III
BUDDHA
In these days there is much discussion concerning
The Buddha and the Buddhist Creed; and this fact is the more
interesting to all who follow the course of human evolution,
because a knowledge of the true character of the Buddhist
religion, or perhaps more correctly, the longing felt by many for
its comprehension has only recently entered into the spiritual
life of the Western nations. Let us consider for a moment that
most prominent personality,
Goethe,
who exerted such a powerful
influence on Occidental culture, at the turn of the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries, which influence continued so potently
right on into our own period. When we examine his life, his
works, and his intellectuality, we find no trace of the Buddhist
doctrine; but a little later we note in the concepts of that
genius,
Schopenhauer
(who was in a certain sense a disciple of
Goethe), a clear and definite touch of Buddhistic thought; and
since that period in which Schopenhauer lived, the interest taken
in Eastern spiritual conceptions has steadily increased. Hence it
is that there is now a widespread and inherent desire, to analyse
and discuss all those matters connected with the name of the
Great Buddha, which have found their way into the course of human
evolution.
It is a remarkable fact that most people still
persist in associating Buddhism, primarily, with the idea of
recurrent earth lives, to which concept we have often referred in
these lectures. Such an assumption is, however, found to be
unwarranted when we have regard to the essential character of the
Buddhist belief. We might say, that with the majority of those
people who interest themselves in this subject, the notion of
repeated earth lives, or as we term it, Reincarnation, forms a
well-established and essential part of their preconceived ideas
regarding Buddhism. But on the other hand it must be said, even
though it sounds grotesque, that to those who probe more deeply
into these matters, the association of Buddhism with the idea of
reincarnation, appears almost equivalent to saying, — that the
most complete knowledge of ancient works of art is to be sought
among those peoples who have destroyed them at the commencement
of universal development and progress in the Middle Ages. This
certainly sounds grotesque, but it is nevertheless true, as we at
once realize when we consider that the aim of Buddhism is
directed towards the disparagement of our apparently inevitably
recurring earth lives, and the reduction of their number as far
as may be within our power. Hence, we must regard as the
essential moving principle underlying the whole trend of Buddhist
spiritual thought that principle which operates in the direction
of freedom, that is, redemption from repeated rebirth, or
liberation from reincarnation which it accepts as an established
and unquestionable fact; in this concept is expressed the true
and vital essence of Buddhism.
Even from a superficial glance at the history of
Western spiritual life, we learn that the idea of repeated
earthly existence is quite independent of an understanding of
Buddhism, and vice versa; for during the course of our Occidental
spiritual development we find ourselves confronted with a
conception of reincarnation, presented in a manner both lofty and
sublime, by a personality who most certainly had remained
untouched by Buddhist views and trend of thought. This
personality was
Lessing,
who in his treatise on The Education
of Mankind, which is regarded as the most matured and mellow
of his works, closes with the confession that he himself was a
believer in the Doctrine of Reincarnation. With regard to this
belief, he gives expression to those deeply significant words, —
‘Is not all eternity mine?‘ Lessing was of opinion
that the repetition of our earthly lives was proof that benefit
would accrue from mundane endeavour, and that existence in this
world is not in vain. For while we toil we look forward to ever
widening and fuller recurring corporal states, in which we may
bring to maturity the fruits of our by-gone earthly lives. The
conception which Lessing really formed was of the prospect and
anticipation of a rich and bountiful harvest, to be garnered in
the fullness of time coupled with the knowledge that throughout
human existence there is ever an inner voice, which in actual
expectation of recurrent earth lives, calls to us, saying, —
‘Thou shalt persist in thy labours.’ From what has
been said, it is now apparent that it is in the very essence of
Buddhism that man must ever strive to obtain such knowledge and
wisdom as may serve to free him from those future reincarnations,
the prevision of which lies in the spirit. Only when during one
of our earth lives we have at last freed ourselves from the need
of experiencing those which would otherwise follow, can we enter
peacefully upon that condition which we may term
Eternity.
I have persistently endeavoured to make it clear
that the idea of reincarnation, both with regard to Spiritual
Science and
Theosophy,
was not derived from any one of the
ancient traditions, not even from Buddhism; it has in fact thrust
itself upon us during our time, as a result of independent
observation and reflection concerning life in connection with
spiritual investigation. Hence, to associate Buddhism so directly
with the idea of reincarnation indicates a superficial attitude.
If we would indeed look into the true character and nature of
Buddhism, then we must turn our spiritual eyes in quite another
direction.
