VI EASTER: THE MYSTERY OF THE FUTURE
IN A former lecture I pointed out that Christianity is wider in
reach and compass than the sphere of religion as we normally
understand it. I said that when, in future times, men have outgrown
what they are now wont to call religion, the substance and content of
Christianity will have thrown off the outmoded forms of religious life
and will have become a potent spiritual influence in the whole of
human culture. Christianity has the power in itself of transcending
the forms in which, in the cultural development of our day, we quite
rightly express our religious life.
Since that lecture, many significant expressions of cultural life
have come to my notice. I have had a brief period of lecturing in the
Northern countries in Sweden, Norway and Denmark. The week
before last I had to give a lecture in Stockholm, among other towns in
Sweden. Because of the low rate of population remember that
London alone has as many inhabitants as the whole of Sweden
there is much unoccupied territory, and people are separated by far
greater distances than is the case in our Middle European countries.
This will help you to understand what I mean when I tell you that the
influences of the old Nordic Gods and Beings are still perceptible in
the spiritual environment of those districts. To one who has some
knowledge of the Spiritual it is in a sense an actual fact, that
wherever the gaze turns one can glimpse the contenances of those
ancient Nordic Gods who appeared to the Initiates in the Northern
Mysteries, in times long before Christianity had spread over the
world.
In the very heart of these lands, enwreathed as they are by myth
and legend, not only in the poetic, but also in the spiritual sense,
another symptom came into evidence. Between the lectures in Stockholm
I had also to give one in Uppsala. In the Library there in the
very midst of all the evidences of spirituality dating from the times
of the ancient Gods lies the first Germanic version of the
Bible; the so-called ‘Silver Codex,’ consisting of the four Gospels
translated in the 4th century by the Gothic Bishop Wulfila.
During the Thirty Years' War, through strange workings of karma, this
remarkable document was taken as booty from Prague and brought to the
North, where it is now preserved in the midst of the spirit-beings
who, in remembrance at least, pervade the spiritual atmosphere of
those regions. And as though it were right and proper that this
document should lie where it does, a strange occurrence played a part
in the story. Eleven leaves of this Silver Codex were stolen by an
antiquarian, but after some time his heir suffered such pricks of
conscience that he sent the eleven leaves back again to Uppsala, where
they now lie, together with the rest of the first Germanic translation
of the Bible.
The subject of the three public lectures in Stockholm was Wagner's
Ring of the Nibelungs, and, walking along the streets, the
announcements of the last performance at the Opera of Wagner's
Ragnarök, the Götterdämmerung (Twilight of
the Gods), were to be seen on the kiosks. These things are really
symptomatic, interweaving in a most remarkable way. Underlying the old
Nordic sagas there is a note of deep tragedy, indicating that the
Nordic Gods and Divinities would be superseded by One yet to come.
This motif and trend of the Nordic sagas reappears in a medieval form
in Wagner's. Siegfried is killed by a thrust between his
shoulder-blades, his only vulnerable part. This is a prophetic
intimation that here, at this place in his body, something is lacking,
and that through One yet to come it will be covered by the arms of the
Cross. This is no mere poetic image, but something that has been drawn
from the inspiration belonging to the world of saga and legend. For
this same note of tragic destiny was implicit in the Nordic sagas, in
the Mystery-truth underlying them, that the Nordic Gods would be
replaced by the later, Christian Principle. In the Northern Mysteries
the significance of this ‘Twilight’ of the Gods was everywhere made
plain.
It is also significant and here again I mean something more
than a poetic image that in the very hearts of these people
to-day the remembrance of those ancient Gods lives on in peaceful
reconciliation with all that has been brought there or made its way
thither from Christianity. The presence of the Gothic Bible amid the
memories of ancient times is verily a symptom. One can also feel it as
a symptom, as a foreshadowing of the future, that in lands where more
intensely than anywhere else the ancient Gods are felt as living
realities, these Gods should be presented again in their Wagnerian
form, outside the narrow bounds of ordinary religion.
