A
truth, intimately united with human aspiration and for
centuries closely associated in the human heart with the
festival whose modern symbol is the Christmas tree, is
expressed in the words that have resounded ever since the time
of the Mystery of Golgotha and that must be impressed still
more deeply into the evolution of the earth. This truth, which
has shone down through the ages, is associated with the words,
“et incarnatus est de spiritu sancto ex Maria
virgine” (“and is born of the Holy Spirit from the
Virgin Mary”).
Most of the people of today seem to attach just as little
significance to these words as they do to the Easter mystery of
the Resurrection. We might even say that the central mystery of
Christianity, the resurrection from the dead, appears to modern
thought, which is no longer directed to the truths of the
spiritual world, just as incredible as the Christmas mystery,
the mystery of the Word becoming flesh, the mystery of the
virgin birth. The greater part of modern humanity is much more
in sympathy with the scientist who described the virgin birth
as “an impertinent mockery of human reason” than
with those who desire to take this mystery in a spiritual
sense.
Nevertheless, my dear friends, the mystery of the incarnation
by the Holy Spirit through the Virgin begins to exert its
influence from the time of the Mystery of Golgotha; in another
sense it had made itself felt before this event.
Those who brought the symbolic gifts of gold, frankincense, and
myrrh to the babe lying in the manger knew of the Christmas
mystery of the virgin birth through the ancient science of the
stars. The magi who brought the gifts of gold, frankincense,
and myrrh were, in the sense of the ancient wisdom,
astrologers, they had knowledge of those spiritual processes
that work in the cosmos when certain signs appear in the starry
heavens. One such sign they recognized when, in the night
between December 24 and 25, in the year that we today regard as
that of the birth of Jesus, the sun, the cosmic symbol of the
Redeemer, shone toward the earth from the constellation of
Virgo. They said, “When the constellation of the heavens
is such that the sun stands in Virgo in the night between
December 24 and 25, then an important change will take place in
the earth. Then the time will have come for us to bring gold,
the symbol of our knowledge of divine guidance, which hitherto
we have sought only in the stars, to that impulse which now
becomes part of the earthly evolution of mankind. Then the time
will have come for us to offer frankincense, the emblem of
sacrifice, the symbol of the highest human virtue. This virtue
must be offered in such a way that it is united with the power
proceeding from the Christ Who is to be incarnated in that
human being to whom we bring the frankincense.
“And the third gift, the myrrh, is the symbol of the
eternal in man, which we have felt for thousands of years to be
connected with the powers that speak to us from starry
constellations; we seek it further by bringing it as a gift to
him who is to be a new impulse for humanity; through this we
seek our own immortality, in that we unite our own souls with
the impulse of the Christ. When the cosmic symbol of world
power, the sun, shines in the constellation of Virgo, then a
new time begins for the earth.”
This was the belief held for thousands of years, and as the
magi felt compelled to lay at the feet of the Holy Child the
wisdom of the gods, the virtues of man, and the realization of
human immortality, symbolically expressed in the gold,
frankincense, and myrrh, something was repeated as a historical
event that had been expressed symbolically in innumerable
mysteries and in countless sacrificial rituals for thousands of
years. There had been presented in these mysteries and rituals
a prophetic indication of the event that would take place when
the sun stood at midnight between December 24 and 25 in the
sign of the Virgin, for gold, frankincense, and myrrh were also
offered on this holy night, to the symbol of the divine child
preserved in ancient temples as the representation of the
sun.
Thus, my dear friends, for nearly two thousand years the
Christian words, “incarnatus de spiritu sancto ex Maria
virgine” have resounded in the world, and so it has been
ever since human thought has existed on the earth. In our times
we can now present the question, “Do human beings really
know to what they should aspire when they celebrate
Christmas?” Does there exist today a real consciousness
of the fact that, out of cosmic heights, under a cosmic sign, a
cosmic power appeared through a virgin birth —
spiritually understood — and that the blazing candles on
the Christmas tree should light up in our hearts an
understanding of the fact that the human soul is most
intimately and inwardly united with an event that is not merely
an earthly but a cosmic earthly event? The times are grave, and
it is necessary in such serious times to give serious answers
to solemn questions, such as the one raised here. With this in
mind we will take a glance at the thoughts of the leading
people of the nineteenth century to see whether the idea of
Christ Jesus has lived in modern humanity in such a way as to
give rise to the thought: the Christmas mystery has its
significance in the fact that man wills to celebrate something
eternal in the light of the Christmas candles.
