LECTURE 5
Yesterday we
endeavored to place before our minds from a certain point of
view the world-historical position that existed at the moment
in time when the Mystery of Golgotha occurred. We tried to do
this by presenting the picture of two significant leaders of
mankind, the Buddha and Socrates, both of whom lived several
centuries before the Mystery of Golgotha. In doing this we
remarked that the Buddha represented something like the
significant conclusion of one stream of evolution. There
Buddha stands in the fifth or sixth century before the
Mystery of Golgotha proclaiming what has since then been
recognized as a deeply significant teaching. The revelation
of Benares, that in a certain way encompasses and renews all
that had been able to flow into human souls during thousands
of years, was proclaimed in the only way it could be half a
millennium before the Mystery of Golgotha. We can see even
more clearly how far the Buddha represented the great
conclusion of one cosmic stream when we place before our
minds his great predecessor who recedes far back into the
twilight of human evolution: Krishna,
[ Note 12 ]
who in quite a different
sense appears to us as the final moment of a revelation
thousands of years old. Krishna can be placed several
centuries before the Buddha, but that is not the issue here.
The main point is that the more we allow the being of Krishna
and the being of the Buddha to affect us, the more clearly do
we recognize that in Krishna what was later to be proclaimed
by the Buddha appears in an even brighter light, whereas with
Buddha, as we wish to demonstrate in a moment, in a certain
way it comes to an end.
The name
“Krishna” embraces something that for many
thousands of years has shone into the spiritual development
of mankind. If we immerse ourselves in all that is meant by
the proclamation of Krishna, we look up into the sublime
heights of human spiritual evolution, instilling the feeling
within us that nothing can possibly surpass, nothing can
enhance what is contained in, what resounds from Krishna's
revelation. What resounds from this revelation of Krishna is
a kind of climax; in saying this we are attributing to the
person of Krishna what also was revealed by others before
him. For it is indeed true that everything that had been
given out gradually for thousands of years before his time by
those who were given the task of becoming the bearers of
knowledge was renewed, summed up and brought to a conclusion
in the revelations of Krishna to his people. If we take into
consideration how Krishna speaks about the divine spiritual
worlds and the relation of these worlds to mankind, and about
the course of cosmic events, and if we also consider the
spirituality to which we ourselves must rise if we wish to
penetrate the deeper meaning of the teaching of Krishna, then
we may say that only one event in the whole subsequent
development of humanity can in even a slight degree be
compared with it. We may say of the revelation of Krishna
that it is in a certain sense an occult teaching. Why occult?
It is occult for the simple reason that few people can
achieve the inner capacity to ascend to those spiritual
heights where understanding can be gained. There is no need
to keep secret what Krishna revealed in an external way, to
lock it up in a safe, so that it stays “occult”;
it remains occult for no other reason than that too few
people rise to the heights to which they must rise if they
are to understand it. However widely such revelations as
those of Krishna are disseminated among the people and put
into their hands, they still remain occult. For they can be
brought out of the realm of the occult not by disseminating
them among the people, but only when there are souls who can
rise high enough to be able to unite with them. It is true
that such revelations hover above us at a certain spiritual
height, yet they speak to us as if from a high point of
spirituality. Anyone who simply picks up the words that are
contained in such revelations should by no means believe he
understands them, not even if he is a learned man of the
twentieth century. It is entirely comprehensible that it is
widely asserted today that there is no occult teaching. This
is understandable because those who say such things do indeed
possess the words, and with them think they have everything.
But it is in the very nature of occult teaching that they do
not understand what they possess.
