II.
The Relation of Anthroposophy to Christianity
London, 18 November 1922
At the present time, opposition to what I will
call anthroposophical knowledge of the Spirit comes mainly from two sides. I
alluded briefly in the lecture yesterday to the antagonism of natural
scientific thinking which maintains that supersensible knowledge is beyond
the reach of human faculties. From this side, therefore, Anthroposophy is
regarded as unworthy of any serious consideration.
We shall be more concerned
to-day with opposition of a different character. It comes from people who
feel that Anthroposophy deprives them and their fellow-believers of their
inward connection with Christ. In their own way, such people are usually very
devout Christians and it is from their very piety that the antagonism is
born. They feel that man's relation to Christ should be the outcome of
simple, naive devotion of the heart and soul and that this is disturbed and
confused when intellectual knowledge is brought to bear upon the Christ
Being. The one desire of such people is that the strivings of simple human
hearts shall be left undisturbed by any attempt to speak of Christ in terms
of intellectual understanding.
Due-respect must, of course, be
paid to such feelings. Nevertheless, in their attitude to Anthroposophy these
people are entirely in error. If they realised the truth, they would find
that Anthroposophy helps them to tread the Path to Christ; they would find
that all the longings which draw them to Christ in simplicity and devoutness
of heart are inwardly strengthened by what Anthroposophy has to say
concerning Him.
I should like to illustrate
this from different points of view. — We will think; to begin with, of
the character of the religions life, of the religious consciousness of men in
different epochs of human evolution on the Earth.
Let us go back to ancient
times. — You will see later that this historical survey is not
superfluous but will actually clear away many misunderstandings prevail and
at the present time. Evidence and knowledge concerning these very ancient
epochs cannot be obtained from historical documents but only through the
methods of Spiritual Science of which I spoke yesterday through the
development of those faculties of inner perception described yesterday as the
means whereby the supersensible nature of man and his supersensible destiny
are revealed. We find that in these olden tithes, men were instructed by
these who were disciples of the Mysteries. External documents have
practically no information to give about the ancient Mysteries, far such
indications as still exist are of very much later date and tell us nothing of
what the Mysteries really were.
The Mysteries were centres of
spiritual life and culture in which religion and science were a unity. Sheer
veneration, superhuman in its intensity, went out from the pupils to their
great Teachers, or Gurus in these Mysteries. And when other men desired to
satisfy their inner longings for religion, they turned to those who were the
pupils of these Teachers, receiving from them the knowledge of the universe
and its laws which the disciples of the Mysteries had acquired through deep
devotion. In order to throw light upon what, in the present age too, can be
true piety and true veneration of Christ, I should like to speak briefly about
the attitude and relation of a pupil in olden times to his Guru or Teacher in
the Mysteries.
We find, first of all, that
these Teachers were regarded by their pupils as being divinely inspired. When
they spoke with the fire of inspiration that had been kindled in them in the
Mysteries and through the sacred rites, their pupils felt that the words were
not uttered by men but that the Divine Powers of the universe were speaking
out of human lips.
This was not a symbolic
conception but an actual experience in the pupils of the ancient Mysteries.
And you can imagine the depth and intensity of veneration in such a pupil
when he knew that a Divine Being, a God — not a human being — was
speaking to him through the lips of his Teacher. Strange as it seems to us to-day,
the following was the typical attitude of the pupils of the ancient
Mystery-teachings. — They held the view: In still earlier epochs of the
evolution of mankind, in the initial stages of this evolution,
Divine-Spiritual Beings themselves descended — in the spiritual sense,
of course — to the Earth. These Divine-Spiritual Beings did not
incarnate in bodies of flesh but by way of spiritual knowledge entered into
communion with those who were the first Gurus, the first Teachers in the
Mysteries; and the primary instruction concerning what must be taught to men
in order that they may enter into real connection with the spiritual world,
came from these Divine-Spiritual Beings themselves. Thus, it was held that
the teachings once transmitted to men by the Gods themselves had - passed
down the generations to the disciples of the Mysteries in every epoch.