Firstly we will take the words of a writer, Ernst Renan, who
has given much study to the personality of Jesus and who has
tried to give a picture of Christ Jesus out of the
consciousness of the nineteenth century. We will listen to some
of the voices of leading thinkers of the nineteenth century.
Ernst Renan regarded the cities of Palestine with his physical
eyes in true materialistic fashion. He desired to awaken in his
own soul, from a materialistic standpoint, a picture of the
personality known through the centuries as the Redeemer of the
world. This is what he says:
“A beautiful outer nature tended to produce a much less
austere spirit — a spirit less sharply monotheistic, if I
may use the expression — which imprinted a charming and
idyllic character on all the dreams of Galilee. The saddest
country in the world is perhaps the region round about
Jerusalem. Galilee, on the other hand, was a green, shady,
smiling district, the true home of the Song of Songs, and the
songs of the well-beloved. During the months of March and April
the country forms a carpet of flowers of an incomparable
variety of colors. The animals are small and exceedingly gentle
— delicate and lively turtle doves, blue birds so light
that they rest on a blade of grass without bending it, crested
larks that venture almost under the feet of the traveler,
little river tortoises with mild, lively eyes, storks with
grave and modest mien, which, laying aside all timidity, allow
man to come near them, seem almost to invite his
approach.”
Ernst Renan never tires of describing this idyll of Galilee, so
remote from the world's historic events, so as to make it seem
natural that in this idyll, in this unpretentious landscape,
with its turtle doves and storks, those things could happen
that humanity for centuries has associated with the life of the
Savior of the world.
So,
my dear friends, that truth from which the earth received its
meaning, the truth toward which humanity has looked for
centuries, is attractive to a thinker of the nineteenth century
only as an idyll with turtle doves and storks.
Ernst Renan proceeds, “The whole history of infant
Christianity has become in this manner a delightful pastorale.
A Messiah at the marriage festival, the courtesan and the good
Zaccheus called to his feasts, the founders of the Kingdom of
Heaven like a bridal procession — that is what Galilee
has boldly offered and what the world has accepted.”
This, my dear friends, is one of the voices of the nineteenth
century. Let us listen now to another, the voice of John Stuart
Mill, who also desires to find his way from the consciousness
of the nineteenth century to the being whom humanity for
hundreds of years, and to the prophetic mind of man for
thousands of years, has recognized as the Savior of the
world.
John Stuart Mill says, “Whatever the rationalist may
destroy of Christianity, Christ remains, a unique figure as
different from his predecessors as from his successors, and
even from those who enjoyed the privilege of his personal
instruction. This estimate is not diminished if we say the
Christ of the Gospels is not historical, for we are not in a
position to know how much of what is worthy in Him has been
added by His followers, for who among His disciples, or their
followers, has been able to think out the speeches ascribed to
Jesus, or to imagine a life and personality such as is
portrayed in the Gospels? Certainly not the fisher-folk from
Galilee, nor even St. Paul, whose whole character and
inclination are of quite another kind, nor the early Christian
writers. The kind of words that could be added and inserted by
a scholar can be seen in the mystical part of the Gospel of St.
