a
page from the
history of the
mysteries.
LECTURE 1.
COUNTLESS numbers of human
beings have felt the Festival of Easter to be something that is
related on one side to the profoundest feelings of the human
soul and on the other to very profound cosmic mysteries. Our
attention is attracted to the connection of this festival with
the mysteries of the universe by the fact that it is what is
called a moveable feast and has to be regulated year by year
according to those constellations of which we propose to speak
more exactly during the next few days. When it is noted how all
through the centuries religious customs and ceremonies having
an intimate connection with humanity have been associated with
the festival of Easter, we realise the very special value that
has gradually come to be placed on it in the course of man's
historical development.
From early Christian centuries — not indeed from the
immediate foundation of Christianity, but from its early
centuries — this has been a festival of the greatest
importance, one associated with the fundamental idea and the
fundamental impulse of Christianity, as revealed to
Christian consciousness in the fact of the resurrection of
Christ.
The
Festival of Easter is the festival of resurrection, but points
to times even before Christianity. It points to festivals
connected with the period of the Spring equinox, which have
certainly had something to do with the fixing of Easter, a
festival that was associated with the re-awakening of Nature
and the reviving life of the earth.
With this we have reached the point where we will at once speak
of “Easter as a page from the History of the
Mysteries,” in so far as the subject is one that can be
dealt with in words. As a Christian festival Easter is a
festival of resurrection. The corresponding heathen festival,
which took place approximately at the same time, was a kind of
resurrection-festival of Nature, a re-awakening of the objects
of Nature, which had slumbered, if I may so express it, during
the winter. Here I must explain that the Christian festival of
Easter is absolutely not a festival that, according to its
inner meaning and nature, is comparable with the heathen
festival held at the time of the Spring equinox; but if we
think of it as a Christian festival, it coincides absolutely
with very ancient heathen festivals that had their source in
the Mysteries and occurred in the Autumn. The strangest thing
regarding the fixing of Easter, which quite obviously,
according to its whole content, is connected with certain
procedures in the Mysteries, is that it directs our attention
to a radical and profound misunderstanding that has come to
pass in the general acceptance of one of the most important
facts concerning our human evolution. This is nothing less than
that the Festival of Easter has been confused, in the course of
the early Christian centuries, with an entirely different
festival, and has on this account been changed from an Autumn
to a Spring festival. This fact indicates something prodigious
in human evolution. But let us consider for a moment the
content of the Easter festival. What is most essential in it?
The most essential thing in it is: that the Being who stands in
the centre of Christian consciousness, Christ Jesus, passed
through death; of this Good Friday reminds us. Christ Jesus
then rested in the grave during the period of three days; this
represents the union of Christ with earthly existence. The time
between Good Friday and Easter Sunday is held by Christians as
a solemn festival of mourning. Then Easter Sunday is the day on
which the central figure for all Christendom rose from the
grave, the day on which this fact is held in remembrance. The
essential content of the Easter festival is: the death,
burial, the repose in the tomb
(Grabes-ruhe),
and resurrection of Christ Jesus.
Let
us now consider some of the features of the corresponding
ancient heathen festival. Only by doing this can we arrive at
an inner comprehension of the connection between the
Festival of Easter and the living content of the Mysteries
(Mysterien-wesen).
In many places, among many people we find
ancient heathen festivals which in outward form and ceremonial
resemble absolutely the main features of those of the Christian
Easter. From among numerous ancient feasts let us take that of
Adonis. This was met with among certain peoples, and over long
periods of the past, in Asia-Minor. A statue provided its
central point. This statue represented Adonis the spiritual
prototype of all youthful growing forces, all the beauty of
man.
It
is true that ancient peoples have in many respects confused the
image with what it represented. In this way these old religions
have frequently acquired a fetishlike character. Many
people saw in the statue the actual god of beauty — the
youthful forces of man, the evolving germinal powers revealing
in splendid life all that was glorious in existence, all that
man possessed or could possess of inner worth and inner
greatness.