You will say this amounts to an
assertion that the origin of human wisdom lies in supersensible worlds. But
here we come to a domain that is still wrapped in complete obscurity. Think,
for example, of the explanation usually given of the origin of speech. There
are people who believe, in accordance with the Darwinian theory, that human
speech has evolved from the sounds uttered by animals. But there are and have
been men — above all it was so up to a comparatively recent past
— who attribute a divine origin to human speech.
I shall not enlarge upon this
particular point for it would lead too far to-day. It is enough to say that
what gave rise to these feelings of deep reverence in the disciples of the
Gurus was the conviction that the teachings received from their lips had once
been imparted to mankind by the Gods themselves.
What was the aim and goal of
this kind of discipleship? Discipleship itself consisted in this: the pupil
gave himself up to his Guru in utter veneration and devotion; the Guru was
the link connecting him with the spiritual worlds; this Teacher was regarded
as the one and only channel for the Divine. The pupil felt that whatever
qualities he himself possessed, whatever powers he unfolded were due to his
Teacher; he felt that he owed everything to his Teacher. From the Teacher he
received instruction — primarily concerning the direction of his
thoughts. His thoughts must not be concerned with the material world of sense
but through the power implanted in his soul by the Guru, using what were then
legitimate methods of suggestion, the heart and soul, of the pupil were
directed entirely to the Supersensible. In acts of ordinary
sense-observation, thoughts strike as it were against the external objects
... when we think about a table or a tree, our thought strikes against the
table or the tree ... But under the influence of the Guru the pupil's
thoughts became translucent, so that he saw nothing that is in the physical
world but with the vision of thought he gazed into those supersensible worlds
I described to you yesterday in terms of ,modern Initiation-science, It was
essential, too, for the pupil to experience the reality of these
supersensible worlds, and to this end instruction was given him concerning
speech. When we speak in ordinary life, we share with others, thoughts that
are either of our own shaping or have been conveyed to us in some way; in
short what flows into our speech has its origin in the physical world. The
Guru imparted to his pupil certain mantric utterances, words half-declaimed,
half-spoken, the purpose of which was to educate him to pay attention not so
much to the meaning of the words but rather to experience the currents of the
Divine Cosmos itself in the flowing sentences. The mantram itself was uttered
in such a way that the divine realities in the world and in the human being
might pour through the words; the actual meaning of the words of the mantram
was of no importance. Thus, by making his thoughts translucent, the pupil was
to become capable of beholding the Divine. When declaiming the mantrams, he
was not to heed! the meaning of the words, but the divine power streaming
through them was to flow over into the acts performed in the sacred rites.
The pupil's will was to be directed to the Divine through the rites and
ceremonial. Even to-day you can find an indication of this in the Buddha
posture. The position in which the limbs are held is quite unsuitable for
earthly activities; indeed, the human being is lifted away from the earthly world
and, I together with the acts he is performing inwardly is led upwards to the
Divine.
What was the aim of such
procedure? The soul of the pupil, directed in this threefold way to the Divine,
was to become capable of turning evil, sin and human transgression in the
direction of .those supersensible worlds described to you yesterday, I told
you that with modern Initiation-science, too, man can penetrate into the
worlds in which he lives as a being of soul-and-spirit before entering
earthly-existence; he descends from these worlds in order to unite with a
body provided by the father and mother, and when he has passed through the
gate of death, returns thither to prepare for another life on Earth. The aim
of these godlike Teachers in the ancient Mysteries was not only to turn the
gaze of the pupil towards the supersensible worlds but to kindle in him a
force of thinking akin to prayer, a force born of the divine power flowing in
the mantric utterances, a force of deepest veneration while performing the
sacred rites. Imbued with this power the pupil was then able to turn the tide
of sinfulness on the Earth towards the supersensible worlds. These pupils in
turn imparted to other human beings what they themselves had been taught in
the Mysteries and thus the content of civilisation in those ancient times
took shape.
