LECTURE SEVEN
One of the outstanding figures in world
history is Julian the Apostate (a successor of Constantine)
who fell by the hand of an assassin in the campaign against
the Persians in the year
A.D. 363
(note 1).
Julian occupies a special place in the history of the West.
His life and career show how the course of world history is
determined by the clash of contending forces. I pointed out
in my previous lecture that in Constantine we have a
personality who had to abandon the former coercive measures
practised by the majority of the earlier emperors when they
sought initiation into the Mysteries. To compensate for this
he therefore did everything in his power to advance the cause
of exoteric Christianity in the Empire.
Now from
earliest childhood Julian was held in low esteem by the
Imperial family and their adherents. In the age with which we
are dealing it was the custom to anticipate the future of an
individual such as Julian by resorting to prenatal
prophecies. The Imperial family had been obliged to conclude
from the predictions of the Sibylline oracles that Julian
would actively oppose the policy pursued by the Emperor
Constantine. From the first, therefore, they tried to prevent
Julian from being raised to the purple. It was decided that
he should be murdered while still a child and preparations
were made to have him butchered along with his brother. There
was a strange aura attaching to Julian which inspired terror
in those around him and countless stories relating to his
personality testify to the fact that there was something
uncanny about him. On one occasion during his campaign in
Gaul a somnambulist cried out as the army passed by:
“There is the man who will restore the old Gods and
their images.”
The
appearance of Julian at this moment in history must be seen
as something predestined, something deeply significant. As
often happens in such cases his life was spared lest his
murder should bring greater disaster in its train. People
persuaded themselves that whatever steps he might take
against the policies of Constantine could be quickly
nullified. And precautionary measures were taken to
neutralize the dangerous tendencies of Julian's make-up
and his leanings towards Paganism. In the first place it was
decided to give him a sound Christian education which
accorded with the ideas of Constantine. It was wasted effort
and met with no response. Anything which had survived from
the ancient Hellenic traditions fascinated him. Where
powerful forces are at work in such a personality they
ultimately prevail. And so, because his mentors sought to
protect him from dangerous associations he was driven into
the arms of Hellenic tutors and was introduced to Hellenic
culture and civilization. When he grew older Julian learned
how the neo-Platonic philosophers were imbued with the spirit
of Hellenism and in consequence he was finally initiated into
the Mysteries of Eleusis. Thus at a time when the Roman
Emperors had already dispensed with the principle of
initiation, an initiate in the person of Julian once again
sat on the throne of the Caesars.
Everything
that Julian undertook must be judged in the light of his
initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries (and history has
been at great pains to misrepresent his actions in every
possible way). In order to form a true estimate of such a
personality as Julian we must give due weight to the effects
of this initiation. What spiritual benefit had Julian derived
from his initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries? Through
direct spiritual perception he learned the secrets of cosmic
and world evolution, the spiritual origin of the world and
how spiritual forces operate in the planetary and solar
systems. He learned to understand certain things which were
quite incomprehensible to his contemporaries (with the
exception of a few Greek initiates), namely, the relation of
solar influences and the Being of the Sun to the old
Hermes-Logos. He understood the meaning of the Pythagorean
maxim: “Thou shalt not speak against the Sun!”
This does not refer, of course, to the physical sun but to
the Spirit which is concealed behind the Sun. He knew that
the ancient sacred traditions ascribed the origin of the
world to the spiritual Being of the Sun and above all that
man must recover his relation to the spiritual Sun if he is
to penetrate to the source of his existence.
Julian
therefore was aware of the ancient Sun-Mystery. He realized
that the physical sun is but the external form of a spiritual
Sun which can be awakened in the soul of man through
initiation, and when awakened can reveal to him the intimate
connection between the universe and the historical life of
man on Earth. It was clear to Julian that the world can never
be ordered on a basis of rationalism, that only those who are
able to be in touch with the Sun Logos are in any way fitted
to have a voice in the ordering of the world. He had to
recognize that the movements of the celestial bodies and the
great historical movements of mankind are governed by a
common law.