John, who borrowed words from Philo and the Platonists of
Alexandria and put them into the mouth of the Savior, who said
many things about Himself of which not the slightest trace
appears in the other Gospels. The East was full of people who
could have stolen any number of such sayings, even as the many
sects of the Gnostics did in later times. The life and
teachings of Jesus, however, bear the stamp and impression of
such profundity and personal originality that, if we deny
ourselves the expectation of finding scientific exactitude, the
prophet of Nazareth is placed in the foremost rank of venerated
people of whom the human race may boast, even in the estimation
of those who do not believe his divine inspiration. As this
extraordinary spirit was equipped with the qualities of the
greatest reformers and martyrs who have ever lived on earth, we
cannot say that religion has made a bad choice” (Made a
choice! We even choose in the nineteenth century!) “that
religion has made a bad choice in setting up this man as an
ideal representative and leader of humanity; also it would not
be easy, even for an unbeliever, to find a better way of giving
concrete expression to the abstract laws of virtue than to
accept Christ as the model for our way of living. If, finally,
we admit that even for the skeptic there remains the
possibility that Christ was actually the person He said He was
— not God; He never made the slightest claim to that; He
would have seen in such a claim as great a blasphemy as would
the people who judged Him — but the man expressly
entrusted by God with the unique mission of leading humanity to
truth and virtue, we may surely conclude that the influences of
religion upon character, which would remain after the
rationalistic critic had done his utmost against religion, are
worthy of retention and, though they may lack direct proof as
compared with other beliefs for which better evidence exists,
the greater truth and correctness of their morality more than
compensate for this lack.”
There we have the picture that the rationalists of the
nineteenth century, by denying their own spirit, have given to
that being whom humanity for centuries has recognized as the
Savior of the world. Let us hear another voice, the voice of
the international spirit, Heinrich Heine, and what he has to
say:
“Christ is the God whom I love most, not because He is a
God by inheritance, whose Father was God who had ruled the
universe from time immemorial, but because He had no love for
courtly, ceremonial display, although He was born the prince of
heaven; I love Him because He was no aristocratic God, no
panoplied knight, but a humble God of the people, a God of the
town, a good citizen. Verily if Christ were not a God, I would
choose Him for one and would much rather listen to Him, the God
of my choice, than to a self-decreed, absolute God.”
“Only so long as religions have to struggle with each
other in rivalry, and are more persecuted than followed, are
they beautiful and worthy of veneration, only then do we see
enthusiasm, sacrifice, martyrs, and palms. How beautiful, holy,
and loveable, how heavenly sweet was the Christianity of the
first centuries, as it sought to equal its divine founder in
the heroism of His suffering — there still remained the
beautiful legend of a heavenly God who in mild and youthful
form wandered under the palms of Palestine preaching human love
and revealing the teaching of freedom and equality — the
sense of which was recognized by some of the greatest thinkers,
and which has had its influence in our times through the French
Gospel” (of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity).
Here we have this Heine Creed which regarded Him, whom
humanity for centuries has recognized as the Redeemer of the
world, as worthy of praise because we ourselves would have
chosen Him, in our democratic fashion, even if He had not
already held that exalted position, and because He preached the
same Gospel as was preached later, at the end of the eighteenth
century. He was therefore good enough to be as great as those
who understood this Gospel.
Let
us take another thinker of the nineteenth century. You know
that I think very highly of Edward von Hartmann. I mention only
those whom I do admire in order to show the manner in which the
thought of the nineteenth century about Christ Jesus expressed
itself.
“We see,” says Edward von Hartmann, the
philosopher, “that the spiritual faculties of Jesus could
not have achieved such good results without the magic of an
impressive and loveable personality. This personality was
endowed with unusual oratorical power, but His quiet majesty
and personal tenderness must have been extraordinarily charming
to his followers, not only to the men but to the women who made
up so large a part of his following, in which prostitutes
(Luke 7:37),
married women of high rank
(Luke 8:3),
and young maidens
of all classes mingled without discrimination. They were mostly
eccentric persons, the epileptic, hysterical, or crazy, who
believed themselves to be healed by Him. It is a well-known
fact that such women are very prone to project or individualize
their religious emotions and enthusiasms onto the person of an
attractive male whom they proceed to make the center of a cult.
Nothing is more obvious than that these women were of such a
kind, and that even if they did not awaken in Jesus the idea of
His Messiah-ship, yet it was so nourished by their adoring
homage that it struck deep roots. According to modern
psychological and psychiatrical opinion it is not possible for
healthy religious feeling to flourish in such unhealthy soil,
and today we would advise any religious reformer or prophet to
shake off such elements in his following as much as possible,
for they would merely end in compromising both him and his
mission.”