Anyone in the slightest degree capable of interpreting the signs of
the times will perceive in the art of Richard Wagner the first rays of
Christianity emerging from the narrow framework of the religious life
into the wider horizons of modern spiritual culture. One can discern
quite unmistakably how in the soul of Richard Wagner himself the
central idea of Christianity comes to birth, how it bursts the bonds
of religion and becomes universal. When on Good Friday, in the year
1857, he looks out of the Villa Wesendonck by the Lake of Zürich
at the budding flowers of early spring, and the first seed of
Parsifal quickens to life within him, this is a
transformation, on a wider scale, of what already lives in
Christianity, as a religious idea. And after he had reached the
heights of that prophetic foreshadowing of Christianity to which he
gave such magnificent expression in the Ring of the
Nibelungs, this central Idea of Christianity found still wider
horizons in Parsifal, becoming the seed of that future
time when Christianity will embrace, not only the religious life, but
the life of knowledge, of art, of beauty, in the widest sense of the
words.
This is the theme that will be presented to you to-day, in order to
kindle the feeling of what Christianity can be for mankind in times to
come.
In connection with this, we will penetrate deeply to-day into the
evolution of humanity, for the purpose of discovering the real
relation between religion in the ordinary sense and Christianity. The
present point of time is itself not unsuitable, lying as it does just
before the great Festival symbolising the victory of the Spirit over
Death. The Festival of Easter is close upon us and we remember,
perhaps, those Christmas lectures in which we endeavoured to grasp the
meaning of Christmas in the light of the Mystery-knowledge. If from a
higher vantage-point we think of the Christmas Festival on the one
side and the Easter Festival, with its prospect of Whitsuntide, on the
other, the relation between religion and Christianity, if rightly
conceived, is brought in a most wonderful way before the eye of
spirit.
It will be necessary to go far, far afield in laying the basis of
this study, but by doing so we shall realise what has been preserved
in such Festivals and what they can bring to life in the soul. We
shall go far, far back in evolution although not so far either
in time or space as in our last lectures, when we dealt with the
Spiritual Hierarchies. Those lectures, however, will have been a help,
because of the vistas they opened up of the earth's evolution and its
connection with that of the Beings of the heavens. To-day we shall go
back only to about the middle of the Atlantean epoch, when the
ancestors of present-day humanity were living in the West, between
Europe and America, on the continent now lying beneath the waters of
the Atlantic Ocean. In those times the face of the earth was quite
different. Where now there is water, then there was land, and on this
land dwelt the early ancestors of men who now constitute the civilised
humanity of Europe and Asia. When the eye of spirit is directed upon
the soul-life of these antediluvian, Atlantean peoples, it is seen to
have been quite different from the soul-life of Post-Atlantean
humanity. We have learnt, from earlier studies, of the mighty changes
that have taken place in earth-evolution since that time, including
changes in the life of the human soul. The whole of man's
consciousness, even the alternating states of waking consciousness by
day and sleep by night, have changed. The normal state to-day is that
when a man wakes in the morning he comes down with his astral body and
Ego into the physical and etheric bodies, making use of the physical
senses: the eyes for seeing, the ears for hearing, and all the other
senses, in order to receive the impressions coming from the material
world around him. He plunges with his astral body down into his brain,
into his nerves, combining and relating his multifarious
sense-impressions. Such is the life of day. At night, the Ego and
astral body draw out of the physical and etheric bodies, and sleep
ensues. The physical and etheric bodies lie in the bed, but the Ego
and astral body have passed out of them and all the impressions of the
sense-world and of the waking life of day are obliterated; joy,
suffering, pleasure, pain everything that composes man's inner
waking life of soul passes away, and in the present cycle of human
evolution darkness enshrouds him during the night.
At approximately the middle of the Atlantean epoch it was not so.
Man's consciousness in those times was essentially different. When in
the morning he entered into his physical and etheric bodies he was not
confronted with sharply outlined pictures of the outer, material
world. The pictures were much less distinct and definite, rather as
when street lamps in thick fog appear surrounded with an aura of
rainbow-like colours. This homely illustration will help you to
envisage what the mid-Atlantean man saw and perceived, but you must
remember that these colourforms surrounding and blurring the sharp
outlines of objects, and also the tones resounding from them, revealed
a great deal more than the colours and tones familiar to us to-day.
These encircling colours were the expressions of living beings
of the inner, soul-qualities of these beings. And so when a man had
come down into his physical and etheric bodies he still had some
perception of the spiritual beings, around him unlike to-day
when, on waking in the morning he merely perceives physical objects
with their sharp outlines and coloured surfaces.