With mournful singing and ceremonies expressive of the
profoundest human grief and woe the divine image was on this
day (if the sea happened to be near) sunk beneath the waves,
where it remained for three days; otherwise an artificial tank
was constructed so that it could be lowered into it. During
these three days profound quiet and sorrow lay upon the
whole community of those who followed this religion. When the
three days were over the image was raised again from the water.
The earlier songs of sorrow were turned into songs of joy, into
hymns about the risen god, the god who had come back to
life.
This was an outward ceremony, one that deeply stirred the
hearts of wide circles of people. It recalled, by means of an
outward act, what happened to every one attaining to initiation
in the Holy Mysteries. Every man attaining initiation in these
ancient times was conducted into a special chamber. The
walls were black; the whole room, in which was nothing but a
coffin, was dark and gloomy. The aspirant for initiation was
then laid in the coffin by those who had conducted him there
with solemn dirges, and was treated as one about to die. He was
made to realise that, now he was placed in the coffin, he had
to pass through what a man experiences when going through the
gates of death, and during the three days following. The
arrangements were carried out in such a way that he who was in
the act of being initiated reached full inner comprehension of
what a man experiences in the first three days after death.
On
the third day there rose in a particular place before the eyes
of him who lay in the coffin a budding branch representing
springing life. The former songs of woe turned into hymns of
joy. The neophyte, who had experienced all this, now rose
from the grave with a changed consciousness. A new language had
been imparted to him and a new writing: the language and the
writing of the spirit.
If
what took place in the depths of the Mysteries to those about
to experience initiation were to be compared with the religious
ceremony performed outside, this would have to be done in a
figurative way, though similar in form, to that which was
experienced by carefully selected individuals in the Mysteries.
And the ceremony — take that of the cult of Adonis, for
instance — was explained to those participating in it in
an appropriate way. It was a religious act that took place in
the Autumn, and those who took part in it were instructed as
follows: Behold it is Autumn; the earth now loses its green
plants, all its leafy covering. Everything withers. Instead of
the fresh, green, sprouting life which arose to deck the earth
in Spring, all is now bleak and bare, or perhaps covered with
snow. Nature is dying. But when all around you dies, you must
experience that which in man resembles to some degree the death
you see in surrounding Nature. Man also dies, Autumn comes to
him also. When life draws to an end it is well that the human
heart and soul of those who survive should be filled with
deepest sorrow. And in order that the full seriousness of the
passage through the gates of death should rise before your
souls, that you not only experience death when it comes but
that you are reminded of it again and again each year, for this
reason you are shown every Autumn how that Divine Being who
represents the beauty, youth, and greatness of man dies, how he
goes the way of all natural things. But just at the moment when
Nature is most desolate and dreary, when death is near, you
have to remember something else. You have to remember
that though man passes through the gates of death, though here
in earthly existence he only experiences things of a nature
similar to that which perishes in Autumn, that so long as he
lives on earth he only experiences temporal things, when once
he is withdrawn from earth his life will continue on into the
wide spaces of universal ether. There he sees himself
grow ever larger and larger — he becomes one with the
whole world. During the three days his life expands to the
confines of the universe. While here, earthly eyes are directed
to the image of death, to that which is mortal and perishable;
out there, after three days, the immortal soul awakens. About
three days after death it rises again; it is born anew in the
land of the spirit.
All
this was brought about in the depths of the Mysteries through
an impressive inner transformation of the body of the neophyte
who had presented himself for initiation. The notable
impression, the tremendous forward push that human life
received in this ancient form of initiation, was the awakening
of the inner soul-forces, the waking of sight. This
brought to him the knowledge that henceforth he lives not
merely in the world of the senses but in the world of the
spirit.
The
teaching that from this time onwards was given on suitable
occasions to the pupils of the Mysteries I can describe
somewhat as follows: — They were told: what takes place
in the Mysteries is a picture of what takes place in the
spiritual world, and what takes place in the cosmos is a model
for that which takes place in the Mysteries. What everyone who
was admitted to the Mysteries had to realise was: the mysteries
veil in earthly acts performed by men, what is experienced by
them in other states of existence, and in the wide
astro-spiritual spaces of the cosmos.
