Today I would like to address myself to a subject specifically
requested by our friends here, a subject having great significance for
modern spiritual life. It shall be considered from the standpoint I
have often taken when speaking of things of the spirit. As a rule, it
is difficult to speak of such a unique and deeply significant subject
unless it be assumed that the audience keep in mind various things
explained in other lectures given on the foundations of spiritual
science. This science is neither widely recognized nor popular; in
fact, it is a most unpopular and much misunderstood spiritual stream
of our day. Misunderstandings can easily arise especially with a
subject like the one chosen today, because the opinion is far too
widespread that anthroposophy might undermine this or that religious
creed, thereby interfering with what someone may hold precious. Anyone
willing to go into anthroposophy in any depth sees that this opinion
is completely false. In one sense, spiritual science aims to develop
further the way of thinking that entered human evolution through
natural science. By strengthening the human soul, it seeks to make
this kind of thinking fruitful. The way spiritual science must proceed
differs significantly, however, from the way taken by natural science.
Anthroposophy takes its start, not from the world perceived by the
external senses, but from the world of the spirit. Questions
pertaining to the spiritual life of the soul must therefore be
considered from the standpoint of spiritual science. Undoubtedly for
many in our time the most important question in the spiritual life of
humanity pertains to the subject of today's lecture, that is, Christ
Jesus.
To ensure that we shall understand each other at least to some extent,
I would like to make a few preliminary observations before moving on
to any specific questions. Spiritual science, though it is the
continuation of natural science, makes entirely different demands on
the human soul. This fact accounts for the misunderstanding and
opposition spiritual science encounters. The kind of thinking derived
from natural science is tied up with a problem that more or less
concerns human souls today when they consider higher aspects of life.
This is the problem of the limits to knowledge. Spiritual science in
no way belittles the most admirable attempt of philosophers to
ascertain the extent of human thought and knowledge. Thinkers who
judge on the basis of what can ordinarily be observed in the soul
easily conclude that human knowledge can go so far and no farther. It
is commonly said, “This fact can be known; that other cannot.”
On this issue spiritual science takes a completely different stand
because it takes into consideration the development of the human soul.
Granted, in ordinary life and science the soul does indeed confront
certain limits of knowledge. The soul, however, may take itself in
hand, transform itself and thereby acquire the possibility of
penetrating into spheres of existence radically unlike those usually
experienced.
Here I can only indicate what in earlier lectures and in such books as
An Outline of Occult Science
and
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
I have already explained, namely, that the soul can
completely change itself. Through practicing certain exercises, the
soul may bring about an infinite enhancement of its inherent forces of
attention and devotion. Ordinarily, the soul-spiritual life uses the
human body like an instrument. Just as hydrogen is bound to oxygen in
water, so is this life closely connected with the body, within which
it works. Now, just as hydrogen may be separated from oxygen and shown
to have completely different qualities from water, so may the soul,
through the exercises described in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
separate itself from the body. By thus turning away from and lifting
itself out of the body, the soul acquires an inner life of its own.
Not by speculation or philosophy but by devoted discipline can the
soul emancipate itself from the body. To live as a soul-spiritual
being, apart from the body is the great experience of the spiritual
investigator. Here I can only indicate things I have elaborated
elsewhere.
Today my task is to show how the spiritual investigator must regard
the Christ Jesus Event. Statements of religious creeds concerning this
event are derived from experiences of the soul in its life within the
body. The statements of the spiritual investigator come from
clairvoyant experiences of the soul as it lives independently of the
body in the spiritual world. In this condition the soul can survey the
whole course of mankind's evolution.
What the spiritual investigator thereby learns of Christ Jesus calls
for a certain way of speaking, because the investigator acquires his
knowledge in immediate spiritual vision while living separated from
his body. Yet he can communicate this knowledge only indirectly by
turning his attention to the things of this world. His description,
however, must convey what he has experienced in spiritual vision.
Thus, what follows in way of explanation of certain processes in man's
external life is not meant to be taken metaphorically. It is intended
rather to express something in which spiritual science must come to an
understanding with natural science. In respect to one point in
particular it is most important to come to terms with present-day
thought.
In natural science it is admitted that a mere descriptive enumeration
of single events in nature is inadequate. It is recognized that the
scientist must proceed from a description of natural phenomena to the
laws invisibly animating them. These laws we perceive when we relate
phenomena with each other, or when we immerse ourselves in them. In
this way they reveal their inner laws. In the treatment of historical
facts, however, this natural scientific method is not easily applied.
