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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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The Gospel of St. John
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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The Gospel of St. John
The Atlantean oracles. The post Atlantean Sanctuaries of initiation. The Baptism by John.
Schmidt Number: S-2034
On-line since: 10th September, 2002
We said yesterday that mankind had great leaders even in that early
period of human evolution called the Atlantean; and we saw that this
period ran its course on a continent situated between the present
Europe and Africa on one side, and America on the other, and was
called the old Atlantis. We also mentioned how different human life
was at that period, especially as regards the state of human
consciousness. We could conclude from yesterday's lecture that the
consciousness of the present day has evolved by degrees, man having
started with a kind of shadowy clairvoyance. We know that the human
physical bodies of the Atlantean period were of an essentially softer,
more flexible and plastic substance than is today the case; and we
also know, taught by clairvoyant consciousness, that the man of that
time was not yet able to perceive solid objects in sharp outline, as
we see them today. The Atlantean could indeed distinguish the objects
of the outer world — the mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdoms
— but vaguely and indistinctly. As we now see the street lamps on
a foggy autumn evening, as if fringed with colour, man then saw
something like coloured borders surrounding the objects —
‘auras’, as we say. These were indications of the spiritual beings who
belonged to the things. At certain moments during the day the
perception of these spiritual beings was very indistinct; but at
others, especially in the intermediate state between waking and
sleeping, the perception of them was very distinct.
If we wish to have a vivid idea of the consciousness of an old
Atlantean we must say to ourselves: He could never have seen a rose,
for instance, as we see it today, in sharp outline. It was all vague
and indistinct; in the intermediate state between waking and sleeping
it became still more indistinct, indeed it disappeared altogether. On
the other hand he could clearly see what we must describe as the
‘rose-spirit’ or ‘rose-soul’. It was thus with all objects of the
surrounding world. The progress of evolution consisted in the fact
that the external objects became increasingly distinct, while the
perception of the spiritual beings who belonged to the things became
increasingly indistinct. On the other hand man developed his
consciousness of himself to an increasing extent, and learnt more and
more to feel his own existence. We indicated yesterday the moment at
which a distinct feeling of the Ego came to the fore. We said that the
etheric body came to coincide with the physical body at the dawn of
the third phase of the Atlantean period. As you may imagine, human
leadership was also very different before this. The sort of
understanding between man and man, when one appeals to the judgment of
the other, was altogether non-existent in Atlantean times. In that
age of shadowy clairvoyance, the understanding consisted of a
subconscious influence which passed from man to man. What we know
today as a last (often misunderstood) vestige of a former state,
existed then in a high degree. This was a kind of suggestion, a
subconscious influence from man to man, which made but little appeal
to the cooperation of the other soul. When we look back to the early
times of Atlantis we see that a powerful influence was exerted, when
some image or sensation rose in the soul, and one man directed his
will upon another. All influences were powerful, and the will to
receive them was also powerful. Today there are but remnants of this
condition. Picture to yourselves a man in those days moving past
another and making certain movements. The other, the spectator, need
only have been a little weaker, and the effect produced on him would
have been to make him try to reproduce or imitate all the movements he
had seen. A last heritage of this condition today is the inclination
for one person to yawn when he sees another do so. In those days the
tie between man and man was far more intimate, the reason being that
humanity lived in a quite different atmosphere. In our time the air in
which we live is not impregnated with water unless it rains heavily.
At that time it was always charged with dense vapours; and at the
beginning of the Atlantean period the substance of man's body was no
more solid than that of certain jelly like animals which can scarcely
be distinguished from the water in which they live. Such was the human
being; his densification was a long and gradual process. But we know
that man was nevertheless exposed to influences, not only from the
higher spiritual beings who, dwelling on the Sun or the various
planets of our solar system, were his rightful leaders, but also from
the Luciferic spirits who influenced his astral body. We have already
described the manner in which these influences made themselves felt,
and how the appointed leaders of the Atlantean people had to combat
these Luciferic influences in their own astral body. Human
consciousness being at that time still spiritual and clairvoyant, men
could perceive everything in the nature of spiritual influences at
work within themselves. Nowadays, a person who knows nothing of
spiritual science would laugh if he were told that the influences of
the Luciferic spirits are embedded in his astral body. He does not, of
course, know that these beings exert a far stronger influence upon him
when he pays no heed to them.
