LECTURE 6
Yesterday an
attempt was made to give you an idea of Krishna's revelation
and its relation to what entered later into human evolution,
the revelation through the Christ. It was especially noted
how the revelation of Krishna can appear to us as the
conclusion of the clairvoyant, the primitive clairvoyant
epoch of human development. If we once more place before our
souls from this point of view the understanding we obtained
yesterday about the revelation of Krishna as a conclusion, we
may say that whatever was gained through this revelation is
still present in human evolution, but in a certain way it has
reached an end and can go no further. Some teachings handed
down at that time must be accepted during all subsequent
evolution just as they were given then.
Now it is
necessary for us to study the peculiar nature of this
revelation from one particular point of view. We might say
that it does not really reckon with time and the sequence of
time. Everything that does not reckon with time as a real
factor is already contained in Krishna's teaching. What do we
mean by this?
Every spring
we see the plants spring forth from the earth, we see them
grow and ripen, bring forth fruit and drop their seeds, and
from these seeds when they have been laid in the ground we
see similar plants begin to grow again in the same way, come
to maturity and again develop their seeds. This process is
repeated year after year. If we reckon with the time span
that man is able to survey we must say that we are here
concerned with a real repetition. The lilies of the valley,
the primroses and hyacinths look the same every year. Their
nature is repeated within them every year in the same way, in
the same form. We can ascend further to the animal kingdom in
a certain way, and we shall still find something similar in
it. When we consider the individual animal, the separate
species of lions, hyenas, the separate species of monkeys, we
find that every creature is from the beginning directed to
become what it does become. So we may with a certain
justification say that no education is possible among the
animals. Although some foolish persons have recently begun to
apply all kinds of educational and pedagogical concepts to
animals, this cannot be considered as something essential,
nor does it lead to a correct characterization of animals.
When we have short time-spans in mind we see this repetition
in nature fundamentally confirmed, in the same way as we see
how spring, summer, autumn and winter repeat themselves
regularly through the centuries. Only when we consider really
large spans of time, so large that they cannot in the first
place be observed by man, would we see something resembling
the need to take account of the concept of time. Then we
should see how in the far distant past things happened
differently from the way they do now, and we should, for
example, be able to take into account the fact that the
present way in which the sun rises and sets will in the far
distant future be different. But these are realms which will
come into our view only when we enter into the field of true
spiritual science. But as regards what man is first of all
able to observe, for example the field of astronomy, the fact
of recurrence, the recurrence of the same or similar, holds
good, as we can especially notice in the annual recurrence of
plant forms. With this kind of recurrence time has no special
significance; time itself, as time, is essentially not a
real, active factor.
It is
different when we think of individual human lives. As you all
know, we also divide human life into successive, recurring
periods. We distinguish one such period from birth to the
coming of the second teeth, or about the seventh year, then a
period from the seventh to the fourteenth year, to puberty,
then one from the fourteenth to the twenty-first year, and so
on. In short, we distinguish successive seven-year periods
in individual human lives; and it is quite true to say that
in these seven-year periods certain things recur. But far
more striking than the mere recurrence is something else, the
constant changing, the progress that is actually made. For
human nature is quite different in the second period of seven
years from what it was in the first period; and again in the
third period it is different. We cannot say that in the case
of man the first seven-year period repeats itself in the
second, as we can say that the plant repeats itself in
another plant. We can see that time as it passes plays a real
role in human life. It has a meaning.
When we thus
come to see how what is significant for the individual human
being is applicable to all mankind, we can say that in the
consecutive periods of evolution this can in a sense be seen
to be true for both the individual and for humanity as a
whole. We need not go beyond the postAtlantean epoch. Here we
differentiate in this era the ancient Indian or first
post-Atlantean cultural epoch, the Old Persian as the second,
the Egypto-Chaldean as the third, the Greco-Roman as the
fourth and our own as the fifth. Two more epochs will follow
ours, until there is again a great catastrophe. This
evolutionary progress in successive epochs does often show
similarities that can be compared in a certain way with the
kind of recurrence that may be observed, for example, in the
plant kingdom. We see how these periods run their course so
that in a certain respect at the beginning of each epoch
humanity receives certain revelations; a stream of spiritual
life is given to mankind as an impulse, in the same way as
the plants of the earth receive an impulse in springtime.