I must now once again draw your attention to that
law in human evolution which we met with when we were considering
the personality of the great Zarathustra. In accordance with this
law, as was then stated, during the gradual passing of time the
whole condition and character of man’s soul changed, while
it went through varying transitional states. Those events
regarding which we obtain information from external historical
documents, represent as far as man is concerned, only a
comparatively late phase in the evolution of humanity. If,
however, we look back with the aid of Spiritual Science to
prehistoric times, we gain much further knowledge; we then find
that a certain condition of soul was common to primitive man,
whereby the normal state of human consciousness was quite other
than that of our day.
That pre-eminently intellectual order of
consciousness, which leads to the manner in which, during the
course of our normal human life, we now regard all things around
us combining them by means of our mental powers acting through
the brain, so that they shall be connected with and become a part
of our wisdom, and our science — was first developed from
another form of conscious state. I have emphasized this point
before, but I must lay particular stress upon it once again. We
have in the chaotic disorder of our dream-life, a last remnant —
a species of atavistic heritage – of an old clairvoyance,
which was at one time to a certain extent, an ordinary condition
of the human soul, and in which mankind assumed a state between
that of sleeping and that of being awake; he could then look upon
those things hidden behind the perceptual world.
In these days in which our consciousness mainly
alternates between the sleeping and the waking conditions, it is
only in the latter that we seek to apprehend a state of
intellectuality in the soul; but in olden times, clairvoyant
visions were not so meaningless as are the dream forms of our
period, for they could be quite definitely ascribed to specific
superperceptual creations and events. Mankind had in connection
with these ancient fluctuating visions a species of conscious
state out of which our present intellectuality gradually evolved.
Hence, we look back to a certain form of primeval clairvoyance
which was followed by the long drawn out evolution of our
consciousness as recognized to-day. Because of this by-gone
dream-like clairvoyance, prehistoric man could gaze far into the
superperceptual worlds, and through this connection with the
supersensible, he gained not knowledge alone but a feeling of
profound inner satisfaction and bliss from the full realization
of the soul’s union with the Spirit-World.
Just as present-day man is now convinced through
his sense perceptions and intellectuality that his blood is
composed of substances which exist without in the physical
universe, so was prehistoric man confident that his soul and
spiritual nature emanated from that same hidden Spirit-World
which he could discern in virtue of his clairvoyant
consciousness. It has already been pointed out that there are
phenomena connected with the history of mankind, and which are
also apparent in certain external facts and happenings, that can
only be fully understood when we pre-suppose some such primordial
condition of man’s earthly existence. It has further been
stated that modern science is coming more and more to the
conclusion that it is erroneous to assume, as has been done by
the materialistic Anthropology of the nineteenth century, that in
primeval times the prevailing state common to man was similar to
that found among the most primitive peoples of to-day. It is, in
fact, becoming more and more clear that the prehistoric races had
extremely exalted theoretical conceptions regarding the
Spirit-World, and that these concepts were given to them in the
form of visions. All those curious ideas which come to us through
myths and legends can only be rightly understood, when they are
first connected with and referred back to that ancient wisdom
which came to man in a way wholly different from that by which
our present intellectual science has been attained.
In these modern times there is not much sympathy
expressed with the view that the position in which we find the
primitive peoples of our day is not typical of the universal
primordial condition of mankind, but is in reality an example of
decadence from a primarily highly clairvoyant spiritual state
common to all peoples. But facts will yet force a general
acceptance of some such hypothesis as that put forward by
Spiritual Science as a result of its investigations. Here, as in
many other cases, it can be shown that fundamentally there is
complete accord between spiritual and external science. Further,
a time will come when the conclusions which Spiritual Science has
formed regarding the probable future of man’s evolution,
viewed from the scientific stand-point, will be entirely
confirmed. We must look back, not merely to a form of primeval
wisdom, but to a specific order of primordial feeling and
apprehension, which we characterize as a clairvoyant bond,
erstwhile existent between man and the divine regions of
spirit.
We can easily understand that during the
transition from the old or clairvoyant state of the human soul to
our modern direct, unprejudiced and intellectual method of
regarding the external perceptual world, there should arise two
different currents of thought. As time went on the first of these
made itself manifest more especially among those peoples who had
clung to memories of the past, and to their fading psychic power,
in such manner that they would say: — ‘In by-gone days
mankind was truly in contact with the spirit realms in virtue of
the clairvoyant faculty, but since then he has descended into the
material world of sense perception.’ This feeling spread
throughout the whole soul’s outlook, until those ancient
peoples would cry out: — ‘We are indeed now come into a
world of manifestations where all is illusion — all is
Maya.’ Only at such time as man might commune with the
spirit spheres could he truly comprehend, and be united with his
very being. Thus it was that there came to those nations who
still preserved a dim remembrance of the ancient primal
clairvoyant state, a certain feeling of sadness at the thought of
what they had lost, and an indifference to all material things
which man might apprehend and understand through the medium of
his intellect, and with which he is ever in direct and conscious
contact.
