LECTURE FOUR
[At the beginning of this lecture Dr. Steiner
emphasised that those relatively new to the study of Spiritual
Science would find many things difficult to understand. He
added that unless the necessary efforts were made by these
recent Members to master the elementary principles of
Spiritual Science, erroneous ideas would be inevitable.]
THE SYMBOLIC LANGUAGE OF THE MACROCOSM IN
THE GOSPEL OF ST. MARK
My book
Christianity as Mystical Fact
will have made it
clear to all of you that if the Gospels are to be rightly
understood, they must be regarded as treatises of Initiation.
This means that in essence they are adaptations of rites and
rituals of Initiation. Scripts of this nature indicated the
path along which the candidate was led step by step to the
higher worlds, how he must undergo certain experiences and
awaken forces slumbering in his soul, how each higher stage
was related to the one below, until at the stage of
Initiation itself the spiritual world penetrated into his
soul and revealed its mysteries. At this stage he gazed into
the spiritual worlds and a vista of the Beings of the
Hierarchies lay open before him. The content of these
Initiation-scripts, then, was a description of the
experiences which every candidate for Initiation had to
undergo.
In
pre-Christian times many human beings were initiated in the
different centres of the Mysteries. Generally speaking the
process was the same, although there were variations in
details. The candidates were led stage by stage to the point
where they were able to gaze into the spiritual world and the
Beings of the Hierarchies were before them as spiritual —
not physical — realities. That is what happened in
pre-Christian times. But what did Christianity, what did the
Christ Impulse signify for those who had been initiated in
the ancient Mysteries? It signified that a Being, known in
the physical world as Jesus of Nazareth, had revealed the
secrets of the spiritual world in a new way, not in the way
that had been customary in the pre-Christian Mysteries. A man
who had been initiated according to the ancient rites was
able to speak to others about the secrets of the spiritual
worlds. But the Christ Event meant that something had come to
pass whereby without having traversed the usual paths, Jesus
of Nazareth was able to speak of these secrets through what
happened at the Baptism in Jordan, when the Christ Being
entered into him. From the moment when in an event of supreme
historical significance, Jesus of Nazareth was thus
initiated, the Christ Spirit spoke to those around Him of the
secrets of the spiritual worlds. Christ made manifest on the
physical plane, for all the world to see, something that in
former times could be attained only in the secrecy of the
Mysteries by those who were to be initiated: they could then
go forth and speak to their fellow-men of the secrets of the
spiritual worlds. We can imagine ourselves looking into
sanctuaries of the ancient Mysteries and seeing how the
aspirants were initiated by the Hierophants and were then
able to look into the spiritual worlds and go forth to teach
of them. All the rites of Initiation took place in the
deepest secrecy of the temples; and outside the Mysteries
there was no possibility of speaking at first hand about the
spiritual worlds. But now, what had been enacted time and
time again in the secrecy of the Mysteries was brought into
the open in Palestine, presented there as an historical
event, as the story of Jesus of Nazareth, which culminated in
an Initiation of supreme significance in world-history. This
was the Mystery of Golgotha. The supreme Mystery enacted as
an historic fact before the eyes of all the world — this is
how we must picture the connection of the Mystery of Golgotha
with the Mysteries of pre-Christian times.
Now the
directives for Initiation, although concerned in essentials
with the same stages, differed in details among the peoples
living in different parts of the Earth and these directives
were adapted to the nature of the individuals living in
different places at different times. Let us think of the soul
of one of those generally called the Evangelists who
participated in the writing of our Gospels. From their own
occult training such men had some knowledge of the directives
for Initiation among various peoples and in various
Mysteries. They knew what experiences a man must undergo
before he could proclaim the secrets of the spiritual worlds
and of the Hierarchies. And now, through the events in
Palestine and the Mystery of Golgotha, they had been made
aware that what could previously be witnessed only by those
who had attained Initiation in the Mysteries, had taken place
openly on the stage of world-history and would enter more and
more deeply into the hearts and souls of all men.
