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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Knowledge and Initiation - Cognition of the Christ Through Anthroposophy
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Knowledge and Initiation - Cognition of the Christ Through Anthroposophy
Schmidt Number: S-4815
On-line since: 12th October, 2003
COGNITION OF THE CHRIST THROUGH ANTHROPOSOPHY
Clairvoyance, which is the basis of the modern science of initiation,
has always existed. In the past ages it was something that rose up
within the human being like an elemental force, and on the path of
initiation those who had gone through fewer stages were essentially
dependent for their progress upon the authority of those who had gone
through more stages than they. But to meet the needs of the human soul
of today we cannot build on authority; to do so would be to contradict
the stage it has now reached.
In our age the methods are entirely built, as in external science,
upon the continuous and full control of the individuality and
personality; in the soul life there must be control in every stage and
in every step taken by the new candidate for initiation. Hence in
speaking of exact clairvoyance in connection with the modern science
of initiation we use the word ‘exact’ as it is used in the term
exact science. Yesterday I spoke of the insight we gain
into the cosmos and into the working of all things through the modern
science of initiation. That insight is by no means something which,
when we study it, lives in the soul merely as a theory or an abstract
conception; it is something which becomes a living, spiritual force
which penetrates us fully in all our powers and faculties when we
allow it to work upon us. Thus the anthroposophical spiritual movement
has been made effective in many spheres of life and particularly in
that of the artistic life. Through the help and self-sacrifice of its
friends and members in many countries the movement has been able to
build the Goetheanum, its headquarters at Dornach, near Basle, Switzerland,
[Refers to the first Goetheanum,
destroyed by fire on December 31, 1922. Rebuilt as the present Goetheanum.
(Ed.)]
as an independent school of anthroposophical science.
And in all its forms this building expresses that same deep spiritual
reality which finds utterance through the spoken and the written word
for the ideas and thoughts of the science.
Had any other spiritual movement in our time required to build a
headquarters it would have commissioned an architect to design it on
Antique, Renaissance or Gothic lines, or in one of the prevailing
styles. This the Anthroposophical Movement, by reason of its inner
nature, could not do. The architectural forms of the Goetheanum are
drawn from the same source out of which the ideas of the
super-sensible spring, as they are proclaimed through the world.
Everything that is found in Dornach, be it sculpture or painting, is
carried by a new style out of which Anthroposophy is born in this
modern age. Whoever visits this School for Spiritual Science will find
that on the one hand the anthroposophical world view is proclaimed
from the rostrum in words and on the other hand the forms of the
building and the paintings express in an artistic way what is
expressed by the word. That which can work from the stage should only
be another form of revelation than that what can be effected through
the word. Anthroposophy should come out of the deepest foundations of
humanity, of which theoretical Anthroposophy is only one branch,
education and the arts are the others. In this way anthroposophical
life becomes a factor in the most varied fields of human existence.
The Waldorf School, which has been founded in Stuttgart, is not in any
sense a school where children are taught a particular anthroposophical
conception of the world. It is one where the teachers themselves, not
so much in what they teach as in how they do so and in the whole way
in which they exercise the art of education are permeated in
their faculties with that which anthroposophy can give them. Reference
could be made to other directions in which the modern science of
initiation is proving itself of use in every branch of human life and
activity. Moreover it operates upon and vitalizes the religious needs
of civilized humanity, and as these needs are deeply connected with an
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha it is with that subject that
I propose to deal now.
Let me begin by connecting what I have to say with what was said
yesterday about the path of spiritual development for modern times
leading to imagination, inspiration and intuition. I showed how by
imagination and concentration, by means of certain exercises, the
student can develop his thought-power until it becomes something which
may be called imaginative in the real sense of the word, and in such a
way that thought becomes not what it ordinarily is abstract,
cold, and in outline sketchy if compared with the intense vitality of
sense impressions but imaginative, pictorial, vivid and full of
life, and in these characteristics no way inferior to impressions of
the senses. The man who has attained to imaginative thinking, has
something as full of life as when in normal daily existence he yields
to the impressions of the world of colour or of sound.
