LECTURE THREE
The
Influx of Buddhistic Conceptions into the Gospel of St. Luke.
The Teaching of Buddha. The Eightfold Path.
Whoever turns to the
Gospel of St. Luke will, to begin with, only be able to feel dimly
something of what it contains; but an inkling will then dawn on him that
whole worlds, vast spiritual worlds, are revealed by this Gospel. After
what was said in the last lecture, this will be obvious to us, for as we
heard, spiritual research shows how the Buddhistic world-conception, with
everything it was able to give to mankind, flowed into the Gospel of
St. Luke. It may truly be said that Buddhism radiates from this
Gospel, but in a special form, comprehensible to the simplest and
most unsophisticated mind.
As could be gathered
from the last lecture and will become particularly clear to-day, to
understand Buddhism as presented to the world in the teachings of the
great Buddha demands the application of lofty conceptions and an
ascent to the pure, ethereal heights of the Spirit; a very great deal
of preparation is required to grasp the essence of Buddhism. Its
spiritual substance is contained in the Gospel of St. Luke in a form
that can influence everyone who recognizes concepts and ideas that
are essential for humanity. This will be readily understood when we
get to the root of the mystery underlying the Gospel of St. Luke. Not
only are the spiritual attainments of Buddhism presented to us
through this Gospel; they come before us in an even nobler form, as
though raised to a level higher than when they were a gift to
humanity in India some six hundred years before our era.
In the lecture
yesterday we spoke of Buddhism as the purest teaching of compassion
and love; from the place in the world where Buddha worked a gospel of
love and compassion streamed into the whole spiritual evolution of
the Earth. The gospel of love and compassion lives in the true
Buddhist when his own heart feels the suffering confronting him in
the outer world from all living creatures. There we encounter
Buddhistic love and compassion in the fullest sense of the words; but
from the Gospel of St. Luke there streams to us something that is
more than this all-embracing love and compassion. It might be
described as the translation of love and compassion into deed.
Compassion in the highest sense of the word is the ideal of the
Buddhist; the aim of one who lives according to the message of the
Gospel of St. Luke is to unfold love that acts. The true Buddhist
can himself share in the sufferings of the sick; from the Gospel of St.
Luke comes the call to take active steps to do whatever is possible
to bring about healing. Buddhism helps us to understand everything
that stirs the human soul; the Gospel of St. Luke calls upon us to
abstain from passing judgment, to do more than is done to us, to
give more than we receive! Although in this Gospel there is the
purest, most genuine Buddhism, love translated into deed must be
regarded as a progression, a sublimation, of Buddhism.
This aspect of
Christianity — Buddhism raised to a higher level — could be
truly described only by one possessed of the heart and disposition of the
writer of the Gospel of St. Luke. It was eminently possible for him
to portray Christ Jesus as the Healer of body and soul because having
himself worked as a physician he was able to write in the way that
appealed so deeply to the hearts of men. That he recorded what he had
to say about Christ Jesus from the standpoint of a physician will
become more and more apparent as we penetrate into the depths of the
Gospel.
But something else
strikes us when we consider what an impression this Gospel can make
upon even the most childlike natures. The lofty teachings of
Buddhism, to understand which mature intelligence is required, appear
to us in the Gospel of St. Luke as though rejuvenated, as though born
anew from a fountain of youth. Buddhism is a fruit on the tree of
humanity, and when we find it again in this Gospel it seems to be like
a rejuvenation of what it had previously been. It is only possible to
understand this rejuvenation by paying close attention to the great
Buddha's teachings themselves and discerning with spiritual eyes the
powers working in Buddha's soul.
In the first place it
must be remembered that the Buddha had been a Bodhisattva, that is to
say, a very lofty Being able to gaze deeply into the mysteries of
existence. As a Bodhisattva, the Buddha had participated in the
evolution of humanity throughout the ages. When in the epoch
following Atlantis the first post-Atlantean civilization was
established and promoted, Buddha was already present as Bodhisattva
and, acting as an intermediary, conveyed to man from the spiritual
worlds the teachings indicated in the lecture yesterday. He had been
present in Atlantean and even in Lemurian times. And because he had
reached such a high stage of development, he was also able, during
the twenty-nine years of his final existence as Bodhisattva, from his
birth to the moment when he became Buddha, to recollect stage by
stage all the communities in which he had lived before incarnating
for the last time in India. He could look back upon his participation
in the labours of humanity, upon his existence in the
divine-spiritual worlds in order that he might bring down from there
what it was his mission to impart to mankind. It was indicated
yesterday that even an Individuality of this lofty rank must live
through again, briefly at any rate, what he has already learnt. Thus
Buddha describes how while still a Bodhisattva he gradually rose to
higher stages of consciousness, how his spiritual vision became ever
more perfect and his enlightenment complete.
