LECTURE THREE
Yesterday
I made two observations drawn from the science that we must call the
science of Initiation, and I should like to remind you of them, for
we shall need them as a connecting link. First, I said that the
truths, the deepest truths, relating to the Mystery of Golgotha must
by their nature be of the kind that cannot be substantiated through
external historical evidence perceptible to the senses. Anyone
who sets out by an external historical route to find a proof of
the facts concerned with the Mystery of Golgotha, in the same way as
historical evidence is sought for other facts, will be unable to
discover it, for the Mystery of Golgotha is meant to relate itself to
mankind in such a way that access to its truths is finally
possible only by a supersensible path. If I may put it rather briefly
— where the most important event in earthly existence is
concerned, men are intended to accustom themselves to
approaching it by supersensible means, not through the senses.
The second
thing I said yesterday is that man, with the understanding he possesses
according to his development as an earthly being, is never able,
right up to his death, to comprehend the Mystery of Golgotha
through his own understanding developed within the sense-world. I
went on to say: It is only after his death, during the time he spends
in the supersensible world, that there develops in man the understanding,
and the forces for that understanding, which can fully make clear the
Mystery of Golgotha. Hence I stated yesterday something which will quite
naturally be held up by the external world as an absurdity, a paradox.
I said that even the contemporaries of Christ were unable to reach such
an understanding until the second or third century after the Mystery of
Golgotha, during their life beyond the threshold; and that what has been
written about the Mystery of Golgotha in those centuries was inspired by
men who had been contemporaries of it and, from the spiritual world, from
the supersensible world, had an inspiring influence on the writers of
that period.
Now there
is an apparent contradiction to this in the fact that the Gospels are
inspired writings (as you may gather from my book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact;
they are inspired writings of Christianity. The inspired Gospels,
therefore, could give expression to the truth about Christianity only
because — as I have often emphasised — they were not
written out of the primal nature and being of man, but with the
remnants of atavistically clairvoyant wisdom.
What I
have said here about the relation of mankind to the Mystery of
Golgotha is drawn from the science of Initiation. If in this way
something has been given out of supersensible knowledge, the question
may well be asked: How does it appear when compared with the facts of
external historical life? Hence at the beginning of this lecture
to-day I want to put forward, as a particularly characteristic case
— at first only as a question which should receive an answer by
the end of our studies to-day — a typical ecclesiastical author
of the second century. I might just as well — but then
naturally I should have to give the whole treatment a different form
— choose some other writer of the Church, Clement of
Alexandria, Origen, or any other. But I am choosing one who is often
mentioned — Tertullian. With regard to the personality of
Tertullian I should like to ask how the external course of Christian
life is related to the supersensible facts of which I was
speaking yesterday, and have repeated in essence to-day.
Tertullian
is a very remarkable personality. Anyone who hears the ordinary
things said about Tertullian — well, he will hardly get beyond
the knowledge of Tertullian that is generally current. He is
said to have been the man who justified belief in the being of
Christ, in the sacrificial death and the resurrection, by saying,
Credo quia absurdum est
— “I believe because it is absurd,” because no light
is thrown upon all this by human reason. The words,
Credo quia absurdum est,
are not to be found in any of the other Fathers of the Church; they
are pure invention, but they are the source of the later opinion about
Tertullian that has been held, often dogmatically, right up to
the present day.
When, on the
other hand, we come to the real Tertullian — there is no need to
be an actual follower of his — then the more exactly we
get to know his personality, the more we respect this remarkable man.
Above all we learn to respect Tertullian's use of
the Latin language, the language which expresses the most
abstract way of human thinking, and had come in other
writers of his time to exemplify the thoroughly prosaic character
of the Romans — Tertullian makes use of it with a true
fieriness of spirit. Into his style of treatment
he brings temperament, brings movement; he brings feeling
and holy passion. Although he is a typical Roman who expresses
himself as abstractly as any other Roman about what is
often called reality — and although in the opinion of people versed
in the Greek culture of that time he was not a particularly
well educated man — he writes with impressiveness, with
inner force, and in such a way that while using the abstract, Roman
language, he became the creator of a Christian style. And the
way in which Tertullian himself speaks is impressive enough. In a kind
of apologia for the Christians he writes in such a way that one
seems to be listening directly to the speech of a man in the
grip of a holy passion.