The
Evangelists were not biographers in our sense of the word.
They did not include in their writings details of no
significance to the world which it is quite unnecessary for
anyone to know. They were not the kind of biographers who
ferret out every detail of a man's private affairs.
They described the life of Christ by saying that in Jesus of
Nazareth, in whom the Christ was present, something happened
which had been witnessed again and again in the Mysteries but
never as an historic event, concentrated into a few years. It
was now an historic reality, yet it was a repetition of the
temple-rituals. — The life of Jesus could therefore have
been described by specifying the stages passed through in
other circumstances during the process of Initiation.
The directives
for Initiation in the ancient Mysteries are found again in
the Gospels and indications are given there of the reason why
what had formerly taken place in the deep secrecy of the
temples had now been transferred to the great arena of
world-history. And it is the writer of St. Mark's
Gospel who, at the outset, states why he is in a position to
write of an historic event which in fact fulfils a rule of
Initiation though enacted on an infinitely greater scale.
From the beginning he speaks of how humanity has developed in
such a way that this great event might come to pass and
Initiation might be transferred from the secrecy of the
temple-sanctuaries to the arena of history. He proclaims that
this is connected with an event foretold by the Hebrew
prophets. For the Mystery of Golgotha had been foreseen and
foretold by the true Initiates, among whom the Hebrew
prophets may, in a certain sense, be included.
If we try to
penetrate into the soul of a man such as the prophet Isaiah,
the meaning of the words at the beginning of St. Mark's
Gospel is approximately this: that a time will come when the
souls of men will not be as they are at present. This time is
already now being prepared for. — This was Isaiah's
view in his own day. What did he really mean? The deeply
impressive words of this prophet with which St. Mark's
Gospel begins, are, as you know, usually rendered:
‘Behold,
I send my messenger before thy face which shall prepare thy
way before thee. The voice of one crying in the wilderness.
Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths
straight.'* [* Dr. Steiner quoted the translation by
Carl Weizsacker.]
In these words
the prophet Isaiah points to the greatest event in all
world-history — the Mystery of Golgotha in Palestine. You
know what trouble we have had when studying the other Gospels
to make the most important passages to some extent
intelligible in translation. What really matters is to render
the turns of phrases in a way that will convey the profound
meaning of the original language. The words should not merely
lend themselves to theoretical interpretation but be able to
arouse feelings similar to those aroused in men who
understood the inherent character of the language in current
use. Language at that time was not as abstract, dry and
prosaic as it has now become. Its character as the means of
verbal expression was such that in addition to the usual
meaning of the words spoken the hearer was always aware of a
richer significance and fullness of content and knew
precisely what that content indicated. At that time a whole
world of meaning was heard in the words. The ancient Hebrew
language was particularly rich in this respect, even when the
picture used was drawn from the realm of the senses. Phrases
such as ‘prepare the way’ or ‘make his
paths straight’ are pictures derived entirely from the
sense-world — as if a way, or a path, were being prepared
with spades and shovels. But it was a peculiar feature of
Hebrew — a language of outstanding grandeur among the others
— that behind these expressions which were applied to outer
things, spiritual worlds could be apprehended with great
exactness. Fanciful interpretations were unheard of and the
procedure was unlike that adopted by our modern scholars when
they read all sorts of implications into the works of poets.
Arbitrary interpolations were quite impossible. This was
partly because in the ancient Hebrew language the vowels were
not marked in the script, and by varying them, world-secrets
could be revealed in the sounds themselves. In those days men
had a true feeling for all this.
In Greek —
the language of the Gospel texts — this was no longer the
case to the same extent. All the same, far better renderings
than those produced by most translators of the Gospels would
have been possible, even without occult knowledge. What has
happened is that for the most part one translator has just
copied another without any searching philological study of
the passages in the Greek texts. Later on I will give you
definite examples of errors that have been made. I do not
want to interrupt our study to-day and will try, not on a
philological basis but with the help of knowledge derived
from spiritual-scientific investigations, to clarify the most
significant passage occurring at the beginning of the Gospel
of St. Mark. The following is a prophecy of Isaiah, showing
what the event of Palestine was to mean.
