VII
Yesterday's discussion
brought us to a comprehension of the real nature of the baptism by John,
the Forerunner of Christ Jesus, so that it will now be comparatively
easy to understand the difference between this baptism and what we may
call the baptism by Christ; and precisely by striving to fathom this
difference will the very essence of the Christ-Impulse and its influence
in the world become clear and distinct in our minds.
We must first of all remind
ourselves that the condition to which people were reduced by the baptism in
the Jordan was, after all, an abnormal one as compared with the ordinary,
every-day state of consciousness. We learned that the old initiation,
for instance, was based upon the withdrawal, in a certain respect, of
the etheric body, which normally is firmly joined to the physical body,
and that this enabled the astral body to imprint its experiences into
the etheric body. Such was the procedure in the old initiation, and
an abnormal condition had to supervene in the baptism by John as well.
The disciple was submerged in water, resulting in a certain separation
of the etheric from the physical body; and thus he could attain to a
survey of his life and become aware of the connection of this individual
life with the regions of the divine-spiritual world. To make it a little
clearer, we can say that when the submersion was successful it produced
in the disciple the conviction: I have spirit within me; I am not just
a being in this physical-material body; and this spirit within me is
one with the spirit underlying all things. — And he knew in addition
that the Spirit Whom he thus confronted was the same that Moses had
perceived in the fire of the burning bush and in the lightning on Sinai
as Jahve, as I am the I AM, as ehjeh asher ehjeh. All this
was revealed to him through the baptism by John.
Now, in what way did this
sort of consciousness differ from that of an initiate of olden times?
The latter perceived, when in the abnormal state I described yesterday,
those divine-spiritual beings that had already been connected with the
earth before Zarathustra's Ahura Mazdao — the Jahve of Moses —
had united with the earth. So what men perceived by means of the ancient
wisdom was the old spiritual world out of which man was engendered,
in which he still dwelt in the old Atlantean age, and for which the
people of ancient India longed: the old Gods. Unknown, however, to the
old initiate was the God Who had long remained remote from the earth
in order ultimately to appear with deeper effect — He Who throughout
long ages influenced the earth only from without and Who then approached
it gradually, so that Moses was able to perceive the approach. Not until
men were initiated in the Old Testament way did they discern aught of
the unity of all that is divine.
Let us consider the frame
of mind of an initiate who had not only experienced what the Persian
or the later Egyptian Mysteries offered, but who in addition had passed
through all that could result from Hebrew occult research. Let us suppose,
for example, that such an initiate had also received initiation on Mount
Sinai of old, possibly in an incarnation occurring during the ancient
Hebrew evolution, or even earlier. There he had been guided to cognition
of the old divine world out of which mankind had evolved. Equipped with
this primordial wisdom and its capacity for observing the primordial
divine world, he came to the Hebrew Mysteries. There he learned what
could be put somewhat as follows: The Gods I learned to know in former
times were connected with the earth before the Divinity Jahve-Christ
came to unite with it; now I know that the first and foremost Spirit
among them, the Leading Spirit, is He Who approached the earth only
gradually.
Thus an initiate of this
sort learned of the identity of his own spiritual world and the world
in which the approaching Christ reigns. He did not need the immersion
by John the Baptist, but through this act he learned to know the connection
between his own individuality — what he was as a personality —
and the great Father-Spirit of the world. Only few, to be sure, could
achieve this result; indeed, most of them only needed to take the baptism
as a symbol, as something that served, so to speak, under the powerful
influence of John's teaching, to consolidate their faith in the existence
of Jahve-God. But among them were some who in earlier incarnations had
developed so far that they were now able to learn to a certain extent
from personal observation. — For all that, however, it was an
abnormal state to which the human being was reduced by John's baptism.
John baptized with water,
with the result that the etheric body was disconnected for a short time
from the physical body. But John the Baptist claimed to be the Forerunner
of Him Who baptized with fire and with the Holy Spirit. The baptism
with fire and with the Holy Spirit came to our earth through Christ.