We are told how he
described to his disciples the path his soul had traversed and how he
was able by degrees to recollect his experiences in the past. He
spoke to them somewhat as follows. ‘There was a time, O ye monks,
when an all-pervading light appeared to me from the spiritual world,
but as yet I could distinguish nothing in it — neither forms, nor
pictures: my enlightenment was not yet pure enough. Then I began to
see not only the light, but single pictures, single forms, within the
light; but I could not distinguish what these forms and pictures
denoted: my enlightenment was not yet pure enough. Then I began to
realize that spiritual beings were expressing themselves in these
forms and pictures; but again I could not distinguish to what
kingdoms of the spiritual world these beings belonged: my
enlightenment was not yet pure enough. Then I learnt to know to which
of the various kingdoms of the spiritual world these several beings
belonged; but I could not yet distinguish through what actions they
had acquired their place in the spiritual realms, nor what was their
condition of soul: for my enlightenment was not yet pure enough. Then
came the time when I could discern through what actions these
spiritual beings had acquired their place in the spiritual realms,
and what was their condition of soul; but I could not yet distinguish
with which particular spiritual beings I myself had lived in former
times, nor how I was related to them: for my enlightenment was not
yet pure enough. Then came the time when I was able to know that I
was together with certain beings in particular epochs and was related
to them in this way or in that: I knew what my previous lives had
been. Now my enlightenment was pure!’
In this way Buddha
indicated to his disciples how he had gradually worked his way to
knowledge which, although he had already attained it in an earlier
epoch, had nevertheless to be freshly acquired in accordance with the
conditions prevailing in each successive incarnation. In Buddha's
case this knowledge had necessarily to be in a form in keeping with
his complete descent into a physical human body. If we enter into
these things with the right feeling we shall get an inkling of the
greatness and significance of the Individuality who incarnated at
that time in the King's son of the family of Sakya. Buddha knew that
the world he himself could again experience and behold would be
inaccessible to men's ordinary faculty of vision in the immediate
present and future. Only ‘Initiates’ — and Buddha
himself was an Initiate — could gaze into the spiritual world; for
normal humanity this was no longer possible. Inherited remains of the old
clairvoyance had become increasingly rare. But Buddha had not come to
speak to men only of what Initiates had to say; his primary mission
was to convey to them knowledge of the forces that must flow out of
the human soul itself. Hence he could not speak only of the fruits of
his own enlightenment, but he said to himself: ‘I must speak to men
of what they can attain through the higher development of their own
inner nature and of the faculties belonging to this epoch.
In the course of
Earth evolution men will gradually come to recognize the content of
Buddha's teaching as something that their own reason, their own soul,
tells them. But long, long ages will have to pass before all men are
mature enough to produce out of their own souls what Buddha was the
first to bring to expression in the form of pure knowledge. For to
develop certain faculties in later ages is not the same as to bring
them forth for the first time from the depths of the human soul. Let
us take another example. To-day, even the young are able to
assimiliate the principles of logic and unfold logical thinking.
Logical thinking is now one of the general faculties possessed by man
and developed from his own inner nature. But it was in Aristotle, the
great Greek thinker, that this faculty first arose from a human soul.
There is a difference between bringing forth something for the first
time from the soul and bringing it forth after it has already been
developing for a period in humanity.
Buddha's message to
men was among the very greatest of teachings and will remain so for
long, long ages. Hence the soul of a Bodhisattva, the soul of one
enlightened to such a supreme degree, was needed in order that this
teaching should for the first time become a living power in a human
being. Only the highest degree of enlightenment could enable the soul
to give birth to what was to become a universal endowment of
mankind — namely, the lofty doctrine of compassion and love. Buddha's
message had to be presented in words familiar to the humanity of that
time, especially to the people of his homeland. Reference has already
been made to the fact that at the time of Buddha the Sankhya and Yoga
philosophies were being taught in India. From them were derived the
terminologies and concepts in use at the time. Anyone who brought a
new message had necessarily to use current parlance, and Buddha too
clothed what was living within him in concepts familiar to his
contemporaries. True, he re-cast these concepts into completely new
forms but he was obliged to use them. The principle of all evolution
must be that the future is based on the past. And so Buddha clothed
his sublime wisdom in expressions customary in the Indian teachings
of that time.