Then we see how a further development is built on the first
impulse, how it bears fruit and then dies away when the
period comes to an end, as plants wither at the approach of
winter. However, in addition, something appears during the
successive epochs that is similar to the progress of an
individual human being, and of this we can say that time
plays a significant role, and it proves to be a real factor.
It is not only the case that in the second, the Old Persian
epoch, seeds are again planted, as was the case in the first
epoch, or that in the third epoch the same thing happened as
in the first. The impulses are always different, always at a
higher level and always new, in just the same way that in
human life the seven-year periods can be differentiated, and
there is progress.
Now that
which came to humanity in the course of time came in such a
way that we could say that the things which comprise the sum
total of human knowledge were opened up to man slowly and
gradually. Not all the streams of peoples and nations always
had the same perceptions of things at the same time. Thus we
see that in that human evolutionary stream that came to an
end at about the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, the sense
for time as a real factor was missing. Indeed, in all Eastern
knowledge this sense of time as a real factor was
fundamentally missing. Characteristically the Eastern
knowledge has a sense for the recurrence of the same.
Therefore everything that is concerned with recurrence is
magnificently grasped by the knowledge of the East.
When we think
of this recurrence of the same in successive cultural epochs,
what is it that comes into consideration? Take, for example,
the question of plant growth. We see how in springtime the
plants shoot forth from the earth; we witness their
“creation.” We see how these plants grow and
flourish until they reach a kind of culmination. Then they
wither, and in withering they carry in themselves the seed
for a new plant. Thus we have to do here with a threefold
process: coming into being, growth and flourishing, and then
withering, and this withering is accompanied by the
production of the seed of a similar plant. When time does not
come into question, when it is a question of recurrence, then
this principle of recurrence is best understood as a triad.
It was the special talent of Oriental wisdom, pre-Christian
wisdom, to understand recurring development as a triad. The
grandeur of this ancient world view was limited by what we
may think of as a predisposition in favor of events that
recur and are timeless. And when this world view comes to a
conclusion, trinities confront us everywhere, and
fundamentally these represent the clairvoyant perception of
what lies behind coming into being, passing away, and
renewal. Brahma, Shiva, and Vishnu, this trinity of creative
forces is the foundation of all things. In the time preceding
Krishna's revelation it was recognized as a trinity that
could be perceived through clairvoyance, and it was seen as
Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. The image of this trinity exists
wherever time is seen only as the successive recurrence of
the same.
The
significance of a new era is recognized when the gift of
seeing events in historical perspective arises, that is, when
time is taken into account in relation to evolution, when
time is looked upon as a real factor. It was a special task
of Western knowledge to develop a historical sense, to
penetrate into the truths of history. And the two streams in
human evolution coming from East and West differ in that the
East looks at the world unhistorically, while the West,
prompted by a new impulse, begins to look at the world from a
historical point of view. It was the world view of the
Hebrews that gave the first impulse to this historical
viewpoint.
Let us now
consider together what the essential elements of the Oriental
world view actually are. We are always told of recurring
world ages, of what happens at the beginning of the first and
at the end of the first cosmic age. Then we are told of the
beginning of the second world age, and its end, then the
beginning of the third and its end. And the secret of world
development is correctly presented when it is said that when
the ancient culture of the third world age had become dry and
arid and the culture had entered the phase of autumn and
winter, then there appeared Krishna. The son of Vasudeva and
Devaki, his task was to sum up for later ages, namely for the
fourth period, what could be carried from the third into the
fourth period as the germ, the new seed for that period. The
individual world ages appear to us like successive years in
the life of a plant. In the Oriental world view the cycles of
time, which constantly recur, are the essential element.
