EXCURSUS — Lecture III
IN
THE
LAST
LECTURE
I began by giving some idea of
the nature and character of the Gospel according to Mark. I showed
that when this Gospel is studied something more can be gathered from
it than from the other Gospels concerning the great laws both of
human and cosmic development. One has to acknowledge that in what is
indicated concerning the profundities of the Christian Mystery, an
opportunity is here given us to enter perhaps most deeply into these
mighty secrets.
I originally thought
that it might be possible, in the course of this winter, to give
intimate and important instructions concerning matters we have not
heard as yet within our spiritual-scientific movement; or perhaps I
should say concerning things that lie on the border of spiritual
matters not as yet dealt with by us. But it has been necessary to
abandon this scheme, for the simple reason that our Berlin Group has
grown so enormously during recent weeks that it would not have been
possible at present to bring to the understanding of its members all
that I had intended to say.
It is necessary in
the case of mathematics, for instance, or any other science, that
preparation should he made for any special stage, and this is
necessary to a still higher degree when we advance to the
consideration of certain high spiritual matters. Therefore we shall
leave to a later date the consideration of those parts of the Gospel
of Mark which cannot be explained to so large a circle.
It is most necessary
when a document like this Gospel is under consideration that we
should clearly understand through what important factors the
evolution of mankind has passed. I have always impressed on you
— as a quite abstract and general truth — that in every
age there have always been certain guides or leaders of men who,
because they stood in a certain relationship to the Mysteries, to the
spiritual super-sensible world, were in a position to implant
impulses in human evolution which contributed to its further
progress. Now there are two principal and essential methods by which
men can come into relationship with super-sensible worlds. The one is
that to which I have referred when indicating certain features of the
teaching of that great leader, Zarathustra; and the other is one that
comes before our souls when we study the special methods of the great
Buddha. These two great teachers, Buddha and Zarathustra, differ very
much as regards their whole method and manner of working.
We must realise that
the entrance into that state which Buddha and Buddhism describe as
being “under the Bodhi tree,” is a symbolic expression
for a certain mystic enhancement of consciousness, and opens a path
by which the human ego can enter into its own Being, its own deeper
nature. This path, blazed by Buddha in such an outstanding way, is a
descent of the ego into the abyss of its own human nature.
You will gain a more
exact idea of what is meant by this if you recall that we have
followed man through four stages of development, three of which are
already concluded and the fourth is that we are in at present. We
have traced human development through the Saturn, Sun and Moon
evolutions; now it is passing through the Earth-evolution.
We know these three
stages correspond with the upbuilding of the physical, the etheric,
and the astral natures of man; that now during earthly evolution we
are at the stage corresponding to the development of the human ego,
in so far as this can be developed as a member of man's Being.
We have described the human Being from various points of view as an
ego enclosed within three sheaths: an astral sheath corresponding to
the Moon-evolution, an etheric sheath corresponding to the
Sun-evolution, and a physical sheath corresponding to the
Saturn-evolution.
As normally developed
to-day, man has no consciousness of his astral, etheric and physical
bodies, he really knows nothing of them. You will naturally say: but
man is aware to-day of his physical body. This, however, is not the
case. What ordinarily confronts him as the human physical body to-day
is only illusion, Maya. What he regards as the physical body is in
reality the interblending activity of the four members of his Being
physical body, etheric body, astral body and ego; and the result of
this interplay, of these interblended activities, is what our eyes
see and our hands grasp as man. If we really wish to see the
physical body we must separate off three parts and retain one; as
when analysing a chemical compound formed of four substances; we must
separate the ego, astral body and etheric body, then the physical
body remains. But this is not possible under present conditions of
earthly existence. You might perhaps say this happens whenever a man
dies. But this is not correct, for what a man leaves behind at death
is not the human physical body but a corpse. The physical body cannot
live when the laws present at death are active in it. These laws did
not originally belong to the body, but are laws belonging to the
external world. If you carry out these thoughts you must acknowledge
that what is usually called man's body, is a Maya, an illusion,
and what spiritual science calls the “physical body” is
the combination, the result, within our mineral world of organic
laws, which produces the physical body of man in the same way as the
laws of crystallisation produce quartz, or those of
emerald-crystallisation produce emeralds. This physical body of man
as it works in the physical mineral world is the true human body.
