EXCURSUS — Lecture IV
IF
YOU
CONTINUE
reading the Gospel of Mark from
the verses we endeavoured to explain in the last lecture, you come to
a remarkable passage similar in every way to what we are told in the
other Gospels, but the full meaning of which can be best studied in
the Gospel of Mark. This passage tells how Jesus Christ, after He had
received baptism in Jordan and passed through the experiences met
with in the wilderness, went into the synagogue and taught. The
passage is generally translated as follows: — “And they
were astonished at his doctrine: for He taught them as one that had
authority and not as the scribes.” What more does this sentence
mean to the man of to-day, however much he may believe the Bible,
than the somewhat abstract statement: “He taught with authority
and not as the scribes?” If we take the Greek text we find for
the words “For he taught with authority”— “He
taught as an Exusiai” and not as the “scribes.”
If we enter deeply
into the meaning of this important passage, it leads us a step
further towards what may be called the secrets of the mission of
Christ Jesus. For I have already remarked that the Gospels as well as
other writings that spring from inspired sources are not to be
understood so simply as people think, but that we must bring to the
understanding of them everything in the way of thoughts and ideas
concerning the spiritual world that we have been able, to acquire in
the course of many years. Only such thoughts can show us what is
meant in the Gospel where it say: — For he taught those who sat
in the synagogue as an “Exusiai,” as a Power, and not as
those who are hero called “scribes.”
If such a sentence is
to be understood we must recall the knowledge we have acquired in
recent years concerning the super-sensible worlds. We have learnt
during this period that man as he lives in this world is the lowest
member of a hierarchical order; it is here we must place him. He is a
part of the super-sensible world, a world where, in the first place,
we find Beings called in Christian esotericism, Angeloi or Angels;
these are the Beings standing next above man. Above them come the
Archangeloi or Archangels, then the Archai or Spirits of Personality.
Above these again are the Exusiai, Dynamis and Kyriotetes, and still
higher are the Thrones, Cherubim and Seraphim. We have thus a
Hierarchical order of nine kinds of Beings one above the other, the
lowest of which is man. Now we ought to understand how these many
different spiritual or super-sensible Beings intervene in our
lives.
Angels are those who,
as messengers of super-sensible realms, stand nearest to man
as he is on earth; they constantly influence what may be called the
fate of individuals on our physical plane. As soon as we mention
Archangels on the other hand, we speak of Spiritual Beings whose
activities cover a wider span. We can also call them
“Folk-Spirits,” for they order and guide the concerns of
whole nations or groups of peoples.
When a
“Folk-Spirit” is spoken of to-day people generally mean
so many thousands of people who are guided by this spirit merely
because they live within the same territory. But when a
“Folk-Spirit” is spoken of in spiritual science, we mean
the individuality of the people, not such or such a number of people,
but a real individuality, just as we speak of the
“individuality” of separate men. And when speaking of the
spiritual guidance of the individuality of a people this guide or
leader is called an Archangel. In speaking of these exalted Beings we
speak of real super-sensible entities having their own spheres of
activity. The Archai (called also Spirits of Personality or first
Beginnings) are spoken of in spiritual science as being again
different from “Folk-Spirits.” We speak, for instance, of
a French or an English or a German “Folk-Spirit,” and in
doing so speak of something allotted to different parts of the earth.
But there is something that unites all men, at least all western
humanity, something in which these people feel at one. This, in
contradistinction to the separate “Folk-Spirits,” we call
the “Spirit of the Age or Time-Spirit” (Zeitgeist), there
is a different “Time-Spirit” or Zeitgeist for the time of
the Reformation from that of pre-Reformation times, and again a
different one for our own day. The Beings we call
“Time-Spirits” or Zeitgeists have therefore to be ranked
above the separate “Folk-Spirits”; in fact the name
Archai is given to these leaders of succeeding epochs, but all the
same they are “Time-Spirits.”