Now, what is the difference between John's baptism with water and Christ's
baptism with fire and with the Holy Spirit? That can be understood only
by one who has learned the nature of such understanding from its very
roots, for even today we are still dependent upon first causes for a
comprehension of the Christ. This comprehension will continue to increase,
but as yet men can assimilate only just the beginnings. — I ask
your patience in following me along this path, begining with the A B
C.
First, we must recall
that spiritual processes underlie really all physical processes —
even those that pertain to the human being. For people of our day this
is hard to believe, but in time the world will learn to recognize the
fact; and only then will a full understanding of the Christ be reached.
Today even those who like to talk about spirit do not seriously believe
that everything taking place in man in a physical way is ultimately
controlled by spirit. They disbelieve it unconsciously, if I may put
it that way, even when they consider themselves idealists. There is
a certain American, for example, who systematically assembles facts
intended to prove that in abnormal states man attains the ability to
ascend to a spiritual world, and thereby he endeavors to establish a
certain basis for a variety of phenomena. This American, William James
by name, goes to work most exhaustively; but even the best of men are
powerless to oppose the influential spirit of the time. They claim not
to be materialists, but they are. The philosophy of William James has
influenced a number of European scholars; and for this reason we shall
point out several grotesque statements of his that will confirm what
has just been said. He maintains, among other things, that a man does
not weep because he is sad, but is sad because he weeps. Well, hitherto
people have always believed that one must first be sad; that is, that
a psycho-spiritual process must occur which only then can penetrate
the physical principle of the human body. When the tears flow there
must be present a psychic process underlying the secretion of the tear
fluid.
Even today, when everything
of a spiritual nature lies as though buried under a covering of matter
and awaits rediscovery by a spiritual conception of the world, there
remain processes within us which are a heritage of primeval times when
the spiritual workings were more powerful, and which can reveal most
significantly the manner in which spirit acts. There are two phenomena
to which I like to draw attention in this connection: the sensation
of shame, and that of fear, or fright. Let it be said in advance that
it would be easy to enumerate all the hypothetical attempts to explain
these two kinds of experience; but they do not concern us here, and
in connection with any objection of that sort it would be a grave mistake
to imagine the spiritual scientist to be unacquainted with these hypotheses.
Of the sensation of shame it can be said that when a person is ashamed
it is as though he were trying to prevent his environment from seeing
something that is taking place in him. Inherent in the sensation of
shame is a feeling akin to a wish to conceal something. And what is
the physical effect of this psychic experience? It causes him to blush:
the blood rushes to his face. This means that under the influence of
some psycho-spiritual event, such as a sensation of shame, a transformation,
a change, results in the blood circulation. The blood is driven from
within outward, toward the periphery. Its course is altered as the result
of a psycho-spiritual event — this is a physical fact.
And when a person is frightened
his impulse is to protect himself from something he considers threatening:
he pales, the blood withdraws from the outer surface. Here again is
an external process called forth by a psycho-spiritual one, by fear,
fright. Recall here that the blood is the expression of the ego, then
ask yourself, What would a man want to do when he sees some peril approaching?
He would assemble his forces and consolidate them in the center of his
being. The ego, with the intention of making a stand, draws the blood
back into the center of its being.
There you have physical
processes resulting from psycho-spiritual processes; and similarly,
the flow of tears is a physical process brought about by soul and spirit.
It is not a case of some mysterious physical influences joining forces
and squeezing out the tears, and of the person then becoming sad
when he feels the tears flow. That is an example of the way a materialistic
view turns the simplest things upside-down. Were we to go into the matter
of various ills — even physical ones — which can affect
human beings and which are connected with psycho-spiritual processes,
we could multiply such instances indefinitely. But what concerns us
at the moment is to understand that physical processes are effects of
psycho-spiritual processes; and that whenever this does not appear to
be the case we must realize that we have simply not yet recognized the
underlying psycho-spiritual principle. Present-day man is not at all
inclined to recognize this principle offhand. The modern scientist can
observe the development of the human being, beginning with the moment
of conception, from the very first embryonic stages in the mother's
womb, then outside the maternal body; he sees the outer physical form
grow and expand. And on the basis of present-day research he concludes
that the genesis of a human being starts with the development of the
physical form as he sees it at conception: he is averse to considering
the fact that spiritual processes underlie the physical ones. He does
not believe that back of the physical human embryo there is something
spiritual, that this unites with the physical and then develops what
derives from a former incarnation.