Yet
another voice I wish to quote, the voice of one of the
principal characters in a romance that exercised a wide and
powerful influence during the latter third of the nineteenth
century over the judgment of the so-called
“educated” humanity. In Paul Heyse's book, Die
Kinder der Welt, the diary of Lea, one of the
characters in the book, is reproduced. It contains a criticism
of Christ Jesus, and those who know the world well will
recognize in this judgment of Lea's one which was common to
large numbers of human beings in the nineteenth century. Paul
Heyse has Lea write, “The day before yesterday I stopped
writing because an impulse drove me to read the New Testament
once again. I had not opened the New Testament for a long time;
it had been a long time since its many threatening, damning,
and incomprehensible speeches had estranged and repelled my
heart. Now that I have lost that childish fear, and the voice
of an infallible and all-knowing spirit can be heard, since I
have seen therein the history of one of the noblest and most
wonderful of human beings, I have found much that greatly
refreshed and comforted me.
“But its somber mood again made me depressed. What is
more liberating, gracious, and comforting than joy in the
beauty, goodness, and serenity of the world, yet while we are
reading this book (the New Testament) we hover in a twilight of
expectation and hope, the eternal is never fulfilled, it will
only dawn when we have struggled through time; the full glory
of joy never shines, there is no pleasantry, no laughter
— the joy of this world is vanity — we are directed
to a future that makes the present worthless, and the highest
earthly joy of sinking ourselves deep in pure and loving
thoughts is also open to suspicion, for only those can enter
heaven who are poor in spirit. I am such a one, but it makes me
unhappy to feel so, yet at the same time if I could break
through this limitation I should no longer be what I am, thus
my salvation and blessedness are not certain, for what
transcends me is no longer. And then this mild, God-conscious
man, in order to belong to the whole human race, departed from
his own people with such strange hardness that he became a
homeless one — it had to be so, but it chilled my
feeling. Everything great that I had formerly loved, even when
shrouded in majesty, was yet happily and comfortably linked
with my being by ties of human need.”
Here you see the New Testament represented as it had to be if
it was to provide satisfaction to such a typical person of the
nineteenth century. Thus she says that everything great that
she had formerly loved, even when shrouded in majesty, was yet
happily and comfortably linked with her being by ties of human
need. Because the New Testament contains a power that cannot be
described in these terms, therefore, the Gospel failed to meet
the needs of a person of the nineteenth century.
“When I read the letters of Goethe, of the narrow home
life of Schiller, of Luther and his followers, of all the
ancients back to Socrates and his scolding wife — I sense
a breath of Mother Earth, from which the seed of their spirit
grew, which also nourishes and uplifts mine own which is so
much smaller.” Lea thus finds herself more drawn even to
characters like Xanthippe than to the people of the New
Testament, and this was the opinion of thousands and thousands
of people in the nineteenth century.
“But this picture of a world forlorn alarms and estranges
me, and I am unable to justify it by any belief that everything
is guided and ordered by God.”
It
is fitting, my dear friends, to ask in these grave times what
is really the attitude of soul of people today with regard to
the candles they burn at Christmas? For this attitude of soul
is a complex of such voices as we have just examined and that
could be multiplied a hundred or thousand fold. But it is not
fitting in serious times to ignore and disregard the things
that have been said about the greatest mystery of earthly
evolution. It is much more fitting today to ask what the
official representatives of the many Christian sects are able
to do to check a development that has led human beings right
away from an inwardly true and genuine belief in that which
stands behind the lights of Christmas time. For can humanity
make of such a festival anything but a lie, when the opinions
just quoted from its best representatives are imposed upon that
which should be perceived through the Christmas mystery as an
impulse coming from the cosmos to unite itself with earthly
evolution? What did the magi from the East desire when they
brought divine gifts of wisdom, virtue, and immortality to the
manger, after the event whose sign had appeared to them in the
skies during the night between December 24 and 25 in the first
year of our era? What was it these wise men from the East
wished to do? They wanted, by this act, to furnish direct
historical proof that they had grasped the fact that, from this
time onward, those powers who had hitherto radiated their
forces down to earth from the cosmos were no longer accessible
to man in the old way — that is, by gazing into the
skies, by study of the starry constellations. They wished to
show that man must now begin to give attention to the events of
historical evolution, to social development, to the manners and
customs of humanity itself. They wished to show that Christ had
descended from heavenly regions where the sun shines in the
constellation of Virgo, a region from which all the varied
powers of the starry constellations proceed that enable the
microcosm to appear as a copy of the macrocosm. They wished to
show that this spirit now enters directly into earthly
evolution, that earthly evolution can henceforth be understood
only by inner wisdom, in the same way as the starry
constellations were formerly understood. This was what the magi
wished to show, and of this fact the humanity of today must
ever be aware.
