Lecture V
Berlin,
August 28, 1917
How can one approach the
Christ impulse, how does one come near the Being of Christ? In one form
or another this question is asked again and again — and rightly
so. People feel a need to ask this all-important question which must
be approached from many aspects as we have done in our anthroposophical
studies. Just as a photograph of a tree taken from one angle does not
convey its full shape, so one aspect or indeed several do not exhaust
the many-sidedness of a spiritual reality. All we can hope is that we
shall come near it by approaching it from as many aspects as possible.
It is essential to realize
that seeking Christ is deeply connected with the nature of the human
‘I’ and is therefore something inward and intimate. The
special nature of the human ‘I’ comes to expression in the
way we use the word ‘I.’ All other words are applicable
to other things whereas the word ‘I’ can never refer to
anything except to the one who speaks it. Because of the inner relationship
between the Being of Christ and the human ‘I’ the Christ
Being has for us the same intimate character as our own ‘I.’
All the impulses of feeling and will which stir within us when we contemplate
the Mystery of Christ are actual means by which we draw near the Christ.
It is through feeling- and will-filled contemplation of Christ that
we have reason to hope we may find Him. At present it is of particular
importance to pay attention to mankind's historical evolution especially
in relation to the Event of Christ. Historically, the present is a significant
moment in time. Few are aware of its full implication; it is therefore
all the more important to be mindful of man's historical development
in relation to every issue of significance.
We know that man's inner
development, the whole configuration of his soul life was different
before and after the Mystery of Golgotha. Various aspects of this difference
have already been described. Some fifty or sixty years ago there was
more feeling for spiritual knowledge, more people concerned themselves
with higher questions. The inclination to do so has since waned. To
illustrate this we can turn to the writings of a psychologist such as
Fortlage who, up to the sixties
of the 19th Century practiced in Jena and other cities. We still find
in his writings a remarkable description of human consciousness to which,
I may add, modern philosophers take great exception.
Fortlage said, in (1869),
that human consciousness is related to death, to dying, and as we, in
the course of life, develop consciousness we are actually slowly and
gradually developing those forces which, at the moment of death, confront
us all of a sudden. In other words Fortlage sees the moment of death
as an immensely enhanced act of consciousness. One could say that he
sees consciousness as life which gradually develops into death. It is
not life as such which develops death, but the consciousness in man
develops death forces and death itself is enhanced consciousness compressed
into a moment. This statement by a psychologist — condemned as
I said by modern philosophers as unscientific — is immensely significant.
It is important to realize
that despite the significance of this statement in relation to man's
present soul life, that is his present consciousness, it is not true
for every period of man's evolution. If we go back thousands of years
before the Mystery of Golgotha no one with deeper insight would have
spoken like that. Our present consciousness, which is normally devoid
of all former atavistic clairvoyance, does owe its existence to slow
death. But this was not the case at the time of the ancient atavistic
clairvoyant consciousness which disappeared as the time of the Mystery
of Golgotha approached. Words are always inadequate for describing such
matters. Nevertheless it can be said that this ancient consciousness
was engendered by a surplus of spiritual life over man's organic life.
Now we find ourselves within a surplus of organic life which is gradually
dying. Our consciousness at present is due to the fact that, in returning
to the body upon waking, we are overwhelmed by a body which is subject
to death, which is progressively dying. The fact that we are overwhelmed
by it enables us to develop our present day-consciousness which is an
object consciousness.
In ancient times before
the Mystery of Golgotha things were different. Man then had a surplus
of spiritual life which was not altogether extinguished when, on waking,
he returned to the body. This surplus of spiritual life expressed itself
as atavistic clairvoyance. But as the time of the Mystery of Golgotha
approached this surplus decreased ever more. At the time of the Mystery
of Golgotha, in the case of most people, a balance had been reached
between man's inner life of soul and the organic life of his body. After
the Mystery of Golgotha the organic life gradually gained the upper
hand. One can also express it by saying that before the Mystery
of Golgotha man gained knowledge through the forces of birth; after
the Mystery of Golgotha he gains knowledge through the forces of death.