When we rise still
higher we come to the Exusiai, here we have to do with a quite
different kind of super-sensible Being. In order to form an idea of
how the Beings of the higher Hierarchies differ from the three just
mentioned — the Angels, Archangels, Archai — think how
similar members of one group of people is to another. As regards
their external physical constitution — as regards what they eat
and drink for instance — we cannot say they differ very much in
anything outside the realm of the soul and spirit. Even in respect of
succeeding epochs of time we must allow that the spiritual guides of
humanity are connected only with the things of soul and spirit. But
man does not consist only of soul and spirit, these influence mainly
his astral body, but within his Being are also denser parts, and
these, as regards the activities of the Archai, Archangels and
Angels, do not differ much from each other. Creative influences are
however at work on these denser members of man's Being, and
this creative activity of Hierarchical Beings beginning with the
“Exusiai,” continues upwards.
We have to thank the
“Time-Spirits” Zeitgeister or Archai, and the
“Folk-Spirit” or Archangels, for ideas connected with
time and for speech, but human nature is influenced also by other
things, by what lives in light and air and in the climate of
particular districts. The humanity that flourishes at the Equator is
different from that which flourishes at the North Pole. We do not
perhaps quite agree with a well-known German professor of philosophy
who states in a widely read book that “Important civilisations
must develop in the temperate zone, for all those great Beings who
have introduced important civilisations would have frozen at the
North Pole and been burnt up at the South Pole!” We can say
however, food, etc., is different in different climates, and this
affects people differently. External conditions are by no means
unimportant to the character of a people, whether this people dwells,
for instance, among mountains or on wide plains. We observe how the
forces of nature influence the whole constitution of man, and as
students of spiritual science we know that the forces of nature are
nothing else than the result of the activities of Beings of a
spiritual nature. For we hold that super-sensible spiritual Beings
are active in all the forces of nature and make use of these to
influence man. We therefore distinguish between the activities of
Archai and of Exusiai by saying: — Angels, Archangel and Archai
do not influence man by making use of the forces of nature, but they
make use of that which affects his spiritual nature, his speech, and
the ideas that connect him with epochs of time. The activity of these
Beings does not extend to the lower members of his organism, neither
to the etheric nor yet the physical body. In the Exusiai, on the
other hand, we have to recognise those higher Beings affecting
mankind who work through the forces of nature, who are the bringers
to man of the different kinds of air and light, of the various ways
in which foodstuffs are produced within the different kingdoms of
nature. It is they who control these kingdoms of nature.
What comes to us in
thunder and lightning, in rain and sunshine, how one kind of food
grows in one region, other kinds in other regions — in short,
the whole distribution and organisation of earthly condition we
ascribe to spiritual Beings that have to be sought among the higher
Hierarchies. So that when we look up to the nature of the Exusiai we
do not see the result of their activities in any such invisible way
as in the case of the “Time-Spirits” for instance; but we
see in them that which works on us in light, and that also works on
the plant creation as light.
Let us now consider
what was given to man as “culture,” what he had to learn
in order to progress. Every man receives in his own age what this age
has produced, but he also receives to a certain extent what former
ages have produced. This can, however, only be preserved
historically, can only be the result of historical teaching and
learning. This is derived from the lowest of the Hierarchies, and
reaches as far as to the “Time-Spirit.” What comes to man
on the other hand from the kingdoms of nature, cannot be preserved in
records or traditions. Yet those who are able to penetrate to
super-sensible worlds pass beyond the sphere of Archangels to still
higher revelations. Such revelations are perceived as carrying more
weight than what comes from the realms of the Zeitgeists, they affect
mankind in a quite special way.
Every clear thinking
man should occasionally turn back and seriously ask himself —
“Which has the greatest effect on my soul, that which I have
learnt from the traditions of different peoples and
‘Time-Spirit’ since history began, or a lovely sunrise;
that is, than the revelations of spiritual worlds presented to me by
nature itself?”
Such a man feels that
the grandeur and beauty of a sunrise reveals infinitely more to his
soul than all the sciences, learning, and art of the ages. What
nature reveals can be felt by anyone who having visited the Art
Galleries of Italy and seen what have been preserved to us of the
works of Michelangelo, of Leonardo da Vinci, or Raphael, and having
allowed the power of these to act on him has then climbed one of the
mountains of Switzerland, and viewed the marvellous spectacles
provided by nature. He might then ask: — Who is the greater
painter, Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci, or those Powers who paint the
sunrise as seen from the Rigi? And he would be obliged to answer:
— However much we may admire what man has achieved, what is
here presented to us as the divine revelation of Spiritual Powers
appears to us infinitely the greater!