Even a Church
Father such as St. Chrysostom was aware of the existence of
an ancient Sun-Mystery, since he went so far as to declare
that men are so dazzled by the physical sun that they cannot
penetrate to the spiritual Sun. The soul of St. Chrysostom
was still illumined by a ray of wisdom from olden times, but
in those around him hardly a trace of it remained. It is
clear that scarcely a vestige of understanding remained for
that method of awakening the soul to the secrets of the
universe which had been communicated through the ancient
Mysteries and which were certainly communicated to Julian who
was one of the last to be instructed in that method. He was
therefore surrounded entirely by adherents of Constantine, by
those who echoed the thoughts of Constantine. It is true that
in the West, up to the end of the ninth century we find
outstanding personalities even amongst the Popes, who were
still inspired by the ancient Mystery wisdom; but the real
opposition came from Rome which set out to nullify the
efforts of these individuals and to pursue in its place a
definite policy of its own towards the traditions of the
ancient Mysteries. I shall say a few words about this later.
In effect, Julian only came in contact with a very exoteric
form of Christianity.
Through
complicated psychological processes which are difficult to
describe in detail he lighted upon the idea of utilizing the
last surviving remnants of initiation in order to ensure
continuity in evolution. In reality he was not an opponent of
Christianity; he simply favoured the continuity of Hellenism.
He was more interested in promoting Hellenism than in
opposing Christianity. With passionate enthusiasm he strove
to arrest the decline of Hellenism and to transmit its
traditions to posterity. He was opposed to any sudden break
in continuity, any radical change. As an initiate of Eleusis
he knew that the policies he proposed to embark upon could
not be realized unless one was in close touch with the
spiritual forces operating in the sensible world, and that if
we seek to introduce new impulses into world evolution by
appealing to physical and psychic forces alone, then we are
“speaking against the Sun” in the Pythagorean
sense. Julian had no such intention; indeed his purpose was
quite the reverse. In effect he accepted one of the greatest
challenges that it is possible to imagine.
Now we must
not forget that in Rome at that time and throughout the whole
of Southern Europe there was active opposition to this
challenge. Remember that up to the time of Constantine, in
large sections of the population the last remnants of ancient
cults had been preserved. Today the question of miracles is a
real thorn in the side of Biblical exegesis, because people
refuse to read the Gospels from the standpoint of the age to
which they, the Gospels, belong. The question of miracles
raised no problems for the contemporaries of the Evangelists,
for they were aware of the existence of rites and ceremonies
from which men derived spiritual forces which they were able
to control.
Whilst, on
the one hand, Christianity was introduced as a political
measure which culminated in Constantine's edict of
toleration, so attempts were made on the other hand, to
suppress the ancient pagan rites. Endless laws were
promulgated by Rome which forbade the celebration of rites
which derived their power from the spiritual world. These
laws, it is true, declared that the old superstitions must
cease, that no one may practise ritual magic in order to
injure others and no one may communicate with the dead, and
so on, but these were only pretexts. The real purpose of
these laws was to eradicate root and branch any traces of
pagan cults which had survived from ancient times. Wherever
possible, history has endeavoured to hush up or to conceal
the real facts of the situation. But our earliest historical
records were the work of priests and monks in the monasteries
(a fact which modern science, which claims to be
“objective and to accept nothing on authority”,
studiously ignores). The avowed object of the monasteries
(i.e. priests and monks) was to suppress all knowledge of the
true character of antiquity and to prevent the essential
teachings of the pagan Mysteries from being transmitted to
posterity.
And so Julian
saw the vanishing world of antiquity in a totally different
light from the forerunners of Constantine. Through his
initiation he knew that the human soul was related to the
spiritual world. He could only hope to succeed in the task he
had undertaken — to use the forces of the old principle
of initiation in order to further the continuity of human
evolution — by resisting the current attitude to
man's evolution. Because of his initiation Julian was
in reality a man with a profound and sincere love of truth, a
sense for truth that was totally foreign to Constantine.
Indeed Julian's profound respect for truth has not its
like in the history of the West. With his deep instinct for
truth that had been fortified by his initiation he turned his
attention to teachings of the universities and schools of his
day. He found that the Christian dogma had been introduced
into the schools in the form that had existed since the time
of Constantine. Armed with this dogma the teachers gave their
personal interpretations of the Hellenistic writers whose
works were centred round the figures of Zeus, Apollo, Pallas
Athene, Aphrodite, Hermes-Mercury and so on. And Julian said
to himself: “These teachers are the most outrageous
sophists. How can they presume to expound ancient writings
whose authors were convinced that the old gods were still
living forces in the world? On what grounds do these teachers
presume to interpret these writings when, by the very nature
of their dogmas, they must deny the existence of these
gods?” Julian's instinct for truth was outraged.
