Easter
April 12, 1906
Goethe has in
various ways expressed a certain feeling he has often had, he
says: When I observe the inconsequence of human passions,
desires and actions, I experience the strongest impulse to
turn to nature and seek support against the structure of her
consequence and logic. — The arrangement of our
festivals rests upon the endeavour of humanity since the
earliest day to raise their eyes from the chaotic life of
human desires, impulses and actions to the great
consequential facts of all powerful nature. It is admirable,
how well the big festivals are directly related to
corresponding phenomena of nature. One such is the Easter
festival, representing for the Christian a commemoration of
his Redeemer's resurrection, and was earlier celebrated as
the awakening of something of especial importance for
mankind.
We look back
to ancient Egypt with its Osiris-Isis-Horus cult expressing
the uninterrupted rejuvenation of eternal nature. We then
consider Greece, and find there a festival in honour of the
God bacchus — a spring festival, connected in one way
or another with the awakening of nature in spring. In India
we have a spring festival dedicated to Vishnu. The Godhead of
the Brahman is divided into three aspects — Brahma,
Vishnu and Shiva. Brahman is rightly called the Great
Architect of the universe bringing thereinto order and
harmony. Vishnu is described as a kind of redeemer, awakener
of slumbering life, rescuer, and Shiva is he who sanctifies
and elevates the life awakened by Vishnu to the highest
possible perfection. A sort of festival was also dedicated to
Vishnu. It is said he falls into a sleep at the time of the
year when we celebrate Christmas, to awake again at Easter.
Those calling themselves his servants celebrate the entire
intervening time in a most significant manner: they abstain
from certain foods and drinks, and also meat. In that way
they prepare themselves for gaining an understanding of the
meaning involved when, at the Vishnu-festival, the
resurrection is celebrated, — the awakening of entire
Nature. The Christmas festival also has a significant
relation to great natural phenomena — the power of the
Sun becomes weaker, days shorter, and also that the Sun
radiates more heat from Christmas onwards, so that Christmas
becomes the festival of the reborn Sun. In this sense the
Winter festival was felt by Christians. When Christianity, in
the 6th and 7th centuries, wished to connect itself with
ancient, holy events, the birth of Christ was transformed to
the day on which the Sun again rose to a higher altitude. The
spiritual significance of the World redeemer was brought into
revelation with the physical Sun and awakening, resurrected
life.
The Easter
festival of spring also is brought into connection — as
is usual with other festivals — certain solar
phenomenon, one coming into expression even in common custom.
During the first Christian century the symbol of Christianity
was the Cross, at the foot of which is the lamb. Lamb and Ram
are synonymous. During the time when Christianity was in
preparation, the Sun appeared in the constellation of the Ram
or Lamb. The Sun passes through the signs of the Zodiac; each
year the Sun advances some distance. About 600-700 years
before Christ the Sun had advanced into this zodiacal sign.
For 2500 years it advances through it. Before that the sun
was in the constellation Taurus — Bull. In those days
the nations celebrated events which appeared significant to
them in connection with human evolution through the Bull,
because the Sun occupied that sign or constellation. As the
Sun enters the sign of Aries — Ram or Lamb — the
myths and legends the people contained references to the Ram
as something significant. The Ram's skin brings Jason across
from Kolchis. The Christ Jesus speaks of himself as the Lamb
of God, and during the early period of Christianity is
symbolised by the Lamb at the foot of the Cross. Thus can
Easter be brought into relation with the constellation of the
Ram or Lamb, and be considered the festival of the Redeemer's
resurrection, because he summons everything to a new life
after the death of Winter.
With these
characteristics only in your mind, the two festivals
Christmas and Easter seem rather similar, for the Sun has
gained more power since its own festival of resurrection
— the Christmas festival; therefore something more
should be expressed by Easter. The festival of Easter in its
deepest meaning will always be felt to be the greatest
festival of the greatest mystery humanity — not merely
as a sort of nature-festivity, related to the Sun, but
essentially something more; It is indicated in the Christian
meaning of resurrection after death. Also in the
awakening of Vishnu the awakening after
death is indicated. The awakening of Vishnu falls into
the period in which the Sun in winter resumes its ascent, and
the festival of Easter is a continuation of that ascending
solar power which commenced at the festival of Christmas. We
must look into the mysteries of human nature very deeply if
we would understand the experiences of the old initiates when
trying outwardly to express the essentials of the festival of
Easter.
Man appears
as a dual being, connecting a psycho-spiritual essentiality
on one side with a physical substantiality on the other. The
physical part is convergence of all other natural phenomena
in the environment of man; they all appear as a delicate
extract in human nature. Paracelsus significantly describes
man as a confluence of all outside nature which is like
letters of which man forms the word.