Now let us
compare these world views in their timelessness, their
profoundest aspect, with what confronts us in the Old
Testament. What a mighty difference we find from the world
views of the East! Here we perceive as an essential part of
this view a real continuous line in time. We are first led to
Genesis, to the Creation, and linked to Creation is the whole
history of mankind. We see a continuous sequence through the
seven days of Creation, through the era of the patriarchs,
from Abraham down through Isaac and Jacob, everything
developing, everything a part of history. Where is there any
recapitulation? The first day of Creation is by no means
repeated in an abstract way in the second. The patriarchs are
not repeated in the prophets, nor does the era of the kings
repeat the era of the judges. In due course comes the time of
the captivity. We are everywhere led through an entire
dramatic process, in which time plays a real part as it does
in an individual human life. Irrespective of what is repeated
time is shown as a real factor in all that happens. The
special element in the picture presented by the Old Testament
is progress. The Old Testament is the first great example of
a historical approach to events, and it is this historical
approach that was bequeathed to the West.
Men learn
only slowly and gradually what in the course of time has been
revealed to them; and we may say that in a certain sense when
there are new revelations there is a kind of reversion to
what had gone before. Great and significant things were
revealed at the beginning of the theosophical movement. But
it was an extraordinary feature of this revelation that the
historical approach permeated the movement very little. You
can convince yourselves of this especially if you glance at
Sinnett's Esoteric Buddhism,
[ Note 15 ]
which in other respects is an excellent
and meritorious book. All the chapters in it that are
pervaded by history will be found acceptable by the Western
mind. But side by side with this is another element that we
may call an “unhistorical” element, curious
passages in which large and small cycles are spoken of, the
procession of rounds and races, where the material is
presented in such a way that recurrence is of central
importance — how the third round follows after the
second, how one root-race follows after the other root-race,
one subrace follows after the other subrace, and so on. One
really becomes caught up in a kind of working of a clock, and
the greatest importance is given to recurrence. This was a
reversion to a kind of thinking that had already been
outgrown by mankind, for the way of thinking suited to
western culture is in truth historical.
What is the
consequence of this historical element that belongs to
Western culture? Precisely the knowledge of the one focus of
all earthly development. The Orient regarded development as
similar to the process of plant growth that recurs every
year. Thus the individual great initiates appeared in each
period and repeated — at all events it was what they
repeated that was especially stressed — what had been
done earlier. It was particularly emphasized in an abstract
manner how each initiate was only a particular form of the
one who continues his development from epoch to epoch. There
was in the East a special interest in picturing how this
continuous development of the same also is easily seen in the
plant world as the form reveals itself each year, and the
individual years are not distinguished from each other. Only
in one particular case do people notice that there is a
difference from year to year. If someone wants to describe a
lily or a vine leaf it is of no consequence whether the plant
grew in 1857 or 1867, for lilies all resemble each other if
they belong to a particular variety of lily. But when what we
may think of as the general, recurring, identical
“Apollonian” element passes over into the
“Dionysian,” even in the realm of plant life,
then we attach special importance to the fact that individual
“vintages” do differ, and it becomes important to
distinguish the different years. In all other cases no one
cares whether a lily flowered in 1890 or 1895.
Similarly,
the Orient saw no particular point in distinguishing the
incarnation of the Boddhisattva in the third epoch from his
incarnation in the second or first epoch. This comparison
should not be carried too far, however. For the Easterner the
Boddhisattva was always an incarnation of the One. This
abstract concentration on the One, this tendency to look for
the One, demonstrates the unhistorical nature of Oriental
thought; and fundamentally this is equally characteristic of
all the unhistorical conceptions of the pre-Christian era.
The single exception is the historical point of view that
appears in the Old Testament. In the case of the Old
Testament this historical viewpoint was only a beginning,
which reached a more perfected stage in the New Testament.