We must now try to
picture what Buddha experienced during the seven-day period of his
‘Enlightenment’ under the Bodhi-tree. This teaching was to
become the deepest, most intimate concern of mankind. Let us therefore try
to conceive, even if with thoughts only approximately adequate, what
profound experiences were undergone by Buddha under the Bodhi-tree
and then came to expression in his soul.
He might have said that
there were times in the ancient past when many human beings were dimly
clairvoyant and that in an even more distant past this was the case with
everyone. What does it mean — to be ‘dimly clairvoyant’,
or ‘clairvoyant’? To be clairvoyant means to be able to use the
organs of the etheric body. When a man is able to use the organs of
his astral body only, he can, it is true, inwardly feel and experience
profound mysteries, but there can be no actual vision. Clairvoyance
cannot arise until what is experienced in the astral body makes its
‘impress’ in the etheric body. Even the old, dim clairvoyance
originated from the fact that in the etheric body, which had not yet
passed completely into the physical body, there were organs which it
was still possible for ancient humanity to use. What, therefore, was
it that men lost in the course of time? They lost the capacity to
use the organs of the etheric body! They were obliged to make use of
the external organs of the physical body only, experiencing in the
astral body, in the form of thoughts, feelings and mental pictures,
what the physical body transmitted. All this passed through the soul
of the great Buddha as the expression of what he experienced. He said
to himself: ‘Men have lost the capacity to use the organs of their
etheric bodies. They experience in their astral bodies what they
learn from the outer world through the instrumentality of their
physical bodies.’
Buddha now concerned
himself with this significant question: ‘When the eye perceives the
colour red, when the ear hears a sound, a tone, when the sense of
taste has received some impression, under normal conditions these
impressions become concepts and ideas, are inwardly experienced in
the astral body. If they were experienced in this way alone, they
could not, in normal circumstances, be accompanied by pain and
suffering. Were man simply to abandon himself to the impressions of
the outer world as the latter with its light, colours, sounds, and so
forth, affects his senses, he would pass through the world without
experiencing pain and suffering from the impressions made upon him.
Only under certain conditions can pain and suffering be experienced
by man.’
Hence the great
Buddha sought to discover the conditions under which man experiences
pain, suffering, cares and afflictions. When and why do the
impressions of the outer world become fraught with suffering? Then he
said to himself: Looking back into ancient times, it is revealed
that in men's earlier incarnations on the Earth certain beings worked
into their astral bodies from two sides. In the course of
incarnations through the epochs of Lemuria and Atlantis, the
Luciferic beings penetrated into human nature, and their influences
took actual effect in the human astral body. Then, from the Atlantean
epoch onwards, man was also worked upon by beings under the
leadership of Ahriman. Thus in the course of his earlier
incarnations, man was subjected to the influences of both the
Luciferic and Ahrimanic beings. Had these beings not worked upon him,
he could have acquired neither freedom nor the capacity to
distinguish between good and evil, nor free will. From a higher point
of view, therefore, it is fortunate that these influences were
exercised upon him, although it is true that in a certain respect
they led him from divine-spiritual heights more deeply into material
existence than he would otherwise have descended.
The great Buddha
could therefore say that man bears within himself influences due to
the invasion of Lucifer on the one side and Ahriman on the other.
These influences have remained with him from earlier incarnations.
When, with his old clairvoyance, man was still able to gaze into the
spiritual world, he perceived the influences of Lucifer and Ahriman
and could clearly distinguish them. He could say: This particular
influence comes from Lucifer, this other from Ahriman. And inasmuch
as with his vision of the astral world he perceived the harmful
influences of Lucifer and Ahriman, he could reckon with and protect
himself from them. He knew too, how he had come into contact with
these Beings. There was a time — so said Buddha — when men
knew whence came the influences they had borne within themselves from
incarnation to incarnation since bygone ages. But with the loss of
the old clairvoyance this knowledge was also lost; man is now
ignorant of the influences that have worked upon his soul through the
series of incarnations. The earlier clairvoyant knowledge has been
replaced by ignorance. Darkness now envelops man; he cannot perceive
whence come these influences of Lucifer and Ahriman, but they are
there within him! He has within him something of which he knows
nothing. It would be folly to deny the reality and effectiveness of
something that exists, even though people are ignorant of it. The
influences that have penetrated into man from incarnation to
incarnation are working in him. They are there and they work through
his whole life — only he is unaware of them!