Earlier I
said that there is just one thing that can be compared with
the teaching of Krishna, and indeed what we associate with
the name “Krishna” can be compared with what may
remind us of three later names which are in a certain sense
closely connected with us — though in the case of these
three the method, conceptual and philosophical, is quite
different. I am referring to everything that in recent years
has been linked to the names of Fichte, Schelling and Hegel,
[ Note 13 ]
and the teachings of these men have a slight resemblance to other
”occult teachings” of mankind. For though we can
undoubtedly acquire the writings of Fichte, Schelling, and
Hegel, it cannot be denied that in the widest sense of the
words they have remained occult teaching. Truly they have
remained occult to this day. There are very few people who
wish to achieve any kind of relation to what these three men
have written. From a certain kind of what I may call
philosophical courtesy, there is today in certain circles
some talk about Hegel again; and if something is said like
what I have just said myself, then the reply is made that
after all there really are some people who busy themselves
with Hegel. However, if one listens to what these people say
and what they contribute to the understanding of Hegel, then
we are all the more compelled to the view that for these
people Hegel has remained an occult teaching. What shines out
towards us from the East from Krishna appears again in
Fichte, Schelling and Hegel in an abstract conceptual way,
and it is not easy to notice the similarity; indeed, it
requires a special constitution of soul to be able to do so.
I should like to speak candidly about this and state clearly
what is required.
When a man of
today who believes he has enjoyed not an average but a
superior education takes up a philosophical work by Fichte or
Hegel he believes he is reading something concerned only with
the development of advanced concepts. Most people will agree
that it is difficult really to warm up to it, if, for
example, they turn to Hegel's Encyclopaedia of the
Philosophical Sciences and read for the first time about
being, nonbeing, becoming, existence, and the like. We have
probably heard it said that in this work a man has cooked up
a collection of highly abstract concepts, beautiful enough,
no doubt, but providing nothing capable of kindling warmth in
heart or soul. I have known many people who after three or
four pages of this particular work have promptly closed the
book. But they are not at all prepared to admit that perhaps
the guilt lies in themselves that they do not warm up and
have avoided the struggles that have to be endured in going
from hell to heaven. This they do not willingly admit. Yet it
is possible by means of these so-called “abstract
concepts” to experience a veritable life-struggle, and
to feel not only a living warmth but the whole range of
feeling from the most extreme cold to the highest
soul-warmth. Then one can come to feel that these things are
written not in simply abstract concepts but in the heart's
blood.
We may
compare what radiates over to us from Krishna with what is
regarded as the newest evolutionary phase of the human ascent
toward the spiritual heights. Yet there is a significant
difference. What we meet with in Fichte, Schelling and Hegel,
these most mature thinkers of Christianity, we meet with in a
pre-Christian era, in the form it had to take then, in
Krishna. For what is Krishna's revelation? It is something
that can never again be repeated, whose greatness of its kind
and in its own way can never be surpassed. If we have an
understanding for such things we may have a conception, an
idea of the strength of that spiritual light that shines over
to us, if we let such things affect us as are connected with
the culture from which Krishna emerged. If we do this, if we
allow words like the following to influence us (to take a few
examples from the
Bhagavad Gita)
where Krishna indicates in
words his real being, we arrive at thoughts, feelings and
emotions that will be characterized later. Thus in the tenth
canto Krishna speaks as follows:
I am the
spirit of creation, its beginning, its center and its end.
Among all beings I am always the noblest of all that has come
into being; among spiritual beings I am Vishnu, I am the sun
among the stars; among the lights I am the moon; among the
elements I am fire; among the mountains I am the lofty Meru;
among the water I am the great cosmic sea, among the rivers I
am the Ganges, among the multitude of trees I am Ashvattha;
in the true sense of the word I am the ruler of men and of
all the beings that live; among the serpents I am the one
that is eternal, the very ground of existence itself!
Let us take
another example from the same culture, which we find in the
Vedas. The Devas were gathered around the throne of the
Almighty, and in deep reverence they ask who he himself is.
Then the Almighty, that is to say the cosmic god in the old
Indian sense, answered:
If there
were another than I, I would describe myself through him. I
have been from all eternity and through all eternity I
shall be. I am the primal cause of everything, of all that
is in West, in East, in North and South; I am the cause of
all that is in the heights above and in the depths below. I
am all, I am more ancient than anything that is. I am the
ruler of rulers, I am the truth itself. I am revelation
itself, and the cause of revelation. I am knowledge, I am
piety, I am the law. I am almighty!
And when, as
the ancient document records, it was asked what was the cause
of all things, the answer was given:
The cause
of the world, it is fire; it is the sun and it is also the
moon. It is also this pure Brahman and this water and this
highest of all creatures. All moments and all weeks and all
months and all centuries and all millennia and all millions
of years have proceeded from him, have emerged from his
radiant personality which no one can comprehend, neither
above nor below nor in the circumference, nor in the
center, here where we stand!