He therefore forbade those who, by virtue of their Christian
dogma were unable to believe in the old gods, to expound the
ancient writings in the schools. If today we had the same
honesty of purpose as Julian you can well imagine how much
would be excluded from the curricula of our schools!
Julian wished
to meet the challenge of the current trends which none the
less were a necessity from another point of view. In the
first place he had to come to terms with the Gospels, which
had arisen in a totally different way from the knowledge
imparted to him in the Eleusinian Mysteries. He could not
reconcile himself to the way in which the Gospels had arisen.
He said to himself: If that which is manifested in the Christ
is a genuine inspiration that stems from the Mysteries then
it must be possible to find it in the Mysteries, for it must
have been incorporated in the Mystery-teachings. He wanted to
ascertain if it were possible to continue the ancient
Mystery-teachings. In the first place he was only familiar
with the Christianity of his time in its exoteric aspect. He
decided to make an experiment — not the kind of
experiment that relies purely on human expedients (that would
have seemed childish to him) — but to undertake an
experiment that had a spiritual significance. He reasoned as
follows: It has been prophesied that the temple in Jerusalem
would be destroyed, not a single stone would remain standing.
This has indeed come to pass. But if this prophecy could be
discredited, if its fulfilment could be prevented then the
mission of Christianity could not be accomplished. At the
cost of great capital outlay Julian decided therefore to
rebuild the temple in Jerusalem. A large number of workmen
was assembled to begin the reconstruction. Now the whole
affair must be regarded from a spiritual standpoint; it was
not men alone, but gods, whom Julian set out to challenge.
And it is an undoubted fact that can be demonstrated
historically — in so far as historical facts can be
demonstrated, even externally, although internal evidence
leaves no doubt of their truth — that each of the
workmen engaged on the work of reconstruction had a vision;
he saw tongues of flame licking over the place where he was
working and was obliged to withdraw. The undertaking was
abandoned; but we recognize the high purpose that inspired
Julian to undertake this venture.
Julian's experiment miscarried. After he had failed to
discredit the prophecy of the destruction of the temple, he
decided to approach the problem from another angle. His new
plan was no less boldly conceived. The time had not yet come
when the evolution of Europe had been influenced by that
spiritual current which owed its origin to the fact that one
of the greatest Church Fathers, Augustine
(note 2),
could not rise to a certain idea because at
that time he lacked the necessary spiritual development. You
know perhaps from your study of history — and I have
referred to this on frequent occasions when discussing the
Faust legend — that Augustine had originally been a
Manichaean. Manichaeism originated in Persia and claimed to
understand Christ Jesus better than Rome and Constantinople.
This doctrine (unfortunately it is not yet permissible today
to unveil the ultimate secrets of this doctrine, even in our
present circle) filtered through into Europe in later times
in various guises and still survived, though in a corrupt
form, in its ramifications in the sixteenth century when the
Faust legend was first recorded. By a happy intuition the
revival of the Faust legend by Goethe preserved something of
the spirit of Manichaeism. Julian thought on the grand scale;
his thought embraced all mankind. In the presence of a man
such as Julian we realize only too clearly how limited are
the thoughts of ordinary mortals. The doctrine of the
“Son of Man” will of necessity assume different
forms according to our capacity to form conceptions of the
real nature of man himself. Our conceptions of the “Son
of Man” must therefore depend upon our conceptions of
man; the one involves the other. In this respect men differ
widely. At the present time people have only the most
superficial understanding of such matters.
In Sanscrit
the word for man is Manushya. This word expresses the basic
feeling which a large number of people associate with the
idea of humanity. When we use this vocable to
describe man we are referring to the spiritual aspect of man,
we are appraising man primarily as a spiritual being. If we
wish to express the idea that man is spirit and his physical
aspect is only the manifestation of spirit, then we use the
word “Manushya”.
From our
earlier discussions you know that we can study man from
another angle. We can consider him mainly from his psychic
aspect. We shall then give more attention to man as soul than
to man as spirit; his physical aspect and everything that is
related to his external aspect will be of secondary
importance. We shall then be able to characterize man from
the information derived from his inner life which is
reflected in the eye or in the fact that he holds his head
erect. If you look into the derivation of the Greek word
anthropos you will find that it gives a rough indication of
this aspect. Those who characterize man with the word
Manushya or some similar vocable see him primarily as spirit,
as that which descends from the spiritual world. Those who
characterize man with a word resembling the Greek word
anthropos (and this applies especially to the Greeks
themselves) are expressing his soul nature.