What effect have
these influences in man? Although he cannot actually recognize them
for what they are, he feels them; there is a power within him that is
the expression of what has continued from incarnation to incarnation
and has entered into his present form of existence. These forces, the
nature of which man cannot recognize, are represented by his desire
for external life, for experience in the world, by his thirst and
craving for life. Thus the ancient Luciferic and Ahrimanic influences
work within man as the thirst, the craving for existence. This
‘thirst for existence’ continues from incarnation to
incarnation. This, in effect, is what the great Buddha said. But to
his intimate pupils he gave more detailed explanations.
How he presented what
he thus felt can be understood only if there has been a certain
preparation through Anthroposophy. We know that when a man dies his
astral body and his Ego leave the physical and etheric bodies. Then
he has before him, for a certain time, the great memory-tableau of
his last life in the form of a vast picture. The main part of his
etheric body is then cast off as a second corpse and something like
an extract or essence of this etheric body remains; he bears this
extract with him through the periods of Kamaloka and Devachan and
brings it back again into his next incarnation. While he is in
Kamaloka there is inscribed into this life-extract everything he has
experienced through his deeds, everything that has been incurred in
the way of human Karma and for which he has to make compensation. All
this unites with the extract of the etheric body which passes on from
one incarnation to another and man brings it with him when he again
comes into existence through birth. The term in Oriental literature
for what we call ‘etheric body’ is ‘Linga
Sharira’. Thus it is an extract of Linga Sharira that man takes
with him from incarnation to incarnation.
Buddha was able to
say: At birth, the human being brings with him, in his Linga Sharira,
everything it contains from his former incarnations; it is inscribed
there everything of which man, in the present epoch, knows nothing and
over which spreads the darkness of ignorance, although it asserts itself
as the ‘thirst for existence’, the ‘craving for
life’. In what is called the ‘craving for life’, Buddha
saw everything that comes
from previous incarnations and drives man to long avidly for
enjoyment in the world, so that he does not merely move though the
world of colours, tones and other impressions, but yearns for this
world. This force exists in man from previous incarnations. Buddha's
pupils called it ‘Samskara’. Buddha spoke to his intimate
pupils to the following effect. — What is characteristic of man is
his ignorance, his ‘non-perception’ of something very
significant that is in him. Because of this ignorance, this non-perception,
everything that confronts man from the Luciferic and Ahrimanic beings and
to which he might otherwise adopt an effective attitude, is transformed
into the ‘thirst for existence’, into slumbering forces which
rumble darkly within him from previous incarnations. Man's present thinking
has developed from ‘Samskara’ and this is why, in the present
cycle of human evolution, nobody is able, without further effort, to think
objectively.
Mark well the fine
distinction made clear by Buddha to his pupils: the distinction
between objective thinking which has nothing but the ‘object’ in
view, and thinking influenced by the forces arising from the Linga
Sharira. Consider how you acquire your ‘opinions’ about things; ask
yourselves how much you acquire from these things because they please
you and how much because you observe them objectively. Everything
acquired as an apparent truth, not as the result of objective thinking,
but because old inclinations have been brought from previous incarnations
— all this, according to Buddha, forms an ‘inner
organ of thought’. This organ of thought comprises the sum-total of
what a man thinks because certain experiences in former incarnations
remain in his Linga Sharira as a residue. Buddha saw in the inner
being of man a kind of inner organ of thought formed from Samskara,
and he said: ‘It is this thought-substance that forms in man what is
called his ‘present individuality’ — in Buddhism,
‘Name and Form’, or ‘Kamarupa’.
‘Ahamkara’ is the term used in another philosophy.
Buddha spoke to his
pupils somewhat as follows. In primeval times, when men were still
clairvoyant and beheld the world lying behind physical existence, they
all, in a certain sense, saw the same, for the objective world is the
same for everyone. But when the darkness of ignorance spread over the
world, each man brought with him individual capacities which distinguished
him from his fellows. This made him into a being best described as having
a particular form of soul. Each human being had a name which distinguished
him from another — each had an ‘Ahamkara’.