People of today tend to regard history as though the earlier
were invariably the cause of the latter, as though in order to
understand the events of the years 1914 to 1917 we need simply
go back to 1913, 1912, 1911, and so on; historical development
is regarded in the same way as evolution in nature, in which we
can proceed from effect to impulse and in the impulse find the
cause. From this method of thinking, that fable convenue
which we call history has arisen, with which the youth
of today are being inoculated to their detriment.
True Christianity, especially a reverent and sincere insight
into the mysteries of Christmas and Easter, provides a sharp
protest against this natural scientific caricature of world
history. Christianity has brought cosmic mysteries into
association with the course of the year; on December 24 and 25
it celebrates a memory of the original constellation of the
year 1, the appearance of the sun in the constellation of
Virgo; this date in every year is celebrated as the Christmas
festival. This is the point in time that the Christian concept
has fixed for the Christmas festival. The Easter festival is
also established each year by taking a certain celestial
arrangement, for we know that the Sunday that follows the first
full moon after the vernal equinox is the chosen day, though
the materialistic outlook of the present time is responsible
for recent objections to this arrangement.
To
those who wish, reverently and sincerely, to tune their
thoughts in harmony with the Mystery of Golgotha, the period
between Christmas and Easter is seen as a picture of the
thirty-three years of Christ's life on earth. Previous to the
Mystery of Golgotha, with which I include the mystery of
Christmas, the magi studied the heavens when they wished to
investigate the secrets of human evolution or any other
mysterious event. They studied the constellations, and the
relative positions of the heavenly bodies revealed to them the
nature of events taking place upon earth. But at that moment in
which they became aware of the important event that was
happening on earth, by the sign given to them through the
position of the sun in Virgo on December 24 and 25, they said,
“From this time onward the heavenly constellations
themselves will be directly revealed in human affairs on the
earth.”
Can
the starry constellations be perceived in human affairs? My
dear friends, this perception is now demanded of us, the
ability to read what is revealed through the wonderful
key that is given us in the mysteries of the Christian
year, which are the epitome of all the mysteries of the year of
other peoples and times. The time interval between Christmas
and Easter is to be understood as consisting of thirty-three
years. This is the key. What does this mean? That the Christmas
festival celebrated this year belongs to the Easter festival
that follows thirty-three years later, while the Easter
festival we celebrate this year belongs to the Christmas of
1884. In 1884 humanity celebrated a Christmas festival that
really belongs to the Easter of this year (1917), and the
Christmas festival we celebrate this year belongs, not to the
Easter of next spring but to the one thirty-three years hence
(1950). According to our reckoning, this period —
thirty-three years — is the period of a human generation,
thus a complete generation of humanity must elapse between
Christmas festivals and the Easter festivals that are connected
with them. This is the key, my dear friends, for reading the
new astrology, in which attention is directed to the stars that
shine within the historical evolution of humanity itself.
How
can this be fulfilled? It can be fulfilled by human beings
using the Christmas festival in order to realize that events
happening at approximately the present time (we can only say
approximately in such matters) refer back in their historical
connections in such a way that we are able to perceive their
birthdays or beginnings in the events of thirty-three years
ago, and that events of today also provide a birthday or
beginning for events that will ripen to fruition in the course
of the next thirty-three years. Personal karma rules in our
individual lives. In this field each one is responsible for
himself; here he must endure whatever lies in his karma and
must expect a direct karmic connection between past events and
their subsequent consequences.