But between the students of the new science of Initiation who attain
to this imaginative thought, and those who abandon themselves to
uncontrolled vision and hallucination, there is an important
difference. The man who is subject to visions and hallucinations is
not aware that the pictures which arise before him are subjective; on
the other hand, he who has imaginative thought is fully aware that
what he has before him is not an external reality but is something
subjective having its origin in his own inner life. He knows the
subjective nature of that imaginative picture-world. He knows too,
that when through ‘imaginative thought’ he comes to perceive what was
called yesterday his ‘time organism’ the formative force body
that works within the physical body as its sculpturer and architect
he is perceiving the first spiritual super-sensible thing that
he can experience, and something that essentially belongs to his own
inner being.
Then there comes the second stage on that path of development when he
becomes so strong that he is not only able to concentrate the full
forces of his soul at will upon the concepts, and then upon the
imaginative pictures he has before him in imaginative thought, but can
divert that picture world away from his consciousness while
maintaining it in a fully wakeful condition. He is now ready for the
real imaginations to pour into him from the external world
spiritually, speaking through the outside spiritual universe, i.e.,
the objective imaginations as against the subjective picture-world
that he had before. Here is attained the stage I have described as
inspirational knowledge. He perceives his own spiritual being as it
exists independently of his physical bodily organism, and as it
existed in the worlds of soul and spirit before he entered into this
physical life through conception and birth. He has before him a
picture of his prenatal existence in the spiritual world and of the
spiritual realities of the whole universe, and comes in contact
through conscious knowledge with the spiritual reality of man and of
the universe. Thus, through this imaginative, inspirational knowledge,
he discovers what he was before he descended into this physical
incarnation in a physical body for this life. He discovers also that
when he came down from the spiritual worlds he carried with him into
this physical life the power of thought which he here possesses in his
ordinary consciousness. What is this power of thought? It is that
which he already had in his life in the spiritual worlds before birth,
but ordinary consciousness only shows it in a pale and abstract
outline.
He then comes to recognize something that may be thus described: he
gazes upon the picture at the gate of death, and the moment of death,
and sees that the physical body is no longer held together and built
up in its whole forces by the force of an indwelling human soul but is
given over to the forces of the earth as they work in the external
mineral world; he sees how, through decay or the process of burning,
the human physical body is given up to those mineral forces and
assimilated with the earth. He sees by comparison how, in effect, what
is carried into the earthly life through birth is something (speaking
now in the sense of the soul) that dies into the physical body just as
the latter dies into the earth at death. What he had in his power of
thought in the ordinary consciousness was something that was vital and
full of spiritual life in the spiritual worlds before conception and
birth, but was then killed in the physical body so that it appeared in
ordinary consciousness as the power of deadened thought.
Because of this fact knowledge of today is so unsatisfactory for man,
as he comprehends, in a certain sense, only lifeless nature. It is an
illusion when he thinks that through scientific experiments he can
reach anything else. Certainly there will be progress beyond
representing only lifeless nature; they will be able to create organic
substances. But it will not be understood by the deadened thinking,
even when they have been created in the laboratories. With this kind
of thinking, which is the corpse of the soul which is spiritually
dead, only death can be understood.
In what then does the process consist that was described as the
development of the soul to imaginative, inspirational and intuitional
knowledge? It is in effect this, that we call to life within ourselves
what was killed in our power of thought. When we develop the living,
imaginative, plastic thought, and inspirational and intuitional
cognition, we call to life our power of thought, which was dead.
We have now reached the point where we should be able to understand
human evolution and history. Modern scientific history usually skims
over the surface of external events, without regarding the
metamorphoses that go on within the soul of man from age to age. We
may ask why is it that in this age humanity has had to pass through a
period when thought was abstract and of a deadened quality. The answer
is that the full, living, spiritual thought, by its very vitality and
fullness of life, exercises a kind of compulsion on the human soul. It
is by passing through this dead and abstract thought that humanity has
been able to achieve freedom, and for the evolution and development of
freedom this stage was a necessary one.
