6th January, 1914 Berlin
LectureIX
Our study
of the life of Christ Jesus according to what I have
called the “Fifth Gospel” will certainly have
brought home to us all the significance of what took
place after the conversation between Jesus of Nazareth
and the mother, of which I spoke here. And I want now to
speak, in the way that may be possible in the intimate
circle of a group like this, of what transpired
immediately after that conversation, that is to say, of
what happened to Jesus of Nazareth on his way to the
Baptism by John in the Jordan.
What I
have to tell consists of a number of facts which are
revealed to the eye of Intuition; they are simply
narrated, so that it is for each of you to form your own
thoughts about them.
We have
heard that after the life of Jesus of Nazareth from his
twelfth until about his twenty-ninth or thirtieth year, a
conversation took place between him and the mother who
was, actually, his step- or foster mother. In this
conversation, the effects of the experiences through
which he had passed poured with such intensity into the
words uttered by Jesus of Nazareth that together with his
words a mighty force flowed into the soul of the
foster-mother, a force of such power that the soul of the
mother who had borne the body of the Nathan Jesus was
able to descend from the spiritual world (for since the
twelfth year of the Nathan Jesus the soul of his mother
had been in the spiritual world), and permeated the soul
of the foster mother. From then onwards, the
foster-mother bore within her the soul of the mother of
the Nathan Jesus. What had happened in Jesus himself was
that together with the words, the Zarathustra-Ego had to
a certain extent gone out of him. The being who now made
his way to the Baptism in the Jordan was the Nathan Jesus
as he had been up to his twelfth year, that is to say,
without the Zarathustra-Ego; but the effects
left by the Zarathustra-Ego were still present —
the effects of all that the Zarathustra-Ego had been able
to pour into the threefold sheath. And so we can
understand that Jesus was prompted to make his way to the
Baptism in the Jordan by an undefined Cosmic urge
-— that is to say, in him it was an undefined urge,
but in the Cosmos it was definite and deliberate. It is
also obvious that this being was not like an ordinary
human being, for the Zarathustra-Ego had gone out of him
and only the effects remained. The “Fifth
Gospel” reveals that as this being, Jesus of
Nazareth, made his way to the Jordan, he met, firstly,
two Essenes. They were two with whom he had often
conversed on the occasions of which I have told you. But
as the Zarathustra-Ego had gone out of him, for to
physical eyes the outer physiognomy — which had
developed under the influence of the indwelling
Zarathustra-Ego — had not changed. The two Essenes
addressed him with the words:
“Whither go you, Jesus of Nazareth?”
Jesus of
Nazareth said: “I go whither souls of your kind are
unwilling to gaze, where the pain of humanity can feel
the rays of the forgotten Light!”
The two
Essenes did not understand his words, and they perceived
that he had not recognised them. Then they said to
him:
“Jesus of Nazareth, do you not know us?”
And be
said:
“You
are like lambs gone astray, but I was the shepherd's son
from who you strayed. When you truly recognise me you
will stray yet again. It is so long since you fled from
me into the world.”
The
Essenes were greatly perplexed for they did not
understand how such words could be uttered by any human
soul, and they gazed at him questionly. He spoke
again:
“What manner of souls are you? Where is your world?
Why do you wrap yourselves in sheaths of deceit? Why does
there burn within you a fire that was not kindle in my
Father's House? You have upon you the mark of the
Tempter. With his fire he has made your wool shining and
glistening. The hairs of this wool prick my eyes, you
erring lambs. The Tempter has filled your souls with
pride. You met him on your flight.”
When he
had said this, one of the Essenes answered:
“Have we not shown the Tempter the door? He has no
longer any part in us!”
And Jesus
spoke:
“True, you showed him the door, but he ran and came
to the other men. Therefore he leers at you from the
souls of these others. Do you then believe that you can
exalt yourselves by abasing others? You do not exalt
yourselves when you abase others; you think yourselves
exalted but this is only because the others have been
abased. You remain as you were, and it is only because
you have abased the others that you imagine yourselves to
be great.”
The
Essenes were afraid, but at this moment Jesus of Nazareth
vanished from their sight. And after their eyes had been
as if clouded for a little while, they beheld in the
distance a kind of Fata Morgana, revealing to them, but
enlarged to gigantic proportions, the countenance of the
one who had just stood before them. And then from this
Fata Morgana they heard words which filled their souls
with dread:
“Vain is your striving, for your heart is empty.
