Buddha
By RUDOLF STEINER
A lecture delivered in the Architektenhaus, Berlin,
March 2nd, 1911.
THAT Buddhism and the
teaching of Buddha should frequently be discussed to-day, is a fact
of special interest in the study of human evolution; for an
understanding of the essential nature of Buddhism — or rather
the longing for such an understanding — has only made itself
felt comparatively recently in the spiritual life of the West. Think
for a moment of Goethe, who so powerfully influenced Western culture
at the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. When we
examine Goethe's life and writings we find no trace of the influence
of Buddhism; yet shortly afterwards there are distinct traces of
Buddhist influence in one who was in a certain sense a disciple of
Goethe — I refer to Schopenhauer. Since his time, interest in
the spiritual life of the East has steadily increased, until in our
age many people feel an inherent desire to understand what really
entered human evolution through all that is connected with the name
of the great Buddha.
It is true that most people
connect Buddhism, among other things, with the idea of reincarnation.
Yet with regard to its essentials one cannot do so — at all
events in the form in which this truth is now often conceived. For to
those who have deeper insight, this linking up of Buddhism with the
teachings of repeated earthly lives is almost tantamount to saying
that the deepest understanding of ancient works of art is to be
found among those peoples who set about destroying them at the
beginning of the Middle Ages! Grotesque as this may sound, it is
nevertheless true, and its truth is brought home to us by the
realisation that the whole mood of Buddhism is to undervalue
earthly lives, indeed its aim is rather to reduce their number.
Liberation from rebirth — this is the innermost nerve of
Buddhist thought. To be freed from repeated earthly lives —
reincarnation being of course an already recognised truth — is
the essence of Buddhism.
Even a superficial study of
the history of Western spiritual life should tell us that the idea of
reincarnation is not really essential to the understanding of
Buddhism — and vice versa. For within our Western
culture we find that Lessing had a magnificent conception of the idea
of reincarnation and yet was quite uninfluenced by Buddhistic
thought. His most mature work
The Education of the Human Race
concludes with a confession of belief in repeated earthly
lives. “Is not all Eternity mine?” he exclaims, feeling
that man's sojourn on earth may become fruitful if earthly lives are
repeated. We are not on this earth for nothing. We are active in
earthly life and we may look forward to an ever fuller life wherein
the fruits of past lives may ripen. The prospect of a rich and
greater future, the consciousness of continuous activity —
these are the essentials of Lessing's thought. On the other hand, the
essence of Buddhism is that it urges man to strive for such knowledge
and wisdom as will free him from all desire for rebirth. Only
when in one such earthly life he can liberate himself from this
necessity — only then will he enter the state that may be
called “Eternity.”
I have endeavoured to show
you in the course of these lectures that Spiritual Science has taken
the idea of reincarnation neither from ancient tradition, nor from
Buddhism, for the idea of reincarnation arises of necessity from an
unprejudiced observation of life in the sense of Spiritual Science.
It would therefore seem superficial to connect Buddhism directly with
the idea of repeated earthly lives, for to understand the essence of
Buddhism we must turn our gaze in quite another direction. Here I
must again remind you of the law of human evolution which we
considered in connection with the great Zarathustra.
[See Anthroposophy, Easter, 1927.]
In the course of the ages
the whole constitution of man's soul has passed through different
stages and conditions. The events of which outer history and
outer documents tell are really a comparatively late phase in the
evolution of mankind, and when with the help of Spiritual Science we
go back to prehistoric ages, we find that the nature of the soul and
of man's consciousness in those early times was very different indeed
from what it is to-day. Let me briefly recapitulate.
In normal human life to-day
we examine objects with our senses and form chains of thought with
our practical wisdom and science (in effect our essentially
intellectual consciousness), which has developed from quite a
different kind of consciousness. In the chaotic medley of the dream
we have a last remnant — an atavistic heritage — of
clairvoyant faculties that were normal in the soul of prehistoric
man. In those early times the nature of the soul was such that in a
condition midway between waking and sleeping, man gazed into all that
lies hidden behind the world of sense. Our consciousness to-day
alternates between the waking and sleeping states and we think of
“intelligence” in connection with waking life only, but
in more ancient days pictures continually arose and passed
away before the soul of man. These pictures were not as void of
meaning as are our dream pictures to-day but were related to
super-sensible events. Out of the condition of consciousness arising
from these flowing pictures, our present so-called intellectual
consciousness gradually evolved. A kind of primeval clairvoyance
preceded the gradual development of our modern consciousness.
