; he shrank from carrying the war against the
Christians into the realm of the Mysteries. This has
significant implications.
What history
tells of Constantine is extremely interesting and shows how
he tried to find a modus vivendi with Christianity by other
means, how he set himself up as the protector of Christianity
and introduced Christianity, as he understood it, into the
Roman empire. But he could not incorporate his form of
Christianity into the old principle of initiation. He was
faced with an insurmountable difficulty because the
Christians themselves and their leaders were vigorously
opposed to this. They felt, and many even realized, that the
mission of Christianity was to unveil the ancient Mystery
teachings which until then had been kept secret in the
Mystery temples. It was their desire that the truths hidden
in the Mysteries should be proclaimed to the whole world and
should not be restricted to the temples. Fundamentally, the
aim of these initiated emperors was to deny Christianity to
the people and to restore it again to the Mystery temples. In
that event, they believed, people would be initiated into
Christianity in the same way as they had been initiated into
the secrets of the ancient pagan Mysteries. It was difficult
for Constantine to achieve his goal in face of the objectives
pursued by the Christians. The Christians saw in the
turning-point of world history an event of a spiritual,
non-temporal order. And their claim that the Roman empire
would endure must be understood as an expression of a wholly
spiritual impulse. And this is clearly reflected in the
secret teachings of the early Christians. In maintaining that
the Roman empire would endure they sought to anticipate what
actually came to pass. I pointed out recently that the deeper
impulse of the Roman empire has not ceased, that it still
lives on, not only in jurisprudence, but in other domains
also, which, to those who do not probe more deeply, appear to
be a new innovation. But in fact we are simply witnessing a
prolongation, an extension of the driving forces behind
Imperial Rome. Although the old Roman empire is no more, its
spirit still lives on and bites deeply into our
civilization.
Certain
people maintain that we are haunted today and will always be
haunted by the ghost of the old Roman empire. And this is
accepted as a truism by the educated, even today, and is
unlikely to change. The Christians wished to draw attention
to this. But at the same time they contended that
Christianity will always contain an element that is
antagonistic to the Roman empire, for the spiritual impulse
in Christianity will always be at odds with the materialism
of Rome. And this contention of the Christians was
prophetic.
You will now
understand more clearly why the Senators and the Roman
Emperors were alarmed, for they naturally associated the
decline that was prophesied with the external empire which
they saw slowly crumble under the impact of Christianity. And
the emperor Constantine shared this view. Although not
himself initiated, he was aware that a primordial wisdom had
once existed in ancient times when man possessed atavistic
clairvoyance. This wisdom had been transmitted to later ages,
had been preserved by the priesthood, but had gradually
become corrupted. In Rome too, Constantine said to himself:
our social order embodies something that is associated with
the institutions of this primordial wisdom, but we have
simply buried it beneath the social order of a materialistic
and secular empire. This was expressed in a pregnant symbol
that is an “Imagination”, and not only an
“Imagination”, but also an historical cult act,
for these “Imaginations” often took the form of
cult acts. People knew that in earlier times wisdom was not
an arbitrary invention of man but was a revelation from the
spiritual worlds. They knew that in primordial times priests
had preserved this wisdom, not in Rome, of course, but across
the sea in Ilion, in Troy where they originally dwelt. And
this is expressed in the legend of the palladium, the
so-called image of Pallas Athene which fell from Heaven in
Troy, was preserved in a sanctuary, was then transferred to
Rome and buried under a porphyry pillar. In all that was
connected with this symbolical cult act people felt that they
were able to trace back their civilization to the ancient
wisdom which they had received from the spiritual world, but
that they could not reach the heights which this wisdom had
known in ancient Troy.
Such were the
feelings Constantine harboured; and he also felt that even if
he were to be initiated into the later Mysteries, they would
be of little help to him; they would not lead him to the
palladium, to the ancient primordial wisdom. He therefore
decided to challenge the cosmic powers after his own fashion
in order to save the Roman empire from destruction. He
realized that this must be achieved in accordance with
certain cosmic impulses and that it would have to take place
in accordance with certain cult acts which were publicly
enacted for all the world to see. He decided therefore to
transfer the capital from Rome to the site of ancient Troy,
to have the palladium dug up and taken back to Troy. The plan
miscarried. Instead of establishing a new Rome on the site of
Troy, he decided to found a new city, Constantinople,
transfer the power to her and thus save declining Rome for
future ages. By these means Constantine hoped to stem the
tide of world evolution. He was prepared for Rome to become
the habitat of foxes and wolves as the Sibylline oracle had
foretold, but at the same time he wished to transfer the
hidden impulses of Rome to a new site and so restore them to
their original source. Constantine therefore embarked upon
the ambitious plan to found Constantinople, and the work was
completed in
A.D. 326.