How
do things stand, however, with regard to historical
associations? Historical connections at the present time are of
such a nature that we can neither perceive nor understand the
real significance of any event that is taking place today
unless we refer back to the time of its corresponding Christmas
year, that is 1884 in this case. For the year 1914 we must
therefore look back to 1881. All the actions of earlier
generations, all the impulses with their combined activity,
poured into the stream of historic evolution, have a life cycle
of thirty-three years. Then comes its Easter time, the time of
resurrection. When was the seed planted whose Easter time was
experienced by man in 1914 and after? It was planted
thirty-three years before.
Connections that reach over intervals of thirty-three years are
essential for an understanding of the time rhythms of historic
evolution, and a time must come when people in the holy time
that begins with Christmas Eve will say to themselves,
“What I do now will continue to work on, but will arise
as outer fact or deed (not in a personal but in a historic
sense) only after thirty-three years. Furthermore, I can
understand what is happening now in the events of the outer
world only by looking back across the thirty-three years of
time needed for its fulfillment.”
When, at the beginning of the 1880's, the insurrection of the
Mohammedan prophet, the Mahdi, resulted in the extension of
English rule in Egypt, when at about the same time a war arose
through French influence between greater India and China over
European spheres of control, when the Congo Conference was
being held, and other events of a like nature were taking place
— study everything, my dear friends, that has now reached
its thirty-three years fulfillment. It was then that the seeds
were sown that have ripened into the events of today. At that
time the question should have been asked: what do the Christmas
events of this year promise for the Easter fulfillment
thirty-three years hence? For, my dear friends, all things in
historic evolution arise transfigured after thirty-three years,
as from a grave, by virtue of a power connected with the
holiest of all redemptions: the Mystery of Golgotha.
It
does not suffice, however, to sentimentalize about the Mystery
of Golgotha. An understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha
demands the highest powers of wisdom of which the human being
is capable. It must be experienced by the deepest forces that
can stir the soul of man. When he searches its depths for the
light kindled by wisdom, when he does not merely speak of love
but is enflamed by it through the union of his soul with the
cosmic soul that streams and pulses through this turning point
of time, only then does he acquire insight and understanding
into the mysteries of existence. In days of old the wise men
who sought for guidance in the conduct of affairs of human
beings asked knowledge of the stars, and the stars gave an
answer; so, today, those who wish to act wisely in guiding the
social life of humanity must give heed to the stars that rise
and set in the course of historic evolution. Just as we
calculate the cyclic rotations of celestial bodies, so must we
learn to calculate the cyclic rotations of historic events by
means of a true science of history. The time-cycles of history
can be measured by the interval that extends from Christmas to
the Easter thirty-three years ahead, and the spirits of these
time-cycles regulate that element in which the human soul lives
and weaves in so far as it is not a mere personal being but is
part of the warp and woof of historic evolution.
When we meditate on the mystery of Christmas, we do so most
effectively if we acquire a knowledge of those secrets of life
that ought to be revealed in this age in order to enrich the
stream of Christian tradition concerning the Mystery of
Golgotha and the inner meaning of the Christmas mystery. Christ
spoke to humanity in these words, “Lo! I am with you
always even to the end of the world.” Those, however, who
today call themselves His disciples often say that; though the
revelations from spiritual worlds were certainly there when
Jesus Christ was living on earth, they have now ceased, and
they regard as blasphemous anyone who declares that wonderful
revelations can still come to us from the spiritual world. Thus
official Christianity has become, in many respects, an actual
hindrance to the further development of Christianity.
What has remained, however? The holy symbols, one of the
holiest of which is portrayed in the Christmas mystery —
these constitute in themselves a living protest against that
suppression of true Christianity that is too often practiced by
the official churches.