Now upon what basic assumption
did these teachings rest? The basic assumption was that the world in which
man lives here on Earth does not, like the Divine world, encompass his whole
being. In those olden times the Guru taught his pupil: This world in which
you are living between birth and death comprises the other kingdoms of
nature, but not the deeper being of man. And apart altogether from the
conception that human activities between birth and death were fraught with
sin, the pupil was taught to realise None of my experiences here in the world
between birth and death, none of the deeds I perform are an expression of my
full manhood, for that belongs to supersensible worlds.
Every pupil in those ancient
times knew with complete certainty in certain moments of life that before
descending to the Earth he had lived in a supersensible world and would
return thither after death. This clarity of insight was due to a primitive,
dreamlike clairvoyance which he need not acquire by effort since it was a
natural faculty in all human beings. Thus, the pupil knew: When my actions
and life are concerned only with what exists here, on the physical Earth, my
full manhood is not in operation. I must guide the forces within me to those
spiritual worlds where they truly belong.
The aim of the ancient
Mysteries was that by the ceremonial rites and the divine power flowing
through the sounds of the mantrams, the forces which man on the Earth cannot
turn to good account in his actions should be led upwards and away from the
earthly world to the super-earthly, supersensible worlds — for it is
there and there alone that man lives in the fullness of his being.
The Gurus brought home to their
pupils that when the human being has passed through the gate of death he
knows that his actions and achievements on Earth fall short of what his full
manhood demands; he knows that compensation must be made in the spiritual world
for actions which on the Earth are full of imperfection and fraught with
unwisdom.
Knowledge of the supersensible
worlds includes the realisation that what remains imperfect on the Earth can
be raised nearer to perfection in the supersensible worlds.
But as we shall see, conditions
in the days of the ancient Mysteries were quite different and this difference
must be recognised and understood to-day. The pupils in those olden days
learned from their Teachers that when man has passed through the gate of death
and has lived for a certain time in the supersensible world, a sublime.
Spiritual Being comes before him, a sublime Being Whose outer expression is
the Sun and its forms of manifestation. Hence the sages of the ancient
Mysteries spoke of the Divine Sun Being. Just as we say that the soul of a
man expresses itself in his physiognomy and play of countenance, so did the
men of old conceive the Sun with its movement and forms of manifestation to
be the physiognomic expression, the revelation of the sublime Sun Being Who
was hidden from their sight on Earth but Who came before them after their
death, helping to make more perfect their shortcomings and imperfect
achievements in earthly life. “In deepest piety of heart, put your
trust in the sublime Sun Being Whom you cannot find on the Earth, Who will be
found only in the spiritual worlds ... put your trust in the mighty Sun Being
in order that after your death He may help you to take the right path through
the spiritual world.” ... In such manner did the Gurus of ancient times
speak of the Being by Whom all the imperfections of men are made good.
When the time of the Mystery of
Golgotha was approaching, this ancient wisdom had already fallen into decay;
little of it remained, save traditions and vestiges here and there. But
Initiates-in the old sense of the word still existed — men who clung
with the same devotion and pious faith to the Divine Father God by whom in
days of yore the Divine Messengers, the Teachers of the first Gurus, had been
sent down to Earth. These Initiates were well aware of the deep consolation
that had been given to the pupils of the ancient Mysteries when they were
told: After death you will find the sublime Sun Being — He Who helps
you to transmute and make perfect all shortcoming of earthly life, Who takes
away from you the bitter realisation that you have fallen away from the
Divine World-Order. Those who were Initiates at the time of the Mystery of
Golgotha, however, knew that this same sublime Sun Being had come down to the
Earth, had taken Manhood upon Himself in Jesus of Nazareth and since the
death on Golgotha must be sought no longer in the supersensible worlds but
among men on the Earth. This was how the Initiates spoke at the time of the
Mystery of Golgotha and on in to the third century of our era. To those who
were willing to listen, they were able to say The Being from Whom true
healing comes and for Whom you are longing, was within the reach of men in
days of yore. Through a Divine Deed this Being came down to the Earth, into a
human body and has lived since then as a supersensible reality within the
evolution of mankind. And whereas the pupils in olden times had been obliged
to go to the Mysteries and there be stimulated by the sacred rites to lift
their gaze to the supersensible world, men of later time must learn on the
Earth itself to make direct connection with the Christ Being Who descended to
the Earth and became Man as other men.