Your heart is filled only with the spirit which conceals
pride in the deceptive guise of humility.”
And when
they had stood there for a time as it stupefied by this
countenance and these words, the Fate Morgana vanished.
But Jesus of Nazareth too had passed further on his way.
The two Essenes went home and spoke to no one of what
they had experienced, keeping silence about it their
whole life long.
As I said
before, I shall simply narrate the facts as they present
themselves in the Akashic Record, and each one of you
must think about them as you will. This is important at
the present time, because it is possible that this Fifth
Gospel will be revealed in greater detail as time goes
on, and may kind of interpretation at this stage might
well be a disturbing factor.
When Jesus
of Nazareth had gone a little further on his path to the
Jordan, he met a man in whose soul there was deep
despair. And Jesus of Nazareth said:
“Whither hath thy soul led thee? Aeons ago I saw
thee; then thou wert different.”
And the
despairing man said:
“I
was of high degree; I have risen to high positions in
life; I have filled offices of distinguished rank. And
often I said to myself that my learning and
accomplishments had made me an exceptional human being.
Then one might when I was asleep, I had a dream and in
the dream it was as if a question were put to me. I knew
at once that in the dream I was beholding myself, for the
question was thine Who hath made me great? And there
stood before me in the dreams, being who said: I
have raised thee up, and in return for this thou art
mine! — And I was ashamed, for I had believed that
I owed everything to myself. And now this being was
telling as that it was he who had raised me to a high
position! Then, in the dream, I took flight; I left all
my offices and honours behind and now I wander about
seeking for something but not knowing what I
seek.”
As the
despairing man was speaking, the being he had seen in the
dream again stood before him, between him and Jesus of
Nazareth. And a feeling came to the despairing man that
this being had something to do with Lucifer. Then Jesus
of Nazareth vanished, and the other being too; and the
man saw that Jesus of Nazareth had already passed on. And
be went on
his way.
As Jesus
of Nazareth continued his path, he met a leper, and to
him he said:
“To
what hath thy soul led thee? Aeons ago I saw thee; then
thou wert different.”
The leper
answered:
“Men
have thrust me away; they have made we an outcast because
of my disease; none would come near me; I could not even
beg my bread. Then I wandered about, and in my wanderings
I came one night into a wood. There I saw a shining,
luminous tree which drew me towards it. And as I drew
near, it was as if a skeleton came from the shimmering
light of the tree. Dearth himself stood before me, and
said: I am in thee. I feed on thee. Fear not! Why art
thou fearful? Didst thou not once love me? — And
yet I knew that I had never told him! And as he said:
‘Didst thou not once love me?’ his nature
changed into that of a beautiful Archangel. And when I
awoke in the morning I found myself beside the tree and
my leprosy grew steadily worse.”
Then the
being who had been transformed into the Archangel stood
again before the leper and he knew: Ahriman or a being of
Ahrimanic nature is standing before me. While he was
still gazing, the being disappeared, and Jesus of
Nazareth also, and the leper was left to go on his
way.
After
these three experiences Jesus of Nazareth came to the
Jordan for the Baptism. And here too, I repeat that the
Baptism in the Jordan was followed by an event that is
also described in the other Gospels, namely, the
Temptation. But in this Temptation Christ Jesus was
confronted not only by the one being — the
Temptation took its course in three stages. First there
came a being who was now known to Him because he had seen
him when the despairing man had come to him; hence he
could recognise him as Lucifer. And then, through
Lucifer, came the Temptation that is expressed in the
words: “All these kingdoms and their glory I will
give to thee if thou wilt acknowledge me as thy
Lord.” Lucifer's attack was repulsed, but now came
two attacks. Lucifer came again, but with him the being
who had stood between Jesus of Nazareth and the leper,
and whom He therefore now recognised as Ahriman.
And then
came the Temptation which in the Gospels is clothed in
the words: “Cast Thyself down; nothing can happen
to Thee if Thou art the son of God.” But as Lucifer
and Ahriman mutually paralysed each other's power, their
attack failed. It was only the third Temptation
— “Make stones into
bread” — that was not fully answered. This
Temptation came from Ahriman alone. And the fact that
Ahriman was not completely satisfied, led to events
taking the course they did. Because of the unanswered
Temptation, Ahriman was able to work through Judas, and
all the later events became possible in the way of which
we shall hear.