Those who in olden times were not admitted to the Mysteries,
who on account of the degree of ripeness they had acquired in
life were not fitted to receive direct vision of the spiritual
world, had communicated to them in the ceremonies carried on in
the Mysteries — that is in pictures — what was
suited to them. So the purpose of the Mystery-Festival, which
we have come to know as the one corresponding to the festival
of Adonis, was for the purpose of arousing in the consciousness
of men, or at least for placing before their eyes in pictures,
the certainty that at the time of autumnal decay, when death
overtakes everything in Nature, it also overwhelms Adonis, the
representative of all youth and beauty, all the grandeur of the
human soul. The god Adonis dies also. He passes into the water,
into the earthly representative of the cosmic ether. But just
as after three days he rises out of the water, or is taken from
it, so the human soul is raised out of the water of the world;
or in other words, out of the cosmic ether, some three days
after passing through the gates of death. The secret of
death is what these Ancient Mysteries sought to reveal,
aided by the appropriate Autumn festival. It was clearly
demonstrated and made obvious through the fact that the first
half — the one side of the religious ceremony —
accorded with dying Nature, but the other half with its
opposite, with what is most essential to man's own existence.
It was intended that man should look upon dying Nature so as to
realise that, though to outward seeming he dies, according to
inner reality he rises again in the spiritual world. The
meaning of these old heathen festivals that were associated
with the Mysteries was to reveal the truth concerning
death.
In
the course of human evolution a most important thing now took
place, which was, that what the pupil passed through on a
certain plane in regard to the death and resurrection of the
soul when preparing himself for initiation into the Mysteries
was consummated by Christ Jesus down to the physical body
(bis zum Leibe).
For how did the Mystery of Golgotha appear to one
who was an adept in the Mysteries? Such an adept gazed into the
ancient Mysteries. He saw how anyone preparing for initiation
was led according to the state of his soul through death to
resurrection, which meant to the awakening of the higher
consciousness of his soul. The soul dies so that it may rise
again in a higher state of consciousness. What has to be firmly
maintained here is that the body does not die, but that the
soul dies so that it may be awakened to a higher
consciousness.
What the soul of every man experienced who passed through
initiation was experienced by Christ Jesus as far as to the
body; that simply means, it was experienced on a different
plane, for Christ was no earthly man, but a Sun-being within
the body of Jesus of Nazareth, and could experience in every
part of his human nature what the ancient Initiate of the
Mysteries experienced in his soul. Those who still existed as
“Knowers” of the ancient Mysteries, who were
conversant with the ceremony of initiation, were such men as
have even to this day a deep understanding of what happened on
Golgotha. What could such men say of it? They could say:
Through thousands of years men have been brought to the secrets
of the spiritual world through the death and resurrection of
their souls. The soul was separated from the body during the
ceremony of initiation. Through death it was led to everlasting
life. What was experienced there by a few exceptional men has
been experienced in the body by a Being who came down from the
Sun at the baptism in Jordan and entered into the body of Jesus
of Nazareth. That which for long thousands of years had been an
ever-recurring procedure of the Mysteries had now become an
historic fact. The most essential fact for men to know was
this: that because the Being who entered into the body of Jesus
of Nazareth was a Sun-being, that which could only take place
as regards the souls, and in the soul-experiences of those
presenting themselves for initiation, could now take place as
far as bodily existence. In spite of the death of the body, in
spite of the dissolving of the body of Jesus of Nazareth in the
mortal earth, a resurrection of Christ could take place,
because the Christ rose higher than the souls of those seeking
initiation. Such men could not take their bodies into the deep
regions of sub-material existence
(tiefe Regionen des Untersinnlichen)
as Christ Jesus did; and for this reason
they could not rise so high at resurrection as the Christ did;
to make the infinite difference of this apparent, the ancient
ceremony of initiation was enacted as an historic fact
for all the world to see on the place of consecration —
on Golgotha.