One who lays store by
theory but ignores practical life might here object: Well, it may be
possible that some higher form of cognition can discern spirit underlying
matter, but we human beings simply cannot recognize it. — That
is one attitude. Others say: But we don't want to make the effort which
we are told is necessary for attaining to a knowledge of the divine-spiritual!
What difference does it make in the world whether we know that or not?
— But it is a grave error, a dire superstition, to imagine that
in practical life such knowledge is of no consequence. On the contrary,
we shall proceed to show as clearly as possible how very much depends
upon it.
Suppose we have a man
who refuses to consider the idea that a psycho-spiritual principle underlies
all that is physical in the human being, who fails to understand, for
instance, that the enlargement of a physical liver is the expression
of something spiritual. Another man — stimulated by spiritual
science, if you like — readily accepts the possibility that by
penetrating into the realm of spirit one may arrive first at an inkling,
then at faith, and finally at cognition and vision of spirit. Thus we
have two men, one of whom rejects spirit, being satisfied with sense
observation, while the other follows what we may call the will to achieve
cognition of spirit. The one who refuses spiritual enlightenment will
grow ever weaker, for he will be letting his spirit starve, wilt, and
perish for lack of adequate nourishment which such enlightenment alone
can provide. His spirit will lose strength — it cannot gain it;
and everything that functions apart from this spirit will gain the upper
hand and overpower him. He will become feeble in meeting all that takes
place without his agency in his physical and etheric bodies. But the
other, he who has the will to cognition, furnishes nourishment for his
spirit which consequently gains strength and mastery over all that occurs
independently in his etheric and physical bodies. — That is the
most important point, and one which we shall presently be able to apply
to a prominent case of our own day.
We know that upon entering
the world the human being springs from two sources. His physical body
is inherited from his ancestors, from his father and mother and their
forbears. He inherits certain traits, good or bad, that are simply inherent
in the blood, in the line of descent. But in every case of this sort
the forces a child brings along from his previous incarnation unite
with these inherited qualities. Now, you know that today a great deal
is talked about “hereditary tendencies” whenever some disease
or other makes its appearance. How this term is abused nowadays —
though it is quite justified within a narrow scope! Whenever anything
crops up that can be proved to have been an attribute of some ancestor,
hereditary tendencies are invoked; and because people know nothing of
active spiritual forces derived from the previous incarnation they endow
these inherited tendencies with overwhelming power. If they knew that
a spiritual factor accompanied us from our previous incarnation they
would say, Well and good: we believe absolutely in hereditary tendencies,
but we know as well what stems from the previous incarnation in the
way of inner, central soul forces, and that if sufficiently strengthened
and invigorated these will gain the upper hand over matter — that
is, over hereditary tendencies. — And such a man, capable of rising
to the cognition of spirit, would continue: No matter how powerfully
the inherited tendencies affect me, I shall provide nourishment for
the spirit in me; for in this way I shall master them. — But anyone
who does not work upon his spiritual nature, upon that which is not
inherited, will positively fall a prey to inherited tendencies as a
result of such lack of faith; and in this way materialistic superstition
will actually bring about a steady increase in their power over us.
We shall be engulfed in the quagmire of hereditary tendencies unless
we fortify our spirit and, by means of a strong spirit, vanquish each
time anew whatever is inherited.
