JESHU BEN PANDIRA WHO PREPARED THE WAY FOR AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE
CHRIST IMPULSE
Leipzig, 4th November 1911
When we discuss, in connection with Spiritual Science, other spiritual
worlds in addition to our physical world, and declare that the human
being sustains a relationship, not only to this physical world, but
also to super-sensible realms, one may ask what is to be found within
the human soul before one achieves any sort of clairvoyant
capacity which is super-sensible, which gives an indication that
the human being is connected with super-sensible worlds. In other
words, can even the ordinary person, with no clairvoyant capacity,
observe something in the soul, experience something, which bears a
relationship to higher realms? In essence, both today's lecture and
tomorrow's will endeavour to answer this question.
When we observe the life of the human soul, it manifests three parts
in a certain way independent of one another and yet, on the other
hand, closely bound together.
What first confronts us when we direct attention to ourselves as souls
is our conceptual life, which includes also in a certain way our
thinking, our memory. Memory and thought are not physical. They belong
to the invisible, super-sensible world: in man's thought-life he has
something which points to higher worlds. What this conceptual world is
may be grasped in the following way. We bring before someone an
object, which he observes. Then he turns away. He has not immediately
forgotten the object, but preserves within himself a living picture of
it. Thus we have concepts of the world surrounding us, and we may
speak of the conceptual life as a part of our soul life.
We can observe a second part of our soul life if we inquire whether we
do not possess within us something related to objects and beings in
addition to our concepts. We do, indeed, have something else. It is
what we call feelings of love and hate, what we designate in our
thinking by the terms sympathy, antipathy. We consider one
thing beautiful, another ugly; perhaps, we love one thing and hate
another; one we feel to be good, the other evil. If we wish to
summarise what thus appears in our inner life, we may call it
stimulation of the feelings. The life of the heart is something quite
different from conceptual life. In the life of the heart we have a far
more intimate indication of the invisible than in the life of the
concepts. Here is a second component of our soul-organism, this life
of emotions. Thus we have already two soul-components, our life of
thought and of emotion.
Of a third we become aware when we say to ourselves, not only that we
consider a thing beautiful or ugly, good or evil, but that we feel
impelled to do this or that, we have an impulse to act. When we
undertake anything, perform a relatively important act or even merely
take hold of an object, there must always be an impulse within us
which induces us to do this. These impulses, moreover, are gradually
transformed into habits, and we do not always need to bring our
impulses to bear in connection with everything that we do. When we go
out, for instance, intending to go to the railway station, we do not
then purpose to take the first, second, and third steps; we simply go
to the station. Behind all this lies the third member of our soul
life, our will impulses, as something ranging wholly beyond the
visible.
If we now connect with these three impulses characteristic of the
human being our initial question, whether the ordinary man possesses
any clue to the existence of higher worlds, we must take cognizance of
dream life, and how this is related to the three soul elements: the
thinking, feeling and willing.
These three components of our soul life can be clearly differentiated:
our thought life, our emotions, and our will impulses. If we consider
our soul life, we can differentiate these three single components of
the life of the soul in our external existence. Let us first take the
life of concepts. The life of thought follows its course throughout
the day if we are not actually void of thought. Throughout the
day we have concepts; and, when we grow tired in the evening, these
concepts first become hazy. It is as if they became transmuted into a
kind of fog. They become hazier and hazier, finally vanishing
altogether, and we can then go to sleep. Thus this conceptual life, as
we possess it on the physical plane, persists from our waking till our
falling asleep, and disappears the moment we fall asleep. No one will
suppose that, when he is really sleeping that is, if he is not
clairvoyant during sleep his thought life can nevertheless
continue just as while he is awake. The life of thought or the
conceptual life which engrosses us fully from our waking till
our falling asleep, must be extinguished, and only then can we go to
sleep.