When the great
spiritual leaders of men appear whom we call Initiates, who speak not
according to tradition but in an original way, their revelations
resemble the revelations of nature itself. But what we feel in a
sunrise would never have the same effect on us if it were something
merely repeated. Compared with what we have received as the
communications of Moses and Zarathustra, when these were
traditional and had been handed down as the external culture
which the “Time-Spirits” and “Folk-Spirits”
had preserved and then passed on — compared with this what
nature has to give is infinitely greater. For the revelations of
Moses and of Zarathustra only worked as powerfully as nature's
revelations when they sprang directly from the experiences of
super-sensible worlds.
The grandeur of the
original revelations made to man is seen in their power to affect him
in the same way as the revelations of nature itself. But this only
begins where, as lowest among the Hierarchies controlling nature, we
divine something of the Exusiai.
What then was felt by
those who sat in the synagogues when the Christ appeared among
them?
We are told by the
“Grammarians” that until then they had experienced those
things which the “Time-Spirits,”
“Folk-Spirits” and others had communicated to them.
People had got accustomed to this; but now One had appeared who did
not teach as those others, but so that His words were a revelation of
the super-sensible Powers in nature itself, or of the Powers working
in thunder and lightning.
Therefore when we
know how the greatness of the Hierarchies increases as they ascend,
we can understand such a saying in the Gospels and accept it in the
full depth of its meaning. This is how we must feel about these words
in the Gospel according to Mark, and even in such human endeavours as
have come down to us in the works of art of Raphael and Leonardo da
Vinci. Anyone with a feeling for the super-sensible quality lying
behind these is aware — even in what remains — of all
they originally presented to us. So that it is in all great works of
art, in all great works of genius. Something continues to affect us
in these like an echo of those others (the Hierarchies); and if we
are able to see what Raphael, for instance, put into his pictures, or
if we are able to pour fresh life into the works of Zarathustra, we
can hear in them something of what streams down to us from the realms
of the Exusiai. But in what was taught by the scribe in the
Synagogue, that is, by those who accepted what originated from the
“Folk-Spirits” and ”Time-Spirits,” nothing
could be heard that agreed in any way with the revelations of
nature.
We are justified
therefore in saying, a sentence like this shows that men began at
that time to have a feeling, a presentiment, that something entirely
new was speaking to them; that through this man who had appeared
among them something made itself felt that was like a power of
nature, like one of those super-sensible powers that stand behind
nature. Men began gradually to divine what it was that had entered
into Jesus of Nazareth, and was symbolised in the baptism in Jordan.
In reality, they were not far from the truth when they said in the
synagogue: we feel when He speaks as though one of the Exusiai spoke
— not only an Archai, or Archangel, or Angel.
It is only through
what spiritual science has given us that we can fill once more with
living sap these modern translations of the Gospels that have become
so thin and meaningless; only then are we able to learn how very much
goes to a true understanding of what is contained in the Gospels. It
will take many generations to fathom, even approximately, all the
depths of which our present age is only beginning to have some
perception.
What the writer of
the Gospel according to Mark desired especially to point out was
really a further development of the teaching of Paul, who was one of
the first to grasp the nature and Being of Christ through direct
super-sensible knowledge.
Men had now to
understand what Paul taught to all, what it was that all men could
receive into them through the revelation of Damascus. Although this
event is described in the Bible as a sudden illumination, yet those
who know the truth regarding such occurrences know that it can happen
at any moment to one who desires to rise to spiritual realms; and
that through what such a man experiences he becomes a changed Being.
With regard to Paul we are amply told how he became an entirely
different man through the revelation made to him on the way to
Damascus.
Even a superficial
study of the letters of St. Paul will prove to anyone that he saw in
the Event of Christ and in the Event of Golgotha the central point of
our whole human evolution; that he associated this directly with that
other event spoken of in the Bible as “the first
creation,” the first Adam, so that he might have spoken
somewhat as follows:—
What we describe as
the true man, the spiritual man (of whom in this world of Maya only a
Maya exists) came down in ancient Lemurian times to this world of
illusion and to all he had to experience in the flesh in successive
incarnations. He became man, as this was understood in Lemurian and
Atlantean times, and up to the time of Christ. Then came the Event of
Golgotha. All this was firmly fixed in the mind of Paul after the
vision of Damascus. He realised that in the Event of Golgotha
something was given which is comparable with the descent of man into
the flesh. With this was given an impulse by which he could gradually
overcome those forms of earthly existence which had entered into him
through “Adam.” Hence Paul calls the humanity that began
with Christ, the “new Adam,” the “Adam” that
everyone can put on through union with the Christ.