Moreover, when at night the Atlantean left his physical and etheric
bodies, the world into which he passed was not a world of darkness and
silence; the pictures were hardly less numerous than by day, with this
difference only, that whereas in the waking life of day man perceived
outer objects, belonging to the mineral-, plant-, animal- and
human kingdoms, at night the whole space around him was filled with
colour-forms and tones, with impressions of smell, taste and so forth.
But these colours and tones, these impressions of warmth and cold of
which he was conscious, were the garments, the sheaths, of spiritual
Beings who never descend to physical incarnation, Beings whose names
and images are preserved in the myths and sagas. Myths and sagas are
not just folk-songs; they are memories of the visions which in olden
times came to men in these conditions of existence. Men were aware of
the spiritual alike by day and by night. By night they were surrounded
by that world of Nordic gods of which the legends tell. Odin, Freya,
and all the other figures in Nordic mythology were not inventions;
they were experienced in the spiritual world with as much reality as a
man experiences his fellow-men around him to-day. And the sagas are
the memories of the experiences actually undergone by men in their
shadowy, clairvoyant consciousness.
At the time when this kind of consciousness had evolved from a
still earlier form, the sun in the heavens rose at the vernal equinox
in the constellation of Libra (the Scales). As the Atlantean epoch
took its further course, the kind of consciousness that is ours to-day
gradually developed. The impressions received by man during the night
when his Ego and astral body were outside his physical and etheric
bodies became dimmer, less and less distinct; whereas the images of
waking life coming to him when he was within his physical and etheric
bodies by day, increased in clarity and definition. Paradoxically
speaking, night became more intensely night, day more intensely
day.
Then came the Atlantean Flood and the dawn of the later,
Post-Atlantean epochs of civilisation: the ancient Indian civilisation
when the Holy Rishis themselves were the teachers of men; the epoch of
ancient Persian culture; the epoch of
Chaldean-Assyrian-Babylonian-Egyptian culture; the epoch of
Greco-Roman culture, and finally our own. These epochs of civilisation
followed one another after the submergence of Atlantis. And the
mood-of-soul prevailing in men during early Post-Atlantean times, and
to some extent also during the last phases of the Atlantean epoch
itself, can be indicated by saying that among the peoples everywhere,
including those who, as the descendants of the Atlanteans, had
wandered across to the East and settled there, the ancient memories
still survived, as well as the old myths and legends describing the
experiences of the earlier form of Atlantean consciousness. These
legends and myths which originated in Atlantis had come over with the
migrating peoples, who preserved and narrated them. They were their
inspiration, and the oldest inhabitants of the North were still
vitally aware of the power flowing from these myths, because their
ancestors remembered that their own forefathers had actually seen what
was narrated in the legends.
Something else too had been preserved, namely the things that had
been experienced, not it is true by the masses of the people, but by
those who were the Initiates in olden times, the priests and
sages of the Mysteries. Their eyes of spirit had penetrated into the
same depths of world-existence that are disclosed to-day through
spiritual investigation. The Initiation-consciousness of man's early
forefathers worked in the spiritual world as powerfully as the
Folk-Soul. Clairvoyance, although dim and shadowy, was still a real
and vital power in those olden days. Folk-lore and saga preserved and
proclaimed, in revelations often fragmentary and broken, realities
that had once been experienced. What had been seen in vision and
cultivated in the Mysteries was preserved in the form of an ancient
wisdom. It was then possible, in the Mysteries, to infuse into the
individual consciousness of those who became Initiates, a wide,
all-embracing vista of the universe. But forms of consciousness which
had been natural in remote ages had in the later times of the
Mysteries to be artificially induced.
Why was spiritual vision a natural condition in the far distant
past? The reason is that the connection between the physical body and
the etheric body was different. The connection existing to-day did not
develop until the later phases of the Atlantean epoch. Before that
time the upper part of the etheric head extended far outside the
boundaries of the physical head; towards the end of Atlantis the
etheric head gradually drew completely into the physical head until it
coincided with it. This gave rise to the later form of consciousness
which became natural in Post-Atlantean man, enabling him to perceive
physical objects in sharp outlines, as we do to-day. The fact that man
can hear tones, be aware of scents, see colours on surfaces
although these are no longer expressions of the inmost spiritual
reality of things all this is connected with the firm and
gradual interlocking of the physical body and etheric body.
