Esoteric Studies: Easter as a Chapter in the Mystery Wisdom of Man
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ASTER
is felt by many people
to be associated on the one hand with the deepest feelings and
sensibilities of the human soul, but on the other, with cosmic
mysteries and enigmas as well. Our attention is drawn to this
connection with world riddles by the fact that Easter is a so-called
moveable feast, fixed each year by computing the position of a
constellation of which we will have more to say in the following
lectures. Yet if we trace the festival customs and cult rites that
have become associated with the Easter Festival through the centuries
— rituals having a deep meaning for a large part of mankind
— we cannot fail to observe the profound significance with
which humanity has endowed this Easter Festival in the course of its
historical development.
Easter became an important Christian festival — not
coincident with the founding of Christianity, but during the first
centuries; a Christian festival linked with the fundamental idea, the
basic impulse, of Christianity: the impulse to be a Christian,
provided by the Resurrection of Christ.
Easter is the
Festival of the Resurrection; yet it points back to periods
antedating Christianity, to festivals connected with the spring
equinox that plays a part in determining the date of Easter, to
festivals bearing on the re-awakening of Nature, on the life
burgeoning from the earth. And this leads us directly to the heart of
our subject.
As a Christian
festival, Easter commemorates a resurrection. The corresponding pagan
festival that occurred at about the same season was, in a sense, the
celebration of the resurrection of Nature, of the re-awakening of
what, as Nature, had been asleep throughout the winter time. But here
we must emphasize the fact that with regard to its inner meaning and
essence the Christian Easter in no sense corresponds to the pagan
equinox festivals. On the contrary: comparing it with those of
ancient pagan times, Easter, as a Christian festival, would
correspond to old festivals that grew out of the Mysteries; and these
were celebrated in the autumn. And the most interesting feature
connected with determining the date of Easter, which is quite
obviously related to certain old Mystery customs, is this: we are
reminded precisely by this Easter Festival of the radical,
far-reaching misapprehensions that have crept into the philosophic
conceptions of the most vital problems during the course of human
evolution. Nothing less occurred, in the early Christian centuries,
than the confusion of the Easter Festival with quite a different one,
with the result that it was changed from an autumn festival to a
spring festival.
This points to something of enormous importance in human
evolution. Let us examine the substance of the Easter Festival
— what is its essence? It is this: the central figure in
Christian consciousness, Christ Jesus, experiences death, as
commemorated by Good Friday. He remains in the grave for the period
of three days, this representing His coalescence with earthly
existence. This period between Good Friday and Easter Sunday is
celebrated in Christendom as a festival of mourning. Finally, Easter
Sunday is the day on which the central being of Christianity arises
from the grave. It is the memorial day of this event. That is the
essential substance of Easter: the death, the interval in the grave,
and the Resurrection of Christ Jesus.
Now let us turn to the corresponding old pagan festival in one of
its many forms; for only by so doing can we grasp the connection
between the Easter Festival and the Mysteries. Among many
people of diverse localities we find ancient pagan festivals
whose outer form — the nature of the rites — strongly
resembles the form of what is comprised in the Christian
Easter.
From among the
manifold ancient festivals let us choose that of Adonis for
examination. This was celebrated by certain peoples of the Near East
for a long period of time during pre-Christian Antiquity. An effigy
constituted the center of interest. It portrayed Adonis, the
spiritual representative of all that appears in the human being as
vigorous youth and beauty.
Now, the ancients
undoubtedly confused, in some respects, the substance of an effigy
with what it represented, hence the old religions frequently
bore the character of idolatry. Many took the effigy of Adonis for
the actually present god of beauty, of man's youthful strength, of
the germinating force becoming outwardly manifest and revealing in
living splendor all the inner worth, the inner dignity, the inner
grandeur of which man is or might be possessed.
To the
accompaniment of songs and of rites representing the deepest human
grief and sorrow, this effigy of the god was immersed in the
sea where it remained for three days. When the locality was not near
the sea, a lake served the purpose; and lacking this as well,
an artificial pond was dug in the vicinity of the sanctuary. During
the three days of immersion a deep and serious silence enveloped the
whole community that confessed this cult, that called it its own. At
the end of the three days the effigy was brought out of the water,
and the previous laments were changed into paeans of joy, into hymns
to the resurrected god, the god come to life again.
That was an
external ceremony, one that stirred the souls of a great multitude of
people: through an outer act, an outer rite, it suggested what was
enacted in the sanctuaries of the Mysteries in the case of every man
aspiring to initiation. In these olden times every such candidate was
conducted into a special chamber. The walls were black and the whole
room, which contained nothing but a coffin or, at least, a
coffin-like case, was dark and somber. Beside this coffin laments and
songs of death were sung: the neophite was treated as one about to
die. It was made clear to him that by being laid in the coffin he was
to go through what a man experiences in passing through the
portal of death and in the three days following this event. The
procedure was such that he became fully aware of
this.