The sublimest
wisdom lies in his organisation; physically he is a temple of
the soul. All the laws we can observe in the lifeless stone,
the living plant, the animal as subject of pleasure or pain,
all these are compounded together in man: in wisdom they are
there fused into a unity. When we contemplate the wonderful
structure of the human brain with its countless number of
cells working together so that all the thoughts and feelings
of man may be expressed — everything that, in one way
or another, affects the soul — we realise the
all-ruling wisdom in the construction of his physical body.
When we look out upon the entire outer world we perceive
crystallised wisdom. And if we would penetrate all the laws
of our surrounding world with our perceptive faculties and
then look back upon man, we see concentrated in him the whole
of nature, as a microcosm in a macrocosm. It was in this
sense that Schiller said to Goethe: “You take into
consideration the whole of nature in order to gain light
concerning the detail. In the totality you seek the
explanation for the individual. From the simple organism you
pass step by step to the more complex, so to finally arrive
at the most complex of all — man — and construct
him genetically from the materials of the all-embracing
structure or Nature.”
It is by
means that marvel of construction the human body — that
the soul can direct her eye upon her environment. Through the
senses the psychic man observes the world around him, seeking
slowly and laboriously — to fathom the wisdom by which
it has been built.
Let us
consider an as yet very undeveloped human being from the
following point of view: — his body is the most
reasonable creation possible; it is a concentration of the
entire Divine reason. But in it resides a very immature soul
incapable of developing even an initial thought for the
comprehension of the mysterious power ruling in the heart,
brain or blood. Very gradually this soul develops to an
understanding of the forces which have worked in the
construction of this human body. But upon it is impressed the
soul of a remote past; man stands there as the crown of
creation. Aeons had to pass away before cosmic wisdom was
united within that human body.
But in the
soul of the undeveloped man the cosmic wisdom first begins to
grow. At first she barely dreams of the profound thoughts of
the universal spirit — the architect of the human
being.Yet, everything lying within man in a state of sleep
— the psycho-spiritual constitution will in future be
understood by man. Cosmic thought has worked through
countless ages, — worked creatively in nature in order
ultimately to build the crown of its agelong activity —
the human body. In it slumbers the cosmic wisdom, so as to
recognise itself in the human soul, to construct in the human
being an eye with which to perceive itself. Cosmic wisdom
without, — cosmic wisdom within — operative in
the present as in the past — operative far into a
future whose sublimity may only be surmised. The most
profound human emotions are evoked when we thus ponder the
past and future.
When the soul
begins to understand the wonder constructed by the wisdom of
the cosmos — when she attains thoughtful clarity and
illumined knowledge then the sun may represent the most
glorious symbol of this inner awakening which opens for the
soul the outer world through the medium of the senses. Man
receives the light because the sun illuminates objects. What
man sees in the outer world is the reflected sunlight. The
sun awakens in the soul the power to perceive the outer
world. The awakening sun-soul in man, beginning to discover;
cosmic thought in the seasons of the year, recognises in the
rising sun her liberator.
When the sun
again begins to ascend in the heavens and the days lengthen,
the soul looks towards the sun, saying: To you I owe the
possibility of seeing cosmic thought spread out in my
environment — cosmic thought that sleeps in me as in
all else. — Then man looks upon his earlier existence
— the ages preceding his groping search for the cosmic
thought.
Man is indeed
very, very much older than his senses. Spiritual
investigation enables us to arrive at the point of time when
the senses are only beginning their development, — when
they are at their weakest. At that time the senses were not
yet the doors through which the soul could perceive her
surroundings. Shopenhauer realised this fact and described
the turning-point where man became able to use his sense
perceptions in the world. That is his meaning, when he says::
The visible world came into being only when an eye existed
with which to perceive it. — The sun formed the eye
— light created light. Formerly, before any such outer
vision existed, man possessed an inner light. In the remote
past of human evolution no exterior object stimulated man to
outer perception, but from his inner self arose imaginations,
ideas, the primitive vision was a vision in the astral light.
Humanity possessed a dull, dim clairvoyance.
In the
Germanic world of the Gods man could also perceive the Gods
through a sort of dim, misty astral light. But it gradually
became more dim and dark and slowly vanished; It became
extinguished by the fierce light or the physical sun which
appeared in the heavens and the physical world it
illuminated. So the astral vision of man receded, declined.
When man looks to the future, it becomes clear that this
astral sight must return upon a higher level; all that which
has become extinguished by physical vision, must again live,
so that a fully conscious clairvoyance may be developed in
mankind. To the normal vision of day will be added a still
brighter and more luminant human life in the light of the
future. To physical vision will come vision in the astral
light.
The leaders
of humanity are those individualities whose renunciations
during earth-life enabled them to experience —
before death — the state of consciousness
called “passing through the portals of death”.
This contains all those experiences which later will be the
possession of all humanity when they have evolved astral
perception which makes visible the psychic and spiritual.