Now there is
a third possibility; we can concentrate on the external, the
corporeal or somatic aspect, which is the product of physical
inheritance. We shall then characterize man with the word
homo that signifies (approximately) the procreator or the
procreated.
Here are
three conceptions of man. Julian who was aware of this
trichotomy felt the need to look for a spiritual
interpretation of the “Son of Man”. The thought
occurred to him: “I have already been initiated into
the Eleusinian Mysteries. Perhaps it is possible to have
myself initiated into the Persian Mysteries and into the
Mysteries which are in accordance with the doctrine of the
Manichaeans. By this means perhaps I may be able to achieve
my aim — the continuity of the pagan Mysteries.”
This was a momentous thought. Just as Alexander's
campaign had deeper motives than the mere conquest of Asia,
so Julian's expedition had other motives than the
conquest of Persia. He wished to find out whether he could
further his objective with the help of the Persian
Mysteries.
In order to
understand the problem that faced Julian we must ask: What
was it that Augustine could not understand in Manichaeism? I
have already said that the time had not yet come to reveal
the ultimate secrets of Manichaeism but it is possible to
give a few indications. In his youth, Augustine was deeply
attached to these teachings and they made a profound
impression on him. He later exchanged the teachings of
Manichaeism for Roman Catholicism. What did he not understand
in Manichaeism? Why did he reject it, what was beyond his
comprehension in Manichaeism?
The
Manichaeans did not cultivate abstract ideas which divorced
the world of thought from the world of reality. The
Manichaeans and the initiates of the Eleusinian Mysteries
were alike incapable of abstract thinking. In earlier
lectures I attempted to show the difference between logical
concepts and concepts in conformity with reality. The basic
principle of Manichaeism was to cultivate only those ideas
which are consistent with reality. Not that unreal ideas do
not play a part in life; unfortunately they play a large part
in life, especially at the present day, and the part they
play is disastrous. And so, amongst other things, it was
consistent with Manichaeism to form representations that were
not purely abstract, but which were sufficiently powerful to
intervene in the external world and to play an active part in
that world. The conception of Christ Jesus that was commonly
held by people at that time would have been quite impossible
for the Manichaeans. And what was this conception? They had a
somewhat nebulous idea of the Christ who had incarnated in
Jesus through whom a change had been brought about in Earth
evolution. Ideas about Christ have become incredibly vague,
especially in the nineteenth century.
If we are
really honest and sincere we cannot say that the notions
afforded by Christian dogma about Christ and His mission will
take us very far. If Christian ideas are not powerful enough
to envisage an Earth which is not the graveyard of humanity,
but the seed-bed of a transformed humanity, if we cannot
envisage Earth evolution differently from the natural
scientists of today who predict that life on the Earth will
one day become extinct, then all our conceptions of Christ
are vain. For even if we believe that Christ has brought new
life to the Earth, it is difficult for us to imagine that
matter can be so spiritualized that we can envisage it as
capable of being transmuted from its present earthly
condition to its future condition. We have need of far more
powerful ideas in order to be able to conceive of the
Earth's metamorphosis to the Jupiter condition.
I said
recently in a public lecture that natural science thinks
— or rather calculates — that if the forces of
nature as they exist today were to persist for millions of
years, then a condition would arise according to Dewar (I
mentioned in Lecture Three his lecture before the Royal
Institute) when, if the walls of a room were painted with
albumen, it would be possible to read the newspaper in its
phosphorescent light. And I spoke of the scientist who
declared that in the distant future milk would be solid and
emit a blue light and so on. These ideas are the inevitable
consequence of nebulous thinking that is unable to come to
terms with reality. Such calculations are equivalent to
deducing from the modifications in the human stomach over a
period of four or five years what its condition would be
after two hundred and fifty years. I am able to arrive at
this conclusion by extending my calculations over a large
number of years. The scientist calculates what will be the
condition of the Earth a million years hence; on the same
principle I can calculate the condition of the human stomach
after two hundred and fifty years — only by that time
the man will be dead! Just as the geologists calculate the
condition of the Earth millions of years ago, so too on the
same principle one could calculate, by showing the
modifications in a child's stomach over a period of a
week or a fortnight, the condition of the same stomach two
hundred and fifty years ago — but of course the child
would not have been alive at that time. Concepts cannot
provide a total picture of reality. Scientific concepts are
valid for the period of time between
6000–7000 B.C.
and
A.D. 6000–7000,
but not beyond that time.