But the human being must recognise that the concepts he has, which
have so overwhelmingly taken possession of him during the day, and
which he always has unless he merely drowses along, are no hindrance
to his falling asleep. That this is so is best seen when we surrender
ourselves to particularly vigorous concepts before falling asleep
for instance, by reading a very difficult book. When we have
been thinking really intensely, we most easily fall asleep; and so if
we cannot go to sleep, it is good to pick up a book, or occupy
ourselves with something which requires concentrated thinking
study a book of mathematics, for instance. This will help us to fall
asleep; but not something, on the other hand, in which we are deeply
interested, such as a novel containing much that captivates our
interest. Here our emotions become aroused, and the life of the
emotions is something that hinders us from falling asleep. When we go
to bed with our feelings vividly stirred, when we know that we have
burdened our soul with something or when there is a special joy in our
heart which has not yet subsided, it frequently happens that we turn
and toss in bed and are unable to fall asleep. In other words, whereas
concepts unaccompanied by emotions weary us, so that we easily fall
asleep, precisely what strongly affects our feelings prevents us from
falling asleep. It is impossible then to bring about the separation
within ourselves which is necessary if we are to enter into the state
of sleep. We can thus see that our life of emotions has a different
relationship to our whole existence from that of our life of thought.
If we wish, however, to make the distinction quite clearly, we must
take into account something else: that is, our dreams. It might be
supposed at first that, when the variegated life of dreams works upon
us, it consists of concepts continuing their existence into the state
of sleep. But, if we test the matter quite accurately, we shall
observe that our conceptual life is not continued in our dreams. That
which by its very nature wearies us does not continue during our
dreams, except when our concepts are associated with intense emotions.
It is the emotions that manifest in dream pictures. But to realise
this it is necessary, of course, to test these things adequately. Take
an example: someone dreams that he is young again and has some
experience or other. Immediately the dream is transformed and
something occurs which he may not have experienced at all. A kind of
event is manifest to him which is foreign to his memory, because he
has not experienced it on the physical plane. But persons known to him
appear. How often it happens that one finds oneself during dreams
involved in actions in the company of friends or acquaintances whom
one has not seen for a long time. But, if we examine the thing
adequately, we shall be forced to the conclusion that emotions are
behind what emerges in dreams. Perhaps, we still cling to the friend
of that time, are not yet quite severed from him; there must still be
some kind of emotion in us which is connected with him. Nothing occurs
in dreams that is not connected with emotions. Accordingly, we must
draw a certain conclusion here that is, that when the concepts
which our waking life of day impart to us do not appear in dreams,
this proves that they do not accompany us into sleep. When emotions
keep us from sleeping, this proves that they do not release us, that
they must be present in order to be able to appear in dream pictures.
It is the emotions which bring us the dream concepts. This is due to
the fact that the emotions are far more intimately connected with
man's real being than is the life of thought. We carry them over into
sleep. In other words, they are a soul element that remains united
with us even during sleep. In contrast with ordinary concepts, the
emotions accompany us into sleep; they are far more closely, more
intensely, connected with the human individuality than is ordinary
thinking, when it is not pervaded by emotion.
What about the third soul component, the will impulses? There also we
can give an example. Of course, this can be observed only by persons
who pay attention to the moment of falling asleep in a rather subtle
way. If someone has acquired through training a certain capacity to
observe this moment, he will find it extremely interesting. At first,
our concepts appear to us to be enveloped in mist; the external world
vanishes, and we feel as if our soul-being were extended beyond our
bodily nature, as if we were no longer compressed within the limits of
our skin but were flowing out into the elements of the cosmos. A
profound feeling of satisfaction may be associated with falling
asleep. Then comes a moment when a certain memory arises. Most likely,
extremely few people have this experience, but we can perceive this
moment if we are sufficiently attentive. There appear before our
vision the good and also the evil will impulses that we have
experienced; and the strange thing is that, in the presence of the
good impulses, one has the feeling: This is something connected with
all wholesome will forces, something that invigorates you. If the
good will impulses present themselves to the soul before the person
falls asleep, he feels so much the fresher and more filled with
life-forces, and the feeling often arises: If only this moment could
last forever! If only this moment could endure throughout eternity!
Then one feels, also, how the bodily nature is deserted by the soul
element. Finally there comes a jerk, and he falls asleep. One does not
need to be a clairvoyant in order to experience this, but only to
observe the life of the soul.