You see,
my dear friends, an “Akasha-Intuition” here
sheds light on the moment that is of such infinite
significance in the whole development of the life of
Christ Jesus and in the evolution of the Earth. It was as
if the connection of Earth-evolution with the Luciferic
and Ahrimanic forces were mirrored in the events between
the conversation with the mother and the Baptism by John
in the Jordan. He who was the Nathan Jesus, who for
eighteen years had borne the Zarathustra-Ego within him,
was made ready, by these events, to receive the Christ
Being.
And this
bring, us to the point where it is of vital importance to
have right and true conceptions. That is why I have tried
to bring together various results of occult investigation
which can make our human evolution on the Earth
intelligible. It may, perhaps, be possible to speak here
too about matters that were the subject of the
Lecture-Course in Leipzig, where I tried to indicate the
connection between the Christ Event and the Parsifal
event. To-day I will speak of one or two points only.
I want to
show you how the whole meaning and course of the
evolution of humanity comes to expression in manifold
events if only they are understood in the right light. I
do not want to go into the idea behind the story of
Parsifal and its connection with the development of the
Christ Impulse, but to speak of something that underlay
everything that was said in Leipzig. I shall begin by
asking: How does the figure of Parsifal come before us?
— Parsifal was one who some centuries after the
Mystery of Golgotha was destined to represent an
important stage of the further development of the Christ
Impulse in a soul. We know the story. Parsifal was the
son of an adventurous knight; his mother was Hezeleide.
The knight bad ridden away before Parsifal's birth. His
mother suffered deep pain and grief before he was born.
She wished to shield her son from the vaunted qualities
of knighthood and she reared him in isolation, protecting
him from the consequences of intercourse with others. He
was to know nothing about what goes on among other human
beings. We are also told that be knew nothing about what
the external world calls religion. From his mother he
heard only that there is a God, a God behind all things,
a God whom he must serve... but more he did not know. But
a meeting with two knights caused him to leave his
mother, in order that be might discover to what his inner
urge was leading him. And after may wanderings he was led
to the Castle of the Holy Grail. What he there
experienced is described best of all by Chrestian de
Troyes — a source upon which Wolfram von Eschenbach
also drew.
We are
told that one day Parsifal came to wooded country at the
edge of a lake where.two men were fishing. In answer to
his question, these men directed him to the Castle of the
Fisher-King. He went into the Castle and there found a
man lying weak and ill on his bed. The sick man gave him
a sword — it was the sword which belonged to
Parsifal's mother. Then came a page carrying a lance from
which blood was dripping on his blood; then came a
maiden, carrying a golden Cup radiating light more
brilliant than all the lights in the room. This Cup was
carried into the adjoining room where lay the father of
the Fisher-King, who is nourished by what this Cup
contains. Now Parsifal had previously been advised by a
knight to abstain from asking many questions. At the
time, therefore, he put no questions but the next morning
decided that be must ask about these strange things. When
he woke up the following morning, however, the Castle was
empty. In the courtyard be found his horse ready saddled
and when he had mounted and galloped away the drawbridge
was immediately raised behind him. There was no sign of
any of those whom he had found in the Castle the previous
day.
As we
know, the point of salient significance is that Parsifal
asked no questions, although miraculous things had been
revealed to him. And as the story goes on we hear again
and again from those persons who meet Parsifal and who
are connected with his mission, that he ought to
have asked, that his troubles were to some extent due to
this. He is told that by not asking he has brought about
disaster.
And now
think of Parsifal. He had remained apart from outer
civilisation and culture; he is led to the Holy Grail
with his virgin soul untouched by the mundane world...
Now the Christ Impulse was a Deed which mankind had not
at once been capable of understanding, But because the
Christ had passed into the Aura of the Earth, He was
working on — as indeed men had conjectured in their
dogmas and teachings. Christ was working in the hidden
foundations of the human soul, in the hidden depths of
historical evolution, not in the surface
consciousness of men or in the wranglings of Theology. In
Parsifal we have a picture of the moment when a further
stage was to be reached; therefore he had learned nothing
of the teachings of the Gnostics, the Apostolic Fathers
or the various theological movements. He was to know
nothing of these things; his connection with the
Christ-Impulse was to be purely in the life of soul, in
his sub-consciousness, where standards of contemporary
life played no part. His connection with the Christ
Impulse would have been impaired and clouded by knowledge
of man-made doctrines. Only the supersensible
influences in the onflowing Christ Impulse were to work
in Parsifal. External doctrine belongs to the material
world but Christ works in the supersensible and
it was this supersensible influence that as to come to
expression in Parsifal. He must ask only at that place
where the living essence of the Christ Impulse confronts
him, that is to say, in the Holy Grail. He should have
asked what the Holy Grail contains, what the Christ Event
actually signifies. He should have asked!