In our time, when the
consequences of materialism are so formidable, you must naturally still
guard against overestimating the power of spirit. It would be a mistake
to object, If that were the case, all anthroposophists would be bursting
with health, for they believe in the spirit. Man's position on the earth
is not only that of an individual being: he is a part of the whole world;
and spirit, like all else, must grow in strength. But once spirit has
become debilitated, as at present, it will not at once affect even the
most anthroposophical of men — no matter how much nourishment
he furnishes the spirit — to such an extent that he can overcome
what springs from material sources; yet all the more surely will this
tell in his next incarnation, as expressed in his health and strength.
Men will grow weaker and weaker unless they believe in the spirit, for
otherwise they deliver themselves over to their inherited tendencies.
They themselves have effected this weakening of their spirit, because
everything here concerned depends upon their attitude toward spirit.
Nor should one imagine
it an easy matter to correlate all the conditions here involved. I will
give you a grotesque instance of the extent to which a man who judges
only by externals may be in error. He might say: There was a man who
had been an ardent adherent of the anthroposophical Weltanschauung.
Now it is precisely the anthroposophists who maintain that anthroposophy
invariably improves the health and even prolongs life. A fine doctrine,
that: the man dies at the age of forty-three! — That much people
know: the man died at forty-three — they witnessed it. But what
is it that they do not know? They do not know when he would have died
without anthroposophy. Maybe he would have only lived to be forty: if
a man's life span were forty years lacking anthroposophy, it might well
reach forty-three with its aid. When anthroposophy will have come to
permeate life in general its effects will not fail to become manifest.
True, if a man wants to see all its fruits in one life between birth
and death he is simply an egotist: he wants everything for his own selfish
purposes. But if he attains to anthroposophy for the benefit of mankind
he will have it through all his future incarnations.
Thus we see that by influencing
his spiritual being, by yielding himself to what really derives from
spirit, man can at least provide new strength for his spirit, can make
it strong and vigorous. That is what we must understand: it is possible
to let ourselves be influenced by spirit and thereby become ever more
completely master within ourselves.
Now let us seek the means
most efficacious for receiving the influence of spirit in our present
stage of evolution. We have already pointed out that spiritual science,
by means of spiritual research, nourishes our spirit. We might say,
what man can thus receive in the way of spiritual nourishment is as
yet but little; but we also understand now that it can keep growing
and growing in our subsequent incarnations. This, however, presupposes
one condition; and in order to become acquainted with it we will turn
to the anthroposophical Weltanschauung itself.
The anthroposophical Weltanschauung
teaches us the principles that constitute man in respect of his being;
it tells us of what remains invisible in a visible man we confront;
and it then shows us how, as regards the core of his being, he passes
on from one life to another, how all that he brings along from his last
life in the way of soul and spirit is organically introduced into the
physical, material elements inherited from his ancestors. Anthroposophy
further discloses the way in which mankind has developed on the earth
and describes its life in the Atlantean time, the preceding periods,
and the post-Atlantean cultural epochs. It tells us of the transformations
undergone by the Earth itself: of its earlier embodiment which
we called the old Moon phase, of the still earlier Sun
phase, the Saturn phase, and so forth. In this way the spiritual-scientific
Weltanschauung releases us from our clinging to the merely
obvious — what our eyes see, our hands touch, and what our present
science investigates — and leads us out into the vast, comprehensive
phenomena of the world, but particularly into the super-sensible realm.
By doing this it provides man with spiritual nourishment.
Those of you who have
accompanied us at all extensively into this anthroposophical Weltanschauung
know that during the past seven years we have elaborated the evolution
of man more in detail, described more fully the various transformations
of the Earth and the life of man in the different cultural stages. It
really is possible in our time to give descriptions as subtle and detailed
as those presented there; and if the opportunity arises we shall enter
more fully into such matters.
There we have a tableau
of super-sensible facts that must be painted for the eye of the soul.
But there is a certain peculiarity connected with this tableau. Among
other things, we learned that our sun split off at a given time, together
with the beings destined there to pursue their immediate further development.