Prehistoric man, gazing into the super-sensible worlds with this
dreamlike clairvoyance, not only acquired knowledge but experienced a
deep inner satisfaction and bliss as he felt the connection of his
soul with a spiritual world. In his intellectual consciousness
to-day man knows with certainty that his blood is composed of
substances which also exist externally in physical space, indeed that
his whole organism is built up materially. With equal certainty,
prehistoric man knew that, so far as his soul and Spirit were
concerned, he had come forth from the spiritual world into which he
gazed with his clairvoyant consciousness.
I have said before, that
certain phenomena in human history, of which external facts also
speak, can only be understood if this spiritual origin of man's
earthly life is admitted. Even science is less inclined to agree with
the assumption of materialistic anthropology, that in prehistoric
ages the general condition of humanity was such as we find still
existing among the most primitive peoples to-day. It is becoming more
and more evident that sublime conceptions of a spiritual world were
current among ancient peoples, though clothed in pictorial forms.
Myths and legends are only intelligible if we trace them back to a
primal wisdom which was altogether different in its nature from the
intellectual science of to-day. True, there is not much sympathy as
yet with the view that primitive peoples to-day are not typical of
the original spirituality of man but represent the decadence of
an earlier time. Neither is it generally admitted that
originally all peoples possessed a lofty wisdom, derived from
clairvoyant powers. But facts will in time compel thinking people to
admit, hypothetically at all events, some of the truths investigated
by Spiritual Science and fully corroborated by Natural Science. What
Spiritual Science has to say about the future evolution of man will
also one day be verified. Thus we must look back, not only to a kind
of primeval wisdom, but also to primeval feelings and perceptions in
man whose clairvoyant powers gave him knowledge of his
connection with the spiritual world.
Now it is easy to
understand the possibility of two streams arising in the gradual
transition from this ancient clairvoyance of the human soul to our
modern intellectual mode of observing the material world. The one
stream can be traced among peoples in whom the memories and instincts
were preserved, and who felt that through his clairvoyant perception,
man was once united with the spiritual world but has descended into
the world of the senses. This feeling gradually extended into a
general attitude of soul, till it could be said: “We have
entered the phenomenal world but this world is maya,
illusion.” Only when he was linked with the spiritual world
could man know his true being. And so among those peoples who had
preserved this dim remembrance of ancient clairvoyant powers, there
arose a sense of loss, and a certain indifference to their material
environment and all that can be apprehended by the intellect.
On the other hand there is
a second current, of which the religion of Zarathustra is typical.
— “We must adapt ourselves to the new world which now
enters our consciousness for the first time.” These men
did not look back with regret to something that man had lost. On the
contrary, they felt impelled to seek and acquire all the powers that
would enable them to penetrate and understand the surrounding world
of sense. The urge arose within them to unite themselves with the
world, not to look back with regret, but to look forwards, to be
warriors. “The same Divine-Spiritual essence of which we
were once a part is also poured into the world immediately
surrounding us. It is in this surrounding world that we must seek it.
Ours [is] the task to unite with the good spiritual elements and so
help forward the evolution of the world!” This conception is
typical of the stream of thought which had its rise in Asiatic
regions lying north of the lands where men looked back with sorrow to
what man had once possessed.
In India arose a spiritual
life which was the natural fruit of this backward-turning gaze to
men's former union with the spiritual world. Consider the Sankhya
philosophy or the Yoga system and discipline. It was the constant
endeavour of the ancient Indian to rediscover his connection with the
spiritual world whence he had come forth; he tried to disregard all
that surrounded him in the world, to free himself from the links
binding him to the world of the senses and by eliminating this world
to find again the spiritual realms whence he had descended. Reunion
with the world of Spirit, release from the world of sense —
this is Yoga.