Mark this
word my dear friends. There was another, the disciple of
Sais, who was not allowed to ask. The disciple
at Sais was doomed in that he felt constrained to ask why
it was not lawful for him to ask; he desired that the
veils of Isis should be lifted. The disciple at Sais
represents the Parsifal of the epoch preceding
the Mystery of Golgotha! But in that age the disciple was
told: “Take heed that what is behind the veil be
not disclosed until thy soul is prepared and
ready.” The disciple at Sais after the
Mystery of Golgotha is represented in the figure of
Parsifal. Parsifal was to undergo no special preparation;
he was to be led to the Holy Grail with a virgin soul.
And he missed the vital opportunity, for he neglected to
do what the disciple at Sais was forbidden to do. —
Parsifal ought to have asked about the mystery of his
soul... Thus do the times change in the onward march of
evolution.
To begin
with we can only think of these things in a more abstract
sense... What was the mystery of Isis? We are told of
Isis with the Child Horus, of the mystery of the
connection between Isis and the Child Horus, of the
Connection between the Son of Isis and Osiris. A deep,
deep mystery lies here. The disciple at Sais was not ripe
for the disclosure of the mystery.
When
Parsifal rode away from the Grail Mountain, having
neglected to ask about the wonders of the Holy Grail, one
of his first experiences was that he met a woman, a
bride, weeping over the dead bridegroom in her arms.
— A true picture, this, of Mary mourning for her
Son — the motif of so many
Pietàs later on. This is the first
indication of what Parsifal would have experienced if be
had asked about the wonders of the Holy Grail. Knowledge
would have come to him of the new connection
between Isis and Horus, between the Mother and the Son of
Man. Parsifal ought to have asked. Now
significantly this points to the progress that had taken
place in the evolution of mankind! What was not lawful
before the Mystery of Golgotha, was now,
after the Mystery of Golgotha, both lawful and
necessary. For in the meantime the evolution of mankind
had progressed.
These
things are only of value when we turn them to real
disciple at Sais is that in accordance with the nature of
the times, we must put the right kind of questions, for
here lies the secret of ascent. Since the Mystery of
Golgotha there have been two main currents in evolution:
one which bears within it the Christ Impulse, the other
which is, as it were, the continuation of the process of
decline and leads to the materialism of the present age.
In our age, by far the greater part of external culture
is steeped in materialism. And everything that Spiritual
Science can tell us about the Christ Impulse makes us
realise how deeply the souls of men need the inner
impulse of spirituality to counteract the steadily
increasing materialism, of external life. To this end we
must all learn to question, to ask! But
the current of materialism leads men away from
questioning. Let us compare the two currents. —
There are people who really cling to materialism, even
while they assert their belief in this or that spiritual
dogma, or profess to acknowledge the existence of a
spiritual world in words and theories. Mere words are of
no account. What matters is that we shall live with our
whole soul in the current of spiritual life. It can be
said of those who cling to materialism that they do not
question, for they claim to know everything already! It
is characteristic of materialistic culture that even the
young and immature think they know everything and
therefore do not question. To give one's opinion at every
turn is thought to be a matter of personal freedom. But
it is not usually realised to what these opinions amount.
— We grow up in the world, absorbing more and more
without noticing it; according to our Karma, we find one
thing more pleasing, another less; we reach, say, the
respectable age of twenty-five and feel absolutely mature
and certain in our judgment because we think it comes
from our own soul. But such judgment contains absolutely
nothing more than our experiences in the external world.
And in that we feel obliged to assert our own judgment in
the outer world, we become all the more slavishly
dependent upon our inner life. We pass judgment, but we
omit to question, to ask. We learn to
ask aright only when we acquire that inner sense of
proportion which maintains respect and reverence for the
things that are holy as sacred in life, when we enter the
sacred domains of life in an attitude of waiting without
asserting our own judgment. A certain diffidence is
necessary in face of things that are holy. We must
ask the spiritual world — to which we
bring, not our own judgments but our questionings, and a
mood-of-soul which asks. Try, my dear friends,
to understand the difference between facing the spiritual
world in an attitude of “judging” and in an
attitude of questioning. There is a radical difference
between the two attitudes. Moreover something is
connected with this to which we ought to give particular
heed in our Movement, for this Movement will not thrive
unless we understand the difference between questioning
and judging. Naturally, we must also judge, but over
against the mysteries of the spiritual life we must
unfold the attitude of questioning, of expectancy. The
progress of our Movement will be furthered by this
attitude of questioning; it will be hindered by the
contrary attitude. And when in solemn moments we ponder
the story of the one who ought to have asked about the
Mystery of the Holy Grail, the figure of Parsifal becomes
the personification of an Ideal for our Movement.