We have therefore to
see in the man of Lemurian times, and on into pre-Christian humanity,
a slow and gradual descent of man into matter (whether he be called
Adam or not). Then came the power and impulse that enabled him to
rise again; so that along with all he acquired in earthly life man
was able to return to his original spiritual state, that state in
which he was before he descended into matter. Unless we misunderstand
the true meaning of evolution we must now ask “Could man not
have been spared this descent? Why had he to enter a fleshly body and
pass through many incarnations, only then to rise again to what he
had been before? Such questions can only spring from a complete
misunderstanding of the spiritual nature of evolution. For man takes
with him all the fruits and experiences of his earthly evolution, and
is enriched with the results of his incarnations. These are results
— contents, which he did not have previously. Picture to
yourselves a man entering into his first incarnation: in it he learns
certain things; he learns more in the second incarnation, and so on
through all his subsequent incarnations. The course of these is a
descending one; he is entangled more and more in the physical world.
Then he begins to rise again, and is able to rise so far that he can
receive within him the Christ-Impulse. One day he will again enter
the spiritual world, but will have taken with him all he had gained
on earth.
Paul saw in the
Christ the true central point of the whole earthly evolution of man;
he saw what gave man the impulse to rise to super-sensible worlds
enriched by all the experiences he had gained on earth.
How, from this
standpoint, did Paul regard the sacrifice on Golgotha, the actual
crucifixion? It is not easy to bring these facts, these most
essential facts of human evolution clearly before modern minds, in
the sense in which Paul saw them. For this sense is also that of the
writer of the Gospel of Mark. Before we can do this we must make
ourselves familiar with the thought, that in man, as he comes before
us to-day, we are concerned with a microcosm, a small world, and we
must study everything that this idea brings with it.
As man comes before
us to-day in the course of his evolution between birth and death in
one re-incarnation, two parts of his development are presented which
differ greatly from each other; only this difference is not noticed
as a rule. I have frequently spoken about these fundamentally
different parts of man's life (for our whole spiritually
scientific endeavour has a more systematic construction than is often
supposed), one of these parts or periods is that between birth and
the moment to which at the present time memory extends. If we trace
our life backwards, a point is finally reached beyond which all
memory ceases. Although you were present, and have perhaps been told
by parents or relatives of things you did, and so have knowledge of
them, you have no recollection of them, memory does not reach beyond
a certain point. Under favourable circumstances this lies round about
the third year. Up to this period the child is specially active and
impressionable. How much he has learnt during this period, during his
first, second and third years! But of how things impressed
him he has not the least recollection.
Then follows the time
through which the thread of conscious memory extends smoothly.
These two parts of
his development should be carefully considered, for they are of very
great importance when man is studied as a whole. Human evolution must
be followed carefully, and without the prejudices of modern science.
The facts of modern science certainly confirm what I have to say; but
if we are not to wander far from the truth we must not follow the
prejudice of science. Observing human evolution closely we say:
— Man's life among his fellows as a social being can only
be lived in accordance with conditions regulated by memory, which
begins as a rule about his third year. Of all that concerns this we
can say: it is under the direction of our conscious life; all the
things we consciously accept as laws according to which we guide our
impulses, etc., and that we feel to be worthy, all this is contained
in memory. Of what lies before we are unconscious so far as ego
consciousness is concerned.
The threads of memory
which belong to our conscious life do not reach to this period. There
are therefore certain years of our conscious life during which the
surrounding world works on us quite differently from how it does
later. The difference is a most radical one. Were we able to observe
a child before the period to which at a later age its memory
extended, we should see that it then feels itself to he much more
within general macrocosmic spiritual life; it is not yet separated
from this, is not yet isolated within itself, but reckons that it
belongs rather to the whole surrounding universe. It does not express
itself as others; it does not say:— “I will,” but
“Johnnie wills.” It only learns later to speak of itself
as an ego; modern psychologists criticise such facts adversely, but
this in no way denies the truth, but only their own powers of
insight.