Only when we see these
principles as the fundamental tendencies of Indian spiritual life can
we understand the mighty impulse of the Buddha as it flamed up in a
last gleam across the evening skies of Indian spiritual life a few
centuries before the Christ Impulse was destined to dominate Western
thought. We can only understand the figure of Buddha when we
contemplate him in this setting. On the soil of India it was possible
for a mode of thought and consciousness to arise which gazed at a
world in the throes of decline, of a descent from Spirit into maya
— the great “Illusion.” It is also natural that as
the Indian looked at the external world with which human life is so
closely interwoven, he should have evolved the idea that this descent
from Spirit into the world of maya had proceeded stage by stage, as
it were, passing from epoch to epoch. We can now understand the
deeply devotional mood of Indian culture — albeit a culture
representing the glow of sunset — and how the concept of
Buddhahood there finds a natural place. The Indian looked back to an
age when man was united with the spiritual world; he then descended
to a certain level, rose once more and again sank, rose, sank —
but in such a way that each descent was deeper than the last.
According to ancient Indian
wisdom, a Buddha arises whenever an epoch of decline draws to its
close. The last of the Buddhas — Gautama Buddha — was the
Being who incarnated as the son of King Suddhodana. The Indian,
therefore, looked back to former Buddhas, of whom five had already
appeared during the time of man's gradual descent from the spiritual
world, and who, coming again and again into the world of men could
bring them something of that primordial wisdom whereby they could be
sustained in earthly life and not utterly lost in maya. In his
descending path of evolution man loses hold of this wisdom and when
it is lost, a new Buddha appears. Of these, Gautama Buddha was the
last.
In the course of many
earthly lives such a being as a Buddha must previously have reached
the level of a Bodhisattva before he can attain to Buddhahood.
According to Eastern Wisdom, Gautama Buddha was first a Bodhisattva,
and as such was born into the royal house of Suddhodana. By dint of
inner effort he attained, in his twenty-ninth year, the illumination
symbolically described as “sitting under the Bodhi tree.”
The wisdom arising from this could then be revealed in the great
Sermon of Benares. In his twenty-ninth year, this Bodhisattva rose to
the dignity of Buddhahood and was then able, as Buddha, to bring
again to mankind a last remnant of the Ancient Wisdom. And when in
the following centuries man again sinks so low that the last remnant
of the wisdom brought by Buddha disappears, another Bodhisattva,
Maitreya Buddha, who, according to Eastern Wisdom, is expected to
appear in the future, will rise to the dignity of Buddhahood.
Legends tell us of all that
was enacted in the soul of the last Bodhisattva who was to become
Gautama Buddha. Up to his twenty-ninth year he had known only the
surroundings of his royal home. Human misery and suffering —
all life's sorrows — were hidden from him. He grew up seeing
only the joys of life. But the Bodhisattvic consciousness was ever
present — a consciousness teeming with the inner wisdom of
former earthly lives. The legend is well-known and we need only
consider the main details. We read how Gautama left the royal Palace
and saw something he had never seen before — a corpse. At the
sight of the corpse he realised that death consumes life, that the
element of death enters life with its fruitfulness and power of
increase. He saw a sick man — disease eats its way into health.
He saw an old man tottering wearily along his way — age creeps
into the freshness of youth.
We must of course realise
that he who was to become Buddha passed through all these experiences
with Bodhisattvic consciousness. Thus he learned that the destructive
element of existence has its place in the wisdom-filled process of
“being and becoming,” but so deeply was his soul affected
that he cried out — so the legend runs — “Life is
full of suffering!” Let us try to enter into the soul of
Gautama the Bodhisattva. He possessed mighty wisdom, although he was
not as yet fully conscious of this wisdom. In his earlier years he
had seen only the fruitfulness of life. Then his eyes fell on the
image of destruction, of corruption, and within his soul the feeling
arose that all attainment of knowledge and wisdom leads man to
increasing life. His soul is then filled with the idea of
“Becoming” — a process of perpetual fruitfulness.
The idea of fruitful growth proceeds from wisdom. Gazing into the
world, what do we behold? Forces of destruction, sickness, old age,
death. Knowledge and wisdom cannot surely have brought old age,
sickness and death into the world. Something else must have been
their cause! And so the great Gautama felt — because he was not
yet fully conscious of his Bodhisattvic wisdom — that man
may be filled with wisdom and through this wisdom be filled with
ever-fruitful forces of growth, but life reveals decay, sickness,
death and many other destructive elements. Here was a mystery
unfathomable even to the Bodhisattva. He had passed through many
lives, through incarnation after incarnation had accumulated an
ever-increasing store of wisdom, until he had reached a point whence
he could survey life from the very heights of existence. Yet when he
left the palace, and life in its grim realities stood before him, the
meaning of it all did not wholly penetrate his consciousness. The
accumulated knowledge and wisdom of earthly lives cannot, in effect,
lead to the solution of the ultimate mysteries of existence, for
these mysteries lie hidden beyond the region of the life that passes
from incarnation to incarnation.