‘The Devil, your good-folk ne'er scent,
E'en though he have them by the collar.’
That is a very deep saying in Goethe's Faust, and many a materialistic
influence would not be there today, if people knew that the Luciferic
influences were not yet eradicated from the human soul. At that time,
the leaders and their pupils were strictly on the watch against
everything which excited passions and desires, with the tendency to
infuse into man a deeper interest in his physical surroundings than
was good for his progress and development in the Cosmos. Thus, the
would-be leader had, above all things, to exercise self-knowledge and
keep intensely alert for everything that might reach him from Lucifer.
He had to study closely these Luciferic beings in his own astral body.
By doing so he could keep them at a distance, and this again enabled
him to see the other, higher, guiding spiritual beings, especially
those who had transferred the scene of their activity from the Earth
to the Sun or to one of the other planets. The spheres seen by men
corresponded to the origin of their descent. There were human souls
who, let us say, were descended from Mars; when they, in keeping with
their development, proceeded to combat the Luciferic influences in
their astral body, they were led to a higher grade of clairvoyance
— to a good, pure seership — and they beheld the higher
spiritual beings in the sphere from which they had descended —
the Mars sphere. Souls from the Saturn sphere became capable of seeing
the Saturn beings; others from Jupiter or Venus, saw the beings of
those planets. Each soul saw the region corresponding to itself; but
the most advanced among the human beings (those who had survived the
lunar crisis) were able to prepare themselves gradually to see, not
only the spiritual beings of Mars, Jupiter, and Venus, but those of
the Sun itself, the high Sun beings. Having descended from the various
planets, the initiated could not perceive the spiritual spheres of
these planets. You will therefore understand that there were
institutions or schools in ancient Atlantis, in which the descendants
of Venus were taught the Venus Mysteries. If we give these schools a
later name of ‘Oracle’, we may say that in Atlantis there was a
Mars-oracle, in which the Mars Mysteries were investigated, a
Saturn-oracle, a Venus-oracle, and so on. The highest of all was the
Sun-oracle, and the highest initiate of the Sun-oracle was the highest
of all the initiates.
Since suggestion and the influence of the will were modes of
intercourse in those days, it follows that instruction was given in
quite a different way. Let us try to form an idea of the intercourse
between teacher and pupil. Let us assume that there were spiritual
teachers, who had received their initiation by an act of grace. How
did the later initiates, their pupils, receive their initiation in
Atlantean times?
We may imagine that the initiated, by their very presence and the mere
fact of their existence, exerted a tremendous influence on those
predestined to become their pupils. No Atlantean initiate could show
himself without setting a note vibrating in the soul of those who were
to become his pupils, whereby the possibility of such discipleship was
revealed to them. The influences which proceeded from man to man were
entirely removed from objective, waking consciousness, and the kind of
instruction familiar to us was not necessary. All intercourse with the
teacher, everything that he did, worked hand in hand with the human
imitative faculty. Much was unconsciously transmitted from the teacher
to the pupil. Hence the essential thing for those who were conducted
to the oracles, after having attained the requisite maturity, was the
fact that they lived in the vicinity of the teacher. By observing the
acts of the teacher, and by the impression made on their feelings and
sensations, they were prepared — it is true in long, very long
stretches of time. Then came the time when there was so intense a
concord between the soul of the teacher and that of the pupil, that
the whole knowledge of the higher Mysteries possessed by the teacher
became transmitted to the pupil. It was thus in ancient times. Now
what happened after the coincidence between the physical and etheric
bodies had taken place?
Although this coincidence had been fully effected in the Atlantean
period, the union between the physical and etheric bodies was not
particularly close, as yet, and it required no more than an effort of
will on the part of the teacher, for the etheric body to be withdrawn
from the physical. It was no longer possible, even when the right
moment had arrived, for the teacher's wisdom to pass, as though of
itself, to his pupil. And now came the great cataclysm which swept
away the Atlantean continent. Stupendous perturbations of air and
water, vast upheavals gradually changed the whole face of the Earth.