In earlier times, when the etheric body was still partly outside
the physical body, this projecting part of the etheric body was able
to receive impressions from the astral body, and it was these
impressions that were perceived by the old, dreamlike clairvoyance.
Not until the etheric body had sunk right down into the physical body
was man wholly bereft of his dim clairvoyance. Hence in the ancient
Mysteries it became necessary for the priests to use special methods
in order to induce in the candidates for Initiation the condition
which, in Atlantis, had been natural and normal. When pupils were to
receive Initiation in the Mystery-temples, the procedure was that,
after the appropriate impressions had been received by the astral
body, the priests conducting the Initiation induced a partial
loosening of the etheric body, in consequence of which the physical
body lay for three and a half days in a trancelike sleep, in a kind of
paralytic condition. The astral body was then able to imprint into the
loosened etheric body experiences which had once come to Atlantean man
in his normal state. Then the candidate for Initiation was able to see
around him realities that henceforth were no longer merely preserved
for him in scripts, or in tradition, but had become his own,
individual experiences.
Let us try to picture what actually happened to the candidate for
Initiation. When the priests in the Mysteries raised the
etheric body partially out of the physical body and guided the
impressions issuing from the astral body into this released etheric
body, the candidate experienced in his etheric body the spiritual
worlds. So strong and intense were the experiences that when he was
restored from the trance and his etheric body was reunited to the
physical body, he brought back the memory of these experiences into
his physical consciousness. He had been a witness of the spiritual
worlds, could himself bear witness to what was happening there; he had
risen above and beyond all division into peoples or nations, for he
had been initiated into that by which all peoples are united; the
primal wisdom, primal truth.
Thus it was in the ancient Mysteries; so too it was in those
moments of which I told you in connection with the Christmas Mystery,
when the boundaries which were to characterise the consciousness of
later times disappeared before the gaze of the Initiate. Think for a
moment of the fundamental characteristic of Post-Atlantean
consciousness. Man is no longer able to see into the innermost nature
of things; between him and this innermost core of being a boundary is
fixed. He sees only the surfaces of things in the physical world. What
man's consciousness in the Post-Atlantean epoch could no longer
penetrate, was transparent and clear to the one who in olden times was
about to receive Initiation. And then, when the great moment came, in
what is called the Holy Night, he was able to see through
the solid earth and to behold the Sun, the spiritual Sun at
midnight.
In essentials, therefore, this pre-Christian Initiation consisted
in re-evoking what in ancient times had been the natural condition,
the normal state of consciousness. Little by little, as civilisation
advanced, these memories of olden times receded and the power to
experience reality outside the physical body became increasingly rare.
Nevertheless, in the earliest periods of the Post-Atlantean epoch
there were still many in the ancient Indian, Persian, Chaldean
civilisations, indeed even in ancient Egypt, whose etheric bodies were
not yet so firmly anchored in the physical body as to prevent them
from receiving the impressions of the spiritual world in the
form of atavistic remains of an earlier age. Later, during Greco-Roman
times, even these vestiges disappeared and it was less and less
possible for Initiation to be achieved in the same way as before. It
became increasingly difficult to preserve for humanity the memories of
the ancient, primal wisdom.
At this point we are drawing near the time of our own Fifth
Post-Atlantean epoch which denotes something of peculiar significance
in the evolution of humanity. In the Greco-Latin epoch it was still
true to speak of an equal possibility, on the one side of remembering
the visions arising in the ancient, shadowy clairvoyance, and on the
other, of living wholly within the physical body, and of being thereby
completely cut off from the spiritual worlds. Individuals here and
there had this experience. The whole trend of modern life goes to show
that the man of the Fifth Post-Atlantean epoch has descended still
more deeply into the physical body the outer sign being the
birth of materialistic concepts. These made their appearance for the
first time in the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch, with the Atomists of
ancient Greece. Then, having passed from the scene for a time, we find
them cropping up again, and during the last four centuries their
influence has so greatly increased that man has lost, not only the
content of the old memories of the spiritual worlds, but, gradually,
all belief in the very existence of those worlds. There you have the
true state of affairs. In this Fifth Post-Atlantean epoch, man has
sunk so deeply into the physical body that he has lost even belief! In
a very large number of people, belief in the existence of a spiritual
world has simply vanished.