In its early years a
child still feels within the whole surrounding world, feels that it
is a part of this world. Memory first begins when it separates itself
as an individual from the world around it. We can therefore say, the
laws a man accepts, and which form the content of his consciousness,
belong to the second part of his consciousness, to the second part of
his evolution, the part we have just described. A quite different
relationship to his environment belongs to the first part, he then
feels far more a part of, far more within, the environing world. What
I wish to say can only he clearly understood if you imagine
hypothetically that the consciousness which gives man this direct
contact with the surrounding universe in the first years of
childhood, were able to continue. In that case his life would be
entirely different, he would not feel so isolated, but would feel in
later life that he was a part of the whole macrocosm, that he was
within the great world. At present he loses this. He has no later
connection with that world, he feels cut off from it. If he is a man
belonging to ordinary life this feeling of isolation only comes to
him in an abstract way. For instance, it enters his consciousness for
the most part when egoism increases, when he shuts himself up, as it
were, more and more within his own skin. Opinions limiting his life
to what is contained within his skin are but half baked opinions, in
fact nonsense, for the moment man exhales breath, the breath he had
drawn in is now outside of him. So that even as regards our
in-breathing and out-breathing we are continually in touch with our
whole environment. The way man regards his own being is an absolute
illusion, but his consciousness is such that he must live in this
illusion. He cannot help himself. For we are really neither suited,
nor are we ripe enough, to experience our own Karma at the present
day. If, for example, someone wishes to close the window, we are apt,
because we regard ourselves as separate beings, to feel injured and
annoyed. But if we believed in Karma we would feel that we belonged
to the whole macrocosm, and would know as a fact that it was really
we who had closed the window, for we are interwoven with the whole
cosmos. It is absolute nonsense to think we are enclosed within our
skins. But the feeling of being one with the macrocosm is only
retained by the child in its early years, it is lost from the point
of time to which later its memory extends.
Things were not
always thus. In former times, which do not lie so very far behind us,
man was still able to a certain extent to carry this consciousness of
his early years on into later times. This was in the days of the
ancient clairvoyance. With it was associated a quite different kind
of thinking as well as a different way of expressing facts. This is
something belonging to human evolution that it would be well the
student of spiritual science should understand.
When a man is born
among us at the present day, what is he? He is in the first place the
son of his father and of his mother. And if in communal life he has
not got a certificate of birth or baptism showing the standing of his
father and mother by which he can be identified nothing is known of
him, and his existence is ignored. According to the ideas of the
present day, a man is the physical son of his father and of his
mother.
This is not how men
thought at a time not so very long ago. But because the scientists
and investigators of to-day do not know that in former times men
thought differently, that their words and their relation-ships to
each other were different from what they are now, they have therefore
arrived at interpretations of ancient communications that are also
quite different. We are told for instance, in these ancient
communications of a Greek singer, Orpheus. I select him because he
belongs to an age immediately preceding that of Christianity. It was
Orpheus who inaugurated the Grecian Mysteries. The Greek age falls
within the fourth period of post-Atlantean civilisations, so that in
a way the Greeks were prepared by Orpheus for what they were to
receive later through the Christ Event.
What would a modern
man say if confronted by a person like Orpheus? He would say: —
He is the son of such and such a father and mother, modern science
might perhaps even look for “inherited attributes” in
him. There exists to-day a large volume treating of all the inherited
characteristics of the Goethe family, and would present Goethe as the
sum of these inherited attributes. People did not think in this way
at the time of Orpheus, they did not then regard external man and his
attributes as what was most essential. The most essential thing in
Orpheus was the power by which he became the inaugurator, the true
leader, of pre-Christian civilisation in Greece. They recognised
quite clearly that his physical brain and nervous system were not
what was most important in him. They considered this to be far more
the fact that he bore within him an element that had its direct
source in super-sensible worlds, that through it, all he experienced
in these worlds came in touch, by means of his personality, with a
physical sensible element, and could then express itself in the
various stages provided by a physical personality. The Greeks saw in
Orpheus not the man of flesh descended from father and mother, even
perhaps from grandfather and grandmother, this was not to them the
main thing, it was only his shell, his outer presentment. For them
the essential thing in him was what had descended from a
super-sensible source, and had entered into a sensible being on the
physical plane.