Europe, Asia, and Africa, of which only a small area was solid land,
also America, arose out of the water. Atlantis vanished. The people
wandered East and West, and many and various colonies came into
existence. But after this tremendous catastrophe, the human race had
advanced a step. Another change had taken place in the connection
between the physical and etheric bodies: they were much more closely
united in post Atlantean times. It was now no longer possible for the
master to draw out the etheric body by an impulse of his will, and to
transmit every observation to his pupil. Hence it was necessary that
initiation leading to vision of the higher worlds, should now assume
another form, which may be described somewhat as follows.
In place of the instruction based upon the immediate psychic influence
passing from teacher to pupil, a new form of teaching was gradually
adopted, which by degrees came to approach the method of the present
day. As in Atlantean times, institutions were established by the great
leaders of humanity, in which reminiscences of the old
Atlantean-oracles were preserved. Mysteries, sites of initiation, were
founded in post Atlantean times. And just as suitable candidates had
formerly been received into the oracles, so were they now admitted
into the Mysteries. Here the pupils were prepared by a severe course
of instruction, for it was no longer possible to work upon them as in
former times. Through long periods of time we find such Mysteries in
all civilizations. Whether we turn to the first period of post
Atlantean civilization which ran its course in ancient India, or to
the civilization of Zarathustra, or to that of Egypt or Chaldea, we
find everywhere that pupils were admitted to Mysteries, which were
something between church and school, there to undergo a strict course
of instruction in thinking and feeling, not merely with regard to the
things of the physical world, but to the facts of the invisible,
spiritual world. Today we can describe exactly what was taught there;
to a large extent it was the same as what we know as Anthroposophy;
this was the subject of study in the Mysteries. It differed only in
being more adapted to the manner and customs of that time, and it was
strictly regulated. Whereas today the mysteries of the higher worlds
are, to some extent, freely and rapidly imparted to those who are in a
degree ripe for them, in those days the instruction was strictly
graduated; at the first stage, only a certain sum of knowledge was
communicated. Everything else remained an absolute secret. Not until
the pupil had mastered the first steps was he entrusted with the
knowledge belonging to a higher stage. Through this preparation,
thoughts, ideas, sensations, and feelings relating to the spiritual
world were implanted in the astral body of the pupil. This meant that
he had to some extent combated the Luciferic influence. For all that
is imparted in the form of spiritual science relates to the higher
worlds, not to the world for which Lucifer would excite man's interest
— namely, the world of sense alone. Then, after this preparation,
the time drew nigh when the pupil could be led to independent vision;
he was himself to behold the spiritual world. For this it was
necessary that he should be able to reflect in his etheric body all
that he had elaborated for himself in his astral body. For vision in
the spiritual world can be attained in only one way. The fruits of
learning stored in the astral body must work upon the pupil so deeply,
through certain feelings and emotions evoked by that learning, that
not only his astral body but also the denser etheric body is
influenced thereby. Before the pupil can rise from study to vision,
the result of his instruction must first produce its effect. For this
reason the course of instruction, throughout the Indian, Persian,
Egyptian, and Greek periods, concluded with a certain ceremony
consisting in the following act.
To begin with the pupil underwent a long course of preparation
consisting not of study and learning, but of that which we call
meditation, and of other exercises to develop self-possession, inner
tranquillity, and a dispassionate attitude. The preparation was
designed to fit the astral body in every respect to become a citizen
of the spiritual world. Finally when the right moment had come, and as
a final act of this preparation, the pupil was thrown into a
death-like condition which lasted three and a half days. Whereas in
Atlantean times, the etheric and physical bodies were so loosely
joined that the former could be withdrawn with comparative ease, it
was now necessary that the candidate for initiation should be thrown
into a death-like sleep in the Mysteries. While this condition lasted,
he was laid in a kind of coffin, or bound to a cross or something
similar. During this time the Initiator or Hierophant, as he was
called, had the power to work upon the astral and especially the
etheric body; for during this procedure the etheric body was withdrawn
from the physical. This is not what happens in sleep; for then the
physical and etheric bodies remain in bed, while the astral body and
Ego withdraw. But here, in this concluding act of initiation, the
physical body remains, and the etheric body is almost fully raised out
of it; only the lower portions are raised out of it and the candidate
is then in a death-like condition. Everything that had been learnt by
meditation and the other exercises was now impressed upon the etheric
body in this condition. In these three and a half days the initiate
actually roamed through the spiritual worlds, where the spiritual
beings live. At the end of the three and a half days the Initiator
called him back again, that is to say, he had to power to awaken him.