Such words
sound over to us from very ancient times, and we surrender
ourselves to them. If we approach these words without
preconceptions, how do we feel in relation to them? Certain
things are said in the words; we have seen that Krishna says
something about himself. And things are said about the cosmic
God and about cosmic origins. From the tone of these
thoughts, as they sound forth through these words, things are
said that could never have been expressed in a greater or
more significant way. And one knows that they never could
have been spoken in a greater or more significant manner.
That is to say, something was placed into human evolution
that must stand just as it is and be accepted as it is since
it has come to a conclusion. And wherever people in later
times have thought about such things, and may perhaps have
believed in accordance with methods employed in these later
times that one thing or another could have been expressed in
clearer concepts or could have been modified in one way or
another, they have nevertheless been unable to say it better.
They have never done so. Indeed if anyone wished to say
something better about precisely these things, it would be
sheer presumption.
Let us first
consider the passage of the
Bhagavad Gita
where Krishna, so
to speak, characterizes his own nature. What is he really
characterizing? His way of speaking is truly remarkable. He
says of his nature that he is the spirit of all that has come
into being, that he is among the heavenly spirits Vishnu,
among the stars the sun, among the lights the moon, among the
elements the fire, and so on. If we wish to paraphrase this
and compress it into a formula we can say that Krishna points
to himself as the essence, the entity of all things. He is
this entity in such a way that it represents always the
purest, the most divine kind of nature. Hence, according to
this passage, if we penetrate beyond the actual things and
seek to find behind them the nature of their true being, we
arrive at the being of Krishna. If we take a number of plants
of the same species and look for the entity of this species,
which is not in itself visible but comes to expression in the
single plant forms, and ask what lies behind them as their
essence, the answer is: Krishna! But we must not think of
this being as identical with any single plant but must think
of him as the highest and purest element in the form. Thus we
have not only what the essence is, but this essence in its
highest, noblest, purest form.
So of what is
Krishna actually speaking? Of nothing else but what a man can
recognize as his own essence when he sinks into himself; not
his being as it appears to him in ordinary life, but
something that lies behind man and the human soul as
they manifest themselves in life. He speaks of the human
essence that is within us because the true human essence is
at one with the universe. This is by no means a knowledge
that works egotistically within Krishna. It is something in
Krishna that wishes to point to the highest in man, something
that may perceive itself as identical and at one with what
lives as being in all things.
Just as we
speak today for our own age, so Krishna spoke to his own age
of what he had in mind for his culture. If today we look into
our own being we first of all glimpse the ego as you will
find it pictured in the book
Knowledge of Higher Worlds and its Attainment.
[ Note 14 ]
We distinguish the ordinary ego from the
higher, super-sensible ego which does not appear in the world
of sense. This super-sensible ego appears in such a manner
that it is not only in us but is at the same time poured out
over the being of all things. So when we speak of our higher
ego, the higher being dwelling in man, we do not speak of
what a man says when he says in his customary manner “I
am,” although in our language it has the same sound. In
Krishna's mouth it would not have had the same sound. He is
speaking of the nature of the human soul as it would have
been interpreted in that day, in the same way as we today
speak of the ego.
How did it
come about that Krishna expresses something that is so
similar to what we express when we speak of the highest of
which we have knowledge? This was possible because the
culture out of which Krishna emerged was preceded for
thousands of years by a clairvoyant culture, because human
beings were accustomed to rising to clairvoyant vision when
they looked into the being of things. And we can understand a
language such as resounds here to us from the
Bhagavad Gita
when we look upon it as the close of the old
clairvoyant view of the world, when we recognize that when a
man in those ancient times passed into the intermediate state
between sleeping and waking that was at that time common to
all human beings he was not placed among things in such a way
that they were “here” and he was outside them, as
is the case in ordinary sense perception. He felt himself
poured out over all things, felt himself in all beings and at
one with them. It was with the best of things that he felt
himself to be at one, and his best was in all things. And if
you do not start out from an abstract feeling and an abstract
perception in the way customary with men of the present time
but rather start out from the old way of feeling and
perception as we have just characterized them, then you will
understand such words as resound over to us from Krishna in the
Bhagavad Gita.