There are
certain passages where Tertullian is defending the Christians
who, when they are accused under a procedure very like
torture, do not deny but testify that they are Christians —
testify to what they believe. And Tertullian says of them: In all
other cases those who are tortured are accused of denying the truth;
in the case of the Christians it is the reverse; they are
declared infamous when they testify to what is in their souls. The aim of
torturing is not to force them to speak the truth, which
would be the only sense in torture; the aim is to force them to
say what is untrue, while they continue to speak the truth. And
when out of their souls they testify to the truth, they are looked
upon as malefactors.
In short,
Tertullian was a man with a fine sense of the absurd in life. He was
a subtle observer who had already identified himself with what had
developed as Christian consciousness and Christian wisdom. So
it is really significant when he makes such a statement as: You have
familiar sayings; very often you say out of immediate feeling in your
soul: “God be with you,” “It is God's will,”
and so on. But that is the belief of the Christians: the soul —
if only unconsciously — is confessing itself to be Christian.
Tertullian
is also a man of independent spirit. He says to the Romans, to whom he
himself belongs: Consider the Christians' God and then reflect
upon what you are able to feel about true piety. I ask you whether
what you as Romans have introduced into the world is in keeping with
true piety, or whether true piety is what the Christians desire? Into
the world you have brought war, murder, killing (said Tertullian to
his fellow-Romans); that is precisely what the Christians do not
want. Your sanctuaries are blasphemies (so said Tertullian to the
Romans) because they are trophies of victory, and trophies of victory
are signs of the desecration of sanctuaries. ... Thus spoke
Tertullian to the Romans. He was a man of independent feeling. And
turning to the ways of Rome he said: Do men pray when they
instinctively look up to the sky, or when they look up to the
Capitol? Thus Tertullian was in no way a man entirely merged in the
abstractions of Rome, for he was permeated with a lively sense of the
presence in the world of the supersensible.
Anyone who
speaks on the one hand with the independence and freedom of
Tertullian, and at the same time out of the supersensible —
such a man is very rare, even in those days when the supersensible
was nearer than it later came to be. And Tertullian was more than
merely rational. To declare that “when the Christians say what
is true, you claim them to be malefactors, whereas men should be
claimed as malefactors only if when tortured they say what is untrue
...” certainly that was rational, but it was also courageous.
And Tertullian said other things, too, for instance: When you Romans
look up to your Gods, who are demonic beings, and really put
questions to them, you will receive the truth. But you do not want to
receive the truth from these demonic beings. If an accused Christian is
confronted by someone who is possessed by a demon, and out of
whom the demon speaks, and if the Christian is allowed to
question it in the right way, the demon will admit that it is a demon.
And of the God whom the Christian acknowledges the demon will say
— though with fear: “That is the God who now
belongs to the world!” Tertullian does not call on the
evidence of Christians alone, but also on that of demonic beings,
saying that they will confess themselves to be demons if they
are simply questioned, questioned fearlessly; and that, just
as it is described in the Gospels, they will acknowledge Christ-Jesus
to be the true Christ-Jesus.
At all
events we have here a remarkable personality who, as a Roman,
confronts his fellow-Romans in the second century. This personality
strikes us especially when we consider his relation to the
Mystery of Golgotha. The words spoken by Tertullian concerning
the Mystery of Golgotha are approximately these: The Son of God is
crucified. Because this is shameful, we are not ashamed. The Son of
God has died; this is easy to believe because it is foolish.
Tertullian's words are:
Prorsus credibile est, quia ineptum est.
It is credible, perfectly credible, because it is foolish. Thus: God's
Son has died; this is perfectly credible because it is foolish. And
He has been buried, He has risen again; this is certain, because it
is impossible. From the words,
Prorsus credibile est, quia ineptum est,
the other untrue words have originated:
Credo quia absurdum est.
Let us
rightly understand what Tertullian says here about the Mystery of
Golgotha. He says: The Son of God is crucified.
If we men contemplate this crucifixion, because it is shameful we are
not ashamed. What does he mean? He means that the best that can
happen on earth is bound to be shameful, because it is the way
of man to do what is shameful and not what is
excellent. Were anything declared to be a most splendid deed, says
Tertullian, a most splendid deed brought about by
man, it could not be the most excellent event for the earth. For the
earth the most excellent deed will indeed be one that brings shame to
men, not fame — this is Tertullian's meaning.
To
continue: “The Son of God has died. This is perfectly credible
because it is foolish.” The Son of God has died; it is quite
credible because human reason finds it foolish. Were human reason to
pronounce it sensible it would not be credible, for what is found
sensible by human reason cannot be the highest; it can never be the
highest thing possible on earth. For human reason with its cleverness
is not so high that it can arrive at what is highest; it arrives at
the highest when it is foolish.