What man knows of the world to-day is but the outcome of observation
made by the senses. But observation as it is made by the senses can
only be made by an organism in which an ego dwells. The present day
superficial method of observation states that animals perceive the
external world, for example, in the same way as men do; through their
senses. This is a most confused conception, people would be much
astonished if they were shown, as must be clone some day, the picture
of the world formed by a horse, a dog, or any other animal. If a
picture were made of what a horse or a dog sees round it this would
be very different from the picture of the world as seen by man. That
the human senses perceive the world as they do is connected with the
fact that the ego reaches out over the whole surrounding world and
fills the sense organs, eyes, ears and so on, with the pictures it
perceives. So that only an organism in which an ego dwells can have
such a picture of the world as man has; and the human organism
belongs to this picture and is part of it. We must therefore say:
What is usually called the “physical body” of man is only
the result of sense-observation and not reality. When we speak of
physical man and of the physical objects around him it is the ego,
aided by the senses and the understanding connected with the brain,
that regards the world. Hence man only knows those things over which
his ego extends, to which his ego belongs. So soon as the ego is not
present the pictures the world presents to it are no longer there;
this means the man is asleep. Then no pictures of the world surround
him — he is unconscious.
Whenever you regard
anything, at every moment, the ego is hound up with what you see. It
is spread out over what you see so that you really know only the
content of your ego. As normal human Beings you know the content of
your ego, but of that which belongs to your own nature, into which
you enter each morning when you wake — of your astral body,
etheric body, and physical body you know nothing. The moment he
awakes, the normal man of to-day sees nothing of his astral body. He
would indeed be horrified if he did, that is if he perceived the sum
of the instincts, desires and passions that have accumulated in him
in the course of his repeated earthly lives. Man does not see these.
He would not be able to endure the sight. When he does dip down into
his own nature, into his physical, etheric and astral bodies his
attention is at once deflected from this to the external world; he
there beholds what beneficent Divine Beings spread over the surface
of his sphere of vision, so that it is in no way possible for him to
sink into his own inner nature.
We are correct
therefore when in speaking of this in spiritual science we say: The
moment a man awakes in the morning he enters through the door of his
own being. But at this door stands a watcher, the “little
guardian of the threshold.” He does not permit man to enter his
own being, but directs him at once to the outer world. Each morning
we meet this little guardian of the threshold, and anyone who on
awakening enters his own nature consciously, learns to know him. In
fact the mystic life consists in whether this little guardian of the
threshold acts beneficently towards us, making us unaware of our own
being, turning our ego aside so that we do not descend into it, or
permitting us to pass through the door and enter into our own being.
The mystic life enters through the door I have described, and this in
Buddhism is called “sitting under the Bodhi tree.” This
is nothing else than the descent of a man into his own being through
the door that is ordinarily closed to him. What Buddha experienced in
this descent is set before us in Buddhistic writings. Such things are
no mere legends, but the reflections of profound truths experienced
inwardly — truths concerning the soul. These experiences in the
language of Buddhism are called “The Temptation of Buddha.”
Speaking of this
Buddha himself tells us how the Beings he loved approached him at the
moment when he entered mystically into his own inner being. He tells
how they seemed to approach him bidding him to do this or that
— for instance, to carry out false exercises so as to enter in
a wrong way into his own being. We are even told that the form of his
mother appeared to him — he beheld her in her spiritual
substance — and she ordered him to begin a false Askese.