This conception, quickening
in the soul of the great Gautama, led him finally to full
illumination “under the Bodhi tree.” We may express the
results of his wakened consciousness as follows: “We are living
in a world of illusion. Life after life we live in this world of maya
whither we have passed from a spiritual existence. In this life we
may rise in Spirit to infinite merit — yet the wisdom of
innumerable lives will never solve the great riddles of old age, of
sickness, death.” He then realised that the doctrine of
suffering was greater than the wisdom of a Bodhisattva. In his
illumination he knew that all that is spread abroad in the world of
illusion is not true wisdom, for even after countless births, outer
existence gives us no understanding of suffering, nor can we release
ourselves from pain. Outer existence contains something that is far
removed from true wisdom. And so it came about that the Buddha saw an
element void of wisdom as the cause of old age, sickness and
death. The wisdom of this world could never bring liberation;
liberation could only proceed from something this world cannot give.
Man must withdraw from outer existence and from his repeated
births.
From this moment onwards
Buddha saw that the doctrine of suffering was the principle necessary
for the further progress of humanity. Devoid of wisdom was the
“thirst for existence,” which seemed to him the cause of
the suffering that had entered into the world. Wisdom on the one
hand, a meaningless thirst for existence on the other. And so
he realised: “Only when Man is liberated from the wheel of
births can he be led to true redemption, to true freedom, for of
itself the highest earthly wisdom cannot save him from
suffering.” Buddha then sought the means whereby man could be
led away from the scene of his successive births to a world which we
must learn to understand aright, for many fantastic and grotesque
ideas have arisen as to the meaning of “Nirvana.” One who
has reached a point in life where there is no more a thirst for
existence and no desire for rebirth, passes into Nirvana. What is the
nature of this world?
According to Buddhism, the
world of redemption and bliss eludes all descriptions derived from
the world sense and space man knows in earthly life. Nothing in the
physical world of space points to liberation. All the words man uses
to describe the world around him must be silenced; they do not and
cannot apply to the world of bliss. It is absolutely impossible to
form an idea of the realm entered by one who has been liberated from
the necessity for re-birth, for since it has no resemblance to
anything in the objective world, it can only be characterised by a
negative term — Nirvana. A man enters Nirvana only when
everything that connects him with earthly existence has been blotted
out.
Yet for the Buddhist,
Nirvana is no empty void. Rather is it a life of bliss no words can
describe. Here we have the root-nerve of Buddhism and an expression
of its pervading mood. From the Sermon of Benares where it was taught
for the first time, this doctrine of the suffering of life, of
suffering and its cause in the “thirst for existence”
permeates all that we know of Buddhism. One thing alone can lead to
human progress, and that is redemption from rebirth. And the first
step is the following of a path of knowledge which leads beyond
earthly wisdom. Treading this path a man will find the means
gradually to reach and enter Nirvana. In other words, he may learn so
to use his earthly incarnations that he is finally freed from their
necessity.
Turning now from this
somewhat abstract conception of Buddhism to its fundamentals, we find
that such an attitude towards life tends to “isolate”
man; it raises the question of the aims and destiny of his life as an
individual personality in the world. How could it be otherwise in a
conception of the world built upon such a foundation? It was believed
that man had descended from spiritual heights to find himself in a
world of maya from which the wisdom of a Buddha now and again can
rescue him, as the last Buddha had taught. Such a conception of the
goal of all human striving could be characterised in no other way
than as an isolating of man from his whole environment, for his
earthly embodiments followed a descending path in a descending
earthly order. How did Buddha himself seek illumination? Unless we
consider this, we shall never understand Buddha himself, or Buddhism.