What is thus created in man's inner nature under the influence of
what he has brought with him from former incarnations and accounts
for his ‘Name and Form’, his individuality — this builds
in him, from within outwards, Manas and the five sense-organs, the
so-called ‘six organs’.
Note well that Buddha
did not say: ‘The eye is merely formed from within outwards’; but he
said: ‘Something that was in Linga Sharira and has been brought over
from previous stages of existence is membered into the eye.’ Hence
the eye does not see with pure, unclouded vision; it would look into
the world of outer existence quite differently if it were not
inwardly permeated with the residue of earlier stages of existence.
Hence the ear does not hear with full clarity but everything is
dimmed by this residue. The result is that there is mingled into all
things the desire to see this or that, to hear this or that, to taste
or perceive in one way or another. Into everything man encounters in
the present cycle of existence there is insinuated what has remained
from earlier incarnations as ‘desire’. If this element of
desire were absent — so said Buddha — man would look out into
the world as a divine being; he would let the world work upon him and
no longer desire anything more than is granted to him, nor wish his
knowledge to exceed what was bestowed upon him by the divine Powers;
he would make no distinction between himself and the outer world,
but would feel himself membered into it. He feels himself separated
from the rest of the world only because he craves for more and
different enjoyment than the world voluntarily offers him. This leads
to the consciousness that he is different from the world. If he were
satisfied with what is in the world, he would not distinguish himself
from it; he would feel his own existence continuing in the outer world.
He would never experience what is called ‘contact’ with the
outer world, for, not being separate from it, he could not come into
‘contact’ with it. The forming of the ‘six organs’
was responsible for the gradual establishment of ‘contact with the
outer world’; contact gave rise to feeling and feeling to the
urge to cling to the outer world. But it is because man tries to cling to
the outer world that pain, suffering, cares and afflictions arise.
This is what Buddha taught
his pupils regarding the ‘inner man’ as the cause of pain,
suffering, cares and afflictions. It was a delicately woven, sublime
theory — but a theory that sprang directly from life, for an
‘Enlightened One’ had experienced it as a profound truth
concerning the humanity of his time. Having guided humanity as Bodhisattva
for thousands and thousands of years in accordance with the principles
of love and compassion, there dawned in him when he became Buddha,
knowledge of the true nature and the causes of suffering. He was able
to know why man suffers, and explained this to his intimate
disciples. And when his development was so advanced that he could
experience the very essence and meaning of human existence in the
present cycle of evolution, he summarized it all in the famous sermon
at Benares with which he inaugurated his work as Buddha. There he
presented in a popular form what he had previously communicated to
his disciples in a more intimate way.
He spoke somewhat as
follows. — Whoever knows the causes of human existence, realizes
that life, as it is, must be fraught with suffering. The first
teaching I have to give you concerns suffering in the world. The
second teaching concerns the causes of suffering. Wherein do these
causes lie? They lie in the fact that the thirst for existence
insinuates itself into man from what has remained in him from
previous incarnations. Thirst for existence is the cause of
suffering. The third teaching concerns the question: How is suffering
eliminated from the world? By eliminating its cause; by extinguishing
the thirst for existence proceeding from ignorance! Men have lost
their former clairvoyant knowledge, have become ignorant, and it is
this ignorance that conceals the spiritual world from them. Ignorance
is to blame for the thirst for existence and this in turn is the
cause of suffering and pain, cares and afflictions. Thirst for
existence must disappear from the world if suffering is to disappear.
The old knowledge has passed away from the world; men can no longer
use the organs of the etheric body. But a new knowledge is now
possible, the knowledge acquired when man immerses himself completely
in what his astral body, thanks to its deepest forces, can give him,
and with the help of what his outer sense-organs enable him to
observe in the external physical world. What is thus kindled in the
deepest forces of the astral body and is developed with the
co-operation of the physical body — although not actually
derived from it — this alone can help man to begin with, and
give him knowledge; for this knowledge is at first bestowed upon him
as a gift. It was to this effect that Buddha spoke in his great
inaugural sermon.