Now, as a rule, I am disinclined to speak of personal matters, but in the
following case I can speak of something objective. The title of my book
Christianity as Mystical Fact,
which was first published many
years ago, was not chosen without due reflection. It was selected to
indicate a certain way of observing things. It was not entitled The
Mysticism of Christianity because I did not intend to deal with this
topic, nor was it entitled Christian Mysticism because I did not
intend to write on that theme, the mystical life of the Christian,
either. What I sought to show was that the Christ impulse, the
entrance of Christianity into mankind's development, can be
comprehended only by perceiving how the super-sensible plays into the
development ordinarily described in history. As these facts are
accessible only to spiritual vision, they can be called mystical. They
are mystical while at the same time having occurred on earth.
The origin and development of Christianity can be understood only when
we realize that facts in history arrange themselves as do facts in our
solar system, where the sun has the major role and the other planets
less important parts. This arrangement can be recognized when facts
are seen from a natural scientific standpoint. In the field of
history, however, facts are rarely so viewed. Here, the succession of
facts is easily described, but the fact that the way of contemplating
the historical facts differs from the way of contemplating scientific
facts is lost sight of.
There is a law in natural science whose validity is more or less
acknowledged by all, despite this or that detail of it being open to
dispute. This law, first formulated by
Ernst Haeckel,
has become fundamental
to biology. It states that a living being recapitulates in its
embryonic life, passes through stages of development that resemble
those of the lower animals such as the fishes. This is a law
recognized in science.
Now there is another law, which can be discovered by spiritual vision,
that is of great importance in mankind's development. Because it is
valid only in the sphere of spiritual life it presents a rather
different aspect than the law just mentioned, but it is as true as any
in natural science. It enables us to say what is undoubtedly true,
that humanity has passed through many stages in its development, and
that as it has passed from one epoch to another, from one century to
another, it has taken on various forms. We need only assume that the
epochs known to history were preceded by primeval ones. At this point
we may ask if the life of humanity as a whole can be compared with
anything else. Of course, any comparison concerning mankind's
development must be the outcome of spiritual-scientific observation.
External facts must be used as a language, as a means of
communication, to express what the spiritual investigator perceives.
What he perceives is that mankind's development as a whole may be
compared with the life of a single man.
The experiences of mankind in ancient cultures — in those of Egypt
and China, Persia and India, Greece and Rome — were different from
those of our time. In those ancient epochs man's soul lived in
conditions different from those of today. Just as in the individual
human life the experiences of childhood are not the same as those of
youth or old age, so in these cultures mankind's experiences were not
the same as ours are today. Human development passes through various
forms in the various ages of life.
The following question now arises. What stage in the individual life
of man may be compared with the present epoch of humanity? This
question can be answered only by spiritual science. Anthroposophy
stands upon such a foundation that it can say that when man enters his
life on earth he does not inherit everything from his mother and
father that belongs to his being. We can say that man descends from a
life in the spirit to an existence on earth, and that the spiritual
part of his being follows certain laws whereby it connects itself with
what is inherited from the parents. Further, we can say that the
spiritual part helps in the whole growth and development of the human
body. We see how the soul and spirit takes hold of and works upon
physical substance. The wonderful mystery of man's gradual
development, the emergence of definite traits from indefinite,
capacities from incapacities, all bear witness to the sculpting power
of these spiritual forces. Through spiritual science we are lead to
look back from this present life to former lives on earth. We see that
the way our soul-spiritual being prepares the bodily organization and
the course our destiny takes depend[s] upon what we have elaborated and
gained for ourselves in former lives.
Exact spiritual-scientific investigation shows that during the whole
ascending course of our lives, up to our thirties, the fruits won from
former lives on earth and brought with us from the spiritual world
still exercise an immediate influence upon our physical existence and
destiny. Our soul, being connected with the external world, progresses
as we experience life on earth. From these experiences a soul-spiritual
kernel forms itself within us. Up until our thirtieth to thirty-fifth
years we arrange our lives in accordance with the spiritual forces we
have brought with us from the spiritual world. From the middle of our
lives onward the forces of our soul-spiritual kernel begin to work.
This seed, containing what we have already elaborated, continues to
work within us for the rest of our lives.