This again illustrates the significance of the Mystery of Golgotha as
the turning point in human evolution.
The ancient clairvoyant
consciousness; i.e., the consciousness related to birth began to wane.
Slowly and gradually man lost the spiritual world from his consciousness.
Whereas formerly everyone was able to experience the spiritual world
a time began, about a thousand years before the Mystery of Golgotha,
when gradually only those who were initiated in the Mysteries were able
to do so. This explains a remark made by Plato, referred to in my book
Christianity as Mystical Fact. Plato who knew of this secret,
declared that only those initiated in the Mysteries were humans in the
true sense, all others were souls submerged in mire. — Rather
a horrible statement but not an arbitrary one: it refers to the situation
I have just described which arose out of necessity in human evolution.
Let us for a moment imagine
what would have happened had the Mystery of Golgotha not taken place:
Evolution would have continued the way it was before, which means that
more and more human beings on the earth would lose all direct connection
with the spiritual world. Eventually humanity would no longer be able
to incorporate the spirit; man's body would become larva-like consisting
only of organic and etheric members. A long time ago men's souls would
have been incapable of living in the bodies available; they would have
hovered above them in the spiritual world. Only those souls who, in
an earlier epoch had reached higher development, would be able to inspire
their bodies from above. Consciousness of the spiritual world would
have been possible only in the case of individuals receiving inspiration
in the Mysteries. The human spirit itself would not inhabit the earth.
In the mystery centers it would be possible to receive inspiration but
Ahriman would battle against this. He would distort the inspirations
thus preventing the larva-like human bodies from carrying out what was
intended.
Because the human body,
during its life between birth and death, overcomes a now comparatively
weaker life of soul, it had to be made possible for the human soul to
live again in a body which is subject to birth and death. This became
possible only because a Being from the spiritual world, the Christ Being,
united Himself with those earthly forces which came to dominate man's
consciousness. What kind of forces are they? They are death forces,
the very forces to which man now owes his consciousness! You will understand
the far-reaching meaning of the Rosicrucian saying: In Christo Morimur,
in Christ we die. These words express in a sense the very meaning of
man's existence. They express what entered human evolution through the
Mystery of Golgotha. They express what united itself with the death-bringing
forces enabling them to become henceforth the basis for man's consciousness.
It may be asked why in these
circumstances such a great number of people still do not acknowledge
the Christ? All one can say about this is that so many and so far-reaching
secrets are connected with this question that at present it is not yet
possible to speak about them in a general way. But what I have just
described is a fact of human evolution.
Let us now connect what
has been said with the Mystery of Golgotha: Christ had incarnated in
the body of Jesus of Nazareth; i.e., in a body subject to the same conditions
as those to which human bodies in general were subject at that time.
As a result of the pure hereditary conditions the body of Jesus of Nazareth
was subject to conditions in which consciousness was gradually to emerge
from the forces of death. What had to happen to give evolution so mighty
a jolt that it would cause an equally mighty impulse to stream as a
force into mankind's evolution, making consciousness arise from forces
of death? The Christ-being, that lived for three years in and through
the body of Jesus of Nazareth, spoke the secrets connected with human
consciousness to this body. This could be done only at the moment of
death, for it is only then that the entire secret connected with human
consciousness is drawn together. Did not the Christ have to lead Jesus
through death in order that this whole impulse of consciousness could
stream into mankind? Indeed, it did! And death is also that moment when
we too may hope to attain an intensified comprehension of Christ. This
is because at that moment all the forces are present which have sustained
our consciousness throughout life. We are adapted at the moment of death
to absorb what is in fact the secret of our consciousness and to absorb
with it the Christ Impulse. We are preparing ourselves to receive it
when we seek not only to understand but to experience the reality of
the Christ Impulse. However what meets us at death we can understand
only when our organ for understanding is set free. That means that while
the moment of death does indeed provide the condition for union with
Christ, it is only when we are free of the etheric body that the astral
body and ‘I’— the organization for understanding —
can actually perceive this union.