He sought illumination, as we know, in complete isolation. He
went out from his father's palace into solitude. All knowledge gained
from previous lives must be silenced in a life of solitude, where he
must seek an inner illumination of the soul which shall reveal the
mystery of the suffering world. In isolation the Buddha awaits the
enlightenment which reveals: The cause of suffering inheres in the
thirst for existence and rebirth which burns in every individual
soul. The world too thirsts for existence and this is the cause of
all the suffering and all the destructive elements in life.
Now we cannot understand
the essential nature of Buddha's illumination and teaching unless we
compare it with Christianity. Six hundred years after the appearance
of the great Buddha, quite different conditions are present. Man's
whole attitude to the world and to his environment has changed. How
has it changed? Oriental thought contemplates one
“Buddha-epoch” after another. “History” is
not a process of descent from a higher to a lower level; rather is it
an effort to attain a definite goal, a possibility of union with the
whole world, with the past, and with the future. Such is the oriental
conception of history. But the Buddhist stands there isolated and
alone and is concerned only with his individual life. In his
individual existence he strives for liberation from the thirst for
existence and hence from the cycles of his births.
Six hundred years later,
the Christian has quite a different attitude. Putting aside
prejudices now widely spread in the world, we may describe the
Christian conception as follows. In so far as the Christian
conception is based on the Old Testament, it points to a primal
humanity when man's relationship to the spiritual world was not at
all the same as in later times. We read of this in the mighty
pictures of the Book of Genesis. The attitude of the Christian to the
world is very different from that of the Buddhist. The Christian
says: “Wisdom lives within my soul and this wisdom arises from
the very nature of the soul. Wisdom, knowledge and morality —
all these arise within me as a result of the way in which I observe
the world of sense and co-ordinate my impressions by means of
my reasoning faculties.” But in an older age the constitution
of the human soul was altogether different. Something happened then
which cannot merely be called, in the Buddhistic sense, a descent
from Divine-Spiritual heights into a world of maya, but must be
spoken of as the “Fall of man.” The Fall is bound up with
the whole of human existence. Man feels that there are forces within
him which had their origin in a far-off past and were part of a
process which caused the human being not merely to
“descend” but to descend in such a way that his
relationship to the world was completely changed. If the conditions
obtaining before this event had prevailed, man would have been
a different being to-day. The Fall was due to man's own sin, even
though he sinned unconsciously.
Thus in Christianity we are
concerned not merely with the direct descent of which the Buddhist
thought but, with an altered state of things in which the factor of
temptation plays an essential part. The Christian who pierces
the surface of Christianity into its depths must say that because of
an event which happened untold ages ago, the subconscious workings of
his soul are different from what they were designed to be. The
Buddhist says: — “From a state of union with the
Divine-Spiritual world, I have been transported into this world of
maya and illusion;” the Christian: — “I have
descended into this world. If I had descended in the original state
of my soul I should everywhere be able to look behind the illusion of
physical ‘appearances’ into reality and find the truth.
But since another factor has entered into the process of descent I
myself have turned this world into illusion.” The two modes of
thought are very different. The Buddhist asks why this world is
illusion and is taught that illusion is its very nature. The
Christian asks the same question but realises: “The fault is
mine! My powers of cognition and the state of my soul no longer
enable me to see the original reality. My actions are not fruitful. I
myself have drawn a veil of illusion over the world.” The
Buddhist says that the world is in itself the Great Illusion,
therefore he must overcome the world, but the Christian feels
himself in the world, and in the world he must seek his goal.
When the Christian realises
that Spiritual Science can lead him to the knowledge of successive
earthly lives, he can resolve to use them as a means whereby the goal
of life may be attained. He knows the world to be full of sorrow and
error, because man himself has wandered so far from his primal state
that his vision and his actions have changed the world around him
into maya. Yet he need not alienate himself from this world in order
to enter into blessedness. Rather must he overcome the forces which
make him see the world as illusion and thus be led back to his true
original nature. There is a higher man. If this higher man
could look upon the world, he would see it in its reality; he would
not pass through an existence of sickness and death but a life of
health, full of the freshness of youth. A veil has been drawn before
this inner man because humanity took part in a certain event in the
evolution of the world. Man is not an isolated entity, an individual,
nor is thirst for existence responsible for his present state. He is
indeed one with all humanity and shared in the original sin of the
whole human race.