We must think
of the evolution of man in terms of a totally different time
scale. And the Christ Being must occupy a central place in
this future evolution. I said therefore on a previous
occasion that we must distinguish between what the Middle
Ages called “mystical marriage” and what
Christian Rosenkreutz called “chymical marriage”.
Mystical marriage is simply an inner experience. As many
theosophists used to say (and perhaps still say): if one
looks within, if one withdraws into oneself one becomes
united with the divine Being! This was depicted in such
roseate hues that, after an hour's lecture, the members
emerged with the firm conviction that if they took firm
control of their inner life, if they practised
self-discipline, they would experience the first intimations
of the divine within. The chymical marriage of Christian
Rosenkreutz imagines forces to be active in man which embrace
the whole man, which so transform his being that when he is
purified from the dross of the physical body he is translated
to the Jupiter, Venus, and Vulcan conditions.
The aim of
Manichaeism was the conquest of evil and of matter by
thought. Julian was brought face to face with the deeper
implications of the problem of evil and the relation of
Christ Jesus to this problem. He hoped to find an answer
through initiation into the Persian Mysteries and to return
to Europe with the solution. But unfortunately he fell by an
assassin's hand during the Persian campaign. It can be
proved historically that this was the work of an adherent of
Constantine. Thus we see that in the course of history the
attempt to establish the “principle of
continuity” was fraught with tragedy and that in the
case of Julian it led into a blind alley.
In the
following years the Augustinian principle triumphed —
ideas that in any way echoed Manichaeism were forbidden, i.e.
the inclusion of material ideas in spiritual thinking. The
West therefore was driven to an abstract mode of thinking and
in the course of time this mode of thinking permeated the
whole of Western Europe. Only a few of the foremost minds
rebelled against this tendency and one of the most celebrated
of these was Goethe. His whole cast of mind was opposed to
abstract theorizing. And one of those who succumbed to it
most was Kant. Take, for example, Kant's
Critique of Pure Reason
— I know that what I am about to
say is heretical — and let us look at the main
propositions. If you reverse each of these propositions you
will arrive at the truth. And the same applies particularly
to his theory of space and time. You can equally well reverse
every proposition and you will then arrive at conclusions
that are valid for the spiritual world. You can gather from
this why some people have a professional interest in
misrepresenting Goethe (the great opponent of Kant) as I
showed in the case of Haller, who wrote: “no created
spirit can penetrate into the inner recesses of nature”
— a complete distortion of Goethe's conception of
nature.
If we bear this
point of view in mind, we can appreciate at its true worth
Julian's essay which was directed against Pauline Christianity
(note 2).
It is a remarkable
document, not so much for its contents, but for its
similarity to certain writings of the nineteenth century.
This may seem paradoxical, but the facts are as follows:
Julian's polemic against Christianity musters every
kind of argument against Christianity, against the historical
Jesus and certain Christian dogmas, with passionate sincerity.
And when we compare these arguments with the objections raised
by the liberal theology of the nineteenth century
(note 3)
and the later theology of
the adherents of Drews against the historicity of Christ,
when we consider the whole field of literature of the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries which reveals most
careful, painstaking and thorough philological investigation,
there are endless repetitions, so that one has to consult
whole libraries — we find that we can piece together
certain guiding principles. The leading critics began to
undertake a comparative study of the Gospels and found many
discrepancies in the texts. But all these critical methods
were already anticipated by Julian. The nineteenth-century
criticism offered nothing new that was not already known to
Julian. Julian spoke out of a natural creative gift whilst
the nineteenth-century criticism displayed enormous industry,
great erudition and downright theological sophistry.
Julian
therefore was engaged in a titanic struggle. He finally
attempted, by reviving Manichaeism, to bring about continuity
in the evolution of the pagan Mysteries. Bear in mind how the
most enlightened minds such as Goethe felt an instinctive
urge to recapture the spirit of ancient Greece! Imagine what
would have happened if Julian's policy had been crowned
with success! That he was doomed to fail was a necessity of
the time. And we shall not understand the reason for his
failure if we belittle his great achievements, if we fail to
see him as a titanic figure, fighting for a realistic
understanding of the relations between man and the universe.