He knew that he must
transmit to humanity the kind of knowledge that is attainable through
the highest development of the forces of the astral body. Hence he
had to teach that through deep and penetrating understanding of the
forces of the astral body, man acquires knowledge that is both
appropriate and possible for him but is at the same time untouched by
influences from earlier incarnations. Buddha wished to impart to men
a kind of knowledge that has nothing to do with what slumbers in the
darkness of ignorance within the human soul as Samskara. Such knowledge
is acquired by waking to life all the forces contained in the astral body
in one incarnation. ‘The cause of suffering in the world’
— so said Buddha — ‘is that something of which man
knows nothing has remained behind from earlier incarnations. This
legacy from earlier incarnations is the cause of man's ignorance
concerning the world; it is the cause of his suffering and pain. But
when he becomes conscious of the nature of the forces in his astral
body, he can, if he so will, acquire a knowledge that has remained
independent of all influences from earlier times — a knowledge
that is his very own!’
This was the
knowledge that the great Buddha wished to impart to men, and he did
so in the form of what is known as the ‘Eightfold Path’. There
he indicates the capacities and qualities which man must develop in
order to attain, in the present cycle of human evolution, knowledge
that is uninfluenced by the ever-recurring births. Thus by the power
he had himself acquired, Buddha raised his soul to the heights
attainable by means of the strongest forces of the astral body, and
in the ‘Eightfold Path’ he showed humanity the way to a kind of
knowledge uninfluenced by Samskara. He described the path as
follows. —
Man attains this kind
of knowledge about the world when he acquires a right view of
things, a view that has nothing to do with sympathy or antipathy or
preference of any sort. He must strive as best he can to acquire the
right view of each thing, purely according to what presents itself
to him outwardly. That is the first principle: the right view of
things. Secondly, man must become independent of what has remained
from earlier incarnations; he must also endeavour to judge in
accordance with his right view of a thing and not be swayed by any
other influences. Thus right judgment is the second principle.
The third is that he must strive to give true expression to what he
desires to communicate to the world, having first acquired the
right view and right judgment of it; not only his words but every
manifestation of his being must express his own right view — that
and that alone. This is right speech. The fourth principle is
that man must strive to act, not according to his sympathies and
antipathies, not according to the dark forces of Samskara within him,
but in such a way that he lets his right view, right judgment and right
speech become deed. This is right action. The fifth principle,
enabling a man to liberate himself from what is within him, is that
he should acquire the right vocation and station in the world. We may
best understand what Buddha meant by this, if we remember how many
people are dissatisfied with the tasks devolving upon them, believing
that some other position would be more advantageous. But a man should be
able to derive from the situation into which he is born or into which fate
has placed him, the best that is possible, i.e. to acquire the right
‘occupation’ or ‘vocation’. Whoever finds no
satisfaction in the situation in which he is placed, will not be able to
derive from it the power to unfold right activity in the world. This is
what Buddha called right vocation. The sixth principle is that
a man should make increasing efforts to ensure that what he acquires
through right views, right judgment and so forth, shall become habit
in him. He is born into the world with certain habits. A child gives
evidence of this or that inclination or habit. But man's endeavours
should be directed, not towards retaining the habits, proceeding from
Samskara but towards acquiring those that gradually become his own as
the result of right views, right judgment, right speech, and so on.
These are the right habits. The seventh principle is that a man
should bring order into his life through not invariably forgetting
yesterday when he has to act to-day. He would never accomplish
anything if he had to learn his skills anew each time. He must
strive to develop recollectedness, mindfulness, regarding everything
in his life. He must always turn to account what he has already
learnt, he must link the present with the past. Thus along the
Eightfold Path man must acquire right mindfulness in the sense
of Buddha's teaching. The eighth quality is acquired when, without
partiality for one view or another and without being influenced by
any element remaining in him from former incarnations, he surrenders
himself with pure devotion to the things of the world, immerses
himself in them and lets them alone speak to him. This is right
contemplation.
This is the Eightfold
Path, of which Buddha said to his disciples that if followed it would
gradually lead to the extinction of the thirst for existence with its
attendant suffering, and impart to the soul something that brings
liberation from elements enslaving it from past lives.
We have now been able
to grasp something of the spirit and origin of Buddhism. We know too
what significance lies in the fact that the Bodhisattva of old became
Buddha. The Bodhisattva had always allowed everything connected with
his mission to flow into humanity. In very ancient times, before
Buddha came into the world, men were not able to apply even their
inner forces in such a way that they themselves could have developed
the attributes of the Eightfold Path. Influences flowing from the
spiritual world were necessary to make this possible, and it was the
Bodhisattva of old who enabled these influences to stream down upon
mankind. It was therefore an event of unique significance when this
Bodhisattva became Buddha and now gave forth in the form of teaching
what in earlier times he had caused to flow down upon men from above.