Naturally this was not the real mother of Buddha. But his temptation
consisted in this very fact, that in his first evolved
vision he was confronted not by his real mother but by a mask or
illusion. Buddha withstood this temptation. Then a host of demoniac
forms appeared to him, these he describes as desires, telling how
they corresponded to the sensation of hunger and thirst, or the
instinct of pride, conceit and arrogance. All these approached him
— how? They approached him in so far as they were still within
his own astral body, in so far as he had not overcome them at that
great moment of his life when he sat under the Bodhi tree. Buddha
shows us in a most wonderful way in this temptation, how we feel all
the forces and powers of our astral body, which are within us because
we have made them ever worse and worse in the course of our
development through succeeding incarnations. In spite of having risen
so high Buddha still sees them, and now at the final stage of his
progress he has to overcome the last of these misleading forces of
his astral body which appear to him as demons.
What does a human
personality find when through temptation it passes down through the
realms of its astral body and etheric body into its physical body?
That is, when it really gets to know these two members of human
nature?
If we are to know
this, we must realise that in the course of his descending
incarnations on earth man has been in a position to injure his astral
body very much, but has not been able to injure his etheric and
physical bodies to the same extent. The astral body is deteriorated
through the “Egoism of human nature,” through greed,
hate, selfishness, arrogance and pride. Through all these, and
through his lower desires man injures his astral body. The greater
part of the etheric body is so strong that however much a man may try
to injure it he is unable to do so, for the etheric body resists
injury. A man cannot descend so deeply into his own nature with his
individual powers, as to injure the etheric or physical body. It is
only in the course of repeated incarnations that the faults he
develops directly affect the physical and etheric bodies injuriously,
and appear later as weaknesses and as dispositions to illness in the
physical body. But a man cannot affect his physical body directly. If
he cuts his finger, this is not brought about through the soul,
neither is infection. In the course of his incarnations he has only
become capable of affecting his astral body and a part of his etheric
body; on his physical body he can only work indirectly, not directly.
We can therefore say if a man descends into his etheric body on which
he can still work directly he sees in this region all the things
connected with his former incarnations, so that the moment he dips
clown into his own being he also dips into his earlier, more remote
incarnations. Man can therefore find the way to his former
incarnation by sinking down into his own being. If this plunging down
into his own being is very intensive, very thorough and forceful, as
was the case with Buddha, the insight into other incarnations goes
further and further back.
Originally man was a
spiritual being, the sheaths that envelop his spiritual nature only
gathered round him at a later day. Man came forth from Spirit, and
everything external has condensed, as it were, out of Spirit. So that
in sinking down into his own being man enters into the Spirit of the
world. This sinking down, this breaking through the sheaths of the
physical body, is one path into the spiritual framework of the
world.
In the information
handed down to us concerning Buddha (and these are no mere legends)
we learn of the different stages he attained in the passage through
his own being, of which he says: — “When I had got as far
as to the attainment of illumination” — that is when he
felt himself to be a part of the spiritual world — “I
beheld the spiritual world as a cloud spread out before me; but as
yet I could not distinguish anything; I felt I was not as yet ready
for this. Then I advanced a step further. There I no longer merely
saw the spiritual world as a widespread cloud, but could distinguish
separate forms, although I could not yet see what these forms were,
for I was not yet sufficiently advanced. Again I rose a step higher,
there I perceived not only separate Beings, but I knew what kind of
Beings they were.”
This continued so far
that Buddha even beheld his own archetype, that which had passed down
from generation to generation, and he saw it in its true connection
with the spiritual world. This is one path, the mystic path, the path
leading through a man's own being to the point where the
boundaries are broken down beyond which lies the spiritual world. By
following this path certain leaders of humanity attained what such
individuals had to have in order that they could give the necessary
impulse to the further development of mankind.
It is by quite
another path that personalities, such as the first Zarathustra for
instance, attained what enabled them to become leaders of humanity.
If you recall what I said about Buddha you will realise that in his
former incarnations when he was a Bodhisattva he must have already
risen through many stages. Through illumination — that which is
known as “sitting under the Bodhi tree”— I
described in the only way it can be described how an individual can
gradually rise through his personal merit to heights whence he can
behold the spiritual world.