And now let us look from a different point of view at the course
taken by evolution. Looking back into those ancient Atlantean times of
which we have been trying to form a concrete picture, we can say that
man was still living with and among his gods. He believed not only in
his own existence and that of the three kingdoms of nature, but also
in the reality of the higher realms of the spiritual worlds, for in
the Atlantean epoch he was an actual witness of them. His spiritual
consciousness by night and his physical consciousness by day did not
greatly differ; they were in balance, and it would have been foolish
of a man to deny the reality of that which was perceptibly around him
for he actually beheld the gods. There was no need for
religion in our modern sense. What now forms the content of the various
religions was a perceived reality to the majority of human beings in
the times of Atlantis. Just as little as you yourselves need religion
in order to believe in the existence of roses or lilies, rocks or
trees, as little did the Atlantean need religion in order to believe
in gods, for to him they were realities. But this immediate reality
faded away, and more and more the content of the spiritual worlds
became mere memory partly preserved in traditions of the
visions of very ancient forefathers, partly in the myths and sagas,
and in what a few individuals gifted with special powers of
clairvoyance had themselves witnessed of these spiritual worlds. Above
all, however, this content of the spiritual worlds was preserved in
the Mysteries, guarded by the priests of the Mysteries. The secret
knowledge under the guardianship of the Priests of Hermes in Egypt, of
Zarathustra in Persia, and the sages of Chaldea, the successors of the
Holy Rishis in India, was nothing else than the art of enabling human
beings, through Initiation, to witness what men in days of yore had
seen around them in a perfectly natural way. Later, what the Mysteries
preserved was expressed in the form of the folk-religion here
in one, there in another religion according to the constitution
of a people, according to its particular faculties and powers of
perception, even according to its native climate. But the primal
wisdom was the basis of them all, as the one great unity. This wisdom
was one and the same, whether cultivated by Pythagoras in his School,
by the Chaldean sages in Western Asia, by Zarathustra in Persia, or by
the Brahmans in India. Everywhere it was the same primal wisdom
expressed in varied form according to the needs and conditions
obtaining in the folk-religions of the different regions. Here, then,
we see the primal wisdom as the fount and basis of all religion.
What is religion, fundamentally speaking? It is the intermediary
between the spiritual worlds and mankind when men are no longer able
to experience these spiritual worlds through their own organs of
perception. Religion was the proclamation, the announcement of the
existence of spiritual worlds, made for the sake of men who could no
longer experience spiritual reality. Thus was the spiritual life
spread over the earth as religious culture in the several epochs of
civilisation, in ancient India, ancient Persia and the rest, down to
our own time.
As I have already said, the purpose of man's descent into a
physical body was that he might gain knowledge of the external world,
experiencing existence through his physical senses, in order, finally,
to spiritualise what he thus experienced, and so lead it to future
stages of evolution. But at the present time, having plunged deeply
into the physical body, and having already passed the middle point of
the Post-Atlantean civilisations, we are facing a very definite
eventuality.
The whole evolution of mankind has a certain strange quality. It
goes forward in one direction until a certain point is reached and
then it begins to stream in the opposite direction. Having streamed
downwards to a certain point, it turns again upwards, reaching the
same stages as on the descent, but now in a higher form. To-day man
stands in very truth before a fateful future, that future when, as is
known to everyone who is aware of this deeply significant truth of
evolution, his etheric body will gradually loosen itself again,
freeing itself from its submergence in the physical body, where the
things of the physical world are perceived in their sharply outlined
forms. The etheric body must release itself again in order that man's
being may become spiritualised and once again have vision of the
spiritual world. To-day humanity has actually reached the point when
in a great number of individuals the etheric body is beginning to
loosen.
A destiny in the very highest degree significant is approaching us,
and here we come near to the secret of our own epoch of
civilisation.