“He has
been buried and has risen again. It is certain because it is
impossible.” As a natural phenomenon it is impossible
that the dead should rise again; but according to Tertullian the
Mystery of Golgotha has nothing to do with natural phenomena. Were
anything to be counted as a natural phenomenon, it would not be
the most valuable thing on earth. What has most value for the earth
can be no natural phenomenon and must, therefore, be impossible
in the kingdom of nature. It is just on this account that He has been
buried and has risen again, and it is therefore certain because it is
impossible.
I should
like to put Tertullian before you, with these words of his just
quoted from his book,
De Carne Christi,
as a question. I have tried to describe him, first as a free,
independent spirit, secondly as one who in man's immediate
surroundings perceives the demonically supersensible. But at the same
time I quoted three propositions of Tertullian's on account of which
all clever people must look upon him really as a simpleton.
In matters
of this kind it is certainly remarkable how one-sidedly people judge.
When they put forward a proposition as false as
Credo quia absurdum est,
they are pronouncing judgment on the whole man in accordance with it.
It is, however, necessary to take the three propositions — which
certainly are not at first glance intelligible, for Tertullian is not
to be easily understood — to take
them first together with his complete awareness of the inter-working
of the supersensible world into the human environment.
And now we
want to bring before our souls something which in some measure is
suited to spread light over the Mystery of Golgotha from another
point of view. I have in mind two phenomena about which I said a few
words during our studies of the day before yesterday. These two
phenomena in the life of mankind are, first, the phenomenon
of death, and secondly the phenomenon of heredity —
death which is connected with the end of life, and heredity with birth.
Where these are concerned it is important to have a clear insight into
human life and the being of man. From all that I have been describing
to you for some weeks you will be able to gather the following.
When man
looks around with his senses at his environment and wishes to grasp
the world of the senses with his understanding, then among the
phenomena of the senses he encounter? also the phenomena of
inheritance, for to a certain extent the characteristics of
forefathers can be traced in their descendants, who are subject
to the unconscious working of these inherited forces. Things
connected with the mystery of birth, all the various inherited
characteristics, are often studied without our knowing it. When, for
example, we are learning about folklore, we are always speaking about
inherited characteristics without noticing it. We cannot study a
people without seeing all that we are studying in the light of
inherited characteristics. When you speak of a particular
people — of
Russians, for example, of Englishmen, of Germans — you
are speaking of qualities belonging to the realm of heredity,
qualities the son acquires from the father, the father from the
grandfather, and so on. The realm of heredity, connected as it is
with the mysteries of birth, is indeed a wide realm, and when talking
about external life we are often speaking of the facts and forces of
heredity without being aware of it.
The fact
that the mystery of death plays into the life of the senses is indeed
constantly before us at the present time; it needs no
reiteration. But if we look back over the human faculty for
knowledge, something different becomes apparent. We see that this
facility is adapted for grasping a great deal in the natural order,
but it regards itself as sovereign and wants to grasp in terms of the
natural order everything found therein.
Now this human
faculty for knowledge is never adapted for grasping either the fact
of heredity, which is connected with birth, or the fact of death. And
so it turns out that the whole of man's outlook is permeated by false
concepts, because it assigns to the sense-world phenomena which
indeed are manifest in the sense-world but in their whole being
are of a spiritual nature.
We count
human death — it is different with animals and plants, as I
have shown — we count human death among the phenomena taking
place in the sense-world, because that is what it appears to be. But
with this we get nowhere in learning about human death. It
would never be possible for a natural science to say anything about
the death of human beings; for on those lines we arrive merely at
exchanging our whole human outlook for a delusion, with the facts of
death mixed into it everywhere. We learn something about the truth of
nature only when we omit death, and omit also inherited
characteristics. A typical feature of human knowledge lies in its
becoming corrupted, becoming mere appearance, because it claims to be
able to deal with the entire world of the senses, including death and
birth. And because it mixes death and birth into its whole outlook,
its outlook concerning the world of the senses is falsified. We shall
never perceive what man is as a sense-being if we ascribe to the
sense-world the inherited qualities, which are indeed connected with
death. We corrupt the whole picture of man developing along his
normal straight line — I have told you of three streams, the
normal straight line and the Luciferic and Ahrimanic side-streams
— we corrupt the whole picture of mans development if we
ascribe birth and death to his essential being in so far as he
belongs to the world of the senses.
That is the
strange situation in which we find the human faculty for knowledge!