If humanity had only
had such leaders to look to, it could not possibly have advanced as
it has. But it had also other leaders. Of these Zarathustra was one.
(I am not speaking now of the “individuality” of
Zarathustra, but of the personality of the original Zarathustra who
taught concerning Ahura Mazdao.) In studying this personality in the
parts of the world in which we find him, we must realise, that at
first no individuality was in him as had risen so high through his
own merit as Buddha had done; but he had been set apart to be the
bearer, the sheath one might say, of a higher Being, of a spiritual
entity, who could not himself incarnate in the world, but could only
illuminate and work within a human form.
I have shown in my
Rosicrucian Mystery Play,
“The Portal of Initiation,”
how when it is necessary for the further evolution of the world, a human
Being is inspired at certain times by some higher Being. This is not
intended as a mere poetic image, but is an occult truth presented
poetically. The personality of the original Zarathustra was no such
highly evolved Being as the Buddha, but was chosen as one into whom a
high individuality could enter, could dwell, and inspire him. Such
persons were mainly found in olden times, that is in pre-Christian
times, in the civilisations that evolved in North-Western Europe and
Mid-Western Asia, but not among the peoples that in pre-Christian
times evolved in Africa, Arabia, and the districts of Asia Minor
extending eastwards into Asia. In these countries that kind of
initiation was found which I have just described in its highest
development as that of Buddha; while the other I am now about to
describe as that of Zarathustra was more suited to northern peoples.
The possibility of anyone being initiated in this way has only
existed, even in our part of the world, for the last three or four
thousand years. The personality of Zarathustra was selected somewhat
in the following way to be the bearer of a higher Being, who could
not himself incarnate. It was ordained from the spiritual worlds that
a Spiritual Being should enter into some child, and when the child
had grown up should work within this human being making use of the
instruments of his brain, his will, etc. In order that this might
take place something quite different had to happen than would
otherwise happen in the individual evolution of this human being. Now
the events I am about to describe did not happen in any such physical
way throughout the life of this highly evolved human being as they
otherwise should; though, naturally, people who follow the life of
such a child with ordinary perceptions do not observe this. But those
who have higher perception see that there is conflict from the
beginning between the soul-forces of this child and the outer world,
that it is possessed of a will, of an impulsiveness that is in
apparent contradiction to all that goes on around it. The fate of
this divine, spirit-filled personality is that it grows up as a
stranger, that those about it have no idea, no feeling, by which they
can rightly understand such a child. As a rule there are few, perhaps
only one person, who is able to divine what is developing within this
human being. Conflict with its surroundings is apt to develop, and
then occurs (but not till later years) what I described as happening
when dealing with the story of the temptation of Buddha, when a man
descends into his own being.
In normal life a
man's individuality is born in him by means of the
“sheath-nature” he receives from his parents or his
nation. This individuality is not always in entire harmony with its
sheaths, and on this account such a man feels more or less
dissatisfied with the way fate has treated him. But so heavy, so
mighty a conflict as occurred in Zarathustra's case is not
possible if a man's individuality develops as it does in
ordinary life. When a child like Zarathustra is observed
clairvoyantly it is seen that he has feelings, thoughts, and powers
of will very different from the feelings, thoughts and will-impulses
developed by the people about him. We are shown (and indeed it is
always to be seen, only nowadays people do not notice spiritual, but
only physical facts) that the people around such a child know nothing
of his nature. They feel on the contrary, an instinctive hatred for
him, no matter what may be developing within him. To clairvoyant
vision the sharp contrast is revealed that such a child who is really
born for the salvation of mankind is surrounded by storms of
hatred.
This has to he. It is
because of this contrast that great impulses are born into humanity.
Similar things are then told concerning such personalities as are
told of Zarathustra.
One thing we are told
— that Zarathustra could do at birth which otherwise only
occurs weeks later. We are told he looked on the harmony of the world
in such a way that he evolved his “Zarathustra smile.”