Such was the mood and attitude
kindled among men by those who were contemporaries of the Mystery of Golgotha
and also by many who were Initiates in the first three centuries of
Christendom. Historical records have little help to offer because all real
evidence of the teaching was exterminated. But supersensible perception as it
was described to you yesterday leads to the knowledge that in the first three
Christian centuries, this was the attitude and feeling prevailing in men who
were willing to listen to the Initiates still living in those times ... And
then this truly Christian feeling died away and must in our time be called to
life again.
The veneration of the pupil for
his Guru in olden days had been a means whereby men had learned to look
upwards to the Divine. The Teacher or Guru was regarded as the channel by
which the Divine streamed down to the Earth and as the one who, in turn,
guided into the spiritual world the feelings of devotion and reverence in the
human heart. These feelings and experiences passed along the stream of
heredity from generation to generation and were guided by those who became
the first Teachers of Christianity no longer to a Guru in the old sense but
to the Christ Who had descended from spiritual worlds and in Jesus of
Nazareth had taken Manhood upon Himself. Few people to-day realise the deep
inwardness and intensity of devotion which characterised these early Teachers
of Christianity.
This feeling of reverence and
devotion continued through the centuries, directed now to the Being of Whom
Christianity proclaimed that He had passed through the Death on Golgotha in
order that henceforward mankind might find Him on Earth.
The goal and aim of the modern
Initiation-science of which I spoke to you yesterday is to approach this
Christ Mystery, this Mystery of Golgotha, with true understanding.
Medieval Christianity was, it is
true pervaded by piety and religious devotion that were really like a
continuation of the veneration paid to the Gurus of old, but the dreamlike
clairvoyance once possessed by human beings had faded away. Apart altogether
from historical records, anthroposophical Spiritual Science is able to
investigate the life of man as it was in those far distant ages of the past.
At certain moments in their lives it was possible for human beings to pass
into a state of dreamlike clairvoyance in which they became aware of the
world from which they themselves had descended to their earthly existence.
But this knowledge that the soul belongs to Eternity had gradually been lost.
Under the influence of this knowledge men would never have been able to
unfold consciousness of human freedom. Consciousness of freedom — which
is an integral part of full manhood — was destined to arise in man when
the time was ripe. The epoch when this feeling of freedom dawned was that of
the Middle Ages; but by that time the old consciousness which could never
have experienced the reality of freedom, was fading away. For when man looked
upwards to his existence as a being of soul among other beings of soul in
pre-earthly life, he was aware only of dependence, he had no feeling of
freedom. The ancient clairvoyant vision of the spiritual world grew dim and
in this twilight condition of consciousness humanity unfolded that feeling of
freedom which in our modern civilisation has reached a certain climax. But in
this condition the gaze of mankind could not penetrate into those
supersensible worlds whence Christ had descended into Jesus of Nazareth. Therefore,
true Christian worship rested, to begin with, upon tradition; men relied upon
historical tradition and upon the power that had come down through the generations
from the veneration once paid to the Gurus. The deep reverence for the Divine
that had once lived in men could be directed, now, to the Being Who had
passed through the Mystery of Golgotha. But in this twilight condition of
consciousness, men were gradually evolving a science of physical nature such
as ancient times had never possessed and in consequence of this, even the
faintest inkling that a spiritual world is accessible to human cognition,
even that faded away.