Even after a plant has faded away, the forces capable of producing a
new one survive. These forces are like the soul-spiritual forces we
gain for ourselves in the first half of life and that predominate in
the second. When, in this second period of life, our senses weaken,
our hair turns gray and our skin becomes wrinkled, our external life
may be compared with a dying plant. Yet, in this period what we have
prepared since our birth, what we have not brought with us from a
preceding life but have rather elaborated in this life, grows ever
stronger and more powerful. It is the part in us that passes through
the portal of death, that casts off life as something faded. It is
that part in us that passes over into the spiritual world. At an
important moment in our life, when the fresh forces of our youth start
to wane, we begin to cultivate something new on earth, that is, a
soul-spiritual seed that passes through death.
We may now ask ourselves what period in human life can be compared
with the present epoch, considering the whole development of humanity.
Can our present age be compared with the first part of human life,
with the first thirty to thirty-five years, or with the latter part.
Spiritual-scientific observation of the present age reveals that our
existence in the external world can in fact be compared only with the
period of human life lying beyond the thirtieth to thirty-fifth years.
Human development on earth has already passed the middle part of life.
We need only compare the experiences of mankind in our present culture
with experiences undergone in the Egyptian-Babylonian or Greco-Roman
cultures. We need only point to our mighty and admirable technical and
industrial achievements to show that man has now severed himself from
what is directly and instinctively connected with his body.
Men in ancient cultures faced the world as a child does. The child's
life is an ascending one, completely dependent upon the body.
Mankind's life today, in contrast, is mechanical, cut off from the
body. History, science, philosophy and religion all show that mankind
in its evolution has reached a point lying beyond the middle of life.
Modern pedagogy, with its efforts to be established on rational lines,
especially bears out this fact. Modern pedagogy differs markedly from
ancient pedagogy. Children growing up under our artificial education
become severed from the direct impulses of humanity. An earlier
education, one in an epoch lying before mankind's middle life, was
derived from intuition and instinct. Observation of the riddles of
education strongly confirms the fact that humanity has now passed
beyond the point of maturity. We may now ask ourselves what point in
humanity's evolution corresponds to the point in the individual life
of man that lies between the thirtieth and thirty-fifth years.
When the spiritual investigator, objectively observing the evolution
of humanity, turns his gaze on ancient times, he finds a trend that
culminates in the Greco-Roman epoch. He finds that then humanity as a
whole reached that age corresponding to the thirtieth to thirty-fifth
years in the life of an individual man. The individual man may use a
surplus of vital forces in his body to live beyond the descending
point in his life and to cultivate up until his death a soul-spiritual
kernel. In the life of humanity as a whole, however, things take a
different course. When the youthful forces of humanity cease to flow,
as it were, a new impulse is needed for its further development, an
impulse not lying within humanity itself. Even if we know nothing
whatsoever of the Gospels or of tradition, we need only look at
mankind's historical development to discover in the Greco-Roman epoch
the entrance of such an impulse. There, at a certain moment, the
turning point of man's whole earthly development occurred. A
completely new impulse entered the course of man's evolution, when its
youthful forces were on the wane. An examination of the ancient
mysteries will throw more light on this historical fact.
These mysteries, which existed in every culture and which to some
extent have reached our knowledge through literature, were functions
performed at centers that served both as schools and churches. Through
cultic rites intended to transform the everyday life of soul, these
functions enabled men to attain to higher knowledge. These mystery
schools took different forms in different countries, but at all
centers those souls whom the leaders of the schools believed capable
of development received training.
In the mysteries man's soul life was not regarded as it is today. In
this ancient viewpoint, which anthroposophy must renew, the soul was
deemed unfit in its ordinary state to penetrate into those spheres
where its inmost being flows together with the very source of life.
The ancients felt that the human soul had to prepare itself for
knowledge by undergoing a certain moral and esthetic training. They
thought that through this inner training the soul could transform
itself and thereby acquire forces of knowledge surpassing those of
ordinary life. The soul then became capable of perceiving those
mysteries that lie behind external phenomena.
There were basically two kinds of center[s] where pupils were trained to
acquire spiritual wisdom and a vision of life's mysteries. Pupils of
the first kind, under the guidance of the centers' leaders, especially
developed the psychic life. During spiritual vision they could free
themselves from the body. The Egyptian and Greek mysteries offered
this kind of training. The other kind existed in the Persian mysteries
of Asia Minor.