We must infer from this something extremely important. Our will
impulses work before we fall asleep, and we feel that they fructify
us. We experience extraordinary invigoration. With regard to the mere
emotions, we had to say that these are more closely connected with our
individuality than our ordinary thinking, our ordinary act of
conceiving. So we must now say of our will impulses: This is not
merely something that remains with us during sleep, but something
which becomes a strengthening, an empowering, of the life within us.
The will impulses are far more intimately connected with our life than
are our emotions; and whoever frequently observes the moment of
falling asleep feels in this moment that, if he cannot look back upon
any good will impulses during the day, it is as though something of
what enters into the state of sleep had been killed within him. In
other words, the will impulses are connected with health and disease,
with the life force in us.
Thoughts cannot be seen. We see the rose bush at first through
ordinary physical perception; but, when the beholder turns aside or
goes away, the image of the object remains in him. He does not see the
object but he can form a mental image of it. That is, our thought life
is somewhat super-sensible. Completely super-sensible are our emotions;
and our will impulses, although they are transmuted into actions, are
none the less super-sensible. But we know at once likewise, when we
take into consideration everything which has now been said, that our
thought life not permeated by will impulses is the least closely
connected with us.
Now, it might be supposed that what has just been said is refuted by
the fact that, on the following day our concepts of the preceding day
confront us again; that we can recollect them. Indeed, we are
obliged to recollect. We must, in a super-sensible way, call our
concepts back into memory.
With our emotions, the situation is different; they are most
intimately united with us. If we have gone to bed in a mood of
remorse, we shall sense upon awaking the next morning that we have
woken with a feeling of dullness or something of the sort. If
we experienced remorse, we sense this the next day in our body as
weakness, lethargy, numbness; joy we sense as strength and elevation
of spirits. In this case we do not need first to remember the remorse
or the joy, to reflect about them; we feel them in our body. We do not
need to recollect what has been there: it is there, it has passed into
sleep with us and has lived with us. Our emotions are more intensely,
more closely, bound up with the external part of us than are our
thoughts.
But anyone who is able to observe his will impulses feels that they
are simply present again; they are always present. It may be that, at
the moment of waking, we note that we experience again in its
immediacy, in a certain sense, what we experienced as joy in life on
the preceding day through our good moral impulses. In reality nothing
so refreshes us as that which we cause to flow through our souls on
the preceding day in the form of good moral impulses. We may say,
therefore, that what we call our will impulses are the most intimately
bound up with our existence.
Thus the three soul components are different from one another, and we
shall understand, if we clearly grasp these distinctions, that occult
knowledge justifies the assertion that our thoughts, which are
super-sensible, bring us into relationship with the super-sensible
world, our emotions with another super-sensible world, and our will
impulses with still another, even more intimately bound up with our
own real being. For this reason we make the following assertion. When
we perceive with the outer senses, we can thereby perceive everything
that is in the physical world. When we conceive, our life of concepts,
our thought life, is in relationship with the astral world. Our
emotions bring us into connection with what we call the Heavenly World
or Lower Devachan. And our moral impulses brings us into connection
with the Higher Devachan, or the World of Reason. Man thus stands in
relationship with three worlds through the impulses of thinking,
feeling and willing. To the extent that he belongs to the astral
world, he can carry his thoughts into the astral world; he can carry
his emotions into the world of Devachan; he can carry into the higher
Heavenly World all that he possesses in his soul of the nature of will
impulses. [See also Rudolf Steiner,
Macrocosm and Microcosm.]
When we consider the matter in this way, we shall see how justified
occult science is in speaking of the three worlds. And, when we take
this into consideration, we shall view the realm of morality in an
entirely different way; for the realm of good will impulses gives us a
relationship to the highest of the three worlds into which the being
of man extends.
Our ordinary thought life reaches only up to the astral world. No
matter how brilliant our thoughts may be, if they are not sustained by
feelings they penetrate no further than the astral world; they have no
significance for other worlds. You will certainly understand in this
connection what is said in regard to external science, dry,
matter-of-fact external science. No man can by means of thoughts not
permeated by emotion affirm anything regarding other realms than the
astral. Under ordinary circumstances, the thinking of the scientist,
the chemist, the mathematician, proceeds without any accompanying
feeling. It goes no further than just under the surface. Indeed,
scientific research even demands that it shall proceed in this way,
and because of this it penetrates only into the astral world.