The Greek text
is as follows:
(Idou egō apostellō ton angelon mou pro prosōpou
sou, hos kataskeuasei tēn hodon sou emprosthen sou,
Phōnē boōntos en tē erēmō:
Hetoimasate tēn hodon Kyriou, eutheiās poieite
tās tribous autou.)
[Translation in the Authorised Version. Mark i, 2-3:
‘Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which
shall prepare thy way before thee. The voice of one crying
in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his
paths straight.’]
It is
essential to realise from the beginning that the word
Angelos (‘angel’ or
‘messenger’) was used in those ancient times only
in the sense in which we use it when, in speaking of the
Hierarchies, we are referring to the Beings of the
hierarchical rank immediately above man. When the words
τόѵἂγγελόѵ
occur, we must realise that a Being of this rank is meant;
otherwise the whole sense of the passage will be lost.
Spiritual Science alone can provide the basis for
understanding such a passage. But once understood it can be a
foundation for what occultism has to say about the
Christ-event. What is the fundamental significance of the
Christ Impulse? We have expressed it as follows. — Through
the Christ Impulse the human soul became conscious for the
first time that an Ego, an ‘I’, was to find a
place within it, a self-conscious ‘I’ through
which in the further course of Earth-evolution there must be
revealed all the secrets formerly revealed by the astral body
through natural clairvoyance.
In the epoch
of post-Atlantean culture preceding our own, men were still
endowed, to some extent, with faculties of clairvoyance which
enabled them to see into the spiritual world. In certain
abnormal conditions of soul the secrets of the spiritual
world streamed into them and they were able to gaze into the
realms of the Hierarchies. Vision of the Hierarchy of the
Angels persisted the longest and was the most frequent. The
Angels were known as Beings belonging to the rank immediately
above man. In the times of ancient clairvoyance men were not
aware that they themselves possessed a faculty capable of
leading them into the spiritual worlds; they regarded this
possibility as a grace vouchsafed to them from without, as
the implanting of spiritual powers in their souls. Hence the
Prophets could point to the future, saying: “The time
will come when man will be conscious of his ‘I’
and know that it is by the self-conscious ‘I’
that the secrets of the spiritual worlds will be unveiled.
Man will be able to say: I penetrate into the secrets of the
spiritual world through the power of the ‘I’
within me.”
But
preparation was necessary before this stage could be reached.
As the lowest rank of the Hierarchies, man had to be prepared
by being sent an example of what he must become. The
‘Messenger’ or ‘Angel’ was to
proclaim to man that he was to become an ‘I’ in
the full sense of the word. And whereas the mission of
earlier Angels had been to reveal the spiritual world, it was
now the mission of a particular Angel to carry the
revelations to a further stage, to make known to man that he
was to enter into full possession of the Ego, the
‘I’. The earlier revelations were of a different
character, not intended for a self-conscious
‘I’.
Isaiah
proclaimed that the time of the mystery of the
‘I’ was to come and that from the host of the
Angels one would be deputed to announce this. — Only in this
sense can we understand what is meant when it is said that
the Angel, the Messenger, was ‘sent before’ —
that is to say, sent before man who was to become a
self-conscious ‘I’. The one who had been
‘sent before’ was to come as a Being of the
Hierarchy of Angels. No Angel had yet spoken to man as a
self-conscious ‘I’. So this messenger of whom the
prophet Isaiah speaks is to make men aware that they must
prepare to make a place in their souls for the
‘I’, the fully independent ‘I’. This
passage therefore draws attention to a great revolution in
the development of the human soul: whereas hitherto men had
always to go out of their bodies in order to reach the
spiritual world, henceforward they would be able to remain
within their own ‘I’ and draw forth from the
‘I’ itself the secrets of that world.