Pupils of these Egyptian and Greek mysteries were trained to turn
their senses away from the external world and thus eventually to enter
the condition man ordinarily falls into unawares when he is overcome
by sleep, when sense impressions cease. The soul of the pupil was led
completely into his inner self, and his inner life was given a
strength and intensity far surpassing that required to receive merely
sense impressions. After pursuing his exercises for a long time, the
pupil reached a certain stage in his inner life when he could say to
himself, “Man learns to know his real being only when he has torn
himself away from his body.” The strange but distinct mood evoked in
the pupil's soul gave rise to an experience he could characterize with
the words, “In everyday life, when I use my body to connect myself
with the world of the senses, I do not really live within my full
human nature. Only when I have a deeper experience of myself within my
own being am I a man in the fullest meaning of the word.” This
experience impressed on him that man can know his spiritual essence by
penetrating into his innermost soul. He thereby could draw near to
God, the primeval source of his being. Within himself he could feel
that point where his soul life united with the divine source of
existence.
It must be added that this type of training resulted in an increase of
egotism, not a decrease. The leaders of the mysteries thus set great
store upon a schooling in human love and unselfishness. They knew that
through the wisdom of the mysteries a pupil could indeed unite with
his god even though he were insufficiently prepared, but they realized
that he could do so only at the price of increased egotism. By
withdrawing from the sense world and entering the spiritual world he
could experience the human self, the human ego, far more strongly than
is usually the case. The men in these mysteries who, by strengthening
their inner lives perceived God, remained useful members of human
society only if they had first passed through a spiritual development
grounded in a sound preparation of the moral life. This, the Dionysian
initiation, led man to experience within himself what lies at the base
of all human nature, that is, Dionysos.
In the other type of initiation, practiced mainly in Asia Minor and
Central Asia, man was led to the secrets of life by an opposite
method. He had to subdue all his inner soul experiences, to free
himself of the cares and troubles, the passions and instincts of his
personal existence. He could then experience the outer course of
nature far more intensely than is normally done. Whereas we normally
experience only winter and summer, the disciples of these initiation
centers had to experience, in a special way, the change from one
season to another. Even as our hands share in the life of our bodies,
so did the disciple have to share in the life of the earth. When the
earth grew cold, when its plant covering began to fade, he had to feel
within his soul its life of sadness and desolation. He had to share in
these experiences as a member of the whole organism of the earth. Too,
he could share in the rising life of spring and of the earth's
awakening at midsummer, when the sun stands at its highest point on
the horizon. He felt those forces of the sun in union with the whole
earth.
In this kind of initiation the disciple's soul was drawn out of his
inner being, whereby he could participate in the events of the cosmos
and raise himself to the soul-spiritual essence permeating the
universe. His experience differed markedly from ordinary contemplation
of nature because he felt he lived within the very soul of the
universe. In not a bad but a good sense, he was beside himself. He
was, though one hesitates to use this word because it has taken on an
unpleasant connotation, in ecstasy. Upon achieving this union with the
cosmos he could say to himself that through living in the universe and
through experiencing its most intimate soul-spiritual forces, he had
come to realize that everywhere the final goal of the cosmos is the
creation of man. Did man not exist, the whole creation could not
fulfill its end, because he was the meaning of the cosmos.
It is one thing to say this; it is quite another to experience it. The
disciples of the mysteries felt this fact because they entered into
the life of the universe with an enhanced selfconsciousness. Indeed,
this proud sense of self was indispensable to their experience of the
cosmos. Whereas egotism resided in man's penetration into his
spiritual being, pride lay in his union with the soul-spiritual
essence of the world. Therefore, those who prepared the disciples for
such an experience took care that they did not completely fall prey to
pride.
In ancient times, all the truths constituting man's knowledge were
acquired through the mysteries on the one or the other path.
Humanity's course of development was then on the ascent. Man was
unfolding fresh forces and lived in the stage of childhood, as it
were. He had to learn through the mysteries how to reach the spiritual
worlds. Ancient civilizations always revealed one of these two sides:
that derived from man's strengthening his inner life, and that derived
from his surveying the whole universe, which enabled him to say that
all this pointed to the human being, to the soul-spiritual part he
bears within him. Such a disciple of the second kind of initiation
could also say when he looked out into the world's spaces, “There, in
the wide reaches of the universe, something lives that must enter into
me if I am to fully know myself as a human being. But when I live on
the earth, unable to look out into the wide world, the spirit cannot
come to me, and I cannot really know myself as man.”