And so the Christian feels
himself bound up with the whole historical course of humanity,
realising as he gazes into the future that he must find once more
that higher nature which man's process of descent has veiled. He
says: “I must seek, not Nirvana, but the higher man within me.
I must find the way back to my Self. Then will the surrounding world
no longer be illusion but reality — a world in which I am able
to overcome sorrow, sickness and death by my own efforts.” The
Buddhist seeks liberation from the world and from rebirths by
overcoming the thirst for existence. The Christian seeks liberation
from the lower man, seeks to awaken the higher man within, whom he
himself has veiled, in order that he may behold the world in its
truth. How great a contrast lies here between the wisdom of Buddha
and Paul's words: “Not I, but Christ in me!” —
words which express a consciousness that places man in the world as
an individuality! The Buddhist says: “Man has descended from
spiritual heights because the world has urged him downwards;
therefore a world that has implanted in him the thirst for existence
must be overcome. He must leave this world!” But the Christian
says: “It is not the fault of the world that I am as I am. Mine
is the fault!” The Christian stands in the world
acknowledging that beneath his ordinary consciousness a power
is at work which once gave him a clairvoyant picture-consciousness.
Man “sinned” and lost this spiritual vision. For this he
must make amends if he would reach his goal. In later life a man does
not feel it unjust that he should suffer from the faults of youthful
actions committed in a different consciousness. Equally, he should
not feel it an injustice that he should atone in his present state
for an act arising out of an earlier consciousness. This former
consciousness he no longer possesses, for his intellect and reason
have usurped its place. Atonement is only possible when the
will arises in man to press forwards with his present
Ego-consciousness, to that higher state described in Paul's words:
“Not I, but Christ in me!” The Christian should say:
“I have descended into conditions other than those ordained for
me from the beginning. I must re-ascend — not with the help of
the Ego I now possess but through a power which can live within me
and lead me beyond my human Ego. This I can only do if Christ works
in me, leading me to behold the world in its reality and not in
illusion. The forces which have brought illness and death into the
world can be overcome by what Christ fulfils in me.”
The innermost heart of
Buddhism only reveals itself when we compare it with Christianity.
Then we realise the words of Lessing in his
Education of the Human Race:
“Is not all Eternity mine?” That is to say: If
I use the opportunities of successive embodiments to bring the Christ
Power to life within me, I shall reach at last the sphere of the
Eternal. This has hitherto eluded me because I have covered myself
with a veil.
Reincarnation shines with a
new radiance in the sunlight of Christianity and will indeed in the
future penetrate Christian culture more and more deeply as an occult
truth. This however is not the point at issue. The point is that the
essential attitude of Buddhism makes the world responsible for
maya or illusion, while the Christian holds himself, as man,
responsible — knowing that the path to “redemption”
lies in his own innermost being. In the Christian sense, redemption
is also a “resurrection” because the Ego is raised
to a higher Ego whence it has descended. The Buddhist believes in the
“original sin” of the world and seeks liberation from the
world. The Christian's conception is an historical one, for human
life is seen as linked both with an event of a prehistoric past and
with a future event through which he may reach a point where his
whole life will be illuminated by the Being of Christ.
Thus Christianity does not
point to successive Buddhas, recapitulating more or less the same
truths through the successive epochs, but to a unique event occurring
in the course of human evolution. While the Buddhist pictures his
Buddha sitting under the Bodhi tree, rising to enlightenment as an
isolated individual, the Christian looks to Jesus of Nazareth, into
whom the Spirit of the Cosmos descended. The enlightenment of the
Buddha under the Bodhi tree — the Baptism by John in Jordan
— these two pictures stand clearly before us. Buddha sits under
the Bodhi tree in the solitude of the soul. Jesus of Nazareth stands
in the waters of Jordan and the very Spirit of the Cosmos descends
into his inner being — the Spirit in the image of the Dove.
The Buddha deed contained
for his followers the message: “Quench the thirst for
existence; tear thyself away from earthly existence and follow Buddha
to realms which no earthly words can describe!” The Christian
realises that from the Deed of Christ flows redemption from the
original sin of man, and he feels: If the influx of the spiritual
world behind the physical grows as strong within me as it was in
Christ Himself, I shall carry into my future incarnations a force
that will enable me to cry with St. Paul, “Not I, but Christ in
me!” And so I shall rise to the spiritual world whence I
descended.