Let us compare
a soul of remote antiquity with a soul living near the time
of Christ. When a man of very early pre-Christian centuries
strove to rise into the higher worlds he could not retain
even the degree of self-consciousness so far developed. He
was obliged to discard all consciousness of self and be
transported into the world of the Hierarchies, the world of
pure spirituality. His consciousness was entirely suppressed.
— Such were the conditions in the early pre-Christian
era.
What, then,
was the situation of a man living in times when in order to
enter the spiritual world it was no longer necessary for
self-consciousness to be suppressed but when the stage had
been reached for the development of the ‘I’? Even
in the Atlantean epoch the ‘I’ was already
present — in a certain sense; but complete assurance that
the greatest secrets and mysteries could flow from the
‘I’ itself was brought by the Christ Impulse.
That is why a man who had achieved the old type of Initiation
felt that if he desired to penetrate into the spiritual world
and receive its revelations, he must suppress a certain part
of his soul and make other parts of it particularly active.
The part of his inner being that was gradually to grow into
the ‘I’ had to be suppressed, darkened, to become
a desolate waste in the soul. On the other hand the astral
body — the body which could make a certain degree of
clairvoyance possible — must be fired into activity. And
then the old clairvoyant visions lit up within it.
I said that
the ‘I’ was in a certain sense already present,
but could not be used to investigate the secrets of the
spiritual world. The ‘I’ had to be suppressed,
the astral body fired into activity. But more and more it
became impossible to quicken the impulses in the astral body.
In olden times one of man's most elementary powers was
that he was able to suppress the ‘I’ and kindle
the astral body into activity; the secrets of the spiritual
world then streamed into him. But progress in evolution was
actually achieved just because the astral body became more
and more incapable of receiving the secrets of the spiritual
world. Man was obliged to admit to himself that his astral
body was becoming more and more incapable of attaining what
human beings had once been able to attain with the old
faculty of clairvoyance, and the ‘I’ within him
was not strong enough yet to achieve anything itself.
It was the
best clairvoyants who were the most strongly aware of
something barren, something desolate in the soul. This was
the ‘I’, to which no impulse had yet been given.
They were aware, too, how impossible it was to reach the
spiritual world through the ‘I’. This will give
you an idea of the feelings and mood of a man living in the
period just before the coming of Christ. Such a man was bound
to say to himself that he could no longer unfold in his
astral body the powers it once possessed: but as yet he had
no alternative impulse, so that there was something barren in
his soul, something that could not rise into the spiritual
world.
When the time
for the Christ Impulse was drawing near, certain methods of
training were adopted with the object of acquainting men with
that province of the soul which could not yet be filled with
the spirit. An individual who aspired to gain entry into the
higher worlds was told that he could not rise into those
worlds in his astral body, that he must withdraw into that
province within him where he would feel as though he had no
contact at all with the external world.
This was the
mood of soul in an aspirant for Initiation at the time of the
Christ Impulse. He said to himself: I must abandon all hope
of reaching the spiritual world through the powers of my
astral body; the time for that is past and the
‘I’ is still not ready. But from something within
me that is trying to emerge and to penetrate into the
spiritual world, I can surmise — no more than surmise —
that it is striving with might and main to receive the
spiritual impulse.
This
experience, known in those days to every seeker for the light
of the spirit, was called ‘the way into the solitude of
the soul’, or also, ‘the way into the
solitude’. The messenger who was to prepare for the
Christ-event had therefore to describe the way into the
solitude to those who wished to hear about the approaching
Impulse. He had himself to know the depths of solitude, to
preach from actual experience of the solitude of the
soul.
In your study
of St. Mark's Gospel you will come to realise more and
more clearly that certain lofty spiritual Beings through whom
matters of vital importance in human evolution are to take
place, look for their instruments in suitable beings of flesh
and blood and then descend to live in the soul incarnated in
such a body. The messenger of whom Isaiah spoke — who must
not be thought of as a man in the ordinary sense — took
possession of the soul of the reincarnated Elias — John the
Baptist — lived in him and was destined to proclaim to men
that the Christ Impulse was at hand.