The supersensible knowledge of
which I. spoke yesterday is an actual extension of knowledge of the world of
nature. And all the faculties developed by a man through meditation and
concentration in such a way. that he penetrates into the spiritual world as a
knower — all these faculties are immeasurably strengthened when, as one
belonging to the modern age, he does not content himself with what natural
science has to say about the external world but wrestles inwardly with it,
assimilating these exact, scientific thoughts but endeavouring, then, to
unite them with the innermost forces of his own being. A certain attunement
or attitude of soul then arises — to begin with, it is not easy to
define. But if this attitude becomes the keynote of meditation and
concentration in the sphere of thought and in the sphere of will, then the
soul is led upwards into the spiritual worlds and understanding of supersensible
reality is attained. We learn to look away from the Earth of which natural
science teaches us, into a supersensible world which belongs to the Earth and
must be recognised as an integral part of the Earth — above all when it
is a matter of understanding man and man's life on Earth.
Questions of far-reaching
import then arise in one who is struggling to acquire anthroposophical
knowledge. And as he seeks to find answers, he is led towards an
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. Having raised his consciousness
away from the Earth, having unfolded a faculty of perception outside the
physical body and of action through the power of ideal magic, such a man is
able to behold the Spiritual. With consciousness that has become independent
of the body, he is able to penetrate into a spiritual world with knowledge
and with power of will.
If a man who is equipped with
this inner understanding of the spiritual world turns his attention again to
Christ and to the Mystery of Golgotha as an Event on the Earth, his thought
— unlike that of many modern theologians — will not be concerned
only with the man Jesus of Nazareth. His conception of what came to pass in
the Mystery of Golgotha is no longer materialistic because he has acquired
the power of supersensible vision and sees the man Jesus of Nazareth as the
bearer of the Divine Christ—the Divine-Spiritual Christ Being. Because
the Divine-Spiritual is a direct reality to this modern “Theosophia,”
it can recognise in the man Jesus of Nazareth the Christ Who is a Spiritual
Being and must always be conceived as such. With the knowledge and
understanding of the Super-Earthly he has acquired, a man is then led to
Christ, beholding in Him the super-earthly, Divine Principle, the God-Man.
* * * *
Through an understanding of the
realities of the spiritual world, modern Anthroposophy leads the way to
Christ — leads to Him after due preparation. In order to make this
quite clear I want to speak of erroneous and true ways by which a man of the
present age may approach the spiritual world ... There were men in days long
since gone by whose inspiration proceeded directly from the Mysteries; then
the spiritual consciousness of humanity grew dim but even with this darkened
consciousness men still gazed into certain spheres of pre-earthly existence
and strove to let a spiritual power stream from their sacred rites. But the
successors of those godly, pious men of old have become, in the modern age,
people who endeavour by extremely questionable means to contact the spiritual
world. The godly men of earlier times confined themselves to the realm of the
soul, turning their eyes of soul to the supersensible worlds; this mood of
holiness and of piety persisted in the feelings of those devotees of
Christianity of whom I spoke at the beginning of the lecture and who desire
to cling to their naive, simple piety. Such an attitude is naive to-day
because in his natural consciousness the human being no longer has any vision
of supersensible existence. This naive piety no longer leads men upwards into
the supersensible worlds, for their consciousness remains in the earthly,
physical body. It is characteristic of this naive piety that it clings to the
feelings, to the sentient experiences, coming to the soul when it sinks into
itself, into its own human nature. This will, it is true, lead a man to the
realisation that the physical body consists not only of flesh and blood, but
that the Spiritual too, is present — the Spiritual which truly pious
men would fain send upwards to the Divine. But those who are misguided
successors of the pupils of the old Gurus endeavour through mediumistic
practises to kindle this spiritual force.