On the other hand, the second of the two thought
currents to which I have referred, may be expressed in the
following manner: — ‘We will observe and be active in this
new world which has been given to us.’ Thought of this
nature is especially noticeable throughout the Zarathustran
doctrine. Those who experienced this call to action did not look
back with sorrow and longing to the loss of the old clairvoyant
power, but felt, ever more and more, that they must keep in close
and constant touch with those forces by the aid of which they
might penetrate into the secrets and nature of all material
things, knowing full well that knowledge and guidance, born of
the spirit, would flow in upon them if they would but give
themselves up to earnest and profound meditation and piety. Such
people felt impelled to link themselves closely with the world —
there was no dreaming of the past, but an urge to gaze resolutely
into the future and to battle with what might come. They
expressed themselves after this fashion: — ‘Interwoven
throughout this world, which is now our portion, is the same
divine essence that was spread about us and permeated our very
beings in by-gone ages; and this spiritual component we must now
seek amid our material surroundings. It is our task to unite
ourselves with all that is good and of the spirit, and by so
doing, to further the progress and evolution of creation.’
These words indicate the essential nature of that current of
thought which was occupied with external physical perception, and
went forth from those Asiatic countries where the Zarathustran
doctrine prevailed, and which lay Northward of the region where
mankind looked back in meditation, pondering over that great
spiritual gift which had passed away, and was indeed
lost.
Thus it came about that upon the soil of India
there arose a spiritual life which is entirely comprehensible,
when we regard it in the light of all this retrospection
concerning a former union with the Spirit-World. If we consider
the results in India of the teachings of the Sankhya and Yoga
philosophies and the Yoga training, we find that these may be
embodied in the following statement: — The Indian has ever
striven to re-establish his connection with those Spirit-Worlds
from whence he came, and it has been his constant endeavour to
eliminate from his earthly life all that was spread around him in
the external creation, and by thus freeing himself from material
things, to regain his union with that spiritual region from
whence humanity has emanated. The principle underlying Yoga
philosophy is reunion with the divine realms, and abstraction
from all that appertains to the perceptual world.
Only when we assume this fundamental mood of
Indian spiritual life can we realize the significance of that
mighty impulse brought about by the advent of the Buddha, which
blazed up before our spiritual sight, as an after-glow across the
evening sky of Indian soul-life, but a few centuries before the
Christ-impulse began to dominate Western thought. It is only in
the light of the Buddha-mood, when regarded as already
characterized, that the outstanding figure of the Buddha can be
truly comprehended. In view of that basic assumption to which we
have above referred, we can readily conceive that in India there
could exist an order of thought and conviction, such as caused
mankind to regard the world as having fallen from a spiritual
state into one of sense-illusion, or that ‘Great
Deception‘, which is indeed Maya. It is also understandable
that the Indian, because of his observations concerning this
external world with which humanity is so closely connected,
pictured to himself that this decline came about suddenly and
unexpectedly from time to time, during the passing of the ages.
So that Indian philosophy does not regard man’s fall as
uniform and continuous, but as having taken place periodically
from epoch to epoch. From this point of view we can now
understand those contemplative moods, underlying a form of
culture which we must regard as being in the departing radiance
of its existence; for so must we characterize the Buddhist
conception, if we would consider it as having a place in a
philosophy such as we have outlined.
Indian thought ever harked back to that dim past
when man was truly united with the Spirit-World. For there came a
time when the Indian fell away from his exalted spiritual
standard; this decline persisted until a certain level was
reached, when he rose again, only to sink once more. He continued
to alternate in this fashion throughout the ages, every descent
taking him still further along the downward path, while each
upward step was, as it were, a mitigation granted by some higher
power, in order that man might not be compelled to work and live,
all too suddenly, in that condition which he had already entered
upon during his fall. According to ancient Indian philosophy, as
each period of decline was ended there arose a certain
outstanding figure whose personality was known as a
‘Buddha‘; the last of these was incarnated as the son
of King Suddhodana, and called Gautama Buddha.