Where, then,
did the voice of this messenger resound? It resounded in what
I have just described to you as. ‘the solitude of the
soul’. In St. Mark's Gospel we read: ‘Hear
the cry in the solitude of the soul’.
ὲν τῇ ὲpήμω
(tē erēmō)
must not be translated as if the image of a
‘wilderness’ were meant in an external sense.
ὲν τῇ ὲpήμω
really means: in the solitude. The imagery used helps us to glimpse
the spiritual world.
We shall have
a truer understanding of this expression if we devote a
little study to the meaning conveyed by another word,
Kyrios, or Lord, as in the usual rendering of this
passage. ‘Prepare ye the way of the Lord.’ The
actual meaning is still discernible in the Greek but can be
confirmed by comparison with ancient tradition. In the
language of those early times the meaning of a word such as
this was not as abstract and shallow as it is to-day. In the
age of materialism men have become superficial in their
attitude to language and no longer feel as they once did,
that words are the bodies of soul-beings, soul-realities,
that a whole world lives in the words. The most that can be
done to-day is to try to revive something of this feeling, as
I have attempted to do in the Mystery Play,
The Portal of Initiation.
What men felt
when they uttered the word Kyrios in circumstances
such as those indicated, was that it was an image, a picture,
of happenings in the inner life of the soul. They felt the
‘I’ rising upwards from the depths towards the
surface of the soul as the appearance of a Lord and Master,
the Director and Ruler of the soul-forces. Nowadays we speak
of thinking, feeling and willing as servants of the soul. But
within the soul there is a Lord, a Kyrios: the
‘I’ or Ego. In olden times man could not say:
‘I think’. He said: ‘It thinks’ —
or, ‘it feels, it wills in me.’
At the time
when the Lord of the soul-forces, the ‘I’,
appeared as Ruler, the result of this crucial change in the
evolution of humanity was that man now said:
‘I think, I feel, I
will.’ Hitherto the soul had lived in a certain
subconscious state, the captive as it were of its own forces.
Now, the Lord of those forces, the ‘I’, was at
hand. This passage in St. Mark's Gospel does not refer
to any personality or being but to the emergence of the
‘I’ as the Lord in the whole structure of the
soul. ‘The Lord within the soul is at hand.’
This was also
made known in the temples where preparation was in train for
what was now to take place in mankind. In a mood of holy awe
and reverence it was affirmed: Hitherto the soul has had
within it only the forces of thinking, feeling and willing —
they are its servants: but now the Lord, the Kyrios, is
drawing near. — This mighty process will continue to unfold
until the end of the Earth-period and its power will
constantly increase. The impulse is given by Christ and His
life marks the supreme moment in earthly time. The hour on
the cosmic clock indicates the point when the ‘I’
becomes more and more powerful as Lord of the soul-forces.
The goal will be attained when the Earth dies in the Cosmos
and man rises to higher stages of existence.
Only if you
are able to feel what this means can you have an idea of what
was prophesied by Isaiah and repeated by John the Baptist.
Both of them wished to call attention to the crucial event in
the evolution of the human soul. But the word
εὐθεἱαç
(eutheiās)
must not be translated ‘straight’, as is usual;
the right rendering is ‘open’ — that is to say,
not only ‘straight’ but ‘open’,
meaning that the paths along which the Kyrios comes to the
human soul are clear. But man must himself do something to
enable the Kyrios to take hold of the soul. The way must be
made free, must be made open. In short, if the passage is to
be translated at all intelligibly and at the same time kept
fairly close to the conventional version, it would run
somewhat as follows:
‘Mark
well!’ — ‘behold’ is not really correct
— ‘I send my angel before the ‘I’ in
you; he will prepare the way. Hear the cry in the solitude of
the soul’ — the cry for the Lord of the soul.