What kind of person is a
medium? A medium is one who lets the Spiritual speak out of the physical
body, write by means of the physical hands or manifest in some other way. The
very fact that mediums speak or write while their ordinary consciousness is
dimmed, indicates that the human body is not wholly physical, that a
spiritual force issues from it, but of a mechanical, inferior kind. A medium
desires not only to experience the Spiritual in the body but strives to bring
the Spiritual to physical manifestation. And the spiritual force that is
present. in the body does indeed become articulate when the medium speaks or
writes. The peculiarity about mediumistic people is that they become
extremely talkative, they love to talk and to write at tremendous length ...
but all these manifestations of the Spiritual through the body contain a
great deal that ordinary logic will regard as highly questionable. These
mediums are themselves the proof that it is not right for modern man to fall
back upon ancient methods of establishing connection with the
Divine-Spiritual but that he must seek in an altogether different way.
This different way of approach
to the spiritual world is that of anthroposophical Spiritual Science and I
will speak of one particular aspect. If a man takes natural science in
earnest, regarding its results as truly great achievements of modern
civilisation, then in his efforts to draw near to the spiritual worlds he
will, to begin with, find it extraordinarily difficult to speak of the Spiritual
at all, to entertain thoughts concerning it, let alone to indulge in any kind
of automatic writing. When through meditation and concentration a man becomes
aware of the Spirit within him, he will prefer to keep silent — to
begin with, at any rate. Whereas a medium becomes talkative and lets the
Spiritual become articulate through his own organs of speech, when
supersensible knowledge of the Spirit begins to dawn in one who is a
conscientious, scientifically trained thinker, he would rather keep silent about
the subtle and delicate experiences of which his soul becomes aware. He even
prefers to forbid thoughts from intruding because thoughts have been
associated with earthly, physical things. He prefers not to let thoughts
stream into his soul because he has an inner fear lest half-consciously he
may apply to spiritual realities, thoughts that are connected with outer,
physical things; he is afraid that when thoughts are applied to spiritual
reality, this spiritual reality will not merely slip away but that it will be
profaned, distorted. Least of all will he take to writing — for he
knows that in days of yore, when worship of the God became potent, spiritual
deed in the sacred rites, men did not resort to writing — which is a
bodily act. Writing first became a custom when the human intellect and
reasoning faculty were directed to the material world of sense and to one who
has any knowledge of the Divine-Spiritual it is an activity which goes very
much against the grain. And so when a man begins to become aware of the
reality of the Divine-Spiritual, of the supersensible world, he stills his
thoughts; he is literally silent as far as speaking is concerned; and he
abstains from writing about matters pertaining to the Divine.
I said before, my dear friends,
that it is permissible for me to speak of these things because they are the
results of my own experience along a path of development which had led on
from natural science to a comprehension and actual perception of the
spiritual worlds and of the Mystery of Golgotha as spiritual reality. But you
will realise that the Mystery of Golgotha presents difficulties to everyone
who tries to approach it in the light of anthroposophical Spiritual Science.
The Mystery of Golgotha as it reveals itself in the course of human history
must be conceived in all its stupendous majesty and glory as an historical
fact. Within the man Jesus of Nazareth, a God passed through death on
Golgotha and we must learn to contemplate in a picture from which every
element of sense-life is absent, this, the greatest of all Events in history.
But it is exceedingly difficult to wrestle through in thought to this
sense-free comprehension of the Mystery of Golgotha, to present it in words
or write of it.
What comes to us along this
path is inner reverence and awe as we contemplate the great Mystery enacted
on Golgotha. This reverence pours through the soul of one who in the way I
have described, has silenced his thoughts and words, who feels the deepest
awe when the power of the Spirit within him draws him to the Mystery of
Golgotha. Feelings of profound reverence and awe pour through the soul of
such a man ... it is as though he dares not approach so stupendous a Mystery.