On the third day
there appeared, at a certain point visible for him who lay in the
coffin, a branch, denoting sprouting life. In place of the laments,
hymns of rejoicing were sung. The initiate arose from his grave with
transformed consciousness. A new language had been imparted to him, a
new script: the language and script of the spirits. Now he might see,
and he was able to see the world from the viewpoint of the
spirit.
Comparing this initiation that took place in the sanctuaries of
the Mysteries with the rites performed publicly, we see that while
the substance of the rites was symbolical, its whole form
nevertheless resembled the procedure followed in the Mysteries.
And in due time the cult — we may take that of Adonis as
typical — was explained to those who had participated. It
was celebrated in the autumn, and those who took part were instructed
approximately as follows:
Behold, it is
autumn. The Earth sheds its glory of flowers and leaves. All things
wither. In place of the greening, burgeoning life that in the spring
time began to cover the earth, snow will envelop it, or drought will
bring desolation. But while everything around you dies, you shall
experience that which in man partly resembles the dying in Nature.
Man, too, dies: he has his autumn. When he reaches the end of his
life it is fitting that the souls of his dear ones be filled with
deep sorrow. But it is not enough that you should meet death only
when it comes to you: its whole import must be grasped in its
profound significance, and you must be able to recall it to your
memory again and again. Therefore you are shown every year the death
of that divine being who stands for beauty and youth and the grandeur
of man: you are shown this divine being going the way of all Nature.
But when Nature becomes barren and passes into death, that is the
time you must remember something else. You must remember that
man passes through the portal of death; that in this Earth existence
he has known only what is transitory, like all that passes in the
autumn, but that now he is drawn away from the Earth and finds his
way into the vast cosmic ether. During three days he sees himself
expand till his being contains the whole world. And then, while
here the eye of the body is directed to the image of death, to the
ephemeral, to what dies, yonder in the spirit there awakens after
three days the immortal human soul. It arises in order to be born for
the spirit land three days after death.
An intense inner transformation was brought about in the body of
the candidate in the recesses of the Mysteries; and the profound
impression, the terrific shock inflicted on the human life by this
old method of initiation awakened inner soul forces, gave rise to
vision.
[We shall see presently why in our time initiation cannot
be accomplished by this method, but must proceed quite differently.]
That impression, that shock, brought the initiate to understand that
henceforth he lived not merely in the sense world but in the
spiritual world as well.
Other information imparted to the neophytes of the old Mysteries
may be summed up thus: the Mystery ritual is an image of events in
the spiritual world; what occurs in the cosmos is a likeness of what
takes place in the Mysteries. No doubt was left in the mind of anyone
admitted to the Mysteries that the procedure followed in these and
enacted in man constituted images of what he experiences in
forms of existence other than the Earth in the astral-spiritual
cosmos.
Those who, owing
to insufficient inner maturity, could not be deemed ready to have the
spiritual world opened up to them directly were taught the
corresponding truths in the cult; that is, in a semblance of the
Mystery proceedings.
Thus the purpose of the Mystery festival corresponding to Easter
— the one we have illustrated by the Adonis Festival —
was as follows: during the autumnal withering and desolation
in
Nature, the drastic autumnal representation of the transience of
earthly things — autumn's picture of dying and death —
the certainty was to be conveyed to the neophyte — or at least
the idea — that death, which envelops all Nature in the fall,
overtakes man as well; and it comes even to the representative of
beauty, youth and the glory of the human soul, to the god Adonis. He
also dies. He dissolves in the earthly counterpart of the
cosmic ether, that is, in water. But just as he arises out of the
water, as he can be lifted out of it, so the soul of man is brought
back, after about three days, from the world-waters — that is,
from the cosmic ether — after having passed through the
portal of death here on Earth.
The mystery of
death itself, that is what the autumn festivals were intended to
present in these old Mysteries; and it was to be made readily
intelligible by having the ritual coincide, on the one hand and in
its first half, with dying, with the death of Nature; and on the
other, with the opposite of this: with what represented the essence
of man's being. It was intended that the initiate should
contemplate the dying of Nature in order to become aware of how
he, too, apparently dies, but how his inner being rises again, to
take part in the spiritual world. To reveal the truth concerning
death, that was the purpose of this old pagan festival deriving from
the Mysteries.