This making visible of the psycho-spiritual environment was
always called by the initiate the “awakening”,
“resurrection”, “spiritual rebirth”
— giving to man — a supplement to his gifts of
the physical senses, the senses of the Spirit. He celebrates
an inner Easter festival who discerns within him the
awakening of the new astral vision.
So we can
understand why this spring festival is related to symbolic
ideas such as death and resurrection. In man, the astral
light is “dead”. It sleeps. But it will again be
resurrected in man. Easter is the festival indicating this
future awakening of this astral light.
The sleep of
Vishnu begins at the Christmas time when the astral light
sank into sleep and physical light awoke. When man has
advanced sufficiently far to renounce the personal, the
astral light re-awakens in him; he can celebrate the feast of
Easter, — Vishnu can again awaken in his soul.
In cosmic
spiritual perception the Easter festival is not connected
with the awakening of the sun only, but with the reappearance
of the world of plant life in the spring also. As the seed is
laid into the soil and there decays in order to awaken to a
new life, so had the Astral light to sink into sleep in the
human body so that it may be rejuvenated. The symbol of
Easter is the seed which sacrifices itself so that a new
plant may arise. It is the sacrifice of one phase of nature
for the sake of creating a new one. Sacrifice and becoming
(germination of the new) — these two are intimately
linked together in the Easter festival. Richard Wagner felt
this thought profoundly. When he lived in a villa on the
banks of the lake at Zurich in 1887 and looked out upon
awaking nature, his thoughts concerning it gave rise to
others — the deceased and resurrected World saviour,
the Christ Jesus, and the thought of Parzifal seeing the Holy
of Holies in the soul.
All leaders
of mankind, who were aware of how the higher spiritual life
of man arises out of his lower nature, have comprehended the
significance of Easter. Dante therefore described his
awakening — in his Divine Comedia — as taking
place on Good Friday. That is clear at the very beginning of
the poem. Dante experienced his sublime vision in the 35th
year of his life; that is the middle of a normal human life.
So he reckons 35 years for the development of man's physical
perceptive powers; till then he continues absorbing new
physical experiences. After that, man is sufficiently matured
for spiritual experience to augment the physical; he is ripe
for spiritual perception. When the growing, evolving physical
powers in man are united, the time is ripe for the awakening
of the spiritual. For that rise Dante's vision falls into the
period of the Easter festival.
A certain
contradiction has been said to exist between the Christian
conception of Easter and the idea of Karma inherent in
Spiritual Science. Certainly, Karma and redemption through
the Son of man do appear to oppose one another. This state of
indecision is common with people who know little of the basic
idea of this anthroposophical thought, — a paradox
seemingly existing in the simultaneous acceptance of
salvation through Christ Jesus and the idea of Karma. Such
people say: — the ides of a redeeming God contradicts
self redemption through Karma. They fail to understand, in
the true sense, the Easter of redemption, nor can they grasp
the idea of Karmic justice. It would be wrong to withhold aid
from someone suffering by saying: “You yourself are the
cause of the trouble,” — refuse him help because
it must work itself out. That is a misunderstanding of
Karma. Karma, to the contrary, says to you: —
“Help him, who suffers, for you exist to help”.
You help to improve the credit balance of the Karmic account
of necessity when aiding your fellow man. You give him the
opportunity and the strength to carry his Karma; and you, to
that extent, are a redeemer from evil .
In a similar
way, instead of helping the single individual, one can come
to the assistance of a whole group or nation of man.
When a mighty
individuality like that of the Christ Jesus comes to the aid
of entire humanity, it is his sacrifice in death which
permeates the Karma of mankind. He helped to carry the Karma
of the whole of humanity, and we may be quite sure that
redemption through Christ Jesus was absorbed and assimilated
by the totality of human Karma.
The
fundamental significance of the resurrection and
redemption-concept will be made really comprehensible only
through Spiritual Science. A Christianity of the future will
unite Karma with redemption. Because cause and effect are
complementary in the spiritual world, this great act of
sacrifice must also have its effect upon human life. Upon
these thoughts of the Easter festival also does Spiritual
Science have a deepening effect. The thought of Easter which
appears to be written in the stars and which we believe to
(we) read in them, is fundamentally deepened by Spiritual
Science. We also see the profound meaning of the
Easter-concept in the ascendance of the spirit about to be
realised in the future.
At present,
mankind exists amidst inharmonious, disordered conditions.
But man knows how the world has emerged from chaos, and that
out of his chaotic inner being harmony will ultimately arise.
Like the regular paths of the planets round the sun, so will
the inner saviour of mankind arise, — herald and
creator of unity and harmony amid all disharmony. All
humanity shall be reminded by the Easter festival of the
resurrection of the spirit from the present obscurity of
human nature.
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