He had now brought into the world a physical body able to unfold out
of itself, forces that formerly could flow down from higher realms
only. The first body of this kind was brought into the world by
Gautama Buddha. Everything he had formerly caused to flow down from
above became reality in the physical world at that time. It is a
happening of great and far-reaching importance for the whole of Earth
evolution when forces that have streamed down upon humanity from
epoch to epoch are present one day in the bodily nature of a human
being on Earth. A power that can pass over into all men is then
engendered.
In the body of
Gautama Buddha lie the causes enabling men in all ages to develop in
their own being the powers of the Eightfold Path. Buddha's existence
ensured for men the possibility of right thinking! And whatever
comes to pass in the future in this respect, until the principles of
the Eightfold Path become reality in the whole of mankind, will all
be thanks to that existence. What Buddha bore within himself he
surrendered to men for their spiritual nourishment.
Generally speaking,
no science to-day perceives these significant facts in the evolution
of humanity, but they are often presented in simple fairy-tales and
legends. I have emphasized more than once that fairy-tales and
legends are often wiser and more truly ‘scientific’ than our
objective science itself. In its depths the human soul has always
sensed a certain truth connected with the nature of a Being such as a
Bodhisattva: that, to begin with, something streams down from above,
then becomes by degrees a possession of the soul and thereafter rays
back again into the cosmos from the soul itself. Men who were able to
feel the significance of this either dimly or clearly said to
themselves: like the rays of the sun from the heavens, so did the
Bodhisattva once ray down upon the Earth the forces of the doctrine
of compassion and love, the forces developed through the principles
of the Eightfold Path. But then the Bodhisattva descended into a
human body and surrendered to men the power that was once his own
possession. This power now lives in humanity and streams back into
the cosmos as the rays of the sun are reflected back in the moon's
light. This was felt to be of special significance in regions where
it was customary to express such a truth in the form of a fairy-tale
or legend. Thus the following remarkable legend was narrated in the
regions where the Bodhisattva appeared.
Once upon a time the
Buddha lived as a hare. It was an age when other creatures of many
different species were looking for food, but it had all been
consumed. The plant food which the hare itself could eat was not
suitable for carnivorous creatures. The hare, who was in reality the
Buddha, saw a Brahman passing by and resolved to sacrifice himself in
order to provide food. At that moment the God appeared and saw the
noble deed. A chasm opened and swallowed the hare. Then the God took
a tincture and drew the picture of the hare on the moon. And since
that time the picture of Buddha as the hare is to be seen on the face of
the moon. In the West we do not speak of the ‘hare in the moon’
but of the ‘man in the moon’.
A Kalmuck fairy-tale
expresses this still more cogently. In the moon lives a hare; it came
there because once upon a time the Buddha sacrificed himself and the
Earth-Spirit drew the picture of the hare on the moon. This
expresses the great truth of the Bodhisattva becoming Buddha and
sacrificing the substance of his very being to mankind for
nourishment, so that his forces now ray out into the world from the
hearts of men.
Of a Being such as
the Bodhisattva who became Buddha, we said — and this is the
teaching of all who know: When a Being passes through this stage he
has had his last incarnation on the Earth, for his whole nature is
contained within a human body. Such a Being never again incarnates in
this sense. Hence when the Buddha became aware of the significance of
his present existence, he could say: ‘This is my last incarnation; I
shall not again incarnate on the Earth!’ — It would however be
erroneous to think that such a Being then withdraws altogether from
Earth-existence. True, he does not enter directly into a physical
body but he assumes another body — of an astral or etheric
nature — and so continues to send his influences into the world.
The way in which such a Being who has passed through the last
incarnation belonging to his own destiny continues to work in the
world, may be understood by thinking of the following facts.