The latter now brought with him the knowledge of the spiritual world.
He could behold that world and announce its truths to his fellow-men,
who were not yet ready to behold it themselves. Thus the teachers of
pre-Christian times were initiated into the deepest Mysteries. They
were led by the Hierophant during those three and a half days and were
living witnesses of the reality of spiritual life, that is, of the
truth that behind the physical world there is a spiritual world, to
which man belongs, with his higher principles, and into which he must
find his way. The form of initiation I have just described reached its
climax in the period immediately following the Atlantean cataclysm.
But in the course of time, as the union between the physical and
etheric bodies grew increasingly close, the process of initiation
became increasingly dangerous. Men were becoming ever more accustomed
to the physical world of sense, with their full consciousness. Indeed
it is the very purpose of evolution that man should accustom himself
to live in the physical world, with all his inclinations and
sympathies. The great progress of humanity consists in the fact that
man actually developed this love for the physical world.
In the earliest period of post Atlantean civilization, there was a
vivid recollection of the reality of the spiritual world. People said:
‘We, the late descendants, can yet see into the spiritual world of our
ancestors.’ They still retained that dull, shadowy consciousness; they
knew where the true world lay, which was their home. ‘All that
surrounds us in waking consciousness,’ they said, ‘is like a veil
shrouding the truth; it hides from us the spiritual world; it is Maya
or illusion.’ They could not readily accustom themselves to what they
now saw. It was difficult to understand that the consciousness of the
old spiritual world must be lost. That is the keynote of the first
post Atlantean civilization. It was therefore easy to lead the men of
that time into the spiritual world, for they had a lively attachment
to it. Of course this state could not continue; for it is the mission
of this planet that men should become enamoured with the forces of the
Earth and conquer the physical plane. Could you behold that India of
the past, you would find an enormously high level of spiritual life.
An understanding of the teachings propounded by the ancient teachers
of humanity is only possible today when preceded by a study of
spiritual science. Failing this, the teachings of the great and holy
Rishis must appear nonsense or folly; for people cannot bring
themselves to think that there is any sense in such teachings
concerning the mysteries of the spiritual world. From their point of
view such people are of course right, for people are always ‘right’
from their own particular standpoint.
There was an enormous capacity of spiritual contemplation, but the
power of handling the simplest implement was lacking. Wants were
satisfied in the most primitive manner. Natural science, or what is
known by that name, did not exist; for in everything visible to him on
the physical plane, a man saw Maya, the great illusion, and nothing
but an elevation to the great Sun-being, or to Beings akin to him,
could reveal truth and reality. But this condition would not last. It
was necessary that among the men of post Atlantean times there should
be some who were desirous of conquering the kingdom of the Earth. A
beginning was made in the time of Zarathustra. Indeed a mighty step
forward can be observed in the transition from the ancient Indians to
the ancient Persians. To Zarathustra the external world was no longer
merely Maya or illusion. He showed the people that our physical
environment has value, but that the spiritual is behind everything.
Whereas the flower was Maya in the view of the ancient Indian, and he
sought the spirit behind the flower, Zarathustra said: ‘The flower is
something to be prized, for it is a member of the universal
All-spirit; the material grows out of the spiritual.’ We have already
mentioned that Zarathustra pointed to the physical Sun as being the
sphere of spiritual beings. But initiation was hard of attainment and
for those who, not content to hear from the initiates that there is a
spiritual world, themselves desired to behold the great Sun-aura, more
stringent measures were needed for the attainment of initiation. All
human life altered little by little, and in the following period, the
Egypto-Chaldean civilization, men devoted themselves increasingly to
the conquest of the physical world. A purely spiritual science which
investigates all that lies behind the physical world, was no longer
man's sole interest. He observed the course of the stars and sought to
discern in their position and movement — in all that is outwardly
visible — the writing of the divine spiritual beings. He
recognized in the characters traced between one object of sense and
another, the will of the gods. Thus he studied the objects in their
mutual relation. In Egypt we see the rise of a science of geometry
applied to external things. In this way man becomes master of the
external world. The Greeks progressed still further in the same
direction. In this (Greek) period we see how that union is
accomplished between the experience of the soul and external matter.