Deeply moving in this light
are the words of Buddha to his intimate disciples: “Page after
page I look back upon my former lives as upon an open book; I see how
in life after life I built a material body wherein my Spirit dwelt as
in a temple. Now I know that this body in which I have become Buddha,
is the last.” And referring to Nirvana, whither he was to pass,
he said: “The beams are breaking, the posts are giving way; the
material body has been built for the last time and will now be wholly
destroyed.” Compare these words with an utterance of the
Christ recorded in the Gospel of St. John. Christ indicates that He
is living in an outer body: “Destroy this Temple and in three
days I will build it up again.” Here we have exactly the
opposite conception, for it can be thus interpreted: “I
shall accomplish a deed that will make fruitful and living all that
from God — from primeval humanity — flows into this world
and into us.” These words indicate that the Christian, through
repeated earthly lives, comes to cry in truth, “Not I, but
Christ in me!” We must however understand that the
re-building of this Temple has an eternal significance in that
it points to the in-pouring of the Christ Power into all who share in
the collective evolution of mankind. There can be no repetition of
the Christ Event in the course of evolution. The true Buddhist
assumes a repetition of earthly epochs, a succession of Buddhas
having each a fundamentally similar mission, but the Christian looks
back to the Fall of Man and must point also to a further and unique
event — the Mystery of Golgotha and man's redemption from the
Fall.
There have been times in
the past, and indeed in our own days, when men have looked for a
renewal of the Christ Event; but such an expectation can only arise
from a misunderstanding of the basic facts of man's historical
progress. True history must take its start and pursue its course from
a central point. Just as there must be one equilibrating point on a
pair of scales, so in “history” there must be one event
to which both the past and the future point. To imagine that the
Christ Event could be repeated is as meaningless as to suppose there
could be two focal points in a balance. Eastern wisdom speaks of a
succession of similar individualities, the Buddhas, and herein lies
the difference between the Eastern and the Western conceptions of the
universe, for the Christ Impulse is a unique event and to deny
this is to deny an historical progress in evolution — that is,
to have a false idea of history.
The consciousness that the
individual is indissolubly bound up with humanity as a whole, that
not mere repetition but a great purpose rules throughout the
course of evolution is Christian in the deepest sense and cannot be
separated from Christianity. Human progress inheres in the fact that
an older Eastern conception has evolved into a new one. Man has
advanced from thinking that the wheels of world-events roll on in an
endless repetition to the belief that there is meaning and an
onward-flowing significance in the changing events of human
existence.
Thus Christianity first
gives reality to the doctrine of repeated earthly lives. For now we
say that man passes through repeated lives on earth in order that the
true meaning of human life may again and again be implanted in him,
each time as a fresh experience. Not only the isolated individual
strives upwards, for a yet deeper meaning lies in the striving of
humanity as a whole, and we ourselves are bound up with this
humanity. No longer feeling himself united with a Buddha who urges
liberation from the world, man, gazing at the central spiritual Sun,
at the Christ Impulse, grows conscious of his union with One Whose
Deed has balanced the event symbolised in the “Fall.”
Buddhism can be best
described as the sunset of a mode of thought that was nearing its
decline but flamed into a mighty afterglow when Gautama Buddha
appeared. This is not to honour the Buddha less; we revere him as the
great Spirit who once brought to man a teaching pointing to the past,
and the sense of union with a primeval wisdom. The Christ Impulse
points with the hand of power to the future, and must live
with ever increasing strength in the soul till man realises that not
redemption but resurrection — the
“transfiguration” of material existence can
alone give meaning to man's earthly life.
Concepts or dogmas are not
the only driving forces in life, though many may feel more drawn to
Buddhism than to Christianity. Rather are the essentials such
impulses, perceptions and feelings as give meaning to human
evolution. There is indeed something of a Buddha-mood to-day in many
souls, drawing them towards Buddhism. Goethe could not feel this
mood, for through his recognition that the Spirit which is the source
of the human Spirit permeates also all external things, he could
greatly love life. During his first stay in Weimar, freeing himself
from all narrowness and prejudice, he closely studied the outer
world. He passed from plant to plant, from mineral to mineral,
seeking behind all these that Spirit whence the Spirit of man
descends, and with this all-pervading Spirit he sought to unite
himself. Goethe once said to his pupil Schopenhauer: “All
your splendid conceptions will be at war with themselves directly
they pass into other minds.” Schopenhauer's motto can be
expressed in his own words: “Life is full of perplexity. I try
to make it easier by contemplation.” Trying to find an
explanation of the origin of existence he turned naturally to
Buddhism, and his ideas assumed a Buddhistic colouring.