And it is of paramount importance today to recall these great
moments in the historical evolution of the West. For we are
living in an age from which we shall not emerge with a
healthy outlook unless we make a fresh assessment of the aims
of Julian the Apostate. It was not possible in his time
— herein lies his great tragedy — to reconcile
the old principle of initiation with the real essence of
Christianity. Today this has become possible and we must not
fail to translate the possibility into reality if the world
and mankind are not to suffer evolutionary decline. People
must realize the need for regeneration in all spheres of life
and above all the crying need to restore communication with
the spiritual world.
First of all
we must understand the factors that militate against this
necessary regeneration. Today we are afraid of definite,
clear-cut ideas which could lead to such an understanding.
There is no lack of physical courage today — but we are
certainly lacking in intellectual courage! Mankind today is
unwilling to face realities and this is the greatest need of
our time. For if our age is not to end in futility it must
learn to understand the principle of the creative spirit and
what it means when it is said that the spirit, when creative,
is as powerful a force as the instincts, save that our
instincts work in the dark, whilst the creative spirit works
in the light of the Sun, i.e. the spiritual Sun. This is what
our age must learn to understand. And especially in our own
time many forces are still arrayed against any understanding
of the creative spirit and are actively engaged in
suppressing that knowledge.
Cato's
policy was to establish a highly centralized political
system. In order to achieve this he felt it was necessary to
exile the adherents of Hellenistic philosophy. “They
only prate”, he said, “and that has a disturbing
effect upon the decrees of the authorities.” And the
celebrated Florentine Machiavelli was also of this opinion
and gave high praise to Cato because he proposed to banish
those who used the weapon of spiritual knowledge in order to
raise objections to State decrees. Machiavelli fully
appreciated the fact that in the Roman Empire any
interference with the structure of the social order was on
certain occasions punishable by death. Intercourse with the
spiritual world was anathema especially to the Roman Empire
and the successor States in Europe. Every effort was
therefore made to ensure that the greatest uncertainty should
prevail in these matters and they were hushed up as much as
possible. If a conception of the Mystery of Golgotha that is
both radical and uncompromising gains a firm foothold in the
world, then we shall have to modify considerably our mental
attitude. This is not to our liking, but it will have to
come. And a way must be found to arrive at a real
understanding of the nature of Christ. In our next lecture I
propose to discuss how we can directly experience the being
and nature of Christ today.
We shall see
this whole question in wider perspective through a study of
two contrasting figures — Constantine who inaugurated
the exoteric side of Western culture and Julian the Apostate
who, when the times were out of joint (for him), attempted to
take up the struggle against the exoteric side of Western
evolution. It is a curious phenomenon that if anyone with a
slight knowledge — I do not mean of occult facts, but
with a real knowledge of those occult facts that can still be
found in ancient writings — makes a study of Christian
dogma, if, for example, we inquire into the origin of the
Mass, or if ritual and dogma are studied in the light of this
occult knowledge derived from ancient writings, we discover
the most extraordinary things. What lies behind these dogmas
and cult acts? Not I alone, but countless authors who have
studied these questions from this standpoint have come to the
conclusion that in ritual and dogma a large residuum of
paganism has been preserved or has survived, so that an
attempt was made for example by the French writer Drach
(note 4),
who was an authority on Hebraism,
to demonstrate that the dogma and ritual of the Catholic
Church were simply a revival of paganism. And others
attempted to show that certain people were at pains to
conceal from the faithful the fact that the dogmas and ritual
of the Church were imbued with paganism.
Now it would
have been a strange phenomenon if paganism in particular had
survived quite unconsciously. In that event, we might ask, in
what way would the survival of paganism have contributed to
the survival of the Roman Empire? And what would have been
the position of Julian the Apostate? If many recent writers
are right in saying that the Catholic sacrifice of the Mass,
for example, is in essence a pagan sacrifice and that Julian
had been at great pains to preserve and perpetuate the
ancient pagan rites, then to some extent Julian has achieved
his aim after all. A study of these two contrasting figures,
Constantine and Julian, raises countless problems of the
highest importance, “thorny” problems as
Nietzsche calls them, problems which are fraught with fateful
consequences for us today and which without question will
become the central problems of our time.