Human
souls before the Mystery of Golgotha possessed the old,
inherited clairvoyance which had been carried over from
incarnation to incarnation, but it was gradually fading
away. This fading clairvoyance was bound up with that
upon which our external sight and other sense-activities
are also dependent. When human beings who lived before
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha were growing up as
children, they learnt not only how to walk and talk, but
they also learnt clairvoyance. Clairvoyance arose from
the nature and organisation of man, just as speech arises
from the organisation of the brain and larynx. Human
beings in those times did not stop at learning to speak,
but they also learnt clairvoyance. The old clairvoyance
therefore was bound up with the human organism. as it was
in the physical world. Clairvoyance in one who was a
libertine was tainted by his particular characteristics;
clairvoyance in a pure man bore the mark of his purity.
The consequence of this fact was that a certain mystery,
the mystery of the connection between the spiritual world
and the physical world as it existed before the descent
of Christ, might not be disclosed to an ordinary,
unprepared human being. His constitution must first have
become mature and ready. It was not lawful for the
disciple at Sais to gaze upon the image of the soul of
Isis.
In the
Fourth post-Atlantean age, when the mystery of Golgotha
took place, the old clairvoyance had faded away. The new
constitution of the human soul is such that the soul must
remain shut off from the spiritual world if it does not
ask concerning the spiritual world, if it lacks
the urge that is contained in questioning. The harmful
forces which in ancient times drew near any human soul
who desired to penetrate into these mysteries without due
preparation, cannot now approach when a man asks in the
right way about the Mystery of the Holy Grail. For in
this Mystery there is concealed the power which since the
Mystery of Golgotha has flowed into the aura of the Earth
but was not previously there. It remains shut off,
however, from one who does not ask. There must
be an urge really to unfold what is contained in the
soul. Before the Mystery of Golgotha this urge was not
present, for the Christ had not yet passed into the Aura
of the Earth. Before the Mystery of Golgotha, merely by
gazing at the image of Isis and striving to fathom the
mystery in the lawful way with such powers of
clairvoyance as still existed, a human being would have
poured all his forces into such an act and thus have
recognised the mystery. In the age after the Mystery of
Golgotha, a soul who learns to ask in the right
way will be able to perceive and feel the new
Mystery of Isis. Hence, my dear friends, everything
depends upon asking, upon the right attitude to the
spiritual conception of the world that is made known in
our time. One who comes merely with the intention of
judging, may read all the books and the lecture-courses,
but he will gain nothing whatever, for he lacks the
attitude Parsifal. If a man comes as one who truly asks,
a great deal more than what the mere words contain will
be revealed to him — for the words will then bear
fruit in his soul as actual experience. And this
above all is important — that the spiritual
teachings should become actual experience.
These
things are brought home to us by such events as
transpired between the time of Jesus of Nazareth's
conversation with the mother, and the Baptism by John in
the Jordan. Such things will have meaning for us only
when we ask what it is that distinguishes the time
before the Mystery of Golgotha from the age that
followed it... It it best to allow these things
to work upon the soul; all that they can say to us is
really contained in the story.
At this
point in our study of the “Fifth Gospel” I
wanted merely to indicate how important it is in this age
to understand the attitude of Parsifal. It was brought to
the fore by Richard Wagner, who tried to clothe it in
musical and dramatic form. I do not propose to enter the
lists of the fight that is going on about it in the outer
world, because it is not for spiritual science to mingle
in such strife. I shall not pronounce judgment as between
those who wish to preserve it in Bayreuth and those who
want to consign it to Klingsor's realm — which has,
as a matter of fact, already happened. My aim is to show
that in the onward flow of the Christ Impulse, the
Parsifal attitude must come into play in domains that are
beyond the reach of the power of judgment belonging to
man's ordinary consciousness but to which this
consciousness can more and more be directed by a
spiritual conception of the world.
|