We must realise that the etheric body, which has descended very
deeply into the physical body, must now take the path upwards,
carrying with it from the physical body everything that has been
experienced through the physical senses. But just because the etheric
body is loosening itself from the physical, everything that was
formerly reality in the physical sense must gradually be
spiritualised. It will be essential for mankind in times to come to
have conscious certainty that the spiritual is reality. What will
happen otherwise? The etheric body will be freed from the physical
body while men still believe only in the reality of the physical
world, and have no consciousness of the reality of the spiritual,
which will be manifest in the loosened etheric body as the fruit of
man's past experience in the physical body. In such conditions men may
be faced with the danger of losing all relationship to this loosening
of their etheric bodies.
Let us consider the point at which a man's etheric body, which has
been firmly anchored in the physical body, begins to loosen from it
again and to emerge. Suppose that this happens to a man who in his
physical existence has lost all belief in, all consciousness of, the
spiritual world, and has cut himself off from any connection with it.
Let us assume that he descended so firmly and deeply into the physical
body that he has been able to retain nothing save the belief that the
physical life is the one and only reality. Now he passes into the next
phase of human existence. Relentlessly the etheric body emerges from
the physical body, while he is still incapable of realising the
existence of a spiritual world. He neither recognises nor knows
anything of the spiritual world about him. This is the fate which may
confront men in the near future, that they do not recognise the
spiritual world which, as the result of the loosening of the etheric
body, they must inevitably experience, but regard it as a phantasy,
illusion, vain imagination. And those who have experienced most ably,
with the utmost perfection, the physical body, the men who have become
the pundits of materialism and are full of fixed, rigid notions of
matter, it is they who, with the loosening of the etheric body, will
face the greatest danger of being without a single inkling that there
is a spiritual world. They will regard everything that then comes to
them from the spiritual world as illusion, fancy, as so many figments
of dream.
If in times to come, when the etheric body has again loosened
itself from the physical, man is to live his life in any real sense,
he must have consciousness of what will then present itself to the
etheric body. In order that he may be conscious that what then comes
to him is knowledge of the spiritual world, it is essential that
realisation of the existence of the spiritual world shall be preserved
in humanity and carried through the period when man is most deeply
immersed in the material world. For the sake of the future, the link
between the religious life and the life of knowledge must never be
lost. Man came forth from a life among the gods; to a life among the
gods he will again return. But he must be able to recognise them; he
must know that in very truth the gods are realities. When the etheric
body has loosened he will no longer be able to rely on remembrances of
ancient human times. If meanwhile he has lost consciousness of the
spiritual world, has come to believe that life in the physical body
and things to be seen in the physical world are the only realities,
then for all ages of time he must dangle, as it were, in mid-air. He
will have lost his bearings in the spiritual world and will have no
ground under his feet. He will be threatened, in this condition, with
what is known as the spiritual death. For around him there
is only phantasy, illusion, a world of whose reality he has no
consciousness, in which he does not believe, and so ... he dies! That
is the death in the spiritual world. It is the doom which threatens
men if, before passing again into the spiritual worlds, they fail to
bring with them any consciousness of those worlds.
At what point in the evolution of humanity was attainment of
consciousness of the spiritual world made possible for man? It was at
the point where man's descent into the physical body was countered by
victory over that body, and there was placed before men the great
Prototype of Christ Himself. The understanding of Christ forms for man
the bridge between the memories of his ancient past and the
foreshadowings of his future. When Jesus of Nazareth had reached the
age of 30, the Christ came down into his body. For the first and last
time Christ lived in a physical body. And His victory over death
when it is rightly understood reveals to man what the
manner of his own life must be if, for all ages of time, he is to be
conscious of the reality of the spiritual world. That is the true
union with Christ.
What will the Christ Mystery, the Christ Deed, come to mean in the
life of man in the future? The man of the future will look back upon
our present epoch, when he lived wholly within the physical body, just
as Post-Atlantean man looks back to those Atlantean times when he was
living together with the gods. As he ascends again into the spiritual
world, man will know that through the Christ Deed he has gained the
victory over what he experienced in the physical body; he will point
to the physical as something that has been overcome, surmounted. We
should feel the Easter Miracle, then, as a mighty Deed, a
foreshadowing of the Future.
Two possibilities lie before the man of the future. The one
possibility is that he will look back in remembrance to the time of
his experiences in the physical body, and he will say, These
alone were real. Now there is about me only a world of illusion. Life
in the physical body that was the reality. Such a man
will be gazing into a grave and what he sees in the grave is a corpse.
But the corpse the physical thing will still be for him
the true reality. That is the one possibility.