In the course of the
nineteenth century the different branches of culture yielded such
great and mighty results that the human mind did not feel able to
assimilate the mass of scientific achievements pouring in from
external research. The sense of helplessness grew greater and greater
before the overwhelming mass of scientific facts. True, this world of
facts tallies in a wonderful way with Spiritual Science, but we see
at the same time that thought in the nineteenth century was not equal
to coping with it. Man began to realise that his faculties of
knowledge could not assimilate all the facts nor could his mind gauge
them. And so he began to seek a philosophy or a
world-conception that did not attempt to wrestle with all the facts
of the outer world. In contrast to this, Spiritual Science takes its
start from the deepest principles and experiences of spiritual
knowledge; it is able to compass and elaborate all the facts brought
to light by outer science and to show how the Spirit lives in outer
reality. Now many people do not like this, So far at least as
knowledge is concerned, they draw back from the investigation of the
world of facts and strive to reach a higher stage merely in the inner
being, by a development of soul. This has led to an
“unconscious Buddhism” which has been in existence for
some time now. We can find traces of it in the philosophies of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. When such people — and they
are really unconscious Buddhists — come into contact with
Buddhism, their longing for ease makes them feel more readily drawn
to this mode of thought than to Spiritual Science. For Spiritual
Science deals with the whole mass of facts, with the knowledge that
Spirit manifests in them all.
It is really, therefore, an
element of unbelief and paralysis of will, born of a feebleness of
spiritual knowledge, that awakens the attraction to Buddhism to-day.
Whereas the Christian conception of the universe — as it lived
in Goethe, for instance — demands that man should not give way
to his own weakness and speak of “boundaries of
knowledge,” but rather feel that something within him can
rise above all illusion and lead to truth and freedom. True, a
certain amount of resignation is demanded here, but not the
resignation which shrinks back before “boundaries of
knowledge.” In the Kantian sense resignation means that man is
altogether unable to penetrate the depths of the universe. This is a
resignation born of weakness, but there is another kind whereby man
can say with Goethe: “I have not yet reached the stage where
the world can be known in its truth, yet I can evolve to it.”
This resignation leads him to the stage where he can bring to birth
the “higher man” — the Christ-man. He is resigned
because he knows that for the moment he has not reached this highest
level of human life. This indeed is a “heroic”
resignation, for it says: “We pass from life to life with the
feeling that we exist, and we know as we look towards the future that
in the repetition of earthly existence all Eternity is
ours.”
And so two great streams of
thought can be seen in human evolution. The one is represented by
Schopenhauer who says: “This world with all its suffering is
such that we can only know man's real position through the works of
great painters. They portray figures whose asceticism brought
something like freedom from earthly existence, who are already lifted
above terrestrial life.” According to Schopenhauer, the
greatness of this liberated human being consists in the fact that he
is able to look back upon his earthly existence and feel: This bodily
covering is now nothing but an empty shell and has no significance
for me. I strive upwards, in anticipation of the state I shall attain
when earthly existence has been conquered and I have overcome all
that is connected with it. Herein is the great liberation —
when nothing remains to remind me in the future of my earthly
existence. Such was Schopenhauer's conception, permeated as he was
with the mood Buddhism had brought into the world. Goethe, stimulated
by a purely Christian impulse, looks out upon the world as Faust
looks out upon it. And if we in our time rise above external
trivialities, though realising that our works will perish when the
earth has become a corpse — we too can say with Goethe: We
learn from our experiences on earth; what we build on earth
must perish, but what we acquire in the school of life does not
perish. Like Faust, we look not upon the permanency of our works but
upon their fruits in the eternity of the soul, and gazing at
horizons wider than those of Buddhism, we can say with Goethe:
“Aeons cannot obliterate the traces of any man's days on
earth.” —
“Es
kann die Spur von meinen Erdentagen
Nicht in Aeonen untergehen!”
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