In
the early Christian centuries only a few people were aware that
a Sun-Being — a Cosmic Being — had lived in Jesus
of Nazareth, and that the earth had thereby been fructified
(befruchtet);
that a Being had actually descended to earth from
the sun — a Being such as until then it had been possible
to see only in the sun from the earth, through methods employed
in the centres of initiation. The most essential fact regarding
Christianity as accepted by those who had a real knowledge of
the ancient mysteries was expressed as follows: The Christ to
whom we could rise through initiation, the Christ we could find
when we rose to the Sun in the ancient Mysteries, has descended
into a mortal body, the body of Jesus of Nazareth. He has come
down to earth. At first it was more what might be described as
a holy attitude of mind — a solemn feeling of reverence,
experienced in mind and soul, that made some understanding of
the Mystery of Golgotha possible at the time. What formed the
living content of human consciousness at that time gradually
became, through events we shall learn of later, a festival of
remembrance recalling the historical event of Golgotha.
As
this memory developed, people lost the consciousness,
more and more, of Christ as a Sun-Being.
Adepts in the wisdom of the Mysteries could not be in any
uncertainty as to the nature of Christ. They knew well that
true Initiates, those who had been initiated and had therefore
become free from their physical bodies and had experienced
death in their souls, rose as far as the Sun-sphere, and that
there they found the Christ, that from Him, the Christ in the
Sun, their souls received the impulse to resurrection; they
knew who the Christ was, because they had raised themselves up
to Him. These ancient Initiates, who understood what took place
during initiation, knew from what took place on Golgotha that
the same Being who formerly had to be sought in the Sun had now
come down to men on earth. How did they know this? Because the
proceedings in the Mysteries, undergone by the neophyte that he
might rise to Christ in the sun, could no longer be carried out
in the same way as before, for the simple reason that human
nature had in the course of time become different. The ancient
ceremony of initiation had become impossible because of the way
in which the being of man had evolved. The Christ could no
longer be sought in the Sun according to the methods of ancient
initiation. He therefore came down to earth, there to
accomplish a deed through which men might now find Him. That
which is contained in this Mystery
(Geheimnis)
belongs to the most sacred things that can be spoken of on earth.
For
how actually did the Mystery of Golgotha appear to men living
in the centuries immediately following it? In ancient places of
initiation men looked up towards existence on the Sun
(Sonnendasein)
and became aware, through initiation, of the
Christ in the Sun. They looked out into space in order to draw
near to Christ.
If
I represent diagrammatically how evolution progresses in
the ensuing years, I must represent it in time; that means I
must represent the earth — in one year, in another, in a
third year, as progressing in time. Spatially, the earth is
always there, but the passage of time must be represented thus.
(A diagram was shown).
The
Mystery of Golgotha then took place. Let us suppose that a man
who lived in the 8th century, instead of looking out from the
Mysteries to the Sun in order to find Christ, looked to the
turning-point of time at the beginning of the Christian era,
looked to the time after the Mystery of Golgotha, he was then
able to see the Christ in an earthly happening — in the
Mystery of Golgotha. What had previously been perceived
spatially had now, because of the Mystery of Golgotha,
to be seen in time.
(Sollte nun zeitliche Anschauung werden.)
This was the fact of greatest importance.
It
is especially when our souls are affected by all the things
which took place in the Mysteries, and which were an image of
the death of man, and the resurrection that followed, and when
added to these we consider the form of the religious procedure,
more especially at the festival of Adonis (which was again an
image of what took place in the Mysteries), that we realise how
these three things, united and raised to their highest aspect,
were concentrated within the historic deed on Golgotha.
There now was seen on the outward plane of history what
formerly had been enacted in deep inwardness in the sacred
precincts of the Mysteries; what formerly had only been for
Initiates was now there for all mankind to see. No longer was
an image required that had to be sunk symbolically in the sea
and raised from it again. Instead, men were to have the memory
of what had actually happened on Golgotha. Instead of the
outward symbol connected with an event that was experienced in
space, inward, intangible, formless thoughts were to arise
— thoughts that lived only in the soul, thoughts of the
historical deed done on Golgotha.