If then you ask how men with the
old clairvoyance perceived themselves, you will understand
them and realize that in the same way that a man, when his
etheric body is freed through spiritual scientific training,
feels himself spread and poured out into what lives in
everything, so did the man of former times experience this as
a natural condition, although not in the same way as would
now be the case as a result of spiritual scientific training.
Ancient men felt themselves to be inside things, and this
condition came about by itself without their volition. And
when these revelations were shaped into forms and what had
been seen was expressed in beautiful, wonderful words, then
something appeared like, for example, these revelations of
Krishna. For this reason it could also be said that Krishna
spoke to his fellowmen in this way, “I wish to proclaim
in words what the best of us have perceived when they were in
the super-sensible worlds and how the best of us have
perceived their relationship to the world. In future times
such men as these will no longer be found, and you yourselves
cannot be as your ancestors were. I wish to put into words
what these ancestors perceived, so that it will endure,
because humanity can no longer possess this as a natural
condition.”
Thus
something which had belonged to mankind for thousands of
years was brought in words such as were possible at that time
in the form of the revelations of Krishna so that mankind in
subsequent ages might possess this revelation of what they
were no longer able to perceive for themselves.
Other sayings
can also be interpreted in a similar manner. Let us suppose
that at a period when Krishna was giving his revelations a
pupil had stood before his initiate teacher and asked him,
“What lies behind the things which my eyes see, can
you, my initiated teacher tell me?” The initiated
teacher might well have answered, “Behind those things
which are now seen by your external, material eyes, lies the
spiritual, the super-sensible. But in former times men could
still see the super-sensible while they were in their normal
condition. They were able to look into the nearest
super-sensible world, the etheric world that borders on our
material world. Here in this world is to be found the cause
of everything that is material, and these men of old were
able to see what this cause is. In our time I can do no more
than express in words what could in earlier times be seen,
‘It is fire, it is the sun!’ But not the sun as
it now appears, for what can now be seen by the eye was
precisely what for ancient clairvoyants could least of all be
seen. The white fiery globe of the sun was darkness for them,
while the effects of the sun were spread over all space. The
radiations of the sun's aura in many-colored light pictures
flowed in and out of each other, coming forth from each
other, in such a way that when they merged into things they
became immediately creative light. It is the sun, it is also
the moon (though this too was seen in a different manner),
for pure Brahman is altogether in it.”
What is pure
Brahman? When we breathe in the air and breathe it out again
the materialistic person believes he is only inhaling oxygen.
But that is a delusion; with every breath we inhale and
exhale spirit. The spirit that lives in the air we breathe
penetrates into us and goes out from us again. And when an
old clairvoyant saw that, he did not, like the materialist,
believe that he was breathing in oxygen. That is a
materialistic prejudice. The clairvoyant of ancient times was
aware that the etheric element of the spirit, Brahman, from
whom all life comes, was being inhaled. In the same way that
today we believe that life comes from the oxygen in the air,
so did ancient man know that life comes from Brahman; and in
that he takes up Brahman, he lives. The purest Brahman is the
source of our life.
And of what
nature are the conceptual heights to which this very ancient,
this ether-like, light-like wisdom aspires? Today people
believe they are able to think with great subtlety. But when
we see how people jumble up everything in a higgledy-piggledy
way as soon as they try to explain something, then we lose
all respect for the thinking of today, especially for its
logical thinking. At this point I really must engage
in a short discussion that may seem abstract. I shall make it
as short as possible.
Let us
suppose that we encounter an animal that has a mane and is
yellow; then we call this animal a lion. Now we begin to ask,
“What is a lion?” The answer, “A beast of
prey.” Next we ask, “What is a beast of
prey?” Answer, “A mammal.” We ask further,
“What is a mammal?” Answer, “A living
creature.” And so we continue describing one thing
through another. Most people believe they are being very
lucid when they go on asking ever more questions in the same
way as they asked about the lion, the mammal and so on. And
people often ask similar questions about spiritual matters,
even about the highest spiritual things, in just the same way
as they ask what a lion is, what a beast of prey is, and the
rest. And at the end of lectures, when slips of paper are
handed in with questions, questions such as these are asked
countless numbers of times, for example, “What is
God?” “How did the world begin?” “How
will the world end?” There are many people who have no
wish to know anything at all beyond these questions. They ask
them in just the same way as they ask, “What is a
lion?” and so on.