Since those olden times, when humanity was still
directly united with the Spirit-World, there have arisen a number
of such Buddhas, five having appeared subsequent to the last
fall. The advent of the Buddhas was a sign that mankind shall not
sink into illusion — into Maya — but that again and again there
shall come into men’s lives something of the ancient primal
wisdom, to succour and to aid humanity. This primordial
knowledge, however, because of man’s constant downward
trend, fades from time to time; but in order that it shall be
renewed there arises periodically a new Buddha, and as we have
stated, the last of these was Gautama Buddha.
Before such great teachers could advance, through
repeated earth lives, to the dignity of Buddhahood, if we may so
express it, they must have already been exalted and attained the
lofty standing of a Bodhisattva.1
According to the Indian philosophical outlook, Gautama Buddha, up
to his twenty-ninth year, was not regarded as a Buddha, but as a
Bodhisattva. It was therefore as a Bodhisattva that he was born
into the royal house of Suddhodana; and because his life was ever
devoted to toil and to striving, he was at last blessed with that
inner illumination, symbolically portrayed in the words,
‘Sitting under the Bodhi tree‘; and that glorious
enlightenment which flowed in upon him found expression in the
‘Sermon at Benares’.
Thus did Gautama Buddha rise to the full dignity
of Buddahood in his twenty-ninth year, and from that time on, he
was empowered to revive once again a last remnant of by-gone
primeval wisdom; which, however, in the light of Indian
conceptions, would be destined to fall into decadence during the
centuries to come. But according to these same concepts, when man
has sunk so low, that the wisdom and the knowledge which this
last Buddha brought, shall have waned, then will yet another
Bodhisattva rise to Buddhahood, the Buddha of the Future — the
Maitreya Buddha; whose coming the Indian surely awaits, for it is
foretold in his philosophy.
Let us now consider what took place at that time
when the last Bodhisattva rose to Buddhahood; when, as we might
say, his soul became filled with primordial wisdom. By so doing
we can best realize and understand the true significance of that
great change, wrought by struggle and toil through repeated earth
lives.
There is a legend which tells us that until his
twenty-ninth year he had seen nothing of the world outside the
Royal Palace of Suddhodana; and that he was protected from that
misery and suffering which are factors of existence ever
antagonistic to human prosperity in life’s progress. It was
under these conditions that the Bodhisattva grew up; but at the
same time he was possessed of the Bodhisattva-consciousness, that
consciousness so imbued with inner wisdom garnered from previous
incarnations. Hence, as he developed, during life’s
unfolding, he looked only upon those things which would bring
forth true and goodly fruits. Since this legend is so well known,
it is only necessary to refer to the main points. It states that
when the Buddha at length came outside the Royal Palace he had an
experience such as could not have occurred before — namely, he
beheld a corpse — and he realized on seeing this body that life
is dissolved by death; and that the death element breaks in upon
life’s procreative and fruitful progress. He next came upon
an ailing and feeble man; and knew that disease enters upon life.
Again, he saw an aged person, tottering and weary; and he
understood that old age creeps in upon the freshness of
youth.
From the stand-point of Buddhism, Indian
Philosophy presupposes that: — He who having been a Bodhisattva,
and is exalted to Buddhahood, regards all experiences, such as
the above, with the Bodhisattva-consciousness. This supposition
must be clearly understood. Gautama realized that in the great
wisdom which underlies development in all being, there is an
element destructive to existence; and the legend states that when
this truth first dawned upon him, his great soul was so affected
that he cried out: — ‘Life is full of
misery.’
Let us now place ourselves in the position of
those who look upon experiences of this nature, solely from the
Buddhistic point of view, for instance, in the position of this
Bodhisattva-Gautama. Gautama was possessed of a higher wisdom
which lived within him, but was as yet not fully developed. He
had, up to this period, seen only the fortunate and wealthy side
of life, and now for the first time beheld the elements of decay
and dissolution. If we consider the way in which he must have
regarded these happenings, as viewed from the stand-point of
assumptions forced upon him in virtue of his being, we can
readily understand how it was that this great spiritual Buddha
came to express himself in words somewhat as follows: —
‘When we attain to knowledge and to wisdom, it comes about
that in virtue of such wisdom we are led onwards toward
development and progress; and because of this enlightenment,
there enters into the soul the thought of an ever continuous and
beneficial growth and advancement; but when we look upon the
world about us we see there the elements of destruction as
expressed in sickness, old age, and death. Verily, it cannot be
wisdom that would thus mingle these destructive factors with
life, but something quite apart and distinctive in
character.’ At first the great Gautama did not fully grasp
all that his Bodhisattva-consciousness implied, and we can well
realize how it was that he became imbued with those thoughts
which caused him to exclaim: — ‘Man may indeed be
possessed of much wisdom, and through his knowledge there may
come to him the idea of plenteous benefits; but in life we behold
about us not alone the factors of sickness and death, but many
another baneful element which brings corruption and decay into
our very existence.’