Only when delight or repugnance are associated with the thoughts of
the research scientist is there added to these thoughts the element
needed in order to penetrate the world of Devachan. Only when emotions
enter into thoughts, into concepts, when we feel one thing to be good
and another evil, do we combine with thoughts which carries them into
the Heavenly World. Only then can we get a glimpse into deeper layers
of existence. If we wish to grasp something belonging to the world of
Devachan, theories are no help to us at all. The only thing that helps
us is to unite feelings with our thoughts. Thinking carries us only
into the astral world.
When the geometrician, for example, grasps the relationships
pertaining to the triangle, this lifts him only into the astral
element. But, when he grasps the triangle as a symbol, say of the
participation of the human being in the three worlds, of his
threefoldness, this helps him to a higher level. One who sees in
symbols the expression of the soul force, who inscribes this in his
heart, who feels in connection with everything that people
generally merely know, brings his thoughts into connection with
Devachan. For this reason, in meditating we must feel our way through
what is given us, for only thus do we bring ourselves into connection
with the world of Devachan. Ordinary science, therefore, void of any
feeling, can never bring the human being, no matter how keen, into
connection with anything except the astral world.
On the other hand, art, music, painting and so on, lead man into the
lower Devachan world. To this statement the objection might be raised
that, if it is true that the emotions really lead one into the lower
Devachan world, passions, appetites, instincts, would also do this.
Indeed, they do. But this only shows that we are more intimately bound
up with our feelings than with our thoughts. Our sympathies may be
associated with our lower nature also; an emotional life is aroused by
appetites and instincts also, and this leads into lower Devachan.
Whereas we absolve in Kamaloka whatever false thoughts we have, we
carry with us into the world of Devachan all that we have developed up
to the stage of emotions; and this imprints itself upon us even into
the next incarnation, so that it comes to expression in our karma.
Through our life of feeling, so far as this can have these two
aspects, we either raise ourselves into the world of Devachan, or we
offend it.
Through our will impulses, on the contrary, which are either moral or
immoral, we either have a good relationship with the higher world or
we injure it, and have to compensate for this in our karma. If a
person is so evil and degenerate that he establishes such a connection
with the higher world through his evil impulses as actually to injure
it, he is cast out. But the impulse must, nevertheless, have
originated in the higher world. The significance of the moral life
becomes clear to us in all its greatness when we view the matter in
this way.
From the worlds with which the human being is in such a close
relationship through his threefold soul nature and also through his
physical nature from these realms proceed those forces which
can lead man through the world. That is, we cannot observe an object
belonging to the physical world, without eyes to see it with: this is
the human being's relationship with the physical world. Through his
life of thought, he is in relationship with the astral world; through
his life of feeling, he is connected with the world of Devachan; and
through his moral life with the world of upper Devachan.
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Participation of the Human Being
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Feelings: aesthetic ideals
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Corporeality: physical-material nature
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Man has four relationships with four worlds. But this signifies
nothing else than that he has a relationship with the Beings of
these worlds. From this point of view it is interesting to reflect
upon man's evolution, to look into the past, the present, and the
immediate future.
From the worlds we have mentioned proceed those forces which penetrate
into our lives. Here we have to point out that, in the epoch which
lies behind us, human beings were primarily dependent upon influences
from the physical world, primarily capacitated to receive impulses out
of the physical world. This lies behind us as the Greco-Roman epoch.
During this epoch Christ worked on earth in a physical body. Since the
human being was then enabled primarily to receive the influences of
the forces existing in the physical world, Christ had to appear on the
physical plane.
At present we live in an epoch in which thinking is mainly developed,
in which man receives his impulses out of the world of thought, the
astral world. Even external history demonstrates this. We can scarcely
refer to philosophers of the pre-Christian era; at most, to a
preparatory stage of thinking. Hence the history of philosophy begins
with Thales.
( 36 )
Only after the Greco-Roman epoch does
scientific thinking appear. Intellectual thinking develops for the
first time about the sixteenth century. This explains the great
progress in the sciences, which exclude all emotion from the activity
of thought. And science is so specially beloved in our day because in
it thought is not permeated with emotions. Our science is void of
feeling, and seeks its well-being in the utter absence of sentiments.