People think
that what is valid for everyday life must also be equally
valid for the highest things. They do not take into
consideration that it is just the highest things that are of
such a nature that we cannot ask such questions about them.
If we proceed from one thing to another, from the lion to the
beast of prey and so on, we must eventually come to something
that cannot be described in this way, when there is no longer
any sense in asking, what is this? For in this kind of
questioning a predicate is sought for the subject. But when
we reach the highest being, this being can be comprehended
only through itself. From a logical point of view it is
absolutely meaningless to ask the question, “What is
God?” Everything can be led upward to the highest, but
to the highest no predicate can be added, for the
answer would have to be: God is ..., and God would then
have to be described in terms of something higher. So the
question itself would involve the strangest contradiction
possible.
The fact that
this question is still invariably asked today shows how
highly exalted Krishna was when he appeared in a very early
epoch and spoke as follows, “The Devas gather around
the throne of the Almighty, and in deep devotion ask who He
Himself is. Then He answers, ‘If there were anyone else
other than I myself, I should describe myself through
him.’ ” But this He does not do; He does not
describe Himself through another. So we also, as we could
say, like the Devas, are led in devotion and humility to this
ancient and holy culture, and admire its grandiose logical
elevation which it did not achieve through thinking but
through the old clairvoyance. In those times people knew at
once that when they reached the causes then questioning must
cease. The causes must be perceived. At this point we stand
in admiration in front of what has come down to us from those
very ancient times, as though the spirits who transmitted it
to us wished to say to us, “The times have gone when
men could see directly into the spiritual worlds, nor will
they be able to do so in the future. But we wish to record
what we can aspire to, something that at one time was granted
to human clairvoyance.”
So we find
recorded in the
Bhagavad Gita
and in the Vedas all
those things that were brought together by Krishna as in a
kind of conclusion. Such things cannot be surpassed, though
they will be perceived again when clairvoyance is renewed.
But they will never be perceived through those faculties that
have been attained by men in subsequent times. For this
reason it is always correct to say that if we remain within
the realm of contemporary culture, an external culture whose
content is determined by sense perception, we shall never
again attain to that ancient sacred revelation which found
its conclusion in Krishna unless it is attained through a
trained clairvoyance. But through its own evolution through
spiritual science the soul can again raise itself and attain
it again. What was at one time given to man in a normal way,
if I can express myself in this way, is not now given to
mankind in ordinary life and cannot be attained by him under
natural conditions. It is for this reason that these truths
came down to us. When there are thinkers like Fichte,
Schelling and Hegel who reached the highest possible purity
in their thinking, then we can meet with these things again,
not indeed as life-filled as they were nor with the direct
personal impact of Krishna, but in the form of ideas —
though never in the way in which they were understood in the
time of the old clairvoyance. And, as I have often stated, it
was a spiritual necessity that the old clairvoyance should
slowly and gradually die out in the post-Atlantean era.
If we look
back to the ancient Indian civilization, the first
post-Atlantean cultural period, we may say that no records
are extant from this epoch, for at that time men still could
see into the spiritual world. Only through the Akasha
Chronicle can there be rediscovered what was then revealed to
mankind. It was a lofty revelation. But then mankind sank
down lower and lower. In the old Persian epoch, the second
post-Atlantean cultural period, though the revelations still
continued they had lost their original purity. They were
still less pure in the third cultural period, that of ancient
Egypt. If we wish to visualize what were the real conditions
of the time we must bear in mind that as far as the first
cultural epochs are concerned no records exist, and this is
true for all the peoples of that age, whether or not a
cultural epoch has been called after them. If we speak of the
ancient Indian culture we are referring to a culture from
which nothing has come down to us in writing. It is just the
same with the primeval Persian culture. Written records exist
only from the Egyptian-Babylonian-Chaldean culture, which
belongs to the third cultural period. But during the period
of the unfolding of the primeval Persian culture within
Indian culture there was a second Indian period, running
parallel to the old Persian. And yet a third period began in
India contemporary with the Egyptian-BabylonianChaldean
culture, and it was during this period that the first written
records began to be kept. These first records date from the
latter part of this third culture. Such records are, for
example, those contained in the Vedas, which then penetrated
into external life. It is these records which also speak of
Krishna.