Under the guidance of nature itself this faculty is driven to
thinking falsely because, were it able to think in accordance with
truth, it would have to separate off from nature a picture of human
life in which there was no heredity and no death. We should have to
rule out death and heredity, paying no attention to death and birth,
making our picture without them — then we should have a picture
of nature. Inherited characteristics and death have no place in
Goethe's world-outlook. They do not come into it and are not in
keeping there. It is indeed the special characteristic of Goethe's
world-outlook that you are unable to fit death and heredity into it.
It is so good just because death and heredity have no place there,
and that is why we can accept it as a true picture of the reality of
nature.
Now up to
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha people still thought about death
and heredity out of certain spiritual depths, and more in conformity
with nature. The Semitic peoples looked upon inherited
characteristics as a direct continuance of the working of the God
Jahve. They eliminated everything connected with heredity from
nature, seeing it as the direct working of Jahve — for as long,
at least, as the Jahve-outlook was properly understood. The God of
Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob, signified the continued
working of inherited characteristics.
On the
other hand, the Greek outlook — though in its decadence it had
little success — sought to grasp something in the nature of man
that lived in him between birth and death but had nothing to do with
death. The Greeks sought to raise out of the sum-total of phenomena
something with which death had no power to interfere. They had a
certain horror of the very idea of death. Just because they
concentrated on the realm of the senses, they had no wish to
understand death; for they instinctively felt that when the human
gaze is directed purely to the world of the senses — as it was
with Goethe — death becomes a stranger. It is not in keeping
with the sense-world; it is foreign to it.
But now
there arose other outlooks, and the alteration in certain ancient
outlooks appeared most typically among the leading peoples and
individuals at the time when the Mystery of Golgotha was approaching.
Men increasingly lost all ability to look into the spiritual world in
the atavistic way; and so they came more and more to believe that
birth and death, or heredity and death, belong to the world of the
senses. Heredity and death — they do indeed play their part,
very palpably, in the world of the senses, and men came more and more
to the view that heredity and death belong there. This view wormed
its way into the whole of man's outlook. For centuries prior to the
Mystery of Golgotha the whole human outlook was permeated by the
belief that heredity and death have to do with the world of the
senses. Thereby something very, very remarkable came into being. You
will understand it only if you allow the spirit of what I have been
telling you in the last few days to work upon you in the right way.
Now the
fact of heredity was easily seen by observing how it figured among
the phenomena of nature, and it was thought to be a natural
phenomenon. Increasingly the belief gained ground that heredity is a
natural phenomenon. Every fact of this kind, however, evokes its
polar opposite: in human life you can never cultivate a fact without
that fact evoking its opposite. Man's life runs its course in the
balancing of opposites. A basic condition of all knowledge is
the recognition that life runs its course in opposites, and a state
of balance between opposites is all we can strive for. What,
therefore, was the consequence of this belief that heredity has its
place among natural phenomena and belongs to them? The consequence
was the bringing of the human will into terrible discredit; and this
took the form — because its opposite developed — of
bringing into the human will a fact belonging to the past, a
fact we know in Spiritual Science as the influence of Luciferic and
Ahrimanic spirits. And the effect on the soul of looking for heredity
among the phenomena of nature was so potent that it led irresistibly
to a moralistic world-outlook. For out of this misunderstanding of
heredity its opposite came into being — the belief
that once through the human will something had happened which went on
to permeate the world as “original sin.” It was precisely
through the introduction of heredity into the phenomena
of nature that this great evil originated — the placing of
“original sin” into the moral realm.
In this
way human thinking wasted astray; it was unable to see that the
way original sin is generally represented is blasphemy, terrible
blasphemy. A God as conceived by the majority of people, a God who
permits out of pure ambition, one might say, what happens in Paradise
— according to the usual telling of the story — a God who
does not do this with intentions of the kind described in the book
Occult Science,
but in the way usually described, would be no God of the heights. And
to attribute this ambition to God is blasphemy. Only when we come to
the point of not setting inherited characteristics in a moral
light, but seeing them as a physically perceptible fact in a
supersensible light; only when we relate them to the supersensible
without any of this moral interpretation; when in the supersensible
light we decline to fit them into a moral
world-picture in the manner of rabbinical theology — only then
do we come properly to terms with this matter.
Rabbinical
theology will always give an elaborate intellectual
interpretation of what are manifest in the world of the senses as the
forces of heredity; but we should school ourselves through a
spiritual outlook to discern the spirit in the inherited
characteristics found in the sense-world. That is what it really
comes to. And the essential thing is for you to see that, but for the
Mystery of Golgotha, mankind would by then have reacted to the point
of denying the spirit because people would have ceased to recognise
the spirit in the inherited characteristics within the sense-world;
for men have increasingly replaced the conception of the spirit by
rabbinical and socialistic interpretations.