Alas for one who should experience any feeling in connection with a
laboratory experiment! This is characteristic of our epoch, which
brings the human being into contact primarily with the astral plane.
The next age, following our own, will already be more spiritual. There
the emotions will play a role even in connection with science. If
anyone shall then wish to sit an examination for admission to some
scientific study, it will be necessary for him to be able to sense the
light that exists behind everything — the spiritual world which brings
everything into existence. The value of scientific work in any test
will then consist in whether a person can develop in the test
sufficient emotion; otherwise he will fail in the examination. Even
though the candidate may have any amount of knowledge, he will not be
able to pass the examination if he does not have the right sentiments.
This certainly sounds very queer but it will be true, nonetheless,
that the laboratory table will be raised to the level of an altar, at
which the test of a person will consist in the fact that, in the
electrolysis of water into oxygen and hydrogen, feelings will be
developed in him corresponding with what the gods feel when this
occurs. The human being will then receive his impulses from an
intimate connection with the lower Devachan.
And then will come the age that is to be the last before the next
great earth catastrophe. This will be the age when man will be
connected with the higher world in his will impulses, when morality
will be dominant on the earth. Then neither external ability nor the
intellect nor the feelings will hold the first rank, but the impulses.
Not man's skill but his moral quality will be determinative. Thus,
humanity will have reached the epoch of morality, during which man
will be in a special relationship with the world of higher Devachan.
It is a fact that, in the course of evolution, ever greater powers of
love will awaken in the human being, out of which he may draw his
knowledge, his impulses and his activities.
Whereas at an earlier period, when Christ came down to the earth in a
physical body, human beings could not have perceived Him otherwise
than in a physical body, in our age the forces are actually awaking
through which we will see the Christ, not in His physical body, but in
an etheric form which will exist on the astral plane. Even in our
century, from the 1930's on, and ever increasingly to the middle of
the century, a great number of human beings will behold the Christ as
an etheric form. This will constitute the great advance beyond the
earlier epoch, when human beings were not yet ripe for beholding Him
thus. This is what is meant by the saying that Christ will appear in
the clouds; He will appear as an etheric form on the astral plane.
But it must be emphasised that He can be seen in this epoch only in
the etheric body. Anyone who believes that Christ will appear again in
a physical body loses sight of the progress made by human powers. It
is a mistake to suppose that such an event as the appearance of Christ
can recur in the same manner as that in which it has already taken
place.
The next event, then, is that human beings will see Christ on the
astral plane in etheric form, and those who are then living on the
physical plane, and who have absorbed the teachings of Spiritual
Science, will see Him. Those, however, who are then no longer living,
but who have prepared themselves through Spiritual-Scientific work
will see Him, nonetheless, in etheric raiment between their death and
rebirth. But there will be human beings also who are not yet ready to
see Him in the etheric body. Those who have scorned Spiritual Science
will not be able to see Him, but will have to wait till the following
incarnation, when they may then devote themselves to spiritual
knowledge and so be able to prepare themselves to understand what then
occurs. It will not depend then upon whether a person has actually
studied Spiritual Science or not while living on the physical plane,
except that the appearance of the Christ will be a rebuke and a
torment to them, whereas those who strove to attain a knowledge of the
spirit in the preceding incarnation will understand what they behold.
Then will come an epoch when still higher powers will awaken in human
beings. This will be the epoch when the Christ will manifest Himself
in a still loftier-manner; in an astral form in the lower world of
Devachan. And in the final epoch, that of the moral impulse, the human
beings who have passed through the other stages will behold the Christ
in His glory, as the form of the greatest Ego, as the spiritualised
Ego-Self, as the great Teacher of human evolution in the higher
Devachan.
Thus the succession is as follows: in the Greco-Roman epoch Christ
appeared on the physical plane; in our epoch He will appear as an
etheric form on the astral plane; in the next epoch as an astral form
on the plane of lower Devachan; and in the epoch of morality as the
very essence and embodiment of the Ego.