In
the centuries that followed we now become aware of an
extraordinary development in humanity. The penetration of
mankind into what was spiritual declined more and more. The
spiritual content of the Mystery of Golgotha could no longer
find a place in the souls of men. Evolution tended towards the
training of a materialistic intelligence. Men lost the inward
emotional understanding of such things as, for instance, that
where the transitory quality of external Nature is revealed
— at the moment when the life of Nature is seen to be
most desolate and as if dying — is exactly the moment
when the vitality of the spirit becomes most apparent. Mankind
also lost understanding of the external festivals of the
year: understanding that the coming of Autumn, bringing
as it does death to the outward things of Nature, is the time
when it is most easy to realize that the death of all these
things is connected with the resurrection of what is
spiritual.
Along with this, Autumn lost the possibility of being the
season of resurrection; it lost the possibility of directing
the mind, by way of the fleeting things of Nature, to the
everlasting quality of the spirit. Man has need of the support
of substance. He needs the support of that which does not die
in Nature but springs again, the germinating power of
seeds which fall to the ground in Autumn but rise again. Man
accepts substance as a symbol of what is spiritual, because he
is no longer capable of being stirred by substance to perceive
spirit in its reality. Autumn has no longer power to
demonstrate the immortality of spiritual things, as
compared to the mortality of natural things, through the inner
force of the human soul. Man has need of the support of Nature,
of external resurrection. He likes to see how plants spring
from the earth, how the strength of the sun increases, and the
coming of light and warmth; he needs the resurrection of Nature
in order to cultivate thoughts of resurrection.
But
with this the direct connection linking it with the festival of
Adonis disappears, as also that which can link it with the
Mystery of Golgotha. That inner experience that comes to every
one at earthly death loses power when the soul knows: man
passes through earthly death, and during the three days that
follow undergoes certain experiences of a very solemn nature;
but later the soul is filled with inner joy and happiness,
because it knows that after these three days it rises from
death to spiritual immortality.
The
power contained in the festival of Adonis was lost. Humanity
was so organised at one time that this power could be developed
with the greatest intensity. When looking on the death of the
god, men saw the death of all that was beautiful in humanity,
the death of all its splendour and youthful powers. With great
sadness the god was laid beneath the waves on a day of mourning
— Good Friday
(Char-Freitag, Day of Mourning).
People felt the deep solemnity of this, because it was intended to
evoke in them realization of the frailty of all natural things.
But it was intended that this feeling regarding the mortality
of natural things should then be changed into a feeling
concerning the super-sensible resurrection of the human soul
after three days. As the god, or rather the likeness of the
god, was raised from the water, the well-instructed believer
saw in this image the representative of the human soul a few
days after death. Behold! they said to him, what happens in
spirit to those who die. What happens is brought before your
soul in the likeness of the risen god — the god of beauty
and of youthful vigour.
This outlook, which was bound up so deeply with the destiny of
humanity, was brought directly before the human spirit every
Autumn. It would not have been thought possible at that time to
associate this with external Nature. What could be experienced
in spirit was represented symbolically in ceremonial
acts. But the image of a former time had to be effaced,
it had to emerge again as memory — as formless, inward,
soul-felt memory of the Mystery of Golgotha, which represented
the same thing; at first men had not the power to carry out
this change, because the spirit had passed into the
subconscious part of human souls
(in die Untergründe der Seele des Menschen
ging).
So things remained until our day; men
had need of the support of external nature. But external nature
provides no image — no complete image of the destiny of
man after death. Thoughts about death persisted. Thoughts about
resurrection faded more and more. Even if people spoke of
resurrection as part of their belief it was not a vital fact in
the lives of the men of later times. But it must become so once
more; it must become so, because the Anthroposophical outlook
stirs men's minds to true thoughts concerning resurrection.
If
on one side it is said, at the appropriate season, thoughts on
Michael are precious to the soul of the Anthroposophist as
bringing thoughts of annunciation, if thoughts concerning
Christmas give depth to his soul, those on Easter must be
specially thoughts of joy. For Anthroposophy must add to the
thought of death the thought of resurrection. She must herself
become like a festival of resurrection within the souls of men,
bringing an Easter spirit into their whole outlook on life.
This Anthroposophy will do, when people have realised how the
old thoughts of the Mysteries can live on in rightly conceived
thoughts of Easter; when they have acquired a right
understanding of the body, soul, and spirit of man, and of the
destiny of these in the physical, psychic, and spiritual
heavenly worlds.
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