All that man has won for himself flows out, as it were, into the world
of sense. But inasmuch as man grew increasingly powerful in the world
of sense, and his soul became ever more attached to it, he grew to the
same extent more estranged from the spiritual world in the interval
between death and a new birth. When the soul left the body in ancient
India, and entered the spiritual world, there to fulfil its
development till rebirth, there was still a vivid experience of
spiritual life. For man's whole life was filled with longing for
spiritual culture, and his feelings were fired by the declarations to
which he listened concerning life in the worlds of spirit, even though
he were not himself an initiate. Hence, when he passed through the
portal of death, the spiritual world lay open before him; light and
radiance surrounded him. But in proportion as man's sympathies were
directed towards the physical world, and he grew more skilful therein
— in the same measure did darkness shroud the interval between
death and rebirth. In Egyptian times this was so marked that we can
ascertain, with clairvoyant consciousness, that a state of darkness
and dreariness became the lot of the soul upon leaving the physical
body and entering the spiritual world. The soul felt lonely and
isolated from its fellows; and a frosty chill pervaded the soul in its
loneliness, as it strove in vain to gain contact with the other souls.
The Greeks lived in a time when man, by the superb outer beauty of his
culture, had made the Earth something altogether remarkable, but the
interval between death and rebirth was most dark, dismal, and frosty
for the souls of that period. The story of the noble Greek who, when
questioned about the sojourn in the underworld, replied: ‘Better a
beggar in the upper world than a king in the realm of the shades!’ is
in accordance with facts and no mere legend.
Thus we can say that with the advance of civilization man became more
and more estranged from the spiritual world. Initiates capable of
beholding the higher regions became increasingly rare; for the
procedure of initiation grew ever more dangerous, and it became
increasingly difficult to survive the death-like condition for three
and a half days, and to submit to the withdrawal of the etheric body
without the risk of death.
A renewal now took place for the whole of humanity through that
impulse of which we have spoken in our last lecture — the Christ
Impulse. We have already described how Christ, the high Sun-Spirit,
approached the Earth by degrees. We have seen that in the days of
Zarathustra He was still to be sought in the Sun, as ‘Ahura Mazdao’,
and that in the time of Moses He could already be seen in the burning
bush and in the fire on Sinai. Gradually He entered the Earth-sphere
in which so great a change was to be wrought. In the first place it
was important for this Spirit that men should learn to recognize Him
here on Earth. Now what was the essential condition in all forms of
ancient initiation? That the etheric body should be raised out of the
physical; and even in post Atlantean times it was necessary that the
candidate should be thrown into a death-like trance, that is, that he
should be physically unconscious. This entailed his subjection to the
will of another Ego, which, again, was inseparable from initiation.
The pupil's Ego was wholly under the dominion of his initiator. He
quitted his physical body entirely; his Ego neither occupied it nor
exercised any influence upon it. But the great goal of the Christ
Impulse is that man should develop his Ego entirely within himself,
and not descend to a state of consciousness lower than his Ego for the
purpose of entering the higher worlds. That this might be fulfilled,
it was necessary that one should offer himself as a sacrifice in order
that the Christ-Spirit Himself should be received into a human body.
We have already shown that an initiate who had prepared himself
through many, many incarnations, became able, at a definite point of
his life, to yield up his own Ego and receive into himself the
Christ-Spirit. This is indicated in the Gospel of St. John, in the
account of the Baptism in the Jordan. Now what was the meaning of this
Baptism?
We know that this Baptism by the forerunner and herald of Christ
Jesus, John the Baptist, was accomplished upon those whom he had
prepared to receive Christ Jesus in the right way. We shall fail to
understand what is written concerning the Baptism in the Gospel of St.
John unless we bear in mind that the purpose of John's Baptism was the
true preparation for Christ. If you think of a baptism of the present
day, which is only an imitation of the original symbol, you will fail
to understand it. It was not a mere sprinkling with water, but a
complete immersion; the candidate lived for a certain time, long or
short, under water. The meaning of this will be clear if we seek its
clue in the mystery of the human constitution.
Call to mind again that man consists of physical body, etheric body,
astral body, and Ego. In his waking state these four principles are
firmly knit together; in sleep the physical and etheric bodies lie in
bed, while the astral body and the Ego are outside. In death the
physical body remains behind as a corpse — the etheric body
withdraws and then, for a short time, the Ego, the astral body, and
the etheric body are united. To those who have heard even a few of my
lectures it will be evident that an important experience is associated
with this moment. The deceased sees his past life unfolded before him
in a mighty tableau; the whole circumstances of his life stand out
before him as though ranged side by side in space. For, as we know,
the etheric body is also the vehicle of memory, and nothing but his
physical body prevents a man from seeing all this during his lifetime.