He intended that the foundation of the
city should coincide with this turning-point in world
history. He therefore chose to lay the foundation stone at
the moment when the Sun stood in the sign of the Archer and
the Crab ruled the hour. He followed closely the indications
of the cosmic signs. He wished to make Constantinople famous
and to transfer to her the enduring impulse of eternal Rome.
He therefore had the porphyry pillar (which was later
destroyed by storms) transported to Constantinople. He
ordered the palladium to be dug up and to be placed beneath
the pillar. He also treasured among his possessions some
relics of the Cross and a few nails that had originally
secured the Cross. The relics of the Cross were made into a
kind of frame to hold a much prized statue of Apollo and the
nails into a nimbus with which he was crowned. This statue
was set up on the porphyry pillar and an inscription was
engraved on it which read somewhat as follows: That which
sheds its beneficent influence here shall, like the Sun,
endure for all time and proclaim the fame of its founder
Constantine to all eternity! These things must of course be
taken more or less imaginatively, but with this
qualification, that they refer at all times to actual
historical events.
This whole
story has passed over into legend and, transmuted, lives on
in the following legend: the palladium which is a symbol for
a particular centre of primordial wisdom had been deposited
originally in the secret Mystery Centres of the
priest-initiates of Troy. It came to light for the first time
when it was transported by circuitous routes from Troy to
Rome. It saw the light of day a second time when it was
transferred from Rome to Constantinople on the orders of
Constantine. And those who believe the legend say that it
will see the light of day a third time when it is transported
from Constantinople to a Slavonic city. This legend is still
vitally alive and survives in many things and under manifold
forms. Today many things which appear in their purely
physical aspects conceal a deeper layer of meaning.
Constantine
therefore actively strove to prevent the downfall of the
Roman empire in spite of his firm belief in the prophecy of
the Sibylline oracle. He wanted to save Rome from
herself.
In what I
have told you I want you to recognize that in the historical
personality of Constantine psychic impulses were at work
which had significant and far-reaching effects. And bear in
mind also what the earlier Christians and their leaders
maintained: “The Roman empire will endure and the
Christ Impulse we have received will also be realized and
will ever be present amongst us.” Here we see two
parallel phenomena of importance which have a significant
bearing upon the different currents which have influenced the
cultural development of the West. In particular you will be
able to form an idea of the attitude towards the Roman empire
in the early Christian centuries and in the age of
Constantine, and of the sharply conflicting opinions on the
way in which the future was envisaged. And you will perhaps
find criteria which will enable you to see many of the later
events in their true light. And we can only see many of these
later events in proper perspective if we answer the following
question: How far does the later development of Christianity
up to now accord with its original intention and what must be
done to bring it into closer rapport with that intention?
It remains
for me to speak of a still more important moment in evolution
in connection with the expansion of Christianity, the moment
when an initiated Emperor called Julian the Apostate came
face to face with this emergent Christianity. From the
results of our historical enquiry we shall then be in a
position to discuss in this context the further question: How
can we prepare our souls to draw near to the Christ whose
presence will be experienced in the etheric world in the
present century? What steps must we take, especially in our
present age, to draw near to Him?
In my next
lecture I should like to discuss the trend of events under
Julian the Apostate and to indicate the relation of our
present age to the Etheric Christ in so far as it is
permissible to touch upon this question today.
NOTES BY
TRANSLATOR
Note 1.
Philo of Alexandria or Philo Judaeus (circa 30
B.C.–A.D. 40)
was an important
representative of Hellenistic Judaism. He believed that the
Pentateuch had divine authority. In his “Allegories
of the Sacred Law”, a commentary on Genesis, he
regarded the characters in Genesis as allegories of states
of soul. He is considered to be the first religious
philosopher (cf. H. A. Wolfson,
Philo.
(2 vols.) 1947).
Note 2.
Constantine was firmly convinced of
his divine mission to rule over the world and to establish
the orthodox teaching of the Church. He prided himself on
having settled the Donatist conflict and the Arian heresy.
On his initiative the Council of Nicaea was compelled to
introduce the doctrine of the “filioque” which
split the Church for a century and a half.
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