The important thing here is to look at the whole line of
development, as such, and not confine ourselves to looking at
what is repeated in the individual cycles, but rather to try
to see what constitutes the focus of all development. Then we
shall be justified in saying that it is absolute nonsense to
say that there can be no such focus of development.
This is the
point about which the various peoples, scattered across the
world, must come to an understanding: the subject of
historical development. The first thing they must realize is
that for a true and genuine study of mankind it is absolutely
vital to take the historical element into consideration. Even
today one may have the experience that if a true and genuine
Christianity is taken to the East — not a fanatical or
denominational Christianity — but a Christianity that
wishes to hold its own beside the other Eastern religions,
then one may be received with the words, “It is true
that you have only the one God who incarnated only once, in
Palestine. But we are ahead of you for we have many
embodiments of God.” For an Oriental such an answer
would be a matter of course. It is connected with his special
gift for looking always for the recurrence of the One. By
contrast, what is important for the Westerner is that
everything should have a center of gravity. So if people
speak of several incarnations of Christ they are making the
same mistake as if they were to say that it is ridiculous to
pretend that only one fulcrum is needed for a pair of scales,
and that the load on one side is balanced by the weights on
the other; and moreover that the pair of scales can be
supported in two, three or four places. But this of course is
nonsense — a pair of scales can have only one fulcrum.
So if we wish to understand evolution as a whole we must look
for the one fulcrum, the single center of gravity, and not
think it would be better if we looked for successive
incarnations of the Christ. Regarding this question the
nations and peoples spread across the world will have to come
to the understanding that in the course of human history it
was necessary for men to come to a historical way of
thinking, to a concept of history, as the only conception in
a higher sense truly worthy of man.
This manner
of looking at human evolution from a historical standpoint
came about only very slowly; it began in the most primitive
conditions. We find this historical evolution first indicated
in the Old Testament through the repeated emphasizing of the
nature of the people of the Old Testament, how they belong to
the bloodstream of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, how the blood
flows through successive generations; fundamentally what
develops in this people is a form of descent through the
blood, of propagation through the blood. As a man progresses
through the successive periods in his life and time plays its
part in this process, so it is also in the case of the entire
people of the Old Testament. And if we examine the process
down to its very details we shall find that in truth the
sequence of the generations of the Old Testament peoples is
analogous to the life of an individual human being insofar as
he develops naturally, developing in himself everything that
we may think of as being possible through his physical
disposition. What could happen as a result of the passing on
of his heritage from father to son as an invariable process
is described for us in the Old Testament; and it also
describes the kind of religious faith that came into being
because later generations always clung to those who were
their blood relatives. The significance to be attached to the
bloodstream in the natural life of the individual human being
is made applicable to the entire people of the Old Testament.
And just as the soul element, as it were, emerges in
individual man at a particular time and plays a specific part
in his life, so — and this is an especially interesting
fact — does something similar occur in the historical
evolution of the Old Testament.
Let us take
the case of a child. Here we see that nature predominates;
its bodily needs are at first dominant. The soul-element is
still concealed within the body; it does not wish to emerge
fully. Bodily well-being is produced through pleasant
external impressions; unpleasant, painful impressions of the
external world are also reflected in the manifestations of
the child's soul-nature. Then the child grows up, and through
his natural development his soul-element begins to be
dominant; we then enter a stage in life — the age
varies in different people, but in general this occurs in the
twenties — when men give full expression to the element
of soul that is within them. Purely bodily pains and
necessities recede into the background and the soul
configuration emerges in a marked manner. There follows a
period during which the soul-element in man is inclined to
recede more into the background — and this period will be
longer or shorter in different men. It may happen that a man
will retain his specific soul-nature his whole life long.
Nevertheless something else is really present, even if in his
twenties someone persists in emphasizing what he is, as if
the world had been only waiting for just that specific
soul-element that he bears within him. This is likely to
happen especially when a man has strong spiritual potential,
as, for example, when he possesses a marked talent for
philosophy. It then seems as if the world had only been
waiting until he came and established the correct
philosophical system, for which only his soul configuration
was suited. And it may happen that what is right and good may
emerge in this way. Then there comes a time when we begin to
see what the world may give through others. Then we allow
something different to speak through ourselves, and we take
up what others have achieved before us.