When the Greeks
confronted Orpheus they hardly considered his descent from father and
mother, what mattered to them was the fact that his soul qualities,
the qualities through which he had become what he was, sprang from a
super-sensible source that till then had never had any connection with
the physical plane, and that through what this man was, a
super-sensible element was able to work within his personality and be
united with it.
Because the Greeks
saw, as what was most essential in Orpheus, a pure super-sensible
element, they said of him: — “He is descended from a
Muse.” He was the son of the Muse Calliope; he was not the son
of any mere earthly mother, but of a super-sensible element that had
never had connection with sensible things. Had he been the son of
Calliope alone, he could only have given information concerning
super-sensible worlds. But because of the age in which he lived he was
ordained to give expression also to that which would be of service to
his age physically. He was not only an instrument for the voice of
the Muse Calliope, as the Rischis at an earlier day had been the
vocal instruments of certain super-sensible forces, but he was able to
express super-sensible things so vividly in his own life that the
physical world was influenced by him. Because Orpheus had a Thracean
river God for his father, what he taught waS closely associated on
the other side with nature, with the climate of Greece, and with all
that external nature gave to the river god, Oiagros.
We gather therefore
that the soul-nature of Orpheus was considered the most important
part of him. It was in respect of their souls men were described long
ago, not as became customary later when people were described by
saying: he is the son of so and so, and was born in such a town, but
they were described according to their spiritual values.
It is extraordinarily
interesting to note how intimately the fate of a man like Orpheus was
felt; a man who was descended on one side from a muse and on the
other from a river god. He had within him not merely super-sensible
qualities as the prophets had, but to these he had added sensible
qualities. He was therefore exposed to all the influences exercised
on man by the physical sensible world.
You are well aware
that the nature of man is composed of several members. The lowest of
these is the physical body, then comes the etheric body (concerning
which I told you that it comprises the opposite sex), then the astral
body and the ego. A man like Orpheus was still able to look on one
side into the spiritual world because he was descended from a Muse
(you now know what that means), but on the other side the capacities
by which he could live in the spiritual world were undermined owing
to the life he led on the physical plane, and because of his descent
from his father, the Thracian river god. Through this his purely
spiritual life was undermined. In the case of all the earlier leaders
of mankind in the second and third periods of post-Atlantean culture,
by whom only a verbal teaching concerning the spiritual world had
been imparted, conditions were such that they were conscious of their
own etheric body as something separated from their physical body.
When in the civilisations of ancient Greece, and also in those of the
Celts, a man was empowered to perceive what he had to communicate to
his fellow-men, these revelationscame to him because his etheric body
extended beyond his physical body. It became in this case the hearer
of forces which entered into the man. If the person giving out these
revelations was a man and his etheric body therefore female,
he perceived what he had to communicate from the spiritual world in a
female form.
Now it had to be
shown that where Orpheus came into purely spiritual relationship with
Spiritual Powers, he was exposed, owing to his being the son of the
Thracian river god, to the risk of not being able to retain the
revelations that came to him through his etheric body. The more he
entered into the life of the physical world and expressed what he was
as a son of Thrace, the more he lost his clairvoyant powers. This is
shown in the fact that Eurydice, she through whom he revealed
himself, his soul-bride, was removed from him, and was taken to the
underworld. This occurred through the bite of an adder. He could only
receive her hack again by passing through an initiation. This he now
did. Whenever we are told of anyone “going into the
underworld,” it means an initiation, so he had to pass through
an initiation before receiving his bride back again. But already he
was too closely interwoven with the physical world. He certainly did
attain powers by which he was able to penetrate to the underworld,
but on his return, as he again beheld the light of the sun, Eurydice
disappeared from his sight. Why? Because when he beheld the light of
day he did something he should not have done — he looked back.