After man has attained to Imagination and Inspiration, he has to say
to himself: Something has happened to me, which causes me anxiety. I
mention this as an unusual fact, for the strange thing happens, that
the man of today when he has risen to Imagination and Inspiration,
experiences real anxiety. This stems from the fact that today, when he
becomes clairvoyant, man has to say to himself: I have become too
strongly egotistical through my development. Anxiety arises in the
heart and mind (Gemüt), for man has the feeling that his ego works too
strongly. In ancient initiation, before the Mystery of Golgotha, the
candidate went through the opposite experience: As he attained to
initiation he found that in a sense he was becoming less
ego-conscious, that he was pouring himself out into the universe and
becoming less in possession of himself. His ego-consciousness was
rather weakened than strengthened.
The turning point between these two characteristics of initiation is
the Mystery of Golgotha. The first human being to pass through
initiation, and to experience this deeply disquieting feeling when the
ego becomes too strong, was St. Paul at Damascus. The passage in the
New Testament (Acts 9) is so well known as to need no further
reference here. It was on that occasion that he gained insight into
the necessity for weakening the power of his ego; he realized that the
initiate of the new age stood in need of a force to weaken the
intensity of the ego-life, and as a result of his experience he
pronounced the words which were to give the keynote to the whole
development of humanity through initiation as from the moment of the
Mystery of Golgotha. These words, which resounded forth into the
future and pointed out the direction to be taken by the succeeding
period of evolution, were ‘Not I, but Christ in me.’ When we look upon
the place of Golgotha, and receive into ourselves the forces of the
Christ Who descended to earth from the spiritual worlds and Who since
the Mystery has permeated the earth, we are enabled to diminish the
forces of the ego and to pass through initiation in the right way.
The abstract thinking of which I spoke in the first part of this
lecture, where the power of thought is deadened and becomes like a
soul-corpse living in the physical body, has prevailed only in the
more recent times of human evolution. It began, gradually, some three
or four centuries after the Mystery of Golgotha. In the more ancient
people, man brought with him into his physical life out of the
spiritual worlds more of the full life of thought which is now dead
abstract thought. This may be confirmed by studying, without bias, the
evolution of humanity and the records and experiences of man, whether
initiate or non-initiate, in ancient times. Much is said today about
so-called Animism, the poetic fancy of simple and primitive peoples,
in an endeavour to explain the experiences of the past ages as
recorded and handed down in tradition. But by facing up to realities
we see that it was not in a kind of poetic fancy that ancient man
described the woods and forests, lakes and mountains, springs, brooks,
clouds and thunder and lightning, and everything physical in the world
of Nature in a spiritual way. He saw and described not only the
physical things that we see, but the spiritual beings that inhabited
every flower and mineral, every spring and wood. That description was
not, as in the modern conception of Animism, something created out of
poetic fancy, but a direct experience of the living, spiritual power
which man brought with him into physical life. It was as though, in a
spiritual sense, he sent out feelers which felt and touched and
realized, giving him experiences of the spiritual beings which inhabit
everything in external nature. It is only since the third or fourth
century after Christianity that gradually developed in humanity dead
thinking, that dead consciousness which today can only see the mineral
world. Ancient man experienced in himself something that was living;
he was able to experience and to know the spiritual beings in the
world and to recognize them as the same thing that had lived within
him before he entered into the physical life. His experience was a
very practical one, explaining his pre-natal existence in spiritual
worlds, and he felt that something was born with him into this
physical life and lived within him; he did not feel that this thought
proceeded from the organism of his physical body, for he knew it was a
living thing he had brought with him from the spiritual world before
his birth.
Now we can quite well realize how the course of human evolution would
have continued along the line that has been described, and how the
thinking power of man would have become more and more dead. We can
imagine evolution continuing in a straight downward line, and that is
what would have happened if the Cross had not been raised upon
Golgotha. Looking at the picture of death we see that had it not been
for the Mystery of Golgotha the physical body of man would die, that
his soul-life would die with his physical body. We can say out of our
consciousness of this abstract, deadened thought, that our soul-life,
i.e., our life of thought, partakes of death. And this is what
humanity would have had to experience gradually more and more but for
the Cross on Golgotha; no longer would there have been the living
thought, but the soul-life would have slowly expired in universal
death.