The whole
body of the ancient Hebrew people is presented in the Old
Testament as analogous to an individual man. We see how in
the time of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob everything in this
people develops through its racial characteristics. And if
you follow up what has been described here you will say that
it was certain racial characteristics that provided the
impulses in the Old Testament. Then came the time when this
people formed its soul, in the same way that individual man
forms his personal soul in his twenties. It is at this point
that the prophet Elijah appears, for Elijah seems in himself
like the whole soul peculiar to the Hebrew people. After him
came the other prophets of whom I spoke a few days ago,
telling you that they were the souls of the widely varying
initiates of other peoples who came together in the people of
the Old Testament. Now the soul of this people listens to
what the souls of the other peoples have to say. What Elijah
left behind and what the souls of other peoples have to say
through their prophets, who now reincarnate in the people of
the Old Testament, is blended as in a great harmony or
symphony.
Thus did the
body of the old Hebrew people come to maturity. Then in a
certain way it dies by retaining only the spiritual, what
remains spiritual, in its faith and religion, as we see so
wonderfully in the picture of the Maccabees. We could say,
“Here appears in a picture of the Maccabees the Old
Testament people, now grown old, slowly lying down to rest in
its old age, yet at the same time proclaiming, through the
sons of the Maccabees, its awareness of the eternity of the
human soul. The eternity of individual man confronts us as
the consciousness of the people. And it seems as though while
the body of the people is sinking to its destruction, its
soul continues as a soul seed in an entirely new form. Where
is this soul to be found?
This
Elijah-soul is at the same time the soul of the Old Testament
people, as it enters the Baptist and lives in him. When he
was imprisoned and then beheaded by Herod, what happened then
to his soul? This we have already indicated. His soul left
the body and worked on as an aura; and into the domain of
this aura Christ Jesus entered. Where then is the soul of
Elijah, the soul of John the Baptist? The Mark Gospel
indicates this clearly enough. The soul of John the Baptist,
of Elijah, becomes the group soul of the Twelve; it lives,
and continues to live in the Twelve. We can say that it is
artistically and pictorially shown in a remarkable manner how
the teaching of Christ Jesus, his way of teaching, differed
when he taught the crowd and when he taught his own
individual disciples — and this, even before the Mark
Gospel has told us of the death of John the Baptist. We have
already spoken of this. However, a change takes place when
the soul of Elijah is freed from John the Baptist and works
on further in the Twelve as a group soul. And this is
indicated, for from this time onward — this is quite
clear if we read the passage and reread it — Christ
makes greater demands on His disciples than before. He calls
upon them to understand higher things. And it is very
remarkable what He expects them to understand, and what later
on He reproaches them for not understanding. Read it in the
Gospel just as it is written. I have already referred to one
aspect of these events, namely that mention was made of an
increase of bread when Elijah went to the widow at Sareptah,
and how, when the soul of Elijah was freed from John the
Baptist, again an increase of bread is reported. But now
Christ Jesus demands of His disciples that they should
understand in particular the meaning of this increase of
bread. Before that time He had not spoken to them in such
terms. Now they ought to understand what was the destiny of
John the Baptist after he had been beheaded through Herod,
what happened in the case of the feeding of the five thousand
when the fragments of bread were collected in twelve baskets,
and what happened when the four thousand were fed from seven
loaves and the fragments were collected in seven baskets. So
He said to them:
“Do
you notice and understand nothing? Are your souls still in
the darkness? You have eyes and do not see, ears and do not
hear, and you do not think of what I did. I broke the five
loaves for the five thousand. How many baskets of the
fragments did you gather?” They answered,
“Twelve.”
“And
when seven loaves were divided among four thousand, how
many basketsful of fragments did you gather?” And
they answered, “Seven.”