Now, the Leader of these sun beings is the Christ; and as their Leader
He withdrew with the sun when it separated from the earth. For a time
He then sent His force down to earth from the sun; but He kept gradually
approaching the earth. In Zarathustra's time He could still be seen
only as Ahura Mazdao, but Moses perceived Him in the outer elements;
and when this Christ force finally appeared on earth, it appeared
in a human body, in Jesus of Nazareth.
That is why the anthroposophical
Weltanschauung sees the Christ Being as a sort of central point
in the whole panorama of reincarnation, of the being of man, of our
contemplation of the cosmos, and so forth and so on. And whoever studies
this anthroposophical Weltanschauung in its true sense will
say to himself: I can contemplate all that, but I can comprehend it
only when the whole immense picture focuses at the great central point,
at the Christ. I have pictured in different ways the doctrine of reincarnation,
of the various human races, of planetary evolution, and so forth; but
the Being of Christ is here painted from a single point of view, and
this sheds light on all else. It is a picture with a central figure
to which everything else is related, and I can fathom the significance
and expression of the other figures only if I understand the main figure.
That is the way the anthroposophical
Weltanschauung goes about it. We project a great picture of
the various phenomena of the spiritual world; but then we concentrate
upon the principle figure, upon the Christ, and only then do the details
of the picture become intelligible.
All those who have taken
part in our spiritual-scientific development will sense the possibility
of understanding it all in this way. Spiritual science itself will become
more perfect in the future, and our present comprehension of Christ
will be superseded by a far loftier one. The power of anthroposophy
will thereby continue to grow, but with it will also proceed the development
of those who are open to this power; and the mastery of their spirit
over their material nature will gain ever greater strength. Burdened
as he is with an inherited body such as this is today, a man can call
forth only such processes as blushing, paling, and phenomena like laughing
and crying, but in time he will gain ever greater power over them: out
of his soul he will spiritualize his bodily functions and thus take
his place in the outer world as a mighty ruler of soul and spirit. That
will be the Christ power, the Christ-Impulse acting through the agency
of mankind. And it is the impulse which even today, if sufficiently
intensified, can lead to the same results as did the ancient initiation.
The procedure of the old
initiation was as follows: The candidate first learned comprehensively
all that today we are taught by anthroposophy. That was the preparation
for the old initiation. Then the sum of his attainments was directed
toward a definite end which was achieved by having him lie in a grave
for three and a half days, as though dead. When his etheric body was
withdrawn and, in his etheric body, he moved about in the spiritual
world, he became a witness to this spiritual world. In order that in
the sphere of his etheric forces he might behold the spiritual world,
thus achieving initiation, it was necessary at that time to withdraw
the etheric body. Formerly these forces were not available in the normal
state of waking consciousness: the neophyte had to be reduced to an
abnormal condition. But among the forces Christ brought to earth is
also this force needed for initiation; and today it is possible to become
clairvoyant without the withdrawal of the etheric body.
When a person is sufficiently
developed to receive so strong an impulse from the Christ, even for a
short time, as to affect the circulation of his blood — this Christ
influence expressing itself in a special form of circulation, an influence
penetrating even the physical principle — then he is in a position
to be initiated within the physical body: the Christ-Impulse has the
power to bring this about. Anyone who can become so profoundly absorbed
in what occurred as a result of the Event of Palestine and the Mystery
of Golgotha as to live completely in it and to see it objectively, see
it so spiritually alive that it acts as a force communicating itself
even to his circulation, such a man achieves through this experience
the same result that was formerly brought about by the withdrawal of
the etheric body.
You see, then, that through
the Christ impulse something has come to earth which enables the human
being to influence the force that causes his blood to pulsate through
his body. What is here active is no abnormal event, no submersion in
water, but solely the mighty influence of the Christ-Individuality.