(The word ‘soul’ is not actually used but was
intuitively understood.) ‘Prepare the way of the Lord
of the soul; labour to make the path open for him.’
These
sentences give an approximate idea of what can be felt in the
words of Isaiah. The Angel in the soul of John the Baptist
used them once again.
What made this
possible? To answer this question we shall have to give some
thought to the nature of John the Baptist's own
Initiation and to its effect in his soul.
You know from
earlier lectures
[See
Macrocosm and Microcosm,
notably lectures 1 and 3. A course of eleven lectures given
in Vienna, March 1910.]
that a man can be
initiated either by descending into the depths of his own
soul or by being prepared in such a way that his soul passes
out of the body and its forces pour into the Macrocosm. Among
different peoples these two paths were adopted in very
diverse forms. When a man wished to pour his soul into the
Macrocosm, the twelve stages to be passed were symbolised, so
to speak, by the twelve signs of the Zodiac. The souls flowed
out in particular directions, to particular regions of the
Macrocosm. Generally speaking, a very great deal was
achieved, especially for the realisation of some particular
purpose in world-evolution, when a soul had developed so far
that it could receive all the forces originating from the
cosmic secrets of a particular zodiacal constellation. The
practice in all the ancient rites of Initiation was that a
candidate should be initiated into the secrets of the
Macrocosm in such a way that his soul flowed out in the
direction, let us say, of Capricorn, or in the case of other
candidates, in the directions of Cancer, Libra, Virgo, and so
on. I have said repeatedly that there are twelve different
possibilities of passing out into the Macrocosm, directions
indicated symbolically by the twelve constellations of the
Zodiac. If a candidate was unable at once to attain the
highest Initiation, the Sun Initiation, but could achieve a
partial Initiation only, his soul was directed to the secrets
connected with one particular constellation. But his vision
must become independent of everything material. This meant
that either in the rites of the Mysteries or, as in the case
of John the Baptist, by grace from above, the
candidate's gaze was guided to a constellation when the
Earth lay between him and the constellation — that is to
say, by night. Physical eyes see the physical constellation
only. But when vision can penetrate through the material
Earth — which means that the constellation is masked by the
material Earth — then what is seen is not the physical but
the spiritual reality, that is to say, the secrets which the
constellation expresses.
The vision of
John the Baptist was trained in such a way that at night he
could look through the material Earth into the constellation
of Aquarius. When the Angel took possession of his soul he
had attained the Aquarius Initiation. Thus John the Baptist
was able to place all his faculties and all he knew and felt
at the disposal of the Angel, in order that through the Angel
the secrets connected with the Aquarius Initiation might be
proclaimed and the announcement made of the coming of the
‘I’, the
χὐριοç,
the Lord of the soul-forces.
At the same
time, however, the Baptist proclaimed that the time had come
when this Aquarius Initiation must be replaced by another,
which would make fully intelligible the approaching rulership
of the ‘I’. Therefore he said to his intimate
disciples: I am one who is able to place at the disposal of
my Angel all the forces coming from the Aquarius Initiation:
but after me must come one whose forces are derived from an
even higher source.
If you follow
the course of the Sun in the daytime from the constellation
of Aries, through Taurus, Gemini and so on, to Virgo, you
must follow its progress at night from Libra on to Aquarius
and Pisces. This is the direction of the spiritual Sun. John
had attained the Aquarius Initiation and announced that He
who was to come after him would possess the powers of the
Pisces Initiation — the Initiation that followed his own and
was regarded as the higher. Hence John the Baptist declared
to his disciples: Through the Aquarius Initiation I can place
at the disposal of my Angel only those powers which enable
him to proclaim the coming of the
χὐριοç
the Lord; but there will come One who has the powers
symbolised by the Pisces Initiation; and into him the Christ
Himself will enter!