We may now ask ourselves for what purpose Spiritual Science exists. It
is so that there may be a sufficient number of human beings who will
be prepared when these events take place. And now already Spiritual
Science is working to the end that human beings may enter in the right
way into connection with the higher worlds, so that they may enter
rightly into the etheric-astral, into the aesthetic-Devachanic, into
the moral-Devachanic. In our epoch it is the Spiritual-Scientific
movement whose special aim is to enable the human being in his moral
impulses to develop a right relationship with the Christ.
The next three millennia will be devoted to making visible the
appearance of the Christ in the etheric. Only to those whose feelings
are wholly materialistic will this be unattainable., A person may
think materialistically when he admits the validity of matter alone
and denies the existence of everything spiritual, or through the fact
that he draws the spiritual down into the material. A person is
materialistic also in admitting the existence of the spiritual only in
material embodiment. There are even theosophists who are materialists.
These believe that humanity is doomed to the necessity of beholding
Christ again in a physical body. One does not escape from being a
materialist through being a theosophist, but through comprehending
that the higher worlds exist even when we cannot see them in a sense
manifestation but must develop ourselves to the stage when we can
behold them.
If we allow all this to pass through our minds, we may say that Christ
is the true moral Impulse, permeating humanity with moral power. The
Christ Impulse is power and life, the moral power which permeates the
human being. But this moral power must be understood. Precisely in our
own epoch it is necessary that Christ shall be proclaimed. For this
reason Anthroposophy has the mission also of proclaiming the Christ in
His etheric form.
Before Christ appeared on earth through the Mystery of Golgotha, the
teaching about Him was prepared in advance. At that time, also, the
physical Christ was proclaimed. It was primarily Jeshu ben Pandira who
was the forerunner and herald, a hundred years before Christ. He also
had the name Jesus, and, in contrast to Christ Jesus, he was
called Jesus ben Pandira, son of Pandira. This man lived about a
hundred years before our era. One does not need to be a clairvoyant in
order to know this, for it is to be found in Rabbinical writings, and
this fact has often been the occasion for confusing him with Christ
Jesus. Jeshu ben Pandira was at first stoned and then hanged upon the
beam of the cross. Jesus of Nazareth was actually crucified.
Who was this Jeshu ben Pandira? He is a great individuality who, since
the time of Buddha that is, about 600 BC. has been incarnated
once in nearly every century in order to bring humanity forward. To
understand him, we must go back to the nature of the Buddha.
We know, of course, that Buddha lived as a prince in the Sakya family
five centuries and a half before the beginning of our era. The
individuality who became the Buddha at that time had not already been
a Buddha. Buddha, that prince who gave humanity the doctrine of
compassion, had not been born in that age as Buddha. For Buddha
does not signify an individuality; Buddha is a rank of honour.
This Buddha was born as a Bodhisattva and was elevated to the Buddha
in the twenty-ninth year of his life, while he sat absorbed in
meditation under the bodhi tree and brought down from the spiritual
heights into the physical world the doctrine of compassion. A
Bodhisattva he had previously been that is, in his previous
incarnations and then he became a Buddha. But the situation is
such that the position of a Bodhisattva that is of a teacher of
humanity in physical form became thereby vacant for a certain
period of time, and had to be filled again. As the Bodhisattva who had
incarnated at that time ascended in the twenty-ninth year of his life
to the Buddha, the rank of the Bodhisattva was at once transferred to
another individuality. Thus we must speak of a successor of the
Bodhisattva who had now risen to the rank of Buddha. The successor to
the Gautama-Buddha-Bodhisattva was that individuality who incarnated a
hundred years before Christ as Jeshu ben Pandira, as a herald of the
Christ in the physical body.
He is now the Bodhisattva of humanity until he in his turn advances to
the rank of Buddha after 3,000 years, reckoned from the present time.
In other words, he will require exactly 5,000 years to rise from a
Bodhisattva to a Buddha. He who has been incarnated nearly every
century since that time, is now also already incarnated, and will be
the real herald of the Christ in etheric raiment, just as he
prophesied the physical appearance of the Christ.
And even many of us will ourselves experience the fact that, during
the 1930's, there will be persons and more and more, later in
the century who will behold the Christ in etheric raiment.
Spiritual Science exists to prepare for this and everyone who works at
the task of Spiritual Science shares in making this preparation.