A
tremendous amount is involved when a man is constrained to say:
You understand nothing about the sense-world if you are not prepared
for those phenomena which, because of their
spiritual connections, do not really belong there. We must point to
the connections of heredity with spiritual perception, supersensible
perception. When the intellect takes hold of the realm of the senses,
which is itself permeated with a spiritual, supersensible element,
and turns it into a realm of morality, intellectually measurable
— that is the spirit to which the spirit of Christ, the spirit
of the Mystery of Golgotha, stands opposed. I mean this with
reference to heredity and to death.
Certainly the
Church Fathers were able to verify that even among the heathen there
were many who were convinced of immortality. But what was involved in
this? Only in ancient times had it been truly recognised that in the
world of the senses death is indeed a supersensible phenomenon. By
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha the prevailing outlook had been
corrupted by an acceptance of death as an experience of the
sense-world; and thereby the forces of death were extended over the
rest of that world. Death has to be looked upon as a stranger in the
sense-world. Only then can a genuine science of the natural order arise.
A further
element came in with the reflections of various ancient philosophers
on immortality. They turned to the immortal in man. They were right
in doing so, for they said: Death is there in the world of the
senses. But they said it out of a corrupted world-outlook; for
otherwise they would have been impelled to say: Death is not there in
the world of the senses; only in appearance does it enter there. Out
of their corrupted world-outlook they said that death is in the
sense-world. ... And they gradually pictured the sense-world in such
a way that death had a place there. In consequence, all other things
are corrupted ... it goes without saying that everything else goes
wrong when death is given a place in the sense-world. When this was
said out of a corrupted world-outlook, other things too had to be
said, for instance: We must turn to something in opposition to
death, to something of a supersensible nature that opposes death. And
indeed, because in the last days of antiquity and out of a corrupted
world-outlook people turned to an impersonal spirituality, this world
of spiritual immortality — even when called by some other name
— was the Luciferic world. What people call something is
unimportant; what matters is the active reality behind the picture in
their minds. And in this case the reality was the Luciferic world.
Even if the words sounded different, these philosophers of late
antiquity had in all their interpretations said nothing but:
“As souls approaching death we want to take flight to Lucifer,
who will receive us, so that immortality will be ours. We die into
the kingdom of Lucifer.” That was the true meaning of their words.
I have
told you about the forces that prevail in human knowledge, as a
result of all the conditions I have described — well, these
forces have remnants which can be seen still active to-day. For what
must you admit if you take in earnest the words I have spoken to-day
out of Initiation-wisdom? You will have to say: Man has his origin
and his end. Neither may be understood with the human intellect that
serves to understand nature; for by introducing birth and death into
the sense-world, where they do not belong because they are strangers,
we arrive at a false outlook about both the supersensible and the
sensible. Both are corrupted — the comprehension of the spirit
and the comprehension of nature. And what is the consequence?
One consequence for example, is this: there is an anthropology which
traces the origin of man to very primitive ancestors, and it does so
quite scientifically and very cleverly. Go through these
anthropological writings which trace men back to primitive ancestors,
who are portrayed as though the characteristics which still belong to
savage peoples were the starting-point of the human race.
Scientifically, this opinion is quite in order, but the conclusion
which should be drawn from it is the following: Just because it is
scientifically in order to believe that birth and death belong to the
world of the senses — on that very account it is false; on that
account the real origin of man was different. When Kant and Laplace
thought out their theory, they built it up from natural science. On
the surface there is nothing to be said against it — but things
were different for the very reason that the Kant-Laplace theory is
correct from the standpoint of natural science. You arrive at the
truth if, both for man's beginning and his end and for the origin and
end of the earth, you acknowledge the opposite of what holds good for
natural science in its present-day form. What Anthroposophy has to
say about the origin of the earth will be all the more in accordance
with the truth, the more it contradicts what can be said by a natural
science that is correct in the sense of to-day.
Hence
Anthroposophy does not contradict the natural science of to-day. It
allows validity to natural science, but, instead of extending it
beyond its boundaries, it shows the points where supersensible
perception must come in. The more logical Anthroposophy is, the more
correct will it be in respect of the present natural order, which is
necessary for man and inherent in him, and all the more will it
refrain from saying what is not true concerning the origins of man's
existence and of the earth. And the less natural science divines what
death really is, the more will it indulge in fantasy where death is
concerned. But without the Mystery of Golgotha it would have been
human destiny to think unavoidably out of a corrupted world-outlook
about the most important things. For this did not depend at all on
human will or human guilt; it depended entirely on human evolution.