No physical substance is involved in this baptism — nothing but
a spiritual influence: and the ordinary, every-day consciousness undergoes
no change. Through the spirit that streams forth as the Christ impulse
something flows into the body, something that can otherwise be induced
only by way of psycho-physiological development through fire: an inner
fire expressing itself in the circulation of the blood. John still baptized
by submersion, with the result that the etheric body withdrew and the
spiritual world was revealed. But if a man opens his soul to the Christ
impulse, this impulse acts in such a way that the experiences of the
astral body flow over into the etheric body, and clairvoyance results.
There you have the explanation
of the phrase, “to baptize with the spirit and with fire”,
and those are the facts concerning the difference between the John baptism
and the Christ baptism. The Christ impulse made it possible for a new
class of initiates to come into being. Formerly there existed among
mankind a mere handful who were disciples of the great teachers and
were inducted into the Mysteries. Their etheric body was withdrawn to
enable them to become witnesses to the spirit, and then to step forth
and proclaim, There is a spiritual world! We have seen it for ourselves.
Just as you see the plants and the stones, so we have seen the spiritual
world. — Those were the “eye witnesses”; and the neophytes
who thus emerged as initiates from the obscurity of the Mysteries proclaimed
the gospel of the spirit, though only out of a primeval wisdom.
But while the old initiates
guided people back to a wisdom out of which man had originally come
forth, Christ opened the way for initiates capable of arriving at a
vision of the spiritual world within the confines of the physical body
and within the every-day state of consciousness. These new initiates
learned through the Christ impulse the same fact that had revealed itself
to the old ones, namely, that there is a spiritual world; and then they,
in their turn, could proclaim its gospel. What was therefore needed
to become an initiate and to proclaim the gospel of the spiritual world
in a new sense, in the Christ sense, was that the force which was in
the Christ should stream over as an impulse into the disciple, who had
then to disseminate it.
When did a Christ initiate
of this kind first arise? In all evolution the old must be merged with
the new, and thus even Christ had to transform the old initiation into
the new one gradually. He had to create a transition, so to speak; He
had to take into account certain procedures of the old initiation, but
in such a way that everything deriving from the old gods should be suffused
by the Christ Being.
Christ undertook the
initiation of that disciple who was to communicate to the world the
Gospel of the Christ in the most profound way. An initiation of this
sort lies concealed behind one of the narratives in the Gospel of St.
John, behind the story of Lazarus.
Much has been written
about this story of Lazarus — an incredible amount; but only those
have comprehended it who have known, either through esoteric schooling
or from their own contemplation, what it conceals. For the moment I
shall only quote you one characteristic utterance from this story. When
Christ Jesus was told that Lazarus lay sick, He replied:
This sickness is not
unto death, but that the God may be manifest in him.
His sickness is for the
purpose of manifesting the God in him. It was only due to a lack of
understanding that the word dóxa, given in the Greek
text, was translated with “for the glory of God”. Not for
the glory of God was this ordained, but that the God in him might emerge
and become manifest. That is the true meaning of this utterance: the
divine that is in Christ is to flow over into the individuality of Lazarus;
the divine, the Christ Divinity, is to be revealed in and through him.
Only by understanding
the resurrection of Lazarus in this sense does it become wholly clear.
Do not imagine for a moment, however, that in communicating spiritual-scientific
truths it is possible to speak so openly that everything can be made
obvious to all and sundry. What is concealed behind a spiritual-scientific
fact of that sort is communicated under many a veil of reservation.
That is inevitable; for anyone who would attain to an understanding
of such a mystery should first work his way through all difficulties
appearing in the way, in order to strengthen and invigorate his spirit.
And precisely because it is laborious to find his way through the maze
of words will he arrive at the underlying spirit.