Something else had to take
place at the Mystery of Golgotha to bring about these conditions: After
Christ had — in dying on Golgotha — entrusted to Jesus as
it were the secrets of man's future consciousness, a momentous event
had to occur: Jesus, in whom the Christ dwelt, rose to new life through
the force of death. In other words, the Resurrection had to occur in
order that we could understand that Resurrection when, a few days after
death, we experience our ether body separating from us as explained
by anthroposophical science. In this more inward death — i.e.,
the separation from the ether body a few days after death—we relive
in a certain sense the Mystery of Golgotha. For it was life, that is,
consciousness, which rose out of death: a living consciousness. At no
time before the Mystery of Golgotha had this ever happened; life had
always risen from life. Never before had there been a necessity to understand
how life can come from death, only how life comes from life. —
This is one of many approaches to the Mystery of Golgotha.
The fundamental issue of
Christianity is the Resurrection. Anything calling itself by that name
without having as its center a living concept of the Resurrection is
no true Christianity. It is absolutely essential to understand that
Christ, who united Himself with the forces of death, is the living Christ.
Nothing else provides a true understanding of Christianity. Modern so-called
Christianity which avoids the concept of the Resurrection is not Christianity.
The essential need in mankind's evolution was the Death and Resurrection.
The other events which took place at the Mystery of Golgotha are all
an integral part of what has just been described.
One thought which is always
problematic concerns the circumstances which led to the death of Christ
Jesus. — I have often touched on this problem — on the one
hand there is the feeling that the people must be condemned who brought
death upon someone without sin, on the other there is the fact that
if this death had not occurred Christianity would not exist. This means
that Christianity with all its values has come into existence through
a misdeed. The contradictory thought constantly forces itself upon man:
If there had been no one criminal enough to put Christ to death there
would be no Christianity. Yet we need Christianity!
Here we are touching on
one of those issues in relation to which appeal must be made to understand
what I recently termed “iron necessity.” During his earthly
life man's thinking is adapted to the way he looks at things and he
arranges life accordingly. All civic, political and other arrangements
are based on human views. We live as a matter of course in conditions
created by human beings, unconcerned as to whether the thoughts on which
these arrangements are based come from God or from the devil. Whereas
if we look back to conditions, as they generally were a long time before
the Mystery of Golgotha, we find that in those ancient times man's thoughts,
concerned with social arrangements, were received through atavistic
clairvoyance. As we have seen, when the time of the Mystery of Golgotha
drew near, man's body became more and more larva-like and as a consequence
more and more accessible to ahrimanic influences. Therefore social and
political institutions become more and more saturated with ahrimanic
forces. It was inevitable for instance that the code of law should eventually
become as it is now. It was also inevitable that an ahrimanic code of
law should be particularly in evidence and concentrated, so to speak,
at one particular spot on the earth at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha.
Such circumstances did not prevail everywhere, but in one place the
social structure was completely ahrimanic. Therefore the appearance
of its very antithesis, the appearance of a God was for this society
the most hateful thing that could happen, it had to be eliminated. This
phenomenon, of necessity, accompanies all the others connected with
the Mystery of Golgotha.
Two things in particular
brought about this social structure. First, the kind of thoughts that
had evolved out of Judaic law, were so saturated with ahrimanic forces
that by means of them there was no possibility of grasping the fact
that a God could come so close to man as was the case of Christ Jesus.
This was something Judaic law had of necessity to reject. Secondly,
the Romans were also responsible for the death of Christ Jesus; they
were a powerful and efficient force in establishing the external side
of the social structure. One cannot imagine a more powerful example
than the social structure created by Roman Imperialism, particularly
at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha. Yet at the moment the Mystery
of Golgotha is enacted, Pilate, the representative of the strongest
earthly power, proves a weakling when faced with spiritual power. He
is incapable of coming to any insight or to make any decision about
what is to happen.
So you see this is also
a phenomenon connected with the Mystery of Golgotha — I have mentioned
it before — that it took place at a time when mankind was least
able to understand. In ancient times it would have been understood,
but when it actually happened it was not. It must be realized that to
understand this event a different approach is necessary.