This smile is described as the first thing which showed him to be
quite different from the rest of mankind. The second thing is that
there was an enemy, a kind of King Herod, in the neighbourhood where
Zarathustra was born. His name was Duranasarum, and after he had been
informed of the birth of Zarathustra, which had been divulged to him
by the Magi, the Chaldeans, he tried single-handed to murder the
child. The legend goes on to tell how, at the moment he raised his
sword to kill the child, his Hand was paralysed, and he was forced to
let it go. These are pictures perceived by spiritual consciousness,
pictures of spiritual realities. Further, we are told how this enemy
of the child Zarathustra, unable himself to slay him, had him carried
away by his servant to the wild beasts of the wilderness so that he
might be devoured by them; but when people went to look for him no
wild beast had harmed him, the child was found sleeping peacefully.
As this attempt failed his enemy had the child placed where a whole
herd of cows and oxen would pass over him and trample him to death.
But the first beast, so we are told, took the child between its legs
and bore it away, so that the rest of the herd might pass by; it then
set him down uninjured. The same thing was repeated with a drove of
horses. And the final attempt of this enemy was that he was given to
some wild animals after their young had been taken from them. Now it
happened when his parents sent people to look for him, they found
that none of these animals had harmed him, but as the legend relates
“the child Zarathustra was nourished for a considerable time by
a heavenly cow.”
We need see no more
in all this mass of evidence than that through the presence of the
spiritual individuality that had been introduced into such a soul,
very exceptional powers had been aroused in the child which brought
it into disharmony with its surroundings, and that this was necessary
in order that an upward impulse could be given to human evolution.
For disharmonies are always necessary if true progress towards
perfection is to be made. The nature of these forces is thus
revealed, in spite of so great a Being making use of such a child
they were required to bring it in touch with the spiritual world into
which it was to enter. But how did the child experience this
conflict? Picture to yourselves the entering of the soul into its own
being at a moment of awaking. When the soul is able to experience the
physical body and etheric body it then passes through the evolution I
described in respect of Buddha. Now think of falling asleep as a
conscious process. As things are to-day man loses consciousness when
he falls asleep, instead of the ordinary pictures of the world a
blank surrounds him. But suppose that a man could retain his
consciousness when falling asleep, he would in that case be
surrounded by a spiritual world — the world into
which he pours his Being when sleep overtakes him. But here also
there are hindrances. When we fall asleep a guardian of the threshold
stands before the door through which we would have to pass. This is
the Great Guardian who prevents our entrance into the spiritual world
so long as we are unripe. He prevents our entrance because if we have
not made ourselves inwardly strong enough, we are exposed to certain
dangers when we allow our ego to pour forth over the spiritual world
into which we enter when we fall asleep. The danger consists in this,
that instead of seeing what is in the spiritual world objectively, we
only see what we take there through our own fanciful imaginations,
through our thoughts, perceptions and feelings. In this case we take
what is worst in us, what is not in accordance with truth. Hence an
unripe entry into the spiritual world indicates that a man does not
see reality but imaginary forms, fantastic images which are described
technically in spiritual science as “non-human visions.”
If a man would see objectively in the spiritual world he must rise to
a higher stage where “human” things are seen. It is
always a sign of a fantastic vision when animal forms are seen on
rising to the spiritual world. Such animal forms represent the
man's own fantasy, and are owing to his not being strongly
enough established in himself. What is unconscious in us at night
must be strengthened so that the surrounding spiritual world becomes
objective, otherwise it is subjective, and we take our fantasies with
us into the spiritual world. They are within us in any case; but the
Guardian preserves us from seeing them. This rising into the
spiritual world and being surrounded by animal forms which attack us
and desire to lead us astray is a purely inward experience. We have
only to encompass ourselves with greater inward strength, we can then
enter the spiritual world.