That means, he overstepped a law strictly laid on him by the God of
the underworld. What law is this? It is, that physical man as he
lives on the physical plane to-day must not look back beyond that
moment of time I have already described, within which lie the
macrocosmic experiences of childhood, and which, when extended into
later states of consciousness, gave him the ancient form of
clairvoyance. “Thou shalt not desire to unravel the secrets of
childhood,” said the God of the underworld, “nor remember
how the threshold was crossed.” If he did this he lost the
faculty of clairvoyance. Something infinitely fine and intimate in
Orpheus is shown us by this loss of Eurydice, one result of which is
the sacrifice of man to the physical world. With a nature that is
still rooted in the spiritual world, he is directed to what he has to
become on the physical plane. Through this nature all the powers of
the physical plane rush in on him, and he loses
“Eurydice” his own innocent soul, which must be lost to
modern humanity. The forces among which he is then placed lacerate
him. This in a certain sense is regarded as the sacrifice of
Orpheus.
What did Orpheus
experience as he lived on from the third to the fourth period of
post-Atlantean culture? He experienced in the first place that stage
of consciousness which the child leaves behind — he experienced
connection with the Macrocosm. This does not pass over into his
conscious life. Therefore, as we see him, he is swallowed up, slain
by life on the physical plane, which really begins at the point of
time of which we have been speaking.
Consider now the man
of the physical plane, who is normally only able to carry his memory
back to a certain point of time, before which lie the first three
years of childhood.
The thread of memory
so entangles Orpheus with the physical plane that with his true
nature he could not abide in it, but is torn to pieces. Thus it is
with the spirit of man to-day; we see how profoundly the human spirit
is entangled in matter. This is the spirit which, according to the
Christianity of St. Paul, is called the “Son of Man.” You
get this conception of the “Son of Man” who is in man from
the point of time to which memory extends, along with all that he has
gained through culture. Keep this man before you, and then think what
he might have been through union with the Macrocosm, if there had
entered into him all that streamed towards him from the Macrocosm in
the early years of childhood. In these early years what comes can only
form a foundation, for the evolved human ego is not yet present. But
if it entered into an evolved human ego there would then take place
what occurred for the first time through the baptism in Jordan at the
moment when “the Spirit from above” descended upon Jesus
of Nazareth. The three innocent stages of childhood's
development would blend with all the rest of the human being. The
consequence would be as this innocent life of childhood sought to
develop on the physical earth, that it could do so only for three
years (as is always the case): — it would meet its end on
Golgotha. This means it cannot mingle with what man becomes at the
moment when he achieves his egohood, at the point of time to which
later his memory extends.
If you ponder this;
if you ponder what it would mean if all the connections with the
Macrocosm were to meet in one man; if everything that approached him
in a vague, uncertain way in his early childhood streamed into him,
but could not really dawn in him because the evolved ego was not
present, were you to carry this thought further and picture it
dawning within a later consciousness, something would be formed in
man, something would enter into him, which did not spring from a
human source, but from the vast world-depths out of which we are born
You would then have the interpretation of the words uttered in
connection with the descent of the
dove: — “This is my well beloved Son; this day
have I begotten Him!” This means: Now is the Christ —
incarnated — “begotten” in Jesus of
Nazareth. Christ was actually born in Jesus of Nazareth at the moment
of baptism in Jordan. He then stood at the summit of that
consciousness, which otherwise man only enjoys in the early years of
childhood, but He was aware at the same time of this union with the
whole cosmos. A child would also have this feeling of union if it
were aware of what it felt during those three early years. In this
case other words heard at that time would acquire a different
meaning: — “I and the Father (the cosmic Father)
are one!”
When you allow all
this to affect your souls you will be conscious of something within
you that is like an echo of what Paul felt, the earliest initial
element of that which came to him in the revelation of Damascus, and
experienced in the beautiful words: — “Unless ye become
as little children ye cannot enter into the Kingdom of
Heaven.” This saying has manifold meanings, among others
this — Paul said, “Not I, but Christ in
me!” This means a being having the macrocosmic consciousness a
child would have were it to experience the consciousness of its three
early years along with that of a later day. In the normal man of
to-day these two kinds of consciousness are separate, they must be
separate, for they are not compatible. Neither were they in Jesus
Christ. For after these three years death had necessarily to follow
under such circumstances as occurred in Palestine. It was not by
chance these occurred as they did, but because two factors lived in
one Being: the “Son of God” — which man is
from the time of his birth until the development of his
ego-consciousness, and the “Son of Man” which he is after
this ego-consciousness has been acquired. Through the union of the
“Son of God” and the “Son of Man” all those
events came to pass which later led to the Events of Palestine.
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