Thus the path of anthroposophical Spiritual Science leads not only to knowledge
... although to begin with it is knowledge which directs our gaze into yonder
supersensible worlds. But this knowledge streams into the life of feeling,
becomes holy awe; it becomes a power that lays hold of the human soul far
more deeply than any other power, more deeply even than the veneration paid
to the Guru by his pupils in olden times. And this feeling grows, first and
foremost, into a longing and a yearning to understand Christ Jesus on
Golgotha. What, to begin with, was supersensible vision in the life of soul
is transformed through inner metamorphosis into feeling. This feeling seeks
the God-Man on Golgotha and can find Him through the vision of the Spiritual
already acquired. Man also learns to understand Jesus of Nazareth, realising
that, in him, Christ may be seen as a reality within earthly existence. And
so anthroposophical Spiritual Science brings knowledge of the Spiritual
Christ Being but at the same time the deep and true reverence for the Divine
which arises from this knowledge of the Supersensible.
*
* *
When a man first becomes aware
of the power of supersensible knowledge he prefers to be silent in his
thoughts and words, not in any way to use his bodily faculties as an
instrument for voicing his experiences. Nevertheless, having reached a
transitional stage, when he resolves to speak of his inner life, he
experiences something which justifies him in speaking of the spiritual nature
of Christ Jesus. At this transitional stage he makes the resolve to give the
Spiritual definite form in his thoughts, to speak and to write about the
Spiritual. And the experience that now comes to him is that he feels as it
were lifted out of his physical body whenever he is speaking or thinking
about the Spiritual. The physical body is an essential instrument in ordinary
thinking and speaking, but now, at this higher stage, a man is aware of being
removed in a certain way from his physical body. Whereas a medium feels
himself entirely within the physical body and even deadens his consciousness
in order to remain within the physical while allowing the Spiritual to
manifest through the body, a man who has attained real knowledge of the
Supersensible lifts himself out of his physical body in an enhanced and more
delicate state of consciousness. Because he is experiencing the reality of
the spiritual world, he finds it exceedingly difficult to take hold of the
physical world; his faculty of speech and the natural flow of his thinking
elude him; he cannot find the way to his limbs or his physical body. He must
now undergo the experience of trying to find his bearings in this physical
world once again and therewith the thoughts and the language in which to
express the realities of the supersensible world of which he has become
aware. But having had this experience, a man feels as though he must enter
life anew, as though he must pass through a second, self-engendered birth. He
learns to know the inner depths of human nature for he has entered into these
depths a second time in order to create an instrument for thinking and
speaking of spiritual reality. Penetrating thus into his organism with
supersensible knowledge, a man realises that there too he will find Christ
inasmuch as Christ passed through the Mystery of Golgotha. He now has some understanding
not only of the Christ Who once came down to the Earth and passed through
death, but if he has really fathomed the depths of his own being, there too,
he experiences Christ Who died in order that His Power might flow into all
mankind.
This is the experience that
comes, with far greater assurance now, to a man possessed of supersensible
knowledge. And he can clothe the knowledge of Christ thus acquired in words
which contain profound truth: “Not I but Christ in me.” For he
knows: On Golgotha, Christ died; through His death Christ entered into the
human forces of birth and has lived since His death in the very being of man.
The modern Initiate therefore knows the truth of these words of St. Paul,
knows that he will find Christ within himself if he does but succeed in
fathoming the depths of his own manhood.
In order to make men Christians
in the real sense, the Initiate need not demand that they should all have
reached his own level. Equipped with this understanding and knowledge of
Christ, he can also discover new paths for simple-hearted piety. Men of
simple piety can indeed find Christ, only their path to-day cannot be quite
the same as that which led in days of yore to the adoration outpoured at the
feet of the Guru. The piety that befits the modern age must be an inward
piety, for man is no longer called upon to send up into a supersensible
world, his feelings of reverence for the Divine; he must penetrate within his
own being in order there to find Christ Who since the Mystery of Golgotha has
been on the Earth as the Living Christ.
Anthroposophical Spiritual
Science can say to a man of simple piety: “If you do but penetrate
deeply enough into your own being, you will find Christ; this is no illusion
because by his Death on Golgotha Christ did indeed descend into these depths
of your innermost self.” One who is schooled in Spiritual Science knows
that in speaking thus to a man of simple piety, he is saying what is true; he
knows that he is not playing upon the emotions of the other but pointing to a
goal within his reach. It is perfectly possible for simple, godly men to
tread the path which leads, in the modern age too, to supersensible
knowledge.