Now, during the course of human evolution a most significant
event took place: in the case of Christ Jesus, the transformation
experienced at a certain level by the candidate for initiation in the
Mysteries — the death and resurrection of the soul —
embraced the physical body as well. In what light does one familiar
with the Mysteries see the Mystery of Golgotha? He envisions the
ancient Mysteries; he observes how the soul of the candidate was
guided through death to resurrection, meaning the awakening of a
higher form of consciousness in the soul. The soul died in order to
awake on a higher plane of consciousness. What must here be kept in
mind is that the body did not die, and that the soul died in order to
be reawakened to an enlightened
consciousness.
What every
aspirant for initiation experienced in his soul only, Christ Jesus
passed through in His bodily principle; in other words, on a
different level. Because Christ was not an Earth-man but a Sun-being
in the body of Jesus of Nazareth, it was possible for all the human
principles of this Being to undergo on Golgotha what the former
initiate experienced only in his soul.
Those with
intimate knowledge of the old Mystery initiation, whether living at
that time or in our own day, have best understood what took
place on Golgotha; for what they have known is that for thousands of
years the secrets of the spiritual world have been revealed to men
through the death and resurrection of their soul. During the process
of initiation, body and soul had been kept apart, and the soul was
led through death to eternal life. What was experienced in this
manner by a number of the elect penetrated even into the physical
body of a Being Who descended from the Sun at the time of the Baptism
in the Jordan, and took possession of the body of Jesus of Nazareth.
Initiation, enacted through many centuries, had become a
historical fact.
The important part of that knowledge was this: because it was a
Sun-being that took possession of the body of Jesus of Nazareth, that
which in the old neophyte had to do only with the soul and its
experiences could now penetrate to the bodily life. In spite of the
death of the body, in spite of the dissolution of His body in the
mortal Earth, the resurrection of the Christ could be brought about
because this Christ ascends higher than was possible for the soul of
a neophyte. The neophyte could not sink the body into such profoundly
sub-sensible regions as did Christ Jesus. For this reason the former
could not rise to such heights in his resurrection as could Christ.
But up to this point of difference, which is one of cosmic magnitude,
the ancient enactment of initiation appeared as a historical fact on
the hallowed hill of Golgotha.
In the first centuries of Christianity very few men knew that a
Sun-being, a cosmic being, had lived in Jesus of Nazareth, and that
the Earth had been fructified by the actual coming of a being that
previously could be seen from the Earth only in the Sun — by
means of initiation methods. And for those who accepted
Christianity with genuine knowledge of the old Mysteries, its
very essence consisted in their conviction that Christ, to Whom
they had raised themselves through initiation — the Christ Who
could be reached through the old Mysteries by ascending to the Sun
— that He had descended into a mortal body, the body of Jesus
of Nazareth. He had come down to
Earth.
At the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, a mood of rejoicing, of
holy elation, filled the souls of those who understood something of
it. What then was a living substance of consciousness gradually
became a festival in memory of the historical event on Golgotha
— through developments to be described
later.
But while this
memory was gradually taking shape, the awareness of the
identity of Christ as a Sun-being disappeared more and more. Those
familiar with the old Mysteries could not be in doubt: they knew that
the genuine initiates, by being made independent of the physical
body, experienced death in their soul, ascended to the Sun sphere and
there found the Christ; that from Him, the Christ in the Sun, they
received the impulse for the resurrection of the soul. They knew who
Christ was because they had raised themselves up to Him. From what
took place on Golgotha these initiates knew that the Being who had
formerly to be sought in the Sun had descended to men on
Earth.
Why? Because the
old process of initiation, enacted to enable the neophyte to reach
Christ in the Sun, could no longer be enacted: the nature of man
simply had changed in the course of time. The ancient ritual of
initiation had become impossible by reason of the manner in which the
human being had evolved. Christ could no longer have been found in
the Sun by the old methods, so He descended in order to enact
on the Earth a deed to which men could look.
What is comprised
in this secret is as supremely sacred as anything that can be
revealed upon Earth.
How did the matter appear to those living in the centuries
immediately following the Mystery of Golgotha? A diagram would
have to be drawn somewhat like this:
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
In the old abodes of initiation the neophyte gazed up to the Sun
existence, and through initiation he became aware of Christ. To find
the Christ he looked out into space. In order to show the
subsequent development I must represent time — that is,
the Earth proceeding in time. Spatially the Earth is, of course,
always there, but we will represent the course of time in this way.
The Mystery of Golgotha has taken place. Now, a man, say of the 8th
Century, instead of seeking Christ in the Sun from the Mystery
temple, looks upon the turning point of time at the beginning of the
Christian era, looks in time toward the Mystery of Golgotha
(arrow in diagram), and can find Christ in an Earth deed, in an Earth
event, within the Mystery of Golgotha. What had been spatial
perception was henceforth, through the Mystery of Golgotha, to be
temporal perception: that was the significant feature of what had
occurred.