One comes to realize that
one must bring to the Mystery of Golgotha all the depths of one's thoughts
and feelings; for example when one attempts to relate the Mystery of
Golgotha to the secrets of human death and man's subsequent awakening
in the astral body and ‘I.’ It is through thoughts, through
contemplation that one draws near to this Mystery. It is of no use to
express through empty words a general wish to reach union with Christ;
what is needed is a concrete understanding of what the actual appearance
of Christ in earth evolution means for one's own life. It is not without
meaning that the same time span elapsed between the death and the resurrection
of Christ Jesus as the one that elapses between our leaving the physical
body and our leaving the ether body in death. There is an intimate bond
between Christ's life on earth and the man of today living after the
Mystery of Golgotha. It is now possible to say with greatest conviction:
Christ came in order that man should not be lost to the earth. Had the
Mystery of Golgotha not taken place man's body would have become larva-like,
directed from above by his soul. Death would gradually have removed
man from the earth altogether. Through the Mystery of Golgotha man's
connection with the earth was restored. Through the Mystery of Golgotha
the possibility of consciousness arising from death was created.
These things can be understood
today, they are revealed to contemplation of the spiritual world; making
them our own deepens our inner life. When we are faced with crucial
events we are not helped by knowing in a general way that we are connected
with something called “the Christ,” whereas our inner life
is deepened and strengthened when we know quite concretely that we are
intimately connected with that Being who actually experienced earthly
life and went through the Mystery of Golgotha. In contemplating these
things we feel our innermost being intimately connected with the historical
events of Golgotha.
At the present time man
is going through a crisis as far as understanding the Mystery of Golgotha
is concerned. Last week I attempted to illustrate this crisis by means
of a specific example. I wanted to show how a human being may make a
thorough study of Christianity yet fail to find Christ. At present it
is possible to belong to established Christian communities, perhaps
to one which at present has an ever-increasing influence, without approaching
Christ. This is a phenomenon which spiritual science must emphasize
again and again. What must also be emphasized is that it is modern man's
task to call up the inner forces of his soul which enables him to grasp
spiritual-scientific thoughts. A certain power of soul must be called
upon in order to make these thoughts inwardly living. Unless we do we
shall make no progress, for it lies in the nature of present-day man
that he should call upon this soul-force. A force which ought to be
used, but is not, produces sickness in some form. Illness is caused
not only through lack of something but also through overabundance of
something. Numerous people who appear weak are in reality strong. Paradoxical
as it may seem they are strong inwardly. Many who go about like weaklings
dissatisfied with life, not knowing how to be — as they put it
— “in tune with the infinite” are actually strong,
but subconsciously. However, they are incapable of bringing their subconscious
strength into consciousness because they have no inkling of what it
is that clamours for recognition within them. As a consequence the subconscious
rebels and causes instability. The aim of spiritual science is to make
man conscious of what is stirring within him, of what is in fact striving
to become conscious. A true and satisfying understanding of the Mystery
of Golgotha is what above all wants to become conscious, a fact which
often expresses itself in remarkable ways.
As I have pointed out there
is on the one hand a need to understand the spiritual world and on the
other a shrinking away from such knowledge. Many things show that the
longing is there to find again the spirit, which however, cannot be
found today without an understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. That
the longing is present is often emphasized by writers who are themselves
as remote as possible from any real comprehension. In order to understand
present-day life we must acquaint ourselves with these matters of which
there are plenty of examples in everyday life. Those who have developed
interest in spiritual science have the task to recognize the spiritual
knowledge which should be impartial at present; they must also be able
to recognize where there is a shrinking away from such knowledge. One
must especially learn to recognize where there seemingly is a striving
for the spirit — which indeed there is, though unconsciously —
but in a spurious form while genuine spiritual science is not approached.
That is why I do not hesitate to point to such obvious examples in present-day
life.