When a child is
filled by a higher Being, as was the young Zarathustra, his bodily
nature is naturally unripe, and has first to become ripe. The human
organism, that is the understanding and sense-organisms, are
disturbed. Such a child is in a world which is rightly described as
“being among wild animals.”
We have often shown
that descriptions like this, which are both historical and pictorial,
only represent different sides of the same matter. Events then happen
so that spiritual powers, when represented as hostile forces, make
their influence felt as did King Duranasarum in the case of the child
Zarathustra. The whole thing exists in its archetypal form in the
spiritual world, and external happenings only correspond with what
takes place there. Present day methods of thought do not grasp such
ideas easily. When people are told that the events connected with
Zarathustra are of importance in the spiritual world they think
— “Then they are not real.” But when they are shown
to be historic, the man of to-day is then inclined to regard everyone
as only evolved so far as he is himself.
The endeavour of
present day liberal theologians, for instance, is to present the
figure of Jesus of Nazareth as being similar to, or at least as not
far surpassing, what they can picture to themselves as their own
ideal. It disturbs the materialistic peace of their souls when they
have to picture great individualities. There should not be anyone in
the world, they think, so very much exalted above the modern
Professor of Theology.
But when dealing with
great events, we are concerned with something that is at the same
time both historic and symbolic, so that the one does not exclude the
other. Those who do not understand that external things indicate more
than appears on the surface will not attain to the understanding of
what is true and essential.
The soul of the young
Zarathustra really passed through great dangers in his early years,
but at the same time, as the legend tells, the heavenly cows stood at
his side helping and strengthening him.
We find similar
things happening to all great founders of religions through all the
regions of the Caspian Sea and even into Western Europe. We find
people (without their having raised themselves through their own
development) who are ensouled by a spiritual Being so that they can
become leaders of mankind. Numerous legends and sagas exist among
Celtic peoples, They tell of a founder of religion, one Habich, he
was exposed as a child and was nourished by heavenly cows, hostile
forces appeared later on and drove away the animals — in short,
the accounts of the dangers to the Celtic leader Habich are such that
one can almost say they were extracts from certain of the miracles of
Zarathustra. While we recognise Zarathustra as the greatest of these
personalities, certain features of his miracles are found everywhere,
all through Greece and as far as the Celtic countries of the West. As
a well-known example we have only to think of the story of Romulus
and Remus.
This is the other way
in which the leaders of mankind arose. In speaking of it we have
described, in a deeper sense, what we have often considered before:
the two great streams of civilisation of post-Atlantean times. After
the great catastrophe of Atlantis one of these streams continued to
spread and develop throughout Africa, Arabia and Southern Asia; the
other, which took a more northerly course, passed through Europe and
Northern Central Asia. Here these two streams eventually met. All
that has come to pass as a result of this is comprised in our
post-Atlantean culture. The northern stream had leaders such as I
have just described in Zarathustra; the southern, on the other hand,
those such as we see in their highest representative in the great
Buddha.
If you recall what
you already know in connection with the Christ Event you might ask:
— How does the Baptism by John in Jordan now strike us? The
Christ came down and entered into a human being — as Divine
Beings had entered into all the leaders and founders of religions
— and into Zarathustra as the greatest of these. The process is
the same, only here it is carried out in its sublimest form: Christ
entered into a human being. But He did not enter this human being in
childhood. He entered it in its thirtieth year, and the personality
of Jesus of Nazareth had been very specially prepared for this event.
The secrets of both sides of human leadership are given us in
synthesis in the Gospels. Here we see them united and harmonised.
While the evangelists, Matthew and Luke preferably, tell us how the
human personality was organised into which the Christ entered; the
Gospel according to Mark describes the nature of the Christ, tells of
the kind of Being he himself is. The element that filled this great
individual is what is especially described by Mark. The Gospels of
Matthew and Luke give us in a wonderfully clear manner a different
account of the temptation from that given in the Gospel of Mark,
because Mark describes the Christ who had entered into Jesus of
Nazareth. Hence the story of the temptation has here to be presented
as it occurred formerly in the childhood of such great persons: the
presence of animals is mentioned and the help received from spiritual
powers. So that we have a repetition of the miracles of Zarathustra
when the Gospel of Mark states in simple but imposing words:
“And
immediately the Spirit driveth him into the wilderness
(loneliness). And he was there in the wilderness with the wild
beasts; and the angels (that is Spiritual Beings) ministered unto
him.”