In the
course of his evolution man simply came to regard as his real being
the combination of flesh, blood and bones in which he found himself.
An Egyptian of ancient days, in the older and better period of Egypt,
would have thought it terribly comic had anyone maintained that
what walked around on two legs, and consisted of blood, flesh and
bones, was really man. These things, however, do not depend upon
theoretical considerations; they cannot be spun out of rumination.
Gradually it came to seem natural for a man to accept as
himself a form consisting of flesh, blood and bones — a form
which in truth is a reflection of all the Hierarchies. So much error
was spread abroad on these matters that, curiously enough, those very
individuals who were led to see the error blundered into a still
greater one.
Certainly
there were some who arrived at the idea — but in an
Ahrimanic-Luciferic way — that man is not just flesh and blood
and bones. They now said: “Well, if we are something better
than this combination of flesh, blood and bones, we will despise the
flesh; we will look upon the human being as something higher
and rise above this man of the senses.” But this image of
flesh, blood and bones, together with the etheric and astral bodies,
as seen by man is an illusion; in reality it is the purest likeness
of the Godhead. As I have explained, the error we have been talking
about is not an error because we ought to be seeing the devil in the
world; but it is an error to identify ourselves with physical nature
because in our own world we
should be
seeing God in us. It is also false to say: I am a quite high being, a
tremendously high being, a tremendously lofty soul ... and everything
around me is inferior and ugly (see blue in diagram, I). It is not
like that. This is how the matter really is: There are the
kingdoms of the higher Hierarchies, all divine Beings (diagram, II);
they have considered it to be their divinely-appointed aim to give
shape to a form that is in their image (blue circle). This form
presents itself outwardly as the visible human body. And into this
form, which is a copy of the Godhead and is shamefully belittled when
looked upon as something inferior, the Spirits of Form have planted
the human ego, the present soul — the youngest of man's
members, as I have often said (the point in the blue circle.)
If the
Mystery of Golgotha had not come about, man would have been able to
gain only false conceptions about heredity and about death. And these
false conceptions would have become ever more exaggerated. At
present they appear at times in an atavistic way (as in many
socialistic groups to-day an atavistic world-outlook prevails), so
that death and birth are reckoned as phenomena of the senses. It
would have been a necessity in man's further evolution for the door
of the supersensible to be altogether closed to him. And what
he could find of the supersensible within the sense-world —
heredity and death — would have betrayed him, coming in a
treacherous way to say: “We are of the senses” ...
whereas they are not. Only by refusing to believe in a nature that
shows us death and birth in a false light shall we reach the truth
— such is the paradoxical way in which man is placed into the
world.
There had
to be planted into man something to bring equilibrium into his
evolution — something able to lead him away from the belief
that heredity and death are phenomena of the senses. Something had to
be put before him to show clearly that death and heredity are not
phenomena of the senses, but are supersensible. For this reason the
event that gives man the truth about these things must not be
accessible to his ordinary forces, for these are on the road to
corruption and have to be set right by a powerful counter-shock. This
counter-shock was the Mystery of Golgotha, for it entered human
evolution as something supersensible, and so it gave men the choice
— either to believe in this supersensible event, approaching it
in a supersensible way but now consciously, or to succumb to
those views which must result from regarding death and inherited
characteristics as belonging to the world of the senses.
Hence two
facts that are inseparable from a true view of the Mystery of
Golgotha are those which form, as it were, its boundaries: namely,
the Resurrection, which cannot be understood independently of
the Virgin Birth — born not in the way that makes birth a
delusive fact few mankind, but born in a supersensible way and going
through death in a supersensible way. These are the two basic facts
that have to act as boundaries to the life of Christ Jesus.
No-one understands the Resurrection, which is meant to stand in
opposition to the false idea that death belongs to the world of the
senses — no-one understands this truth who does not
accept its correlate, the Virgin Birth, the birth that is a
supersensible fact.
Men wish
to understand these truths, and modern Protestant theologians want to
understand them in terms of theology, with the ordinary human
intellect. But the ordinary human intellect is but a pupil of the
sense-world, and, moreover, of a corrupted view of the sense-world
which has arisen since the Mystery of Golgotha. And when they cannot
understand these truths they become followers of Harnack, or
something of the sort; they deny the Resurrection, while talking
round and about it in all sorts of ways. And as for the Virgin Birth
— well, they look upon that as something no reasonable being
can even discuss.