The Bodhisattva thus saw around him a condition
which he could not as yet fully comprehend. He had passed through
life after life, always applying the experiences gained through
his previous incarnations to his soul’s benefit; the while
his wisdom became ever greater and greater, till at last he could
look down upon all earthly existence from a more exalted
vantage-point. But when he came forth from the King’s
Palace, and saw before him for the first time the realities of
life, its true nature and significance did not at once penetrate
his understanding. That knowledge which we gain from the repeated
experiences of our earth lives, and which we store within us as
wisdom, can never solve the ultimate secrets of our being, for
the true origin of these mysteries must lie without — remote
from that life which is ours as we pass from reincarnation to
reincarnation.
Such thoughts matured in the great soul of
Gautama and led him directly to that sublime enlightenment known
as ‘The Illumination under the Bodhi Tree
‘.2 There, while seated
beneath this tree, it became clear to the Buddha that this world
in which we have our being is Maya, — illusion; that here life
follows upon life, and that we have come upon this earth from a
spiritual realm. While we are yet here we may indeed be exalted,
and even rise to noble heights in the divine sense, and we may
pass through many reincarnations, becoming ever more and more
possessed of wisdom; but because of that which is material and
comes to us through contact with this earthly life, we can never
solve the great ever-present mystery of existence which finds
expression in old age, disease and death. It was at this time of
enlightenment that the thought came to Gautama that the teachings
born of suffering held for him a greater significance than all
the wisdom of a Bodhisattva.
The Buddha expressed the fundamental concept
underlying his great illumination as follows: — ‘That
which spreads itself abroad throughout this world of Maya is not
veritable wisdom, indeed, so little of this quality is manifested
in life that we can never hope to gain from external experiences
a true understanding of affliction, nor acquire that knowledge
which will show us the way by which we may be freed from
suffering; for interwoven throughout all outer existence is a
factor of quite another character, which differs from all wisdom
and all knowledge.’
It is therefore obvious that what the Buddha
sought was an element through the agency of which the destructive
forces of old age, sickness and death become commingled with
earthly life, and in which wisdom has no part. He held that
freedom from these baneful factors can never come through mundane
knowledge and learning for the path which leads to deliverance
does not lie in that direction, and can only be found when man
withdraws himself entirely from the external world, where life
follows upon life and reincarnation upon reincarnation.
Thus it was the Buddha realized from the moment
of his illumination that in the teachings and experience born of
affliction, lay that basic element necessary to humanity for its
future progress; and he conceived a factor (wherein was no
wisdom) which he termed The Thirst for Existence to be
the true source of all that misery and sorrow which so troubles
the world. Upon the one side wisdom, upon the other a thirst for
existence, where wisdom has no part. It was this thought which
caused Gautama to exclaim: — ‘Only liberation from
recurrent earth life can lead humanity to the realization of
perfect freedom; for earthly wisdom, even that of the highest
learning, cannot save us from grief and anguish.’ He
therefore gave himself up to meditation, and sought some means
whereby mankind might be led away from all this restlessness in
the world of his reincarnations, and guided into that
transcendent state which Gautama Buddha has designated
Nirvana.
What, then, is the nature of this state — this
World of Nirvana — which man shall enter when he has so advanced
in his earthly life that ‘The Thirst for Existence‘
has passed, and he no more desires to be reborn? We must
understand this concept rightly, for then shall we avoid those
grotesque and fantastic ideas, so frequently spread abroad.
Nirvana is a condition that can only be characterized in the
Buddhist sense. According to this conception, it is a world of
redemption and of bliss that can never be expressed in terms of
things which may be apprehended in the material state in which we
have our being. There is nothing in this physical world, nor in
the wide expanse of the cosmos, which can awaken in mankind a
realization of the sublime truth underlying such
redemption.
Hence, we should forbear from all pronouncements
and assertions regarding that glorious region where humanity must
seek salvation; and all earth-born predications and profitless
statements — such as man is ever prone to make – must be
stilled, for in them is nought pertaining to the spheres of
eternal bliss. There is, indeed, no possibility of picturing that
realm, where all may enter who have overcome the need for
reincarnation, since it is not of those things of which we may
have awareness on this earth life. When, therefore, we would
speak of this condition we must use a negative, an indefinite,
term and such a term is Nirvana. He who has conquered all mundane
desires shall yet know the nature and the aspect of that other
world which we can but indicate with the one vague and neutral
word Nirvana. It is a region which, according to the Buddhist, no
language can portray. It is not a ‘Nihility‘, it is
indeed so far removed from such a concept that we can find no
words wherewith to describe this state of being, so complete, so
perfect, and all abounding in ecstasy and bliss.