Eut if we reflect upon the Mystery ritual, remembering that it
was a picture of man's death and resurrection; and if we consider in
addition the form taken by the cult — the Festival of Adonis,
for example — which in turn was a picture of the Mystery
procedure, this threefold phenomenon appears to us raised to the
ultimate degree, unified and concentrated in the historical deed on
Golgotha.
What was enacted in a profoundly inner way in the sanctuary now
appears openly in external history. All men now have access to what
was previously available only for the initiates. There was no further
need of an image immersed in the sea and symbolically resurrected. In
its place was to come the thought, the memory, of what actually took
place on Golgotha. The outer symbol, referring to a process
experienced in space, was to be supplanted by the inner thought,
unaided by any sense image — the memory, experienced only in
the soul, of the historical deed on
Golgotha.
Then, in the following centuries, the evolution of humanity took
a peculiar turn: men are less and less able to penetrate into
spirituality; the spiritual substance of the Mystery of
Golgotha can gain no foothold in the souls of men; evolution tends
toward the development of a materialistic mentality. Lost is
the heart's understanding of facts like the following: that
precisely where Nature presents herself as ephemeral, as dying
desolation, there the living spirit can best be envisioned. And lost
as well is the feeling for the festival as such, the feeling that
autumn is the time when the resurrection of all spirit
contrasts most markedly with the death of Earth
Nature.
And thus autumn can no longer be the time for the festival of
resurrection; no longer can it emphasize the eternal permanence of
the spirit by the impermanence of Nature. Man begins to depend upon
matter, upon those elements of Nature that do not die — the
force of the seed that is sunk in the ground in the fall and that
germinates and sprouts in the spring resurrection. A material symbol
for the spiritual is adopted because men are no longer able to
respond through the material to the spiritual as such. Autumn no
longer has the power to reveal, through the inner force of the human
soul, the permanence of the spiritual by contrasting it with the
impermanence of Nature. The imagination now needs the aid of outer
Nature, outer resurrection. Men want to see the plants sprouting from
the ground, the Sun gaining power, light and warmth increasing.
Nature's resurrection is needed to celebrate the resurrection
idea.
But this exigency also means the disappearance of the direct
relationship that existed with the Festival of Adonis, and that can
exist with the Mystery of Golgotha. A loss of intensity is suffered
by that inner experience which can appear at physical death if the
human soul knows that man passes physically through the portal of
death and undergoes, for three days, what indeed can evoke a somber
frame of mind; but then the soul must rejoice in a festive mood,
knowing that precisely out of death — after three days —
the human soul arises in spiritual
immortality.
The force inherent
in the Festival of Adonis was lost, and the next event ordained for
mankind was the resurrection of this force in greater intensity. One
beheld the death of the god, of all the beauty and grandeur and
vigorous youth in mankind. On the Day of Mourning this god was
immersed in the sea. A somber mood prevailed, because first a feeling
for the ephemeral in Nature was to be aroused.
But the intention was to transform the mood induced by the
impermanence of Nature into that evoked by the super-sensible
resurrection of the human soul after three days. When the god —
or his effigy — was raised up out of the water, the rightly
instructed believer saw in this act the image of the human soul a few
days after death: Behold! The spiritual experience of the deceased
stands before thy soul in the image of the arisen god of beauty and
youth.
Every year in the fall something that is indissolubly linked with
human destiny was awakened within the spirit of men. At that time it
would have been deemed impossible to connect all this in any way with
outer Nature. All that could be experienced in the spirit was
represented in the ritual, in symbolical enactment. But when the time
was ripe for effacing the old-time image and having memory take its
place — imageless, inner memory of the Mystery of
Golgotha experienced in the soul — mankind at first
lacked the power to achieve this, because the activity of the spirit
lay deep down in the substrata of the human soul. So up to our own
time there has remained the necessity for calling in the aid of outer
Nature. But outer Nature provides no complete allegory of the destiny
of man in death; and while the idea of death survived, the idea of
resurrection has faded more and more. Even though resurrection
figures as a tenet of faith, it is not a living fact for people of
more recent times. But it must once more become so; and the awakening
of men's feeling for the true idea of the resurrection must be
brought about by anthroposophy.
If, therefore, as has been explained elsewhere, the
anthroposophically imbued soul must sense the heralding thought of
Michael, must intensify the idea of Christmas, so the idea of Easter
must become especially festive; for to the idea of death
anthroposophy must add the idea of resurrection. Anthroposophy itself
must come to resemble an inner festival of the resurrection of the
human soul. It must infuse into our philosophy a feeling for Easter,
a frame of mind appropriate to Easter. This it can do if men will
understand that the ancient Mysteries can live on in the true Easter
Mystery, provided the body, the soul and the spirit of man —
and the destiny of these in the realms of body, soul and spirit
— are rightly understood.
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