Nevertheless, with the Mystery of Golgotha is intimately
connected the metamorphosis of death — in other words, the
metamorphosis of death from a fact of the sense-world into a
supersensible fact; and the metamorphosis of heredity means that what
the sense-world reflects in an illusory way as heredity,
connected with the mystery of birth, is changed in the supersensible
into the Virgin Birth.
However
much that is erroneous and inadequate may be said about these things,
man's task is not to accept them without understanding them.
His task is to acquire supersensible knowledge, so that through the
supersensible he can learn to grasp these things, which cannot be
understood in the sense-world. If you think of the various
lecture-courses in which these things have been spoken of, if you
think particularly of the content of what I have given as the Fifth
Gospel, [ Seven lectures given in Christiania (Oslo)
from October 1st to 6th, 1913.] you will
discover a whole series of ways by which these things may be
understood, but understood supersensibly only. For it is right that,
as long as the intellect of the student keeps to the realm of the
senses, in accordance with the outlook of to-day, these facts cannot
be understood. It is just when the most sublime facts of earthly life
are such that they are unintelligible to the intellect of the student
of the sense-world — it is just then that they are true. Hence
it is not surprising that the science of Initiation is opposed by
ordinary science, for it speaks of things which — just because
they do not contradict true natural science — must contradict a
natural order derived from a corrupted view of nature.
Theology, too, has largely fallen a victim to this corrupted view of
nature, though in a different direction.
When you
take the other matter of which I was speaking yesterday, that only
after death is man able to come to a right conception of the Mystery
of Golgotha, then, if you reflect a little, you will no longer find
it inconceivable that through the gate of death man enters a world
where he cannot be tricked into thinking that death belongs to the
world of the senses, for he sees death from the other side — I
have often described this — and from this other side he learns
increasingly to study death. And by this means he becomes ever more
fitted to contemplate the Mystery of Golgotha in its true form.
Thus we have to admit that had the Mystery of Golgotha not come about
(but what is said in this connection can be understood only through
supersensible knowledge), death would have taken possession of man.
Evil also would be in the world, and wisdom also. But since men
through their evolution had to fall into a corrupted view of nature,
they were bound to have a false view of death. In wishing for
immortality they turn to Lucifer, and in wishing to turn to the
spirit they fall victim to Lucifer. If
they do not turn to the spirit they become like dumb animals, and if
they do turn to the spirit, they fall into Lucifer's grip. Looking to
the future implies a wish to be immortal in Lucifer; looking towards
the past means interpreting the world in such a way that inherited
characteristics, which are supersensible, are viewed in terms of morality,
thereby inventing the medieval blasphemy of original sin.
A real
devotion to the Mystery of Golgotha is a protection against all these
things. It brings into the world a true conception of birth and
death, gained on a supersensible path. By a true conception of this
kind men should be healed from the effects of the corrupted
conception. Thus Christ Jesus is the Healer, the Saviour. And
therefore — because men have not chosen to follow a corrupted
conception of the world because they are good for nothing, but have
come to it through their evolution, through their nature —
therefore the Christ works healingly; therefore He is not only the
Teacher but the Physician of mankind.
These
things must be pondered — as I have said and must always
repeat, they can be discerned only through supersensible
knowledge — but if we are to ask ourselves: What kinds of
knowledge could be reached by the souls who inspired such a spirit as
Tertullian in the second century? — we must look to the dead
who were perhaps contemporaries of Christ Jesus and have thus
inspired Tertullian. Certainly, since there was much corrupted
knowledge in the world, many things came through in distorted,
clouded colourings. If, however, through the words of a Tertullian we
hear the inspiring voices of the contemporaries of Christ, we shall
understand how Tertullian was able to say such words as: “God's
Son has been crucified. Because it is shameful, we are not ashamed of
it.” Through a corrupted outlook men were bound to fall into
shame; that which gives greatest meaning to the earth is manifest in
human life as a shameful deed. “God's Son has gone through
death. It is perfectly credible because it is foolish” —
Prorsus credibile est, quia ineptum est.
Precisely because it is foolishness by any criterion that man can reach
with his ordinary intelligence up to the end of his physical life —
for that very reason it is true in the sense of what I have been
telling you to-day. “He is laid in the grave and has risen
again; this is certain because it is impossible” —
because within the corrupted phenomena of nature it does not happen.
When in the
supersensible sense you take Tertullian's words as being inspired by
Christ's contemporaries, who by that time had long been dead, you may
say: Certainly Tertullian has absorbed all this, just in the way he
could do in accordance with the constitution of his soul! ... But you
will be able to divine how he came to be so inspired. Indeed, such a
source was accessible only to a man who with his inner knowledge was
so firmly grounded in the supersensible that he referred to demons
being witness to the Divine, just as he spoke of human witnesses. For
Tertullian spoke of how the demons themselves say they are demons and
recognise the Christ. That was the preliminary condition for Tertullian
being able to lay hold of what was given him through inspiration.