We are now in a position to grasp and apprehend
the very essence of Buddhism, its sentiments and its convictions.
From the time of the Sermon at Benares, when first the Buddha
gave expression to the ‘Doctrine of Suffering‘,
Buddhism became permeated with thought and understanding
concerning the inner nature of life’s misery and distress,
and of that yearning, that Thirst for Existence which leads but
to sorrow and affliction. There is, according to this doctrine,
only one way in which humanity may truly progress, and that is
through gaining freedom and redemption from further
reincarnations. Mankind must find that path of knowledge which
extends outward and beyond all earthly wisdom — that path which
is the way and the means whereby slowly, step by step, man may
become so fitted and conditioned that he can at last enter upon
that ideal state — Nirvana. In other words, he must learn to
utilize the experiences of his rebirths, in such manner that
finally recurrent earth life is no longer essential to his
development, and he is freed therefrom for evermore.
If we now turn from this brief summary of the
conceptions which underlie Buddhism, to the root and essence of
this religion, it at once strikes us as peculiar when viewed in
the light of our ideas concerning humanity regarded as a whole —
for Buddhism in point of fact isolates the individual. Questions
are raised relative to man’s destiny, the purport and aim
of his existence, his place and relation to the world — all from
the stand-point of detached and separate personality. How,
indeed, could any other trend of thought underlie a philosophy
built upon a fundamental disposition of mind such as we have
outlined? A philosophy evolved from a basic mood, which conceives
man as being descended from spiritual heights and now finding
himself in a world of illusion; from which material existence the
wisdom of a Buddha may, from time to time, free him; but this
very wisdom (as was seen in the case of the last Buddha) causes
him to seek redemption from his earthly life. How could the goal
of human existence, born as it was of convictions such as these,
be characterized other than by representing man as isolated in
his relation to the whole of his environment? According to this
philosophy, the fundamental aspect of being is such as to
represent decline, while development and evolution in earthly
life implies degeneration.
The manner in which the Buddha sought
enlightenment is both remarkable and significant, but unless we
consider also the peculiar characteristics and circumstances
connected with ‘The Illumination‘, neither the Buddha
himself, nor Buddhism, can be properly understood. When Gautama
craved enlightenment, he went forth into solitude; to a place
where he could find entire and absolute isolation. For all that
he had acquired from life to life, must be overcome in the utter
detachment of his being, so that there could break in upon his
soul that clear light whereby he might comprehend and solve the
mystery of the world’s wretchedness. There in that place,
as one in complete aloofness, dependent upon himself alone, the
Buddha awaited the moment of illumination — that moment when
there should come to him an understanding which would enable him
to realize that the true cause of all human suffering lay in the
intense longing manifested by individual man to be born again
into this material world. And further, that this yearning for
reincarnation, this thirst for existence, is the fundamental
source of all that misery and distress which is everywhere about
us, and of those pernicious factors which bring ruin and
destruction into our very being.
We cannot rightly comprehend the unusual and
singular nature of the Buddha-Illumination and of the Buddhistic
Doctrine unless we compare them with the knowledge and experience
we have gained through Christianity. Six hundred years after the
advent of the Great Buddha, there arose in Christendom a wholly
different conception, in which we also find man’s position
relative to the world and all that is about him expressed in
definite terms.
Now, regarding Buddhism, and speaking in an
abstract and general manner, we can say: — The philosophic
outlook concerning the cosmos, as set forth in Buddhistic
teachings, is not treated historically, and this unhistoric
method is thoroughly typical of all Eastern countries. These
countries have seen one Buddha epoch follow upon another, only to
gradually die out and eventually come to an end. Such
descriptions as are concerned merely with man’s descent
from higher to lower states, do not of themselves constitute what
we term history, for the factors of true history would include
the upward endeavour of humanity to reach some appointed goal,
and the nature and possibilities of man’s association and
union with the world as a whole, both in the past and in the
future. We would then have veritable history. But the Buddhist
stands isolated and alone, concerned only with the basic
principles of his being, ever seeking to gain through the conduct
of his personal life those powers which may lead him to freedom
from ‘the thirst for existence‘, so that having
attained to this freedom he may at last win redemption from
rebirth.