Mark I, 12-13.
The Gospel of Matthew
describes this quite differently, it describes what we perceive to be
somewhat like a repetition of the temptation of Buddha; this means
the form temptation assumes at the descent of a man into his own
Being; when all those temptations and seductions approach to which
the human soul is liable.
We can therefore say
the Gospels of Matthew and Luke describe the path the Christ
travelled when He descended into the sheaths that had been given over
to him by Jesus of Nazareth; and the Gospel according to Mark
describes the kind of temptation Christ had to pass through when He
experienced the shock of coming up against His surroundings, as
happens to all founders of religions who are inspired and intuited by
Spiritual Beings from above.
Christ Jesus
experienced both these forms of temptation, whereas earlier
leaders of mankind only experience one of them. He united in Himself
the two methods of entering the spiritual world; this is of the
greatest importance; what formerly had occurred within two great
streams of culture (into which smaller contributory streams also
entered) was now united into one.
It is when regarded
from this standpoint that we first understand the apparent or real
contradictions in the Gospels. Mark had been initiated into such
mysteries as enabled him to describe the temptation as we find it in
his Gospel; the “Being with wild beasts,” and the
ministration of spiritual Beings. Luke was initiated in another way.
Each evangelist describes what he knows and is familiar with. Thus
what we are told in the Gospels are the events of Palestine and the
Mystery of Golgotha, but told from different sides.
In stating this I
wish once more to put before you, from a point of view we have as yet
not been able to discuss, how human evolution has to be understood;
and also how we must understand the intervention into it of such
individuals as are passing on from the evolution of a Bodhisattva to
that of a Buddha. We have to understand that the main thing in the
evolution of these men is not so much what they are as men, but what
has come down into them from above. Only in the form of Christ are
these two united, and it is only when we realise this that we can
rightly understand this form. We can also understand through this the
many inequalities that must appear in Mythical personalities.
When we are told that
certain Spiritual Beings have done this or that, in respect of what
is right or wrong, and have done, for instance, what Siegfried did,
one often hears people exclaim: — “And yet he was an
Initiate!” But Siegfried's individual evolution does not
come under consideration as regards a personality through whom a
Spiritual Being is working. Siegfried may have faults. But what
matters is that through him something had to be given to human
evolution. For this a suitable personality had to be found. Everyone
cannot be treated alike; Siegfried cannot be judged in the same way
as a leader who belonged to the southern stream of culture, for the
whole nature and type of those who sunk down within their own being
was different. Thus one can say: — A Spiritual Being entered
the forms belonging to the northern culture, compelling them to
transcend their own nature and rise into the Macrocosm. While in the
southern stream of culture a man sank down into the Microcosm, in the
northern stream of culture he poured himself forth into the
Macrocosm, and by doing so he learnt to know all the Spiritual
Hierarchies as Zarathustra learnt to know the spiritual nature of the
Sun.
The law contained
herein can be summed up as follows: — The Mystic path, the path
of Buddha, leads a man so far within his own inner being that
breaking through this inner being he enters the Spiritual World. The
path of Zarathustra draws a man out of the Microcosm, sending his
being forth over the Macrocosm so that its secrets become transparent
to him. The world has as yet little understanding of the mighty
Spirits whose mission it is to reveal the secrets of the great
universe. For this reason very little real understanding of the
nature of Zarathustra has spread abroad, and we shall see how greatly
what we have to say concerning him differs from what is usually said
of him.
This lecture has
again been an Excursus concerning those things which should gradually
reveal to you the nature of the Gospel according to St. Mark.
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