Recently I was sent another
article in which the writer describes just such an example of so-called
spiritual striving. Someone the writer knew well told him — the
way such things are usually conveyed these days — that he simply
must hear Johannes Müller
speak. This gentleman felt that to hear Johannes Müller
was an experience not to be missed. He further informed the writer that
Johannes Muller is the principal of a psychiatric clinic and had founded
what amounted to a new ethics, a new religion. However, at the word
religion he suddenly plunged into a detailed Christology. At an incredible
speed he developed his personal view of the life of Jesus after which
he elaborated on liberal theology, the Warburg school of thought, and
that of the Heidelburg school. He then went on to discuss Alexandrine
poetry and Hegelianism and so on. — This is a prime example of
the folly of many people who take an interest in whatever crops up and
at the slightest opportunity reel it off at breakneck speed. The writer,
listening to all this, thought no one could speak that fast except perhaps
Kainz and then only if he
had to catch the last express train to Berlin after a theater performance.
Nevertheless after this experience the writer goes to hear a lecture
by Johannes Müller about the purpose of life.
Listening to this lecture
the writer felt that Johannes Müller spoke about life's purpose
as would a saint. The lecture dealt with how one ought to sacrifice
oneself, how one should live for others, not for oneself and so on.
Only one thing bothered the writer: the conversation he had with the
fast-talking gentleman had led him to form a picture in his mind of
Johannes Müller. He felt that if only Johannes Müller had
looked like this mental picture he could have believed in him. However,
Johannes Müller was nothing like what he had visualized. He describes
his impression of Johannes Müller which I shall not spare you as
it demonstrates how one sets about judging things nowadays. This is
the writer's description: “On to the platform came a medium-sized,
thick-set man with a short neck, bushy moustache, fresh complexion;
the archetype of a thoroughly healthy citizen of a German provincial
town. I could not avoid the idea that this man would be perfect as manager
of some large toy factory in Nuremberg. The way he dealt with the audience
reinforced this impression. His way of speaking was lucid, definite,
friendly, calm, yet expressing strong inner participation in what he
said. Everything was explained in simple terms with many repetitions
and he never stopped till he had said all he wanted to say. He kept
to his subject, spoke to the point and was obviously filled with earnest
desire to serve the good. In short, ideally a town council should be
composed of people like him. Similar things could be said about his
subject; basically, Johannes Müller expressed what good German
citizens would think about on special feast days.”
How does this impression
compare with the writer's image of someone who spoke about self-sacrifice
and living solely for others? He says: “The image I had formed
of Johannes Müller had established itself so firmly in my mind
that I was convinced he must be real. I had visualized someone with
a pale face which he would support with a thin white hand, his sad brown
eyes gazing into far distances. If this Johannes Müller had been
on the platform saying in a soft voice: Believe me Ladies and Gentlemen,
the purpose of life is sacrifice, then not only I, but everyone, would,
at least for the moment, have had to agree.”
In other words if Johannes
Müller had resembled the writer's preconceived notion the latter
would have believed him. Very interesting! And why would the writer
believe him? The reason is simple. This writer, unlike most people in
the audience, has a critical mind. He judges with a certain shrewdness
that a speaker with a pale face, liquid eyes and a melting look would
have a right to speak about sacrifice. One would believe in him, for
it would be clear that for such a man self-sacrifice would be the joy
of his life; therefore no real sacrifice. The external appearance of
Johannes Müller obviously suggested none of this. The writer said
to himself: the way this man on the platform expresses himself, the
way he looks makes it obvious that what he says has nothing to do with
sacrifice on his part. He speaks as he does because he enjoys it, to
him it is a joke. — This is of course a paradox; what the writer
felt was that a man like the speaker would always do just what he wanted
to do, what would give him pleasure. He would never say so, for if he
did he would have to tell his audience that the purpose of life is to
follow whatever impulse one happens to have, to do whatever one has
an urge to do. In fact he would have to speak like Nietzsche. He does
not for he would always say what is opposite to his actual inclinations.