Whereas in earlier times,
reverence and veneration for the Guru made the thoughts of the pupil translucent,
enabled divine power to resound in the mantrams and the rites to become
potent deed, a man who desires to find the true path to Christ in our modern
age must, above all else, inwardly deepen his soul. He must learn to look
within himself in order that he may find and become aware of inner reality
when he turns his gaze away from the world of sense. And within him too, he
will find the power that carries him through the gate of death, inasmuch as
here, on the Earth, knowledge of this power has come to him through devotion
to Christ and to the Mystery of Golgotha.
The Guru of olden times said to
his pupils and through them to all human beings: When you pass through the
gate of death you will find the sublime Sun Being Who makes good the
imperfections of Earth-existence. The teacher of modern times says: If here on
the Earth, with inner reverence and deep devotion of heart you establish
connection with Christ Who has descended, and with the Mystery of Golgotha,
you will be inwardly filled with a power that does not die with you, but
bears you through death and will work together with you towards the
fulfilment of what cannot be wholly fulfilled on Earth while you are living
in a physical body. What in olden times was wrought by the sublime Sun Being
will be wrought, now, by Christ's power within your own being from which the
body has been cast off at death. Christ's power will work in human
imperfections on Earth and men will be drawn together in the social life
through their recognition of Him. For the power that streams from Christ, the
power upon which anthroposophical Spiritual Science is able to shed the light
of understanding, can enter into the actions and the will of men and thereby
flow into their social life.
There is much talk to-day of
social reform and social progress. Who will be the great Reformer of the
social life when men's actions are performed in the name of Christ Jesus and
the world becomes truly Christian? Who will be the mighty Reformer, having
the power to establish peace amid social strife on Earth? The Christ —
He and He alone can bring peace, when men lead a social life hallowed by acts
of consecration, when as they look up to Christ they do not say “I,”
but rather: When two or three, or many, are gathered together in the name of
Christ, then He is in the midst of us Activity in the sphere of social life
then becomes a veritable hallowing, a continuation of the sacred acts of cult
and rite in olden times. Christ Himself in very truth will be the great
social Reformer, since He works to-day as a living reality within the being
of man.
The social life must be
permeated with the Christ Impulse ... Men of simple piety long to find
Christ's power within the soul so that what they do in the social life may be
done in Christ's name. These men of simple piety can still be sure of their
ground when a modern Initiate says to them: The power you can find through
your simple piety of soul when you meditate upon your own being and upon the
Christ Who lives within you — this power streamed from the Death on Golgotha,
from Christ Himself. It works as the Christ Impulse in the deeds you perform
in social life, because Christ is present among men as a Living Reality when
they find the way to Him. They are led to Him through that deep inner love
which links human hearts together and brings a supersensible element into
feeling, just as the light that is kindled within a man's being brings a
supersensible element into knowledge.
And so men of simple piety need
say no longer that their path is disturbed by the knowledge imparted by
anthroposophical Spiritual Science. If natural science were to continue along
purely external paths, this simple piety would in the course of time die out altogether;
but if natural science itself can lead on to knowledge of the Supersensible and
thereby to knowledge of the Christ as a supersensible Being, then all truly
pious men will be able to find that for which they long: assurance in their
life of soul, certainty that their deeds and actions are in harmony with the
Christ Impulse. That for which pious and godly men yearn can be imbued
through anthroposophical Spiritual Science with all the certainty of
knowledge. This Spiritual Science has therefore the right to insist that it
does not disturb the path of simple godliness or lead men away from Christ.
Seeking as it does to lead the way to the spiritual world by working with and
not against modern science, Anthroposophy has this message to give: Mankind
must not go forward into the future without Christ but with him — with
Christ as a Being Who is known and recognised, Whose reality is felt and
Whose Impulse men resolve to make effective in the world.
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