Humanity then entered an epoch in which its youthful forces became
exhausted. The whole human race reached an age corresponding to the
thirtieth to thirty-fifth years in the life of the individual man. In
this epoch the ancient mysteries, which existed to help humanity in
its youth, had lost their meaning. Furthermore, something happened
that is most difficult to understand even now. When man attempted to
rise to the soul-spiritual essence of the cosmos, this essence no
longer drew near him; he could no longer experience the god within
himself.
When the ancient Persian surpassed his ordinary state of
consciousness, he could feel how God descended upon his soul, how his
soul became permeated by the God of the universe. Humanity always had
this possibility so long as it possessed its youthful forces. But in
the Greco-Roman epoch this possibility ended. Then, everything
prescribed in the ancient mysteries to bring inspiration to man became
ineffectual, because humanity was receptive to this inspiration only
in the time of its youth. Something else now arose. What man could no
longer receive because individual human nature had lost the capacity
of receiving it even with the help of the mysteries, now entered into
the whole evolution of humanity. One human being had to come who could
directly unite the two initiation paths.
Purely from the standpoint of spiritual science, apart from all the
Gospels, we now see Christ Jesus entering the evolution of the world.
Let us imagine someone who knows nothing whatsoever of the Gospels,
knows nothing of traditions, but who has entered modern civilization
with a soul permeated by spiritual science. Such a person would have
to say to himself, “There came a time in the evolution of the world
and in the history of humanity when man's receptivity for spiritual
life ceased.” But humanity has preserved its soul-spiritual life. How
can this be? The soul-spiritual essence that man once took into
himself must have entered the evolution of the earth in some other
way, independently of man. A Being must have taken into himself what
the mystery disciples once received through the power of a most highly
developed soul life. In sum, a human being must have appeared who
inwardly possessed what the one mystery path enabled the soul to
experience directly, namely, the spiritual essence of the external
world, the spirit of the universe.
Spiritual science thus regards Christ Jesus as one who inherently
possessed those strengthened powers of soul formerly acquired by
disciples of the one mystery path. With these powers of soul he could
take into himself from the cosmos what the disciples of the other
mystery path had once received. From the standpoint of spiritual
science we can say that what the disciples of the ancient mysteries
once sought through an external connection with the Godhead came to
expression in immediate form and as historical fact in Christ Jesus.
When did this happen? It happened in that age when the forces that
were already exhausted in humanity as a whole were also exhausted in
the life of the individual human being. In his thirtieth year of life
Jesus had reached the age humanity as a whole had then attained. It
was in this year that he received the Christ. Into his fully
developed, inwardly strengthened soul he received the spirit of the
cosmos. At the turning point of human evolution we discover that a man
has taken into his soul the divine-spiritual essence of the universe.
What was striven for in the ancient mysteries has now become an
historical event.
Let us proceed, bearing in mind indications of the Gospels concerning
the life of Christ Jesus from the Baptism in the Jordan to His
Resurrection. Spiritual science enables us to say that in this period
something completely new entered the evolution of humanity. In the
past, man made a real contact with the divine essence only through the
mysteries. What was thus experienced in the mysteries went out into
the world as revelations, to be accepted in faith. In the event we are
now considering, the contact with the spiritual-divine essence of the
cosmos happened in such a way that within the man Jesus, Christ
entered the stream of earthly life for a period of three years. Then,
at the Mystery of Golgotha, a force that formerly lived outside the
earth poured itself out into the world. All the events through which
Christ passed while living in the body of Jesus brought about the
existence of this power in the earthly world, in the earthly part of
the cosmos. Ever since that time this power lives in the same
atmosphere in which our souls live.
We may term one of the two types of initiation sub-earthly and
designate the other, in which man took up the spirit of the cosmos,
super-earthly. In either case, man had to abandon his human essence to
make contact with the divine essence. The Mystery of Golgotha,
however, concerns not only the individual human being but the whole
history of man on earth as well. Through this event humanity received
something completely new. With the Baptism in the river Jordan
something formerly experienced by every disciple of the mysteries
entered a single human being, and from this single human being
something streamed out into the spiritual atmosphere of the earth,
enabling every soul that would do so to live and be immersed in it.