The
spiritual science we seek to express through anthroposophy
desires, among other things, to proclaim the great significance
of the Mystery of Golgotha and the mystery of Christmas. It is
also its task to bear witness to that which gives to earth its
meaning, and to human life its significance. Since the
Christmas tree, which is but a few centuries old, has now
become the symbol of the Christmas festival, then, my dear
friends, those who stand under the Christmas tree should ask
themselves this question, “Is the saying true for us that
is written by the testimony of history above the Christmas
tree: Et incarnatus est de spiritu sancto ex Maria virgine? Is
this saying true for us?” To realize its truth requires
spiritual knowledge. No physical scientist can give answer to
the questions of the virgin birth and the resurrection; on the
contrary, every scientist must needs deny both events. Such
events can only be understood when viewed from a plane of
existence in which neither birth nor death plays the important
part they do in the physical world. Just as Christ Jesus passed
through death in such a way as to make death an illusion and
resurrection the reality — this is the content of the
Easter mystery — so did Christ Jesus pass through birth
in such a way as to render birth an illusion and
“transformation of being” within the spiritual
world the reality, for in the spiritual world there is neither
birth nor death, only changes of condition, only metamorphoses.
Not until humanity is prepared to look up to that world in
which birth and death both lose their physical meaning will the
Christmas and Easter festivals regain their true import and
sanctity.
Then, and only then, my dear friends, will our hearts and souls
be filled with inner warmth of tone, fortified by which we
shall be able again to speak to our little ones, to speak to
them even in earliest childhood, of that Child who was laid in
the manger, and of the three wise men who brought to him their
gifts of wisdom, virtue, and immortality. We must be able to
speak of these things to children, for what we say to the child
about the Christmas mystery will be celebrated by him as an
Easter festival, it will reappear in his life when he has lived
through thirty-three years. For in historical evolution the
responsibilities of humanity are such that one generation can
only express as Christmas impulse those forces that the next
generation will experience as Easter impulse. If we could
realize this with consciousness, my dear friends, one
generation would think of its successor in the following way:
in the Christmas star I teach you to receive into your soul as
truth that which will arise as the Easter star after
thirty-three years. If we were conscious of this connection of
the present generation and its successor, each one of us could
say, “I have received an impulse for work that extends
far beyond the limits of the day, for the period between
Christmas and Easter is not merely the weeks that lie between
these festivals but is really a period of thirty-three years;
this is the true cycle of an impulse that I have implanted in
the soul of a child as a Christmas impulse, and that after
thirty-three years will arise again as an Easter
impulse.”
Such things, my dear friends, should not encourage pride in
mere theoretical knowledge; they achieve value only when they
are expressed in practical deeds, when our souls become so
filled with conviction concerning them that we can do nothing
but to act according to their light. Only then is the soul
filled with love for the great being for whom the deeds, in
this light, are done; then this love becomes a concrete thing,
filled with cosmic warmth, and quite distinct from that
sentimental affectation that we find today on all lips but that
has led, in these catastrophic times, to some of the greatest
impulses of hatred among humanity. Those who for so long have
talked about love have no further right to speak of it when it
has turned to hate; to such persons falls rather the duty of
asking themselves, “What have we neglected in our talk of
love, of Christmas love, that out of it deeds of hatred have
developed?” Humanity, however, must also ask, “What
must we seek in the spiritual world in order to find that which
is lost, that love that rules and lives warmingly in all beings
but is only real love when it wells up from a vital
understanding of life.”
To
love another is to understand him; love does not mean filling
one's heart with egotistical warmth that overflows in
sentimental speeches; to love means to comprehend the being for
whom we should do things, to understand not merely with the
intellect but through our innermost being, to understand with
the full nature and essence of our human being.
That such a love, springing from deepest spiritual
understanding, may be able to find its place in human life,
that desire and will should exist to cherish such love, may
still be possible in these difficult times for him who is
willing to tread again the path of the magi to the manger. He
may say to himself, “Just as the wise men from the East
sought understanding to find the way, the way of love, to the
manger, so will I seek the way that will open my eyes to the
light in which the true deeds of human love are performed. Just
as the magi surrendered their faith in the authority of the
starry heavens, added to their knowledge of the stars their
sacrifice of this knowledge, and brought the union of
immortality with this stellar wisdom to the Christ Child on
that Christmas night, so must humanity in these later times
bring its deepest impulses of soul as sacrifice to that being
for whom the Christmas festival stands as the yearly symbol.
Inspired by such a consciousness, the Christmas festival will
again be celebrated by humanity sincerely and truly. Its
celebration then will express not a denial but a knowledge of
that being for whom the Christmas candles are lit.”
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