In Christendom, six hundred years after the
Buddha period, the attitude of individual man toward the
evolution of humanity in general was of quite another kind.
Putting aside all prejudice, which is so common a failing
throughout the world, we can characterize one particular
Christian trend of thought as follows: — From that part of the
Christian concept which is founded upon the stories in the Old
Testament it is realized that the ancients were related to the
spiritual realms in a manner wholly different from that which was
subsequently the case; as is seen in the grand and lofty imagery
depicted in Genesis. Now, a curious fact comes to light, namely,
in Christendom we find man’s relation to the world to be of
a character entirely unlike that which obtains in Buddhism. The
following may be considered as the Christian’s point of
view: — ‘Within my being is understanding begotten of that
condition of soul which is now mine; and because of the way and
the manner in which I observe and comprehend this outer
perceptual world, there is born in me wisdom, intelligence and an
aptitude for the practical conduct of life. But I can look back
into the distant past when the human soul was differently
conditioned, and there came about a circumstance, namely,
“The Fall of Man”, which cannot be regarded simply
from the Buddhistic stand-point.’ This event, which we so
often find portrayed in a figurative form based upon
misconception, the Buddhist believes to be a [natural result of
man’s] descent from Divine spiritual heights into a world
of Maya, or illusion. This great ‘Fall’ must,
however, be looked upon in a quite different way, for truly
characterized it is The Fall of Man [as caused wholly through his
own transgression, and was not due as the Buddhist thinks, merely
to his coming down from a higher spiritual state and entering a
world of deception].
Although man may have his own opinion concerning
this matter, nevertheless, there is one thing we must admit, and
that will suffice for the present, namely, that in connection
with the thought of ‘The Fall’ there is an inner
sentiment which causes man to exclaim: — ‘As I am now
there work within me certain impulses and forces that have of a
surety not developed in my being alone, for similar factors were
active in a not so very distant past, when they played a part in
happenings of such a nature that the human race, to which I
belong, not only lapsed from its former higher spiritual
standard, but is so far fallen that mankind has come into another
relation with the world to the one which would have been, if the
original conditions had but endured.’
When man fell away from his previous high
spiritual state, he sank to a definitely lower level, and this
change was brought about by what may be termed his own conscious
sin. We are therefore not merely concerned with the fact of
descent, as is the case when ‘The Fall’ is viewed
from the Buddhist stand-point, for we must take into
consideration varying mood during this period of decadence. If
man’s first nature had but continued unchanged this decline
would not have that character which it has now assumed, where the
soul-state is such that he is ever prone to fall into
temptation.
He who penetrates beneath the surface of
Christianity and studies deeply, learns that while history ran
its course man’s soul-quality altered. In other words,
because of certain events which happened in ancient times,
man’s soul (the working of which may be likened to a
subconscious mind with his being) took to itself a quality quite
other to that which was primarily intended. Now, the
Buddhist’s position relative to the material world may be
expressed as follows; he would say: — ‘I have been
taken out of a Divine spiritual realm and placed upon this earth;
when I look around me I find nought but illusion — all is
Maya.’ But the Christian, on the other hand, would exclaim:
— ‘When I came down into this material life, had I but
conformed to the order and intent of that Divine plan in which I
had my part, I could even now look beyond this perceptual
pretence, behind all this deception, this Maya; and I would at
all times have power to realize and discern that which is genuine
and true. But because, when I descended upon this earth my deeds
were not in harmony with those things which had been ordained, I
have, through my own act, caused this world to become an
illusion.’
To the question: — ‘Why is this world one
of Maya?’ the Buddhist answers: — ‘It is the world
itself that is Maya.’ But the Christian says: — ‘It
is I who am at fault, I alone; my limited capacity for
discernment and my whole soul-state have placed me in such a
position that I can no more apprehend that which was in the
beginning; and my actions and conduct have ceased to be of such a
nature that results follow smoothly, ever attended with
beneficial and fruitful progress. I myself have enwrapped this
material life in a veil of Maya.’ The Buddhist’s
stand-point is: that the world is a great illusion, and must be
overcome. The Christian exclaims: — ‘I have been placed
upon this earth and must here find the purpose and object of my
being.’ When he once understands that through Spiritual
Science knowledge may be acquired concerning recurrent earth
lives, he then realizes that he may use this wisdom for the
achievement of the true aim of his existence. He then becomes
convinced that the reason why we now look upon a world of sorrow
and deception, is because we have wandered from our allotted
path. He considers that this change to Maya is the direct result
of man’s deeds, and the manner in which he regards the
world. The Christian, therefore, is of opinion that in order to
attain to eternal bliss, we must not seek to withdraw ourselves
from this earth-state but master that condition which we alone
have brought about, and through which the aspect of all material
things has been transformed into one of illusion, such that we no
longer apprehend them in their truth and reality; we must turn
back and overcome this deception, then may we follow the course
of our first duly appointed destiny — for latent within each one
of us abides a higher personality. If this more noble hidden-self
were not hindered and could but look around upon the world, it
would apprehend it in all its verity; man would then no longer
continue an existence hampered by sickness and by death but lead
an everlasting life in all the freshness of youth.