Nowadays there is often
a longing to say things which are opposite one's inclinations. Let us
be quite clear about what this implies. There is no doubt that just
those who are least inclined to sacrifice themselves for others are
the very people who love to say that the purpose of life is self-sacrifice,
to live solely for others. There is a definite wish to say what is in
absolute contrast to reality. — What is that?
When life is observed with
a sense for reality it is very recognizable that what people like to
speak about are impulses in complete contrast to their own. They deceive
themselves about it of course, but it is a most conspicuous feature
of life today. There is a desire for the sensation of something which
is in contrast to the reality. It must be remembered that there is at
present no great understanding for these matters. There is also the
fact that so many possibilities exist which help to avoid coming face
to face with them. For instance someone hearing Johannes Müller
say that the purpose of life is to sacrifice oneself for others might
tell a lot of people how he has heard a marvelous speaker say something
very illuminating: “The purpose of life is to sacrifice oneself
for others” and announce that henceforth he will live by that
principle according to the way he sees it. Living by such a rule the
way one sees it is of course an easy way to avoid many of the more difficult
demands made by life. At present it is a favorite way of doing just
that; and confirms that for many people, indeed for most it is exciting
to say the very opposite of what they are.
It is basically an expression
of a longing many people have; they are dissatisfied with external life
and want something different. There is a genuine longing to rise above
external life but the longing finds unhealthy expression because people
seek at all cost to avoid recognizing the reality of the spirit. Take
the example of the writer I just mentioned; he will undoubtedly be suited
better by Johannes Muller than by spiritual science — that is
predictable. The reason is simple; Johannes Müller speaks of things
like the purpose of life, of sacrificing oneself for others. This subject
the writer can use for an article which he ends with the words: “What
the great universal purpose of life is we shall never know, nor is it
in the last resort necessary for us to know.”— Thus the
writer manages to appear high-minded and worldly while remaining a thoroughly
ordinary philistine.
This is impossible when
one strives to attain a world view which does not rely on mere phrases
but recognizes the reality of the spiritual world and what is demanded
of the present age. The individual who sets out on this path will develop
a sense for what the spiritual world at this moment wants from him.
He will discover for himself how his development ought to progress and
to what extent his particular destiny requires him to sacrifice himself
for others. There is no need for any phrase to be bandied about; what
is needed is the development of that inner strength which eventually
leads to spiritual insight.
Nothing can be said against
the meaning of a sentence such as: “The purpose of life is to
sacrifice oneself for others,” but it remains a sterile phrase
till one learns to bring spiritual reality into physical reality. That
was the very reason why the Mystery of Golgotha was fulfilled. It entered
evolution so that new life might spring from death. Or in other words,
so that the living spirit might be born from our present death-related
consciousness. In bringing to birth, within our death-related consciousness,
the living spirit, we approach the Mystery of Golgotha. — There
are indications which suggest that people are beginning to recognize
the necessity of listening to what spiritual science has to say. We
live in difficult times, fraught with problems and conflict. Everyone
feels that it is essential to find a way out. However, it is inherent
in the age that a way out can be found only through a real understanding
of the spirit. All other attempts will prove illusory.
The first understanding
of the Mystery of Golgotha came about through direct experience. At
first people could speak of Christ because some had actually seen Him;
later some had known others who had seen Him. There was still an echo
of Christ's own words in those spoken by the first Apostles. Thus mankind's
first experience of Christ was on the physical plane. Through the centuries
this knowledge faded and had vanished altogether by the turn of the
19th and 20th Centuries. That the present situation should arise was
therefore inevitable when there are people — as I described in
the last lecture — who, though they want to be Christians, do
not actually seek Christ. We must realize that we live in a time of
crisis as far as understanding Christ is concerned. We can reach understanding
appropriate to our age in no other way than through an ever-deeper understanding
of spiritual science. Ahrimanic forces battle against this knowledge
just because it is so essential in our time. However, this does not
prevent those who recognize the task of spiritual science from seeing
this task connected with the enormous world-historical events taking
place in our time. The solution to today's great problems can only come
from real knowledge of the present age. And it is not biased propaganda
to say that only through spiritual science can a solution be found.
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