So no one
should believe when he speaks of written records that they go
back to the first Indian cultural epoch. Everything contained
in the documents are records first written down in the third
period of ancient India, for the reason that precisely in the
third period the old clairvoyance was dying out more and
more. These are the records assembled around the person of
Krishna. Thus ancient India tells us something that can be
externally investigated. If we examine things fundamentally,
everything agrees with what can be discovered in the external
documents. As the third world age came to an end and men lost
what they had originally possessed, Krishna appeared on the
scene to preserve what otherwise would have been lost.
When
tradition says that Krishna appeared in the third world-age,
what age is meant by this? This age is what we call the
Egypto-Chaldean cultural epoch. The Indian-Oriental teaching
of Krishna accords perfectly with what we have been
characterizing. When the old clairvoyance and all its
treasures were on the point of being lost, then Krishna
appeared and revealed them so that they could be preserved
into later times. Thus Krishna is the conclusion of something
great and powerful. And everything that has been said here
over the years agrees entirely with what is given also in the
oriental documents if we read them rightly. It is pure
nonsense to talk in this context of “occidental”
and “oriental,” because this is only a matter of
language, of vocabulary. What is important is that we speak
with a full understanding of that which we proclaim. And the
more you go into what has been given out over the years, the
more you will see that it is in complete agreement with all
the documents of the Orient.
So Krishna
stands there as a conclusion. Then, a few centuries later,
comes the Buddha. In what sense is the Buddha, if we may so
express it, the other pole of this conclusion? In what
relation does the Buddha stand to Krishna?
Let us place
before our souls what we have just spoken of as
characteristic of Krishna: great powerful clairvoyant
revelations of primordial ages, couched in such words that
men of future times will be able to understand and feel and
sense in them the ancient clairvoyance of humanity. Krishna's
revelation, as he stands before us, is something that men can
accept and can say to each other that herein is contained the
wisdom of the spiritual world that lies behind the sense
world, the world of causes and spiritual facts. This wisdom
is expressed in great powerful words in Krishna's
revelations. If we immerse ourselves in the Vedas, in all
that we can sum up in conclusion as the revelation of
Krishna, then we may say that this is the world in which man
is at home, the world which lies behind what our eyes can
see, our ears hear, our hands grasp, and so on. Yes, the
human soul belongs to the world revealed by Krishna.
How could the
human soul itself feel in the course of subsequent centuries?
It could perceive how these marvelous revelations of an older
time spoke about the true, spiritual, celestial home of
mankind. It could then look into all that surrounded it. It
saw with eyes, heard with ears, grasped things with the sense
of touch; it could think with the intellect about things, the
intellect that never penetrates into the spiritual element
proclaimed in the revelation of Krishna. And the soul could
say to itself, “There is an ancient holy teaching from
times past which tells of a world, our spiritual home which
lies all around us, around that world which is all that we
now recognize. We no longer live in that spiritual home, we
have been expelled from that world of which Krishna spoke so
magnificently.”
Then comes
the Buddha. How does he speak of the marvels of the world
spoken of by Krishna to human souls which could perceive only
what eyes can see and ears hear? He says, “Certainly
you live in the world of the senses. The yearning that drives
you from incarnation to incarnation has led you into this
world. But I am telling you of that path which can lead you
out of this world and into that world of which Krishna spoke.
I am telling you about the path through which you will be
redeemed from the world that is not the world of
Krishna.” Buddha's teaching in these later centuries
resounds like a kind of nostalgia for the world of Krishna.
In this respect the Buddha seems to us like the last
successor of Krishna, as Krishna's successor who had to come.