Recall the passage dealing
with the "life" which was supposed to have left Lazarus and
which his sisters Martha and Mary longed to have back. Christ Jesus
said unto them: I am the resurrection, and the life. Life is
to reappear in Lazarus. You have but to take everything literally, especially
in the Gospels, and you will see what all comes to light. Do not speculate
or interpret, but take in its literal meaning the sentence, “I
am the resurrection. and the life”. When Christ appears and raises
Lazarus, what does He bring to bear? What is it that passes over into
Lazarus? It is the Christ impulse, the force flowing forth from the
Christ. What Christ gave Lazarus was the life. Indeed, Christ
had said, “This sickness is not unto death, but that the God may
be manifest in him.” Just as all the old initiates lay as dead
for three and a half days, and then the God became manifest in them,
so Lazarus lay in a deathlike state for the same period; but Christ
Jesus was well aware that with this act the old initiations would come
to an end. He knew that this ostensible death led to something higher,
to a higher life: that during this period Lazarus had beheld the spiritual
world; and because the Leader of this spiritual world is the Christ,
Lazarus received into himself the Christ force, the vision of the Christ.
Christ pours his force into Lazarus, and Lazarus arises another man.[1]
There is one particularly
noteworthy word in the St. John Gospel: in the story of the Lazarus
mystery it is said that the Lord “loved” Lazarus; and the
word is again applied to the disciple “whom the Lord loved”.
What does that mean? Only the akashic record can tell us. Who
is Lazarus after his resurrection? He is himself the writer of the John
Gospel, Lazarus, who had been initiated by Christ. Christ had poured
the message of His own being into the being of Lazarus in order that
the message of the Fourth Gospel, the Gospel of St. John, might resound
through the world as the delineation of the being of Christ. That is
why no disciple John is mentioned in this Gospel before the story of
Lazarus. But you must read carefully and not be misled by those curious
theologians who have discovered that at a certain spot in the Gospel
of St. John — namely, in the thirty-fifth verse of the first chapter
— the name John is supposed to appear as an indication of the
presence of the disciple John. It says there:
Again the next day
after John stood, and two of his disciples. There is nothing in
this passage, nothing whatever, to suggest that the disciple who later
is called the one “whom the Lord loved” is meant here. That
disciple does not appear in the John Gospel before the resurrection
of Lazarus. Why? Because he who remained hidden behind “the disciple
whom the Lord loved” was one whom the Lord had already loved previously.
He loved him so greatly because He had already recognized him —
invisibly, in his soul — as the disciple who was to be awakened
and carry the message of the Christ out into the world. That is why
the disciple, the apostle, “whom the Lord loved” appears
on the scene only beginning with the description of the resurrection
of Lazarus. Only then had he become what he was thenceforth. Now the
individuality of Lazarus had been so completely transformed that it
became the individuality of John in the Christian sense. Thus we see
that in its loftiest meaning a baptism through the Christ impulse itself
had been performed upon Lazarus: Lazarus became an initiate in the new
sense of the word, while at the same time the old form, the old lethargy,
had been retained in a certain way and a transition thus created from
the old to the new initiation.
This will show you the
profundity with which the Gospels reflect spiritual truths that can
be brought to light through research, independently of any documents.
The spiritual scientist knows that he can find beforehand anything the
Gospels contain, without reference to documents. But when he finds again
in the John Gospel what he had previously discovered by spiritual means,
this Gospel becomes for him a document revealed by Christ Jesus' own
initiate. That is why the Gospel of St. John is so profound a work.
Nowadays it is specially
emphasized that the other Gospels differ in certain respects from that
of St. John. There must be a reason for this; but we shall find it
only when we penetrate to the core of the other Gospels as we have now
done in the case of St. John. And what we discover by so doing is that
the difference could arise only from the fact that the author of the
John Gospel was initiated by Christ Jesus Himself. Only because of this
was it possible to delineate the Christ impulse as John did. And we
must examine in like manner the relation of the other Gospel writers
to Christ and discover to what extent they received the baptism by fire
and by the spirit. Then only will we find the inner connections between
the Gospel of St. John and the other Gospels, and so penetrate ever
deeper into the spirit of the New Testament.
#160;
Translator's Notes:
1. You will find this subject
treated in detail in my book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact,
where a separate chapter is devoted to an attempt to clarify particularly
the Lazarus miracle in the sense of spiritual science.
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