The other is that man will look back upon what was experienced in
the physical world, and will know that it is a grave. Then, with deep
consciousness of the import of his words, he will say to those who
still believe the physical to have been the one and only reality:
He Whom thou seekest is no longer here! The grave is empty and
He Who lay within it has risen!
The empty Grave and the Risen Christ this is the
Easter Mystery, the Mystery that is a foreshadowing, a prophecy.
Christ came to establish the great synthesis between the Easter
Mystery and the Christmas Mystery. To the Christmas re-enactment of
the ancient Mysteries is added the Mystery of future time, the Mystery
of the Risen Christ. This is the Mystery enshrined in the Festival of
Easter. The future of Christianity is that Christianity will not
merely proclaim the existence of higher worlds, nor be mere religion,
but an inner affirmation, a powerful impulse in life itself. It will
be an inner affirmation, because in the Risen Christ man will behold
that which he himself will experience through the ages of time to
come. This Mystery is a Deed, a reality of life, inasmuch as man looks
up to Christ not merely as the Saviour but as the great Prototype with
whom his life conforms, in that he too will eventually overcome death.
To live and work in the spirit of Christianity, to see in Christ not
merely the Comforter but the One Who goes before us, Who is related in
the deepest sense with our innermost being and Whose example we follow
this is what the Christ Idea will be in the future, pervading
all knowledge, all art, all life. And if we remind ourselves of what
is contained in the Easter Idea, we shall find there a Christian
symbol of true Deed, true Life.
In times when men will have long since ceased to need the teachings
of religion to tell them of the ancient gods, because they will again
be living among gods, they will find in Christ that source of strength
which enables them to find their own firm centre among the gods. Men
will no longer require religion in order to believe in gods whom they
will once again behold, any more than they required religion
in former times when they lived and moved among gods. Themselves
spiritualised, men will live consciously among spiritual Beings,
fulfilling their tasks in communion with these Beings. In a future by
no means far distant, man will find that the physical world is losing
its importance for him, that physical things are becoming evanescent.
Their reality will have already paled long before man's existence on
the earth has drawn to its close.
(see Note 1)
But when the things of the physical
world of sense cease to be all-important and fade into shadow, man
will either find that the physical is losing its importance while he
is still incapable of believing in the spiritual realities before him,
or he will be able to believe and preserve for himself the
consciousness of these spiritual realities and then for such a
man there will be no spiritual death.
To confront a reality that is unrecognisable, means to be shattered
in the spirit. And men would come to this pass if, with the loosening
of the etheric body, the spiritual worlds were to appear before them
without being recognised and known as such. Many a man to-day could
have consciousness of the spiritual worlds but has it not. Therefore
these worlds take vengeance, and this shows itself in man's
restlessness, his neurasthenic condition, his pathological fears,
which are nothing else than the consequences of failure to unfold
consciousness of the spiritual worlds. Those who realise the
significance of these things feel the necessity of a spiritual
Movement which, for those who are outgrowing the substance of ordinary
religion, preserves belief in man, in the whole man,
including, therefore, the spiritual man.
To know Christ means to know man as a spiritual being. To be filled
with the Christ Mystery in the future will mean that Christianity as
mere religion will be surmounted and will be carried as
knowledge to infinite horizons. Christianity will permeate
art, will broaden and inspire it, will bestow in abundance the power
of artistic creation. Richard Wagner's Parsifal is the
first foreshadowing of this.
Christianity will flow into all life and activity on the earth and
when the formal religions have long ceased to be necessary, mankind
will have been strengthened and invigorated by the Christ Impulse
which had once to be given in the middle of the Fourth Post-Atlantean
epoch, during the Greco-Latin epoch, when Christ came down among men.
Just as it was man's destiny to sink into the deepest depths of
material life, so must he be lifted again to knowledge of the Spirit.
With the Coming of Christ this Impulse was given.
These are the feelings that should inspire us in the days when we
have the Easter Mystery in symbols around us. For the Easter Mystery
is not merely a Mystery of Remembrance. It is also a Mystery of the
Future, foreshadowing the destiny of those who free themselves more
and more from the shackles, ensnarements and pitfalls of the purely
material life.
- Note 1:
- This is the answer to the scientific prognostication of
the end of the human race.
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