This new impulse entered the earthly sphere through the death and
resurrection of Christ. Ever since the Mystery of Golgotha man lives
in a spiritual environment, an environment that has been Christianized
because it has absorbed the Christ impulse. Ever since the time when
human evolution entered upon its descent, the human soul can revive
itself; it can establish a connection with Christ. Man can grow beyond
the forces of death that he bears within him. The spiritual source of
man's origin can no longer be found on the old path; it must be found
on a new path, by seeking a connection with Christ within the
spiritual atmosphere of the earth.
The Christ Event appears to the spiritual investigator in a special
light. It may be of interest to describe what he can actually
experience after he has so changed his soul that he can perceive the
spiritual world. The spiritual investigator can behold a variety of
spiritual processes and beings, but he sees them in a special way,
depending upon whether or not he has experienced the Christ impulse
during his physical existence. Even today one may be a spiritual
investigator without having made any inner connection with the Christ
impulse. One who has passed through a certain soul development and
attained to spiritual vision may thereby investigate many mysteries of
the world, mysteries lying at the foundation of the universe; yet even
with this vision, it is possible that he still cannot learn anything
of the Christ impulse and of the Being of Christ. If we establish a
connection with Christ while in the physical body, however, before the
attainment of spiritual vision, if this connection is established
through feeling, then this experience of Christ that we have gained
while in the body remains with us like a memory when we enter the
spiritual world. We perceive that even while we lived in the body we
had a connection with the spiritual world.
The Christ impulse thus appears to us as the spiritual essence given
to man at a time when the ancient inheritance no longer existed in
human evolution. What the individual human being experiences after his
thirtieth to thirty-fifth years, the whole of humanity experienced at
the beginning of our era. Humanity, which unlike the individual human
being does not possess a body, would have lost its connection with the
divine-spiritual world had not a superearthly Being, a Being who
descended to the earth from the cosmos, poured out his essence into
the earth's evolution. This act enabled man to restore his connection
with the spiritual world.
I realize that I am presenting things that are even less popular with
the public than are the principles of spiritual science. Today I can
give but a few indications, which in themselves cannot produce any
kind of conviction. In regard to the Christ impulse I can only point
out the direction taken by spiritual science, which seeks to be a
continuation of natural science. The thoughts I have just presented
must gradually enter into human evolution, which they will the more
spiritual science enters into it. Unlike many other things being
advanced today, spiritual science is not easy. It assumes that before
attaining to certain definite experiences the soul must first
transform itself.
In respect to the Christ experience in particular, spiritual science
points out the significant fact that in the ancient mysteries man
could find a connection with the divine essence only by going out of
his own being. To experience the divine essence he had to abandon his
humanity, become something no longer human. After the turning point of
human evolution, however, the wonderful and significant possibility
arose that man no longer needed to go out of himself in the one
direction or the other. Indeed, man lacked the strength to do so. Nor
could he in his youth anticipate a time when this would be possible
since humanity had already reached a definite age.
The Mystery of Golgotha enabled man to transcend his ordinary human
essence while still retaining his humanity. He could now find Christ
by remaining man, not by increasing his egotism or pride. It now
became possible for man to find Christ by deepening and strengthening
himself in his own being. With Christianity something entered human
evolution that enabled man to say to himself, “You must remain a human
being; you must remain man in your inmost self. As a human being you
will find within yourself that element in which your soul is immersed
ever since the Mystery of Golgotha. You need not abandon your human
essence by descending into egotism or by rising into pride.”
Ever since the Mystery of Golgotha the quality that each human soul
now needs, the quality that in past epochs could be found only outside
humanity, must be found in humanity itself, within the evolution of
the earth. This deepest and most significant human quality is love.
Man in his development must no longer follow the course of
strengthening his soul on the one mystery path that leads to egotism,
because ever since the Mystery of Golgotha it is essential that man
acquire the capacity of transcending egotism, of conquering egotism
and pride. Having done this, he can experience the higher self within
him. A path of development must now be followed that does not lead us
into egotism and pride but that remains within the element of love.
This truth lies at the foundation of St. Paul's significant words,
“Not I, but Christ in me.”
Only after the Mystery of Golgotha did it become possible to
objectively experience Christ as that element enabling man to unite
with the divine essence. A pupil of the ancient mysteries may indeed
have anticipated St. Paul's words, but he could not have experienced
their fulfillment. The mystery disciples and their followers could say,
“Outside my own being is a god who pours his essence into me.” Or
else they could say, “When I strengthen my inner being, I learn to
know God in the depths of my own soul.” Today, however, each human
being can say, “The love that passes over into other souls and into
other beings cannot be found outside my own being; it can be found
only by continuing along the paths of my own soul.”