Then he
said to them, “Do you still not understand?”
(Mark 8:17-21.)
He reproaches
them severely because they cannot understand the meaning of
these revelations. Why does He do this? Because the thought
was in His mind, “Now that the spirit of Elijah has
been freed, he lives in you, and you must gradually prove
yourselves worthy of his penetration into your souls, so that
you may understand things that are higher than what you have
hitherto been able to understand.” When Christ Jesus
spoke to the crowd, He spoke in parables, in pictures,
because there was still in their souls an echo of what had
formerly been perceived in the super-sensible world in
imaginations, in imaginative knowledge. For this reason He
had to speak to the crowd in the way used by the old
clairvoyants. To those who came out of the Old Testament
people and became His disciples He could interpret the
parables in a Socratic manner, in accordance with ordinary
human reasoning capacities. He could speak to the new sense
that had been given to mankind after the old clairvoyance had
died out. But because Elijah's spirit as a group soul came
near to the Twelve and permeated them like a common aura,
they could, or at least it was possible for them to become in
a higher sense clairvoyant. Enlightened as they were through
the spirit of Elijah-John they could, when the Twelve were
united together, perceive what they could not attain as
individual men. It was for this that Christ wished to educate
them.
To what end
did He wish to educate them? Fundamentally what is this story
of the increase of bread, the first time the division of five
loaves among five thousand and the gathering of twelve
basketsful of fragments? Then the second time, when seven
loaves were divided among four thousand, with seven
basketsful over? This has been a difficult theme for
commentators. In our time they have come to an agreement and
simply say that the people had brought bread with them, and
when they had been made to sit down in rows they unpacked
their fragments. Even those who wish to adhere to the letter
of the Gospel story seem to have agreed on this
interpretation. But when things are taken in this external
manner they are reduced to nothing but external trappings and
external ceremony; and one cannot tell why the whole story
should have been related at all. On the other hand we cannot
of course think of black magic, though if a plentiful
quantity of bread had really been conjured up out of five or
seven loaves respectively then it would indeed have been
black magic. But it can neither be a question of black magic,
nor yet a process found satisfactory by Philistines who
suppose that the people had brought bread with them and
unpacked it. Something special is meant by the story. I have
indicated this when I interpreted the other Gospels, and in
this Gospel it is clearly indicated what is the point at
issue:
And the
apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to Him
everything they had done and what they had taught. And he
said to them: “Withdraw to a solitary place apart and
rest for a short time.”
(Mark 6:30-31.)
We should pay
careful attention to this saying. Christ Jesus sends His
apostles away to a solitary place so that they could rest for
a while; that is to put themselves into a condition which
comes naturally when one goes into solitude. What now do they
see? In this different condition what do they see? They are
led into a new kind of clairvoyance, which they are able to
enter because the spirit of Elijah-John now overshadows them.
Until this time Christ has interpreted the parables for them;
now He allows a new clairvoyance to come over them. And what
do they see? They see in comprehensive pictures the
development of humanity, they see how the peoples of the
future gradually come near to the Christ Impulse. The
disciples see in the spirit what is described here as the
multiple increase of bread. It is an act of clairvoyance. And
like other such clairvoyant perceptions it flits past if one
is not accustomed to it. It is for this reason that the
disciples could not understand it for so long.
In the
lectures that are to follow we shall have to occupy ourselves
ever more intensively with the fact, especially evident in
the Mark Gospel, that the stories concerned with outer events
in the world of the senses pass over little by little into
reports of clairvoyant moments and the Gospel is then
understandable only through spiritual research. Let us, for
example, imagine ourselves in the period just after the
beheading of John, and let us suppose ourselves to be
affected by the Christ Impulse, which was already in the
world. From the point of view of ordinary sense perception
Christ first of all seems to us like a lonely personality,
unable to achieve much. But a clairvoyant vision, schooled in
a modern manner, perceives the element of time. Christ did
not appear only to those who were living then in Palestine,
but to all who will appear in future generations. All of them
gather around Him; and what He is able to give to them He
gives to thousands upon thousands. This is the way the
apostles see Him. They see Him actively working from His own
epoch onward through countless millennia, casting His impulse
forward spiritually into all perspectives of the future. They
perceive how all human beings of the future come near. In
this process they are indeed in very special measure united
with the Christ.