After death the physical body is cast aside, and everything that a man
has experienced in his life just ended, can now enter his
consciousness. Now I have also mentioned that a similar review of the
past life takes place when a person finds himself in peril of death,
from any cause, or when he is overcome by terror or by any great
shock. You already know from narratives that when a man's life is
endangered, say, by drowning or by a fall from a height, and he does
not lose consciousness, his whole life hitherto appears before him as
in a great panorama. What a man experiences, say, when in danger of
drowning, was experienced by almost all who were baptized by John. The
baptism consisted in the immersion of the candidate until he had
experienced his life hitherto. This experience, however, was in the
nature of a spiritual picture; and what the spirit experienced in this
abnormal condition was seen to be connected, in a measure, with the
rest of the spiritual world. So that he who was raised from the water
after the baptism by John could say: ‘There is a spiritual world! In
truth, that which I have within me is something which can exist
without a body!’ After this baptism a man was convinced that a world
indeed existed to which he belonged in the spirit. What then had John
the Baptist accomplished by this Baptism?
Men had become more and more attached to the physical world; they came
together more and more in it and believed ever more firmly that the
physical world was actual reality. But they who came to the Baptist
experienced their own life as a spiritual fact. After baptism they
could say with conviction: ‘I am something more than what I am through
my physical body!’ The mind of man, in its development, had become
directed towards the physical world. John had evoked in men the
consciousness that there is a spiritual world to which they belong
with their higher nature. So that we need only clothe his exhortations
in other words: ‘Change your heart, which is directed to the physical
world!’ And indeed their heart was changed when they were truly and
rightly baptized. Then they knew: ‘I have spirit in me; my Ego belongs
to the spiritual world!’ The individual had gained this conviction
while in his physical body; there had been no special procedure, as in
initiation; he had experienced this while in his physical body; and,
owing to the manner in which all the teaching since Moses had been
received by men and united with their soul, the experience of the
baptism by John acquired a special significance.
After the rite, the individual was not only conscious of his unity
with the spiritual world; he also knew what that spiritual world was,
which was now approaching the Earth. He who had proclaimed Himself to
Moses as ‘Ejeh asher ejeh’ in the burning bush and in the fire on
Sinai, the same, he knew, now permeates the Earth. ‘Jahve’ or
‘Jehovah’, ‘Ejeh asher ejeh’ or ‘I am the I AM’ — these words, he
knew, rightly designated the spiritual world. Thus the disciple not
only knew through the baptism by John that he was one with the
spiritual world; he could also say with truth: ‘The I AM, out of whom
the spirit in me is born, lives in that spiritual world!’ John had
thus prepared his disciples by baptism. He had aroused this feeling in
them, but of course only in a few; most of them were not ripe for such
an experience during immersion. Nevertheless a few there were who
recognized that He was approaching — the Spirit who was
afterwards called the Christ.
Now try to compare what has been said today with what was said
yesterday. The spiritual beings of old had effected love founded on
ties of blood and physical relationship. But the Luciferic spirits
sought to establish man in his individual personality. Lucifer and the
high spiritual beings had worked simultaneously. Little by little the
old blood ties were loosened, and this can be historically traced.
Consider the conglomeration of races in the great Roman Empire; it was
brought about by the loosening of the old blood ties, and the growing
tendency of men to seek the firm standpoint of their own personality.
As a result, however, they had lost their connection with the
spiritual world; they had become merged in the physical world and had
grown to love the physical plane. In proportion to the increase of
self-consciousness through the influence of Lucifer, man had become
centred in the physical world and had rendered desolate his life
between death and a new birth. The Baptist had now prepared a great
and momentous experience for mankind. Human personality was to be
preserved and, by the immersion in water, man, though remaining in his
personality, was to find the very beings whom he had formerly known as
‘gods’, when he himself lived in water, and the atmosphere was laden
with water, mists, and vapours. The experience in the divine worlds
was now repeated. Man, though an Ego, was now prepared to seek reunion
with his fellow-men, and to be led back to love, now a spiritualized
love.