With these
words John the Baptist pointed to Jesus of Nazareth; and for
this reason, tradition assigned to Christ Jesus the symbol of
Pisces, the Fishes. Moreover because every outer event is a
symbol for inner happenings, fishermen were assigned as
helpers of the Pisces Initiate. All these happenings are
external, historical events and at the same time profoundly
symbolic of the spiritual secrets.
John
proclaimed: A higher form of Initiation will be vouchsafed to
mankind! He himself could give only the Initiation that comes
from Aquarius and he called himself an Aquarian, a Water-man.
We must realise more and more clearly that astronomical and
cosmic secrets are connected with the images used to express
the secrets of Man. John said: ‘I have baptised you
with water!’ Baptism with water lay within the power of
those who had received from heaven the Initiation of
Aquarius. The spiritual Sun progresses from Aquarius to
Pisces (representing the progress from John the Baptist to
Jesus of Nazareth) and when a being appeared in the world who
had attained the Initiation of the Fishes and was therefore
able to receive the spiritual impulse which must be the
instrument of the Pisces Initiation — it was then possible
for him to baptise, not only as John had baptised, with
water, but in the higher sense described by John as
‘baptism with the Holy Ghost’.
In this
lecture I have put a twofold conception before you. First:
the words at the beginning of St. Mark's Gospel
indicate processes in the historical evolution of humanity
and speak of a higher Power — an Angel who speaks through
the body of John the Baptist. Second: the passages in
question relate to happenings in the heavens — the progress
of the spiritual Sun from the constellation of Aquarius to
the constellation of Pisces. Every line of St. Mark's
Gospel contains something that can be read rightly only if in
following the words we always have in mind both a human and a
cosmic-astronomical meaning, and when we realise that there
lives in man something that in its true significance can be
found only in the heavens.
We must grasp
the connection between the secrets of the Macrocosm and the
secrets of human nature more exactly than is usual. At the
end of this lecture I can do no more than hint at what lies
behind this and I have only wished to give certain hints of
these things. In studying St. Mark's Gospel we shall
have to plumb depths of wisdom about which you will have to
ponder for a very long time if hints are to lead to anything
more. I will try to make clear to you in the following way
how this Gospel should be read.
A rainbow
appears to a child as something real in the sky and until it
is explained to him, he thinks that he can touch and take
hold of it with his hands. Later on he learns that a rainbow
appears only when there is a certain combination of rain and
sunshine; when the conditions of rain and sunshine change,
the rainbow disappears. The rainbow is therefore not a
reality in itself but only a mirage, an illusion; a
combination of rain and sunshine is the reality.
Once we make a
little progress on the path of occult knowledge we are likely
to have an experience which will remind us of the sort of
thing I have said about the rainbow, namely that ultimately
there is in the external world no solid reality but only
appearances which are sustained by factors outside
themselves. — And do you know what this chimera is? It is
man himself! Man himself is also such an appearance. If you
take him as you see him with your physical senses as being
reality, you are much mistaken. You are in fact surrendering
to maya, to the great ‘non-being’. The word
‘maya’ is derived from mahat aya — mahat =
great; ya = being; a = non, negation; hence maya = the great
non-being.
On the path of
occult development a man reaches the point where he begins to
think of himself as something like the rainbow. He is a
chimera, like everything that comes before his physical
senses. Even the Sun seen as a physical globe is a chimera.
When physical science describes it as a globe of gas in
cosmic space, that is good enough for practical purposes; but
anyone who takes the globe of gas to be a reality is becoming
a victim of maya, of illusion, of non-being. The truth is
that the Sun is a meeting-place for Hierarchies of spiritual
Beings, whose deeds come to expression in the warmth and
light streaming from the Sun. The warmth and light themselves
are an illusion; our other perceptions are also illusions.
Normally we picture ourselves as having a heart in our
breast; but that heart is nothing more than an appearance.