We must
especially recognize that from now on the entire presentation
of the Mark Gospel is permeated by the spiritual. How the
Gospel grows ever more profound because of this permeation we
shall perceive in the lectures that are to follow. But let us
focus our attention on one thing — a scene that can be
understood only through the spiritual scientific method of
research. This scene follows closely on the one we have just
quoted:
And Jesus
and his disciples went into the areas around Caesarea
Philippi. And on the way he asked his disciples,
“What do people say of me? Who do they say I
am?”
So they
told him, “Some say you are John the Baptist; others
that you are Elijah, and yet others that you are one of the
prophets.”
And he
asked them, “What about you? Who do you say that I
am?”
Peter
answered and told him, “You are the
Christ.”
And he
warned them not to tell anyone about him.
And he
began to teach then that the Son of Man must suffer much
and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the
scribes; and that he would undergo death and after three
days be raised. And he spoke quite openly of the
matter.
Then Peter
went close to him and began to scold him. But he turned
round and when he saw his disciples he scolded Peter in
this way. “Get behind me, Satan! You are thinking
only of what is convenient for men, not for God.”
(Mark 8:27-33.)
Surely a
tough nut for Gospel commentators to crack! For what does the
entire passage really mean? Unless we engage in spiritual
research nothing in the passage is comprehensible. Christ
asks the disciples, “Who do the people say I am?”
And they answer, “Some say you are John the
Baptist!” But John the Baptist had been beheaded a
short time before, and in any event Christ was already
teaching while John was still alive! Could the people have
been talking such obvious nonsense when they took Christ for
John the Baptist while the Baptist was still living? It might
have been still acceptable when they said He was Elijah or
another prophet. But then Peter says, “You are the
Christ!” That is to say, he reveals something of a
sublime nature that could have been spoken only from the
holiest part of his being. Then, a few lines later, Christ is
supposed to have told him, “Satan, get behind me. You
are thinking only of what is convenient for men, not for
God.” Is it possible for anyone to believe that after
Peter had made his sublime affirmation Christ would have
insulted him by calling him Satan? Or can one believe what
was said just before, that Christ warned them not to tell
anyone about Him, that is to say, to tell no one that Peter
believes Him to be the Christ? Then the Gospel goes on to
say, “He began to teach them that the Son of Man must
suffer much, and be rejected and killed, and then after three
days be raised. And he spoke quite openly about the
matter.” Then after Peter scolded Him because of what
He had said He calls Peter a “Satan.” But most
curious of all is the remaining passage where it is said that
“Jesus and his disciples went into the areas around
Caesarea Philippi,” and the rest. The Gospel always
tells how they speak to Him, and then later it is said,
“and he began to teach them ...” and so on. But
then it says, “But he turned around, and when he saw
his disciples he scolded Peter.” Earlier it is said
that He spoke to them and taught them. Did He do all this
with His back turned to them? For it is said that “he
turned around and saw his disciples.” Did He really
turn His back on them and talk into the air?
You see what
a tangle of incomprehensible things is to be found in this
single passage. We can only marvel that such things are
accepted without ever looking for real and truthful
explanations. But if you look at the Gospel commentaries they
either hurry over such passages or they are interpreted in a
most curious way. It is true that there have been some
discussions and controversies; but few will claim they have
made them any wiser.