I propose to
return to these problems in my next lecture.
NOTES BY
TRANSLATOR
Note 1.
Julian had received a strict
Christian education; during his internment in Cappadocia he
began to doubt the validity of Christianity and when sent
to Athens in 354, the intellectual centre of Greece, he
secretly abandoned Christian beliefs. His treatise
“Against the Galileans” (referred to here)
summarizes his polemical arguments against Christianity.
Briefly they are as follows: Knowledge of God is natural to
man and does not come by teaching. The story of Eden in the
Old Testament is a fable and the account of Creation is
inferior to that of Plato. The idea of a jealous God and a
chosen people is unacceptable. The Mosaic law is barbarous;
the Decalogue common to all nations. No man is better for
reading the Jewish scriptures. The New Testament is full of
inconsistencies. Matthew and Luke disagree on the genealogy
of Jesus. Peter and Paul were hypocrites.
Matt. IV, 5,
is illogical and in
Luke XXII, 42-47,
since the disciples
were asleep, who could have told him the story of the angel? The
Christians were fanatics and cheerfully massacred heretics.
By contrast the Greeks were mild and forbearing, they were
superior in wisdom and intelligence. Christianity has
achieved little or nothing in the fields of science,
astronomy, arithmetic and music. The achievements of Plato,
Socrates, Aristides, Thales, Lycurgus, Agesilaus and
Archedemus, the Sibyls, the Delphic Oracle and the pagan
Mysteries surpassed anything that Christianity had to
offer.
The formal
refutation of Julian's treatise was “Pro
Christiana Religione” composed between
A.D. 429 and 441
by Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria.
Note 2.
Manichaeism and Augustine. Augustine
(A.D. 345–410),
an African by birth, was a Manichaean for ten years. He
became dissatisfied with Manichaeism and when Faustus, a
leader of the sect, failed to resolve his doubts he
abandoned Manichaean teachings. (See
Confessions,
Books IV and V.) Augustine repaired to Rome where he was
converted by St. Ambrose in
A.D. 386.
His chief works were
directed against the Manichaeans, e.g.
Books against the Manichaeans
and
On the Utility of Believing.
The Scriptures were a means to faith and
hope and the Canon was the testimony of Christianity in the
Church. His dictum, “Better a man's body be
destroyed than his soul” leads to the Inquisition.
When Christianity became the State religion he
distinguished between “Civitas Dei”, which was
perfect and in which all men were equal in the sight of
God, and “Civitas terrena”, which of necessity
was imperfect. It was the devil's domain where sinful
men had to submit to the authorities. Augustine was the
founder of Western monasticism and monastic spirituality
and exercised considerable influence on Pascal, Fenelon and
Port Royal. On Manichaeism in general, see F. C. Burkitt,
Religion of the Manichees
1925) and H. C. Puesch,
Le Manicheisme, son fondateur, sa doctrine
(1949).
Note 3.
Liberal theology. The chief representatives of Liberal Protestant
theology in the nineteenth century were Bauer, founder of
the Tübingen school of New Testament research, and
Ritschl (1822–89) who rejected metaphysics and mysticism
and developed an objective and scientific method of
research. The great exponent of the Ritschl school was A.
von Harnack (1851–1930) whose
History of Dogma and What is Christianity?
are regarded as monuments of
liberal historiography. Harnack eschewed metaphysical
speculation, perfected the scientific-historical method and
emphasized the need for source study and the faithful
representation of facts. “The Gospel about Jesus does
not belong to the Gospel preached by Jesus”, said
Harnack. Radical historical research led to
Bultmann's “demythologization”, the
attempt to liberate the Church's teaching from the
mythological language in which it is expressed. Myths, he
said, need reinterpretation in terms of modern
consciousness. The other burning question of the nineteenth
century was: is the Gospel true and how can we know that it
is true? Drews, Jensen and Kalthoff in Germany, J. M.
Robertson, W. B. Smith and T. A. Jackson in England claimed
that the Christ figure was a copy of the cult-god of pagan
beliefs under another name.
Note 4.
Drach (1791–1865) studied at various Talmudic Schools and
was converted to Christianity, 1823. He went to Rome and
was appointed librarian of propaganda.
|