This gives you the keynote of the Christ-event regarded from another
point of view. Christ represents the descent to our Earth of the force
of spiritual love, which is today but at the beginning of its work. If
we pursue this thought with the help of the Gospels of St. John and
St. Luke, we shall see that spiritual love is the very keynote of the
Christ-impulse; we shall see how the Egos which had been sundered, are
drawn together as regards their inmost being. From the beginning men
have had but a dim presentiment of the significance of Christ for the
world; as yet very, very little of this mission had been realized, for
the separative influence (the after effect of the Luciferic powers) is
still there, and the Christ principle has been at work but a short
time. Though it is true that in our day a sympathetic cooperation is
sought in certain external departments of life; in the most intimate
and important things people have no inkling of the meaning of harmony
and concord between souls, or at least they have it only in their
thought and intellect, which matters least. It is indeed true that
Christianity is only at the beginning of its mission; but it will
penetrate ever deeper into the souls of men and ennoble the Ego ever
more and more. Precisely the youngest nations recognize this in our
day. They perceive that they must unite themselves with the power of
Christ, and penetrate themselves with His force, if they would
progress. A contemporary personality in Eastern Europe, the executor
of the great Russian philosopher Solovioff, said: ‘Christianity must
unite us as a nation, otherwise we shall lose our Ego and, with it,
the possibility of being a nation!’ Powerful words which seem to issue
from an intense intellect for Christianity. But it also shows how
necessary it is that Christianity should pierce to the depths of the
soul. Let us examine an outstanding case and we shall find that, as
regards the inmost life of the soul, even the most exalted and noblest
are far from grasping what they will one day experience, when man's
inmost thoughts, opinions, and feelings are steeped in Christianity.
Think of Tolstoi and his work in the last few decades, as he strives
to expose the true meaning of Christianity. Such a thinker must
inspire the greatest respect, especially in the West, where whole
libraries are filled with endless philosophical disquisitions on the
same subject which Tolstoi treats in a few powerful touches in his one
book On Life. There are pages of elemental strength in Tolstoi's
works, which betray a deep knowledge of anthroposophical truths,
certainly unattainable by a philosopher of Western Europe, or on which
he must write an extensive literature, because something unusually
powerful is expressed therein. In Tolstoi there is an undertone which
we may call the Christ-impulse. Meditate on his words and you will see
that the Christ-impulse it is, which fills him. Turn now to his great
contemporary, who interests us for the reason that he soared upwards
from a comprehensive philosophical conception of the universe to the
boundary line of a life so truly visionary, that he could survey an
epoch, as it were in perspective, apocalyptically. Even though his
visions are distorted, because they lack the true foundation, Solovioff
nevertheless rises to a visionary perception of the future; he places
before us vistas of the future of the twentieth century. If we give
him our attention, we find in his writings great and noble thoughts,
especially with regard to Christianity. But he speaks of Tolstoi as of
an enemy of Christianity, as of Antichrist! Thus two men of our day
may believe in their deepest thoughts that they are doing the best for
their time; their work may spring from the profoundest depths of their
soul, and yet they may altogether fail to understand one another, and
see, each in the other, nothing but an antagonist. No one today stops
to think that if outward harmony and a life steeped in love are to be
realized, the Christ-impulse must have penetrated to the utmost depths
of human nature, so that human love becomes something entirely
different from what it is at present, even among the noblest spirits.
The Impulse which was foretold, and then entered the world, is only at
the beginning of its work, and an even deeper understanding for it
must be shown. What is lacking to all those who, precisely in our
time, cry out for Christianity and declare it to be a necessity, yet
cannot bring it within their reach? Anthroposophy, spiritual science,
is lacking to them — the present day way of comprehending Christ.
For Christ is so great that each successive epoch must find new
methods by which to know and understand Him. In earlier centuries
other methods of striving for wisdom, and other forms were employed.
Today Anthroposophy is a necessity, and, for long periods to come,
what Anthroposophy now teaches will hold good for the purpose of
understanding the Christ. For Anthroposophy will prove to be a
stimulus for all human powers of cognition. Man will gradually find
his way to an understanding of Christ. But even the anthroposophical
presentation is only temporal: of this we are well aware. We know too
that the great subject of our temporal representations will require
still greater modes of representation.
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Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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