An ordinary human
being, consisting of physical body, etheric body, astral body and
Ego, can be permeated by such a Being. It is possible for a Being of
this rank, who no longer descends into a physical body but still has
an astral body, to be membered into the astral body of another human
being. This man may well become a personality of importance, for the
forces of a Being who has already passed through his last incarnation
on the Earth are now working in him. Thus an astral Being unites
with the astral nature of some individual on the Earth. Such a union
may take place in a most complicated way. When the Buddha appeared to
the shepherds in the picture of the ‘heavenly host’, he was
not in a physical body but in an astral body. He had assumed a body in
which he could still send his influences to the Earth. Thus in the case
of a Being who has become a Buddha, we distinguish three bodies:
1. The body he has
before he attains Buddhahood, when he is still working from above
as a Bodhisattva; it is a body that does not contain in itself all
the powers at his command; he still lives in spiritual heights and
is linked with his earlier mission as was the Bodhisattva before
his mission became the Buddha's mission. As long as such a Being is
living in a body of this nature, his body is called a
‘Dharmakaya’;
2. The body which such
a Being builds as his own and through which he brings to expression, in
the physical body, everything he has within him. This body is called the
‘body of perfection’, ‘Sambhogakaya’.
3. The body which
such a Being assumes, after he has passed through the stage of
perfection and can work from above in the way described. This body
is called a Nirmanakaya’.
[ 1 ]
We can therefore say
that the ‘Nirmanakaya’ of Buddha appeared to the shepherds
in the picture of the angelic host. Buddha appeared in the radiance of
his Nirmanakaya and revealed himself in this way to the shepherds. But
he was to find further ways of working into the events in Palestine
at this crucial point of time.
To understand this we
must briefly recall what is known to us from other lectures about the
nature of man. Spiritual science speaks of several ‘births’.
At what is called ‘physical birth’ the human being strips off,
as it were, the maternal physical sheath; at the seventh year he strips
off the etheric sheath which envelops him until the change of teeth just
as the maternal physical sheath enveloped him until physical birth. At
puberty — about the fourteenth or fifteenth year in the modern
epoch — the human being strips off the astral sheath that is around
him until then. It is not until the seventh year that the human etheric
body is born outwardly as a free body; the astral body is born at
puberty, when the outer astral sheath is cast off.
Let us now consider
what it is that is discarded at puberty. In Palestine and the
neighbouring regions this point of time occurs normally at about the
twelfth year — rather earlier than in lands farther to the West. In
the ordinary way this protective astral sheath is cast off and given over
to the outer astral world. In the case of the child who descended
from the priestly line of the House of David, however, something
different happened. At the age of twelve the astral sheath was cast
off but did not dissolve in the universal astral world. Just as it
was, as the protective astral sheath of the young boy, with all the
vitalising forces that had streamed into it between the change of
teeth and puberty, it now united with the Nirmanakaya of Buddha. The
spiritual body that had once appeared to the shepherds as the radiant
angelic host united with the astral sheath released from the
twelve-year-old Jesus, united with all the forces through which the
freshness of youth is maintained during the period between the second
dentition and puberty. The Nirmanakaya which shone upon the Nathan
Jesus-child from birth onwards united with the astral sheath detached
from this child at puberty; it became one with this sheath and was
thereby rejuvenated. Through this rejuvenation, what Buddha
had formerly given to the world could be manifest again in the
Jesus-child. Hence the boy was able to speak with all the simplicity
of childhood about the lofty teachings of compassion and love to
which we have referred to-day. When Jesus was found in the temple he
was speaking in a way that astonished those around him, because he
was enveloped by the Nirmanakaya of Buddha, refreshed as from a
fountain of youth by the boy's astral sheath.
These are facts which
can become known to the spiritual investigator and which the writer
of the Gospel of St. Luke has indicated in the remarkable scene when
a sudden change came over the twelve-year-old Jesus in the temple. We
must grasp what it was that had happened and then we shall
understand why the boy no longer spoke as he had formerly been wont
to speak. It so happened that at this very time, King Kanisha of
Tibet summoned a Synod in India and proclaimed ancient Buddhism to
be the orthodox religion. But in the meantime Buddha himself had
advanced! He had absorbed the forces of the protective astral sheath
of the Jesus-child and was thereby able to speak in a new way to the
hearts and souls of men.
The Gospel of St.
Luke contains Buddhism in a new form, as though springing from a
fountain of youth; hence it expresses the religion of compassion and
love in a form comprehensible to the simplest souls. We can read what
the writer of the Gospel of St. Luke has woven into the text of his
Gospel, but still more is contained in its depths. Only part of what
appertains to the scene of Jesus in the temple could be described
to-day and even greater depths of this mystery have still to be
explained. Light will then be shed upon the earlier as well as upon
the later years of the life of Jesus of Nazareth.
Notes:
1.
Also referred to in Buddhist literature as ‘the Body of
Transformation’.
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