The manner in which humanity is taught by its Leaders, but especially
by a Bodhisattva who is to become the Maitreya Buddha, changes greatly
from epoch to epoch.
Spiritual Science could not have been taught in the Greco-Roman epoch
as it is taught today; this would not have been understood by anyone
at that time. In that period, the Christ Being had to make manifest in
physically visible form the goal of evolution, and only thus could He
then work. Spiritual research spreads this teaching ever increasingly
among human beings, and they will come to understand more and more the
Christ Impulse, until the Christ Himself enters into them.
Today it is possible by means of the physically uttered word, in
concepts and ideas, by means of thinking, to make the goal
understandable and to influence men's souls in a good way, in order to
fire them with enthusiasm for aesthetic and moral ideals. But the
speech of today will be superseded in later periods of time by forces
capable of a mightier stimulation than is possible at present by means
of speech alone. Then will speech, the word, release powers conveying
feelings of the heart from soul to soul, from master to pupil, from
the Bodhisattva to all those who do not turn away from him. It will
then be possible for speech to be the bearer of aesthetic feelings.
But the dawn of a new epoch is needed for this. In our time it would
not be possible even for the Bodhisattva himself to exert such
influences through the larynx as will then be possible.
And during the final period of time, before the great War of All
against All, the situation will be such that, as speech is at present
the bearer of thoughts and conceptions and as it will later be the
bearer of emotions, so will it then carry the moral element, the moral
impulses, transmitting these from soul to soul. At present the word
cannot have a moral influence. Such words can by no means be produced
by our larynx as it is today. But such a spiritual power will one day
exist. Words will be spoken through which the human being will receive
moral power. Three thousand years after our present time the
Bodhisattva we have spoken of will become the Buddha, and his teaching
will then cause will impulses to stream directly into humanity. He
will be the one whom the ancients foresaw: the Buddha Maitreya, a
Bringer of Good.
He has the mission of preparing humanity in advance so that it may
understand the true Christ Impulse. His mission is to direct men's
gaze more and more to what they can love, to bring it about that what
they can spread abroad as a theory shall flow into a moral channel so
that at length all that men can possess in the form of thoughts shall
stream into the moral life. And, whereas it is still entirely possible
today that a person may be very able intellectually but be immoral, we
are approaching a time when it will be impossible for anyone to be at
the same time intellectually shrewd and immoral. It will be impossible
for mental shrewdness and immorality to go hand in hand.
This is to be understood in the following way. Those who have kept
themselves apart, and have opposed the course of evolution, will be
the ones who will then battle together, all against all. Even those
who develop today the highest intelligence, if they do not develop
further during the succeeding epochs in feeling and morality, will
gain nothing from their cleverness. The highest intelligence is,
indeed, developed in our epoch. It has reached its climax. But a man
who has developed intelligence today and who neglects the
possibilities of further evolution, will destroy himself by his own
intelligence. This will then be like an inner fire consuming him,
devouring him, making him so small and feeble that he will become
stupid and be able to achieve nothing a fire that will
annihilate him in the epoch wherein the moral impulses will have
reached their climax. Whereas a person can be very dangerous today by
means of his immoral shrewdness, he will then be without power to
harm. Instead of this power, the soul will then possess in ever
increasing measure moral powers indeed, moral powers such as a
modern man cannot in the least conceive. The highest power and morality
are needed to receive the Christ Impulse into ourselves so that it
becomes power and life in us.
Thus we see that Spiritual Science has the task of planting in the
present stage of the evolution of humanity the seeds for its future
evolution. Of course, we must take into account in connection with
Spiritual Science also what has to be considered in connection with
the whole of creation that is, that errors may occur. But even
one who cannot as yet enter into the higher worlds can make adequate
tests and see whether here and there the truth is proclaimed: the
details must be compatible. Test what is proclaimed, all the
individual data which are brought together regarding the evolution of
the human being, the separate appearances of the Christ, and the like,
and you will see that things mutually confirm one another. This is the
evidence of truth which is available even to the person who does not
yet see into the higher worlds. One can be quite assured: for those
who are willing to test things, the doctrine of the Christ reappearing
in the spirit will alone prove to be true.
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