This is how we can regard the Mystery of Golgotha by means of the
modern science of initiation, just as it is possible for those who are
rooted in Christianity to regard the Mystery through the simple study
of the Gospel records. This fresh aspect of the Mystery is the
starting point for a new evolution and an upward one. He who goes
through the experiences and training of the modern path of initiation,
and who attains to inspirational and intuitive cognition, is able to
attain to the point where a spiritual world is revealed, of which the
Mystery of Golgotha is shown as the great solace in world existence.
He also realizes that he has attained freedom, but as the price of
that freedom he finds this deep and troubling experience, as he passes
through the way of initiation to ‘imagination’ and ‘inspiration’, that
his ego has been strengthened and intensified, and is now too strong.
That is one pole of his experience. The other pole is that in spite of
the strengthened ego he has gained from evolution he cannot save
himself or mankind from the universal death of the soul-life. But when
he looks out, from his spiritual experience in inspirational and
intuitive cognition, upon the picture of the Cross on Golgotha, he
sees that through the passing of that Divine Being, the CHRIST
first through the physical body of a human being, Jesus of Nazareth,
and then through the gate of death mankind can be redeemed from
universal death. On the one hand man has strengthened the
ego-consciousness, but this cannot save him from universal death; and
on the other hand he sees redemption from that death in the picture of
the Cross on Golgotha and of the dying and the risen Christ. Through
this conscious spiritual knowledge he is able to understand from out
of what experience the wonderful writers of the Gospels wrote. He sees
that until the third or fourth century after Golgotha something still
remained of that living thought in humanity, something of that
spiritual world which man brought into his physical life, and that it
was this which enabled isolated human beings in the first three or
four centuries to understand the Mystery of Golgotha; even as the
modern initiate can understand it by means of the new science of
initiation when he goes through that path and through the exercises
which have been described.
From the knowledge contained in the Gnosis which resembles in
some respects modern anthroposophical science we find that in
the first few centuries there was a certain understanding of the
Mystery of Golgotha, and that unless that understanding had still
existed in isolated human beings the Gospels never could have been
written. They were written out of the last relics of the old
pre-Christian science of initiation. Hence we see why St. Paul out of
his experience was able to say, Were it not for the risen Christ
then all our faith and all our life of soul would have been in vain,
would have remained dead'. Then we understand that the Divine Being,
the God, descended to the earth and went through the gate of Death,
and lives in and with the earth since the Mystery of Golgotha, and, as
was not the case before, the forces of Christ are working especially
in the evolution of humanity upon the earth. We know that He passed
through and conquered death, that He rose again through conquering the
death of the soul forces and redeemed the soul from death. And so are
we able to enter our thinking life again, to enliven what has become
dead in the soul-life by looking up from the deeply moving and
troubling experience of our too much strengthened ego to the picture
of the Mystery of Golgotha.
It is thus that anthroposophy can show the path, not away from Christ,
but to Him. I shall now give an outline of what anthroposophical
cognition tells us of the evolution of mankind in its approach to the
Mystery of Golgotha.
In primeval times, when man's thinking was still alive and filled with
spiritual vitality, he saw the spiritual alongside the physical being
when he looked out upon the physical phenomena of the world of Nature.
The spiritual thought he experienced in a somewhat dreamlike,
instinctive consciousness, and he knew that his spiritual origin was
in the spiritual worlds. From out of the great masses of men who thus
knew instinctively of the spiritual world there arose individuals who
gave themselves up to science, to the path of knowledge, just as in
our time individuals become scientists and learned men. In that time
when in the forces of all human souls there was still a connection
with the spiritual world, there arose men of science and learning,
initiates, who also by exercises and by training the soul (though
different in character from those described for the modern science of
development) attained to a kind of imagination, inspiration and
intuition.