For those
who incline to be Christians in a false way, there is something very
disconcerting, thoroughly disconcerting, here. For just think, if
even demons tell the truth and point to the true Christ, the demons
might ultimately be questioned by a Jesuit — someone or other
whom the Jesuit maintained was possessed by demons might be impelled
by these demons to speak about the real origin of the Jesuits'
Christ, and the demon might then say to the Jesuit: “Yours is
not the Christ; the Christ of that other is the true one.”
— You can understand the Jesuitical fear of the spiritual
world! You can see how alarming it is to be exposed to the possible
danger of being disowned in some corner of the spiritual world! Then
someone might call Tertullian as witness for the Crown and
might say: “Now see here, my dear Jesuit, the demon says
himself that your God is a false God — and Tertullian, whom you
have to recognise as a bona fide Church
Father, says that demons tell the truth about themselves and about
the Christ, just as the Bible states.” In short, the matter
becomes very ticklish as soon as it is admitted by the supersensible
world — even though in an unorthodox
form — that demons witness to the truth. For even were we to
cite Lucifer, he would not say what is untrue about the
Christ! But it might leak out that something else is
untrue about the Christ.
Now the
truths of Initiation often sound different from what human beings
find it convenient
to acknowledge. Certainly this leads to things going rather
criss-cross when to-day an endeavour
is made to introduce Initiation truths to the external world
— especially when they have to be introduced into the midst of
immediate reality. Yes, as soon as the field is open for statements
coming from the supersensible, some very remarkable conflicts may
arise — when these statements are opposed by others which owe
nothing to the supersensible!
This can
often be applied to ordinary life. It has brought me a certain
satisfaction that a suggestion I made really to myself during my
lectures —
and things I say during lectures I give out as my own conviction,
with no intention of compelling others to accept them — this
suggestion has been followed up, and our Building, out of all the
conditions experienced at the present time, has been called the
“Goetheanum.” And even if this has been with the
assistance of certain supersensible impulses, it seems to me to be
both right and good. But if I am asked by anyone for the reasons from
an intellectual standpoint — as though I ought to count them
all up on my fingers — if I am asked to give all
the reasons for this,
I should appear to myself a prodigious Philistine if I were to count
up all the reasons for what has been felt out of a deep necessity
— all the reasons for and against would seem to me like sheer
hair-splitting.
One is
often in this situation precisely when ascribing supersensible
impulses to the will. People often say: “I
don't understand this, I can't grasp what it means.” But
is it terribly important whether you or anyone else grasps what
a thing means? For what does this grasping
(begreifen)
mean? It really means putting a matter in the light where repose the
thoughts which for decades a person has found comfortably suitable for
himself. Otherwise its meaning is no different from what people call
“understanding.” What people themselves call
understanding often signifies very little where truths revealed
from the spiritual world are concerned. Just in the most
supersensible spheres — where truths are not mere theory but
are meant to seize upon the will, to strike into the world of deeds
— just here there is always something rather questionable when
people ask intellectually: Why, why, why is this so? Or: How is this
or that to be understood? In this connection we ought to
accustom ourselves to finding for certain things belonging to
the supersensible world an analogy — but only an analogy
— with recognised facts of nature. If you leave here and a dog
bites you and you have never before had a dog bite you, I don't know
whether you will ask, Why has it bitten me? Or, How am I to
understand it? — For what sort of connection has it with the
intellect! You will simply relate the facts. So it is with certain
supersensible things — we simply relate the facts. And there
are many such things, as you can gather from what I have told you
to-day — that in the sense-world there are two apparent events
which conceal their real meaning: human death and human birth, which
bring the supersensible into the world of the senses and are
strangers in that world. They disguise themselves as
sense-phenomena and in that way they extend their disguise over the
rest of nature, so that the rest of nature also is bound to be seen
in a false light by human beings to-day.
Thoroughly
to understand these things, to absorb them thoroughly into our
own approach to knowledge, is one of the future demands that will be
made on human life. The Time Spirits will make this demand especially
on those who are seeking knowledge for the future and wish to
bring active will-impulses into some particular sphere. Particularly
must the spiritual branches of culture be taken in hand —
theology, medicine, jurisprudence, philosophy, natural science, even
technics and social life, even politics — yes, truly, politics,
even that strange creature! Into all this, those who understand the
times ought to introduce the fruits of Spiritual Science.
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