What we see as a heart is rather like the rings we see around
street lamps when we go out in the evening in an autumn mist;
the rings are not really there but are the result of definite
conditions. This is also true of the human heart. Imagine
that this circle represents the vault of heaven and imagine
various kinds of forces streaming in from different
directions of the heavens and meeting at a particular point
of intersection. In ultimate reality, where we think our
heart is there is nothing but these heavenly forces that
stream in and intersect. If you can somehow ‘think
away’ everything except those instreaming forces, then
the point of intersection actually is your heart. The same
sort of thing is true of our other organs which are in
reality only the outcome of intersecting cosmic forces.
Look at it
from another point of view. When you move from one place to
another you probably think that it is some impulse inside
yourself that makes you move. If you do, then you are falling
a victim to what we have called maya. The real fact is that
there are forces streaming in from the Macrocosm which
intersect, and thus evoke an illusion about the direction in
which you are walking and the forces which make you walk.
Down on Earth all that you really experience is the
intersection of cosmic forces. If we want to get at the truth
we have to find out what is going on in the Macrocosm and
what the upper and lower cosmic forces are doing. Those
forces create the effect of making us think we have a heart
or a liver and talk as if we were going from place to place.
If we want to express all this in terms of actual reality we
should have to describe the movements of cosmic forces.
If we want to
give an adequate description of the reality of the Baptism
administered by John the Baptist, we should have to refer to
what the cosmic forces — those symbolised in Aquarius —
were requiring him to do. The ultimate decision had been
taken in the great World Lodge and in consequence the
necessary forces were sent into John. We must therefore read
in the cosmic language accounts of what happened at a
particular place on Earth. The writer of St. Mark's
Gospel read in the heavens the processes corresponding to the
events in Palestine. It is cosmic-astronomical events which
he is describing, and so he says: Look at things in this way:
here you have a wall on which you can see shadows playing,
and if you want to know what ‘causes’ the shadows
you must look upward to what is casting those shadows. I am
giving you an account of what happened at the Jordan, but
those happenings are really the means by which others are
reflected on Earth. These things that I am describing come
about through the interplay of macrocosmic forces active in
the heavens.
The writer of
this Gospel is therefore describing cosmic forces, phenomena
and happenings in the heavens. And what he describes is the
expression, the projection, the shadow-image cast by the
happenings in the Macrocosm upon the little area of Palestine
on the Earth. Only if we are quite clear about this will any
real understanding of the greatness and significance of the
Gospel of St. Mark be possible. We had first to form an idea
of its contents and to understand what is said at the
beginning, namely this: The prophet Isaiah foretold that the
Lord of the soul-forces will come to men and that the
‘messenger’ will live in John the Baptist; he
will prepare men for the approach of the Lord of the
soul-forces.
This messenger
had to take up his dwelling in the body of a man who had
passed through the Aquarius Initiation. John could thus make
possible on Earth the work of an individual such as Jesus of
Nazareth; Jesus, on His side, had been prepared for the
Pisces Initiation and through it was able to receive the
Christ into himself.
Events on the
Earth are the reflections of cosmic happenings, related to
cosmic evolution as the rainbow is related to rain and
sunshine. We must study rain and sunshine if we are to
describe the true nature of the rainbow. And if we want to
understand what lived in the heart of John the Baptist or in
the heart of Jesus of Nazareth who became the vehicle of the
Christ, we must study cosmic happenings. For the whole
Universe was speaking to men in what took place in Palestine
and on Golgotha. The Gospel of St. Mark as it stands merely
provides the letters for accounts of mighty cosmic
happenings. Whoever thinks otherwise is like someone who sees
one set of ink-marks here and another there but has no
conception of what the word ‘Lord’ signifies. The
truth is that what is recounted in this Gospel amounts only
to the letters — and moreover even they are an outermost
shell. We must rouse ourselves to understand to what the
events in Palestine are pointing, as it were in a play of
shadows.
Try to grasp
what is meant by saying that earthly events are shadows of
macrocosmic events and you will then have taken the first
step towards a gradual understanding of St. Mark's
Gospel — one of the greatest sacred records in the
world.
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