Intuition is the third stage of spiritual development, Here the
initiate perceives not only pictures of the spiritual world, but
enters into and communes with the spiritual beings themselves. In the
spiritual worlds the initiates held a mighty and majestic communion
with beings who descended from the divine spiritual worlds; they
raised themselves to this inter-course. The most ancient and primeval
teachers of humanity were spiritual beings who taught, not through the
external senses and not by walking in physical bodies among men and
teaching through the physical ear, but through the spiritual
consciousness of the ancients. Now what was it primarily that these
spiritual beings, the sublime teachers, taught mankind through these
ancients? It was the mysteries of ‘unbornness’ of the human soul. They
taught in clear knowledge that which was already known or felt
instinctively by the masses of mankind, namely, how the life of man is
connected in the spiritual worlds before birth. From these ancients,
divine spiritual teachers, humanity learnt to know the destinies of
the human soul through its connection with the life before birth. We
can see how in ancient times death and resurrection were represented
merely in pictorial form in the cults and ceremonies. The cults
represented the death and the resurrection of gods, of divine beings,
prophetically and in a picture that was not at that time a real and
practical experience of the mysteries of death. For man had not then
the same tragic experience of death as he has today; he still had
within him the living life he had brought from the spiritual worlds
into his physical life. Death to him did not mean that tragedy which
it was to mean later when the soul-life had been drawn into the
physical body and become like a corpse. In those ancient cults where
death and resurrection of the Divine Being were represented as in a
picture it was more like a pictorial prophecy of what was to come
the Mystery of Golgotha. The men who witnessed these cults and
ceremonies were already able to say in dim prophecy that the god
passes through death and conquers it, and that because the god
conquers death so can the divine in the human soul. Nevertheless the
pre-Christian mysteries and understandings and teachings of humanity
by the divine spiritual beings was a teaching principally of the
mysteries of birth not of death. And that is a deeply significant fact
in the evolution of humanity.
The first initiates of the Christian era, looking upon the Mystery of
Golgotha, recognized that the old initiation and the old teaching of
the mysteries did not penetrate into the knowledge of death. They
realized however that this knowledge was revealed in the Mystery of
Golgotha. Then there was understood and was revealed what can only be
described by saying literally that in the Mystery of Golgotha
something happened which concerned the destinies of the gods
themselves. It may be put in this way: looking down upon the earth,
the divine spiritual beings could see that through a destiny that was
beyond the power of the gods, the earth and humanity and all that was
connected with humanity were being given up to death. But who was it
that had no experience of death? The gods, the divine spiritual
beings, those from whom the ancient primeval teachers of humanity
descended to commune with the initiates when they had raised
themselves to a consciousness of the spiritual. And they, the gods,
did not partake in that death through which all earthly human beings
were destined to pass. Therefore it was decided between the gods, not
only as a matter concerning mankind but as one concerning the gods
themselves, that a god should pass through the mystery of death on
earth in a human body. That is the great mystery that we must
understand about the Mystery of Golgotha. It not only concerns man but
also the gods.
So it is that when we come to view the Mystery through the modern
science of initiation our aspect or outlook is super-sensible.
Anthroposophy leads to an understanding of this. Not only the initiate
of today but every man may receive a stimulating impulse,
encouragement and understanding from the modern science of initiation.
We, all of us, may attain to an intensified and strengthened power of
knowledge, and having done so may recognize that the Mystery of
Golgotha which took place within earth-existence, was at the same time
a cosmic and an earthly event. Then are we able to say, ‘It is not I,
but Christ in me Who makes me live again in the spiritual life of the
soul.’
Anthroposophy does not lead to irreligion but to a religious life in
the fullest sense of the term; we are deepened and penetrated with new
spiritual forces. Through spiritual-scientific cognition of the
Mystery of Golgotha man overcomes all doubts which are contained so
strongly in today's religious life. External science has given us
freedom, but with it has come doubt. It is the task of Anthroposophy
to sweep away these doubts that have come in the train of external
science and which were a necessary stage in the development of
humanity, and because Anthroposophy is a spiritual science it is able
to do so. It can instill into the heart and soul of man a religious
sense for everything in the world and in mankind, and above all it can
give an understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha in a form that can be
received, not only by those who adhere to the older Christian
tradition, but by all men on the earth.
Anthroposophy did not come to found sects or new religions. It came to
call to life again what is the religion of humanity, the synthesis of
all religions, the religion that is already there Christianity.
Not only is it able to call Christianity into fresh life, but for
those who have been bereft of Christianity by modern science and the
doubts arising from it, it is able to bring about, in the fullest
sense, a resurrection of the religious life. Amongst all the other
life-giving forces, Anthroposophy is able at this present time to
enliven us and to bring about the resurrection of religious experience
for all mankind.
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