When we immerse ourselves lovingly into other beings, our souls remain
the same; man remains human even when he goes beyond himself and
discovers Christ within him. That He can be thus found was made
possible by the Mystery of Golgotha. The soul remains within the human
sphere when it attains to that experience expressed by St. Paul, “Not
I, but Christ in me.” We then have the mystical experience of feeling
that a higher human essence lives in us, an essence that enwraps us in
the same element that bears the soul from life to life, from
incarnation to incarnation. This is the mystical experience of Christ,
which we can have only through a training in love.
Spiritual science shows how it became possible for the human being to
have this inner, mystical experience of Christ. By way of comparison,
we find in Western philosophy the thought expressed that had we no
eyes we could not see colors. Our eyes must be so built that they can
perceive colors; there must be an inner predisposition to colors in
our eyes, so to speak. Had we no eyes, the world would be colorless
and dark for us. The same reasoning applies to the other senses. They
too must be predisposed for the perception of the external world. From
this argument
Schopenhauer
and other philosophers have concluded that
the external world is a world of our representations.
Goethe
has coined the fine motto, “Were the eye not sun-like it could never
perceive the sun.” We might say further, “The human soul could
never understand Christ were it not able so to transform itself that it could
inwardly experience the words, ‘Not I, but Christ in me.’”
Goethe had something else in mind when he expressed the truth that
were the eye not sun-like it could not see the sun, namely, that our
eyes could not exist had there been no light to form them from the
sightless human being. The one thought is as true as the other: There
could be no perception without eyes and also no eyes without light.
Similarly, it can be said that did the soul not inwardly experience
Christ, did it not identify itself with the power of Christ, Christ
would be non-existent for the soul. How can the human soul perceive
Christ unless it identifies itself with Him? Yet the opposite thought
is just as true, that is, man can experience Christ within himself
only because at a definite moment in history the Christ impulse
entered the evolution of humanity. Without the historical Christ there
could be no mystical Christ. The assertion that the human soul could
experience Christ even if Christ had never entered the evolution of
mankind is a mere abstraction. Prior to the Mystery of Golgotha it was
impossible to have a mystical experience of Christ. Any other argument
is based on a misunderstanding. Just as it would be impossible for us
to have the mystical experience of Christ without the historical
Christ, even though the historical Christ can be discovered only by
those who have experienced the mystical Christ.
Through spiritual science we are thus led to a vision of Christ not
based upon the Gospels. Through spiritual science we can perceive that
in the course of history Christ entered the evolution of humanity, and
we know that He had once to live in a human being so that He could
find a path leading through a human being into the spiritual
atmosphere of the earth.
Spiritual research thus leads us to Christ, and through Christ to the
historical Jesus. It does this at a time when external investigation,
based upon external documents, so often questions the historical
existence of Jesus.
The thoughts I have here presented may of course meet with opposition,
but I can fully understand it if some say my statements appear to them
like a fantastic dream.
From a spiritual contemplation of the whole evolution of humanity we
can, through spiritual science, come to a recognition of Christ, and
through Christ's own nature we can recognize that He once must have
lived in a human body. Spiritual-scientific investigation necessarily
leads to the historical Jesus. Indeed, it is possible to indicate with
mathematical precision when Christ must have lived in the man Jesus,
in the historical Jesus. Just as it is possible to understand external
mechanical forces through mathematics, so is it possible to understand
Jesus by regarding history with a spiritual vision that encompasses
Christ. That Being Who lived in Jesus from his thirtieth to
thirty-third years gave the impulse humanity needed for its
development at a time when its youthful forces were beginning to
decline.
In recapitulation, I can say that a new understanding of Christ is a
necessity today. Spiritual science not only tries to lead us to
Christ; it must do so. All the truths it advances must lead from a
spiritual contemplation of man's development to a comprehension of
Christ. Men will experience Christ in ever greater measure, and
through Christ they will discover Jesus.
Thus, I have tried to day to take my start from the evolution of
humanity, directing your gaze from Jesus, upon whom many look with
skepticism, to Christ. In future, Jesus will be found on that path we
may characterize with the words, “Through a spiritual knowledge of
Christ to an historical knowledge of Jesus.”
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