At this
moment we wish to stick to only one point, and bring before
our souls a picture of what has been said. We pointed out
that after the death of John the Baptist when the soul of
Elijah-John passed over into the disciples as a group soul,
then the first true “miracle” was accomplished,
and it will become ever clearer how this word is to be
understood. Here we come upon a completely incomprehensible
passage in which Christ Jesus is portrayed as having said to
His disciples, “What do people believe is now
happening?” In truth the question can be put also in
this way, for what concerned these people most of all was
what the source of these actions was, where these happenings
came from. To this the disciples reply, “People think
it has something to do with — to use a trivial
expression — John the Baptist, or it has to do with
Elijah or one of the other prophets. And because of this
connection the deeds that we have witnessed have taken
place.”
So Christ
Jesus then asks, “But where do you believe these things
come from?” and now Peter answers, “They come
from the fact that you are the Christ.” With these
words Peter, in the sense of the Mark Gospel, placed himself
through this knowledge at the midpoint of the evolution of
mankind. For what did he actually say with these words? Let
us picture to ourselves what he said.
In former
times it was the initiates who were the great leaders of
humanity, those who were taken up to the final stage of
initiation in the sacred mysteries. It was these men who
approached the gate of death, who had been immersed in the
elements, had remained for three days outside their bodies
and during these three days were in the super-sensible worlds.
Then they were brought back again into their bodies and
became thereafter emissaries, ambassadors from the
super-sensible worlds. It was always those initiates who had
become initiates by means such as these who were the great
leaders of mankind. Now Peter says, “You are the
Christ,” that is, “You are a leader who has not
gone through the mysteries in this way but has come down from
the cosmos and become a leader of mankind.” Something
which in all other cases had happened in a different way,
through initiation, was now to take place on the earth plane
once and for all as a historical fact. It was something
colossal that Peter had just proclaimed. So what had he to be
told? He had to be told that this was something that must not
be brought before the people. It is something that according
to the most sacred laws of the past must remain a mystery; it
is not permissible to speak of the mysteries. That is what
Peter had to be told at that moment.
Yet the whole
meaning of the further evolution of humanity is that with the
Mystery of Golgotha something that otherwise took place only
in the depths of the mysteries had now been manifested on the
plane of world history. Through what happened on Golgotha,
the lying in the grave for three days, the resurrection,
through this what otherwise had taken place only in the
depths and darkness of the mysteries was placed historically
on the earth plane. In other words, the moment in time had
now come when what had hitherto been regarded as a sacred
law: that silence must be preserved about the mysteries, must
be broken. The law that one has to be silent about the
mysteries had been established by men. But now, through the
Mystery of Golgotha, the mysteries must become manifest!
Within the soul of the Christ a decision was taken, the
greatest world-historical decision, when He resolved that
what until now had always, according to human law, been kept
secret must now be made manifest before the sight of all,
before world history.
Let us think
of this moment in world history when the Christ meditated and
reflected in this way, “I am looking at the whole
development of mankind. The laws of mankind forbid me to
speak about death and resurrection, about raising from the
dead, and about the sacred mystery of initiation. Yet no! I
have in truth been sent down to the earth by the Gods to make
these things manifest. It is not for me to conform to what
people say, but I must act in conformity with what the Gods
tell me.” It is in this moment that the decision to
make the mysteries manifest is prepared. And Christ must
shake off the irresolution that might arise from a wish to
maintain within human evolution what human commands have
enjoined. “Get behind me, irresolution, and decision,
grow in me, the decision to place before all mankind what
hitherto has been kept in the depths of the mysteries.”
Christ addresses His own resolution after He had rejected
everything that could make Him irresolute when He says,
“Get behind me,” and at this moment He resolves
to fulfill what He had been sent down to earth by God to
accomplish.
In this
passage we have to do with the greatest monologue in world
history, the greatest that has ever taken place in the whole
of earth evolution, the monologue of a God about making
manifest the mysteries. No wonder that the God's monologue is
from the beginning incomprehensible to the human intellect.
If we wish to penetrate into its depths we must wish, at
least in some measure, to make ourselves worthy of
understanding the God's monologue through which the deed of
the God moves one step further towards realization. More of
this tomorrow.
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