And if the Buddha himself had spoken of Krishna, how would he
have been able to speak about him? He would have said
something like this, “I have come to proclaim to you
again the greater one who was my predecessor. Turn your mind
backward to the Krishna who was greater than I, and you will
see what you can attain if you leave this world which is not
your true spiritual home. I will show you the path by which
you can redeem yourselves from the world of sense. I lead you
back to Krishna.”
The Buddha
could have spoken in this way, but he did not use these exact
words. Nevertheless he did say them in a somewhat different
form when he said, “In the world in which you live
there is suffering, there is suffering, there is suffering.
Birth is suffering. Age is suffering. Illness is suffering.
Death is suffering. To be apart from that which one loves is
suffering. To be bound to that which one does not love is
suffering. The longing for that which one loves but may not
attain is suffering.” And so he gave his Eightfold
Path. It was a teaching that did not go beyond that of
Krishna because in fact it was the same teaching as the one
given by Krishna. “I have come after him who is greater
than I, and I will show you the way back to him who is
greater than I.” These are the world-historical tones
that ring forth to us from the land of the Ganges.
Now let us go
a little further toward the West, and place once more before
our souls the figure of the Baptist, and remember the words
that the Buddha could have spoken, “I have come after
Krishna who is greater than I; and I will show you the way
back to him, away from the world bereft of the divine of
which Krishna spoke. Turn your minds backward!”
Now consider
the figure of the Baptist. How did he speak, how did he
express his views? How did he express the facts he had
received from the spiritual world? He too pointed to another,
but he did not say, as the Buddha could have said, “I
have come after him.” On the contrary he said,
“After me there will come one greater than I.”
(Mark 1:7.)
This is what the Baptist said. Nor did
he say, “Here in the world is suffering, and I wish to
lead you to something that is not of this world.” No,
he said, “Change your way of thinking. Do not continue
to look backward, but look forward. When He comes who is
greater than I the time will be fulfilled. Then the divine
world will enter into the world of suffering. And what was
lost of the revelations of past times will enter in a new way
into human souls.”
(Matt. 5:2. [This passage in the book of Matthew references the Beatitudes ... I do not know where to find the verse for the quote! e.Ed])
So the
successor of Krishna is the Buddha, and John the Baptist is
the forerunner of Christ Jesus. Thus everything is reversed.
We are faced with the six hundred years that elapsed between
these two events, and we have before us the two comets, with
their nuclei: the one comet pointing backward with Krishna as
nucleus together with the one who leads men backward, the
Buddha. Then we have the other comet pointing forward, with
Christ as its nucleus together with him who stands before us
as the forerunner. If, in the best sense, you recognize the
Buddha as the successor of Krishna, and John the Baptist as
the forerunner of Christ Jesus, then this formula expresses
in the simplest way what took place in human evolution around
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha. It is in this way that
we should look at things, and then we can understand
them.
All this has
no bearing on any religious confession, nor should it be
linked with any particular religion. These are facts of world
history. No one who understands them in their innermost
depths can present them or will ever present them in a
different way. Do such statements impair in any way any
revelation ever given to mankind? It is curious that it is
sometimes said that we assign in some way a higher place to
Christianity than to other religions. Do such words as
“higher” or “deeper” have any meaning
in this context? Are not such words as “higher”
or “lower,” “larger,” or
“smaller” the most abstract words we can use? Are
we praising Krishna any less than do those who put him higher
than Christ? We refrain from using such words as
“higher” or “less high,” and wish
only to characterize these matters in accordance with the
truth. It is not a matter of whether we place Christianity
higher or lower, but whether we characterize in the right way
what belongs to Krishna. Look up all that has been said about
Krishna, and ask yourselves whether anyone else has ever said
anything about Krishna “higher” than what has
been presented here. Everything else is idle talk. But truth
comes to light when there begins to be active that feeling
for truth that goes to the essence of things.
Here when we
are characterizing the simplest and grandest of the Gospels
we have the opportunity of studying the whole position of the
Christ as a cosmic and earthly being. It was therefore
necessary to go into the greatness of what came to its
conclusion centuries before the Mystery of Golgotha, in which
the new morning-glow of the future of humanity dawned.
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