Such, then, is the true inner self that we have
veiled. Veiled, because in the past we have been associated with
a certain event in the world’s development, the effects of
which have continued on, while the primary impulses still work
within us, thus proving that we do not exist isolated and alone.
We must not believe that we have been led to our present
condition through a ‘thirst for existence’ common to
individual man; but rather must we realize that each one of us is
a definite unit in the sum total of humanity, and as such must
take his share and suffer from the results of any original
transgression committed by mankind.
It is in this way that the Christian feels that
he is historically united with the whole human race, and while he
looks into the future, he exclaims: — ’Through travail and
toil I must regain touch with that greater self which because of
Man’s Fall, now lies enshrouded within my being. It is not
Nirvana that I must seek, but my more noble Ego. Alone,
must I find the way back to my true nature, then will the outer
world be no longer an illusion, a vision of unreality, but a
world wherein I shall overcome, of my own power and effort, all
sorrow, sickness, and death. While the Buddhist would seek
freedom from earthly conditions and from rebirth, through his
struggle with ‘The Thirst for Existence’, — the
Christian seeks liberation from his lower personality, and looks
forward to the awakening of his higher self, that more exalted
Ego, which he alone has veiled; so that through his awakening he
may at last apprehend this perceptual world in the light of
Divine truth.
When we compare those significant words of St.
Paul: — ‘Yet not I but Christ liveth in me’
(Galatians ii, 20) with the wisdom revealed by the Buddha, the
contrast is as that between light and darkness. In St.
Paul’s words, we find expressed that positive knowledge,
that definite consciousness, which is ever active deep within us,
and in virtue of which we take our place as human personalities
in the world. According to the Buddhist, mankind has lapsed from
spiritual heights, because this material world has pressed him
down and implanted in him a ‘thirst for existence’;
and this desire he must overcome — he must away! The Christian,
on the other hand, says: — ‘No! the world is not to blame
because of my present state, the fault lies with me
alone.’
We Christians dwell upon this earth equipped with
our accustomed consciousness; but beneath all awareness and
understanding there is a something ever active in each individual
personality which in by-gone times found expression in the form
of a clairvoyant visioned consciousness, now no more extant, for
even while we possessed this faculty, we transgressed. If we
would indeed reach the ultimate goal of our existence, then must
we first atone for this human error. No man who is advanced in
years may say: — ‘In my early life I have sinned; it is
unjust that I should now be called upon to make atonement for
youthful faults, committed at a time when I had not yet attained
to that fuller knowledge which is now mine.’ It would be
equally wrong for him to assert that it is unfair that he be
expected to use his present conscious power to such end that he
may compensate for misdeeds enacted while in possession of a
different conscious faculty, which faculty no longer exists, for
it has been replaced by an intellectual cognition.
The only way in which man may truly atone, when
indeed the will is there, is for him to raise himself upward from
his present conscious-state and existing Ego, to a higher plane
of personality — a more exalted ‘I’. Those words of
St. Paul, — ‘Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me,’
could then be characterized as follows, — ‘Yet not I, but
a higher consciousness liveth in me.’ The Christian
conception can be expressed in these words: — ‘I have
fallen from a higher spiritual state, and have entered upon a
different condition from that which was previously ordained; but
I must rise again; and this I must do, not through that quality
of Ego which is mine, but in virtue of a power that can enter
into my very being, uplifting me far above that “I”,
which I now possess. Such a change can alone come to pass when
the Christ-influence is once more active within, leading me
onward until the world has lost all power of illusion, and I can
apprehend it in its true reality. Ever upward until those baneful
forces which have brought sickness and death upon the earth may
be vanquished, — conquered by that higher spiritual power which
Christ has quickened within my being.’
The innermost essence of Buddhism is best
understood by comparing the Buddhist creed with that of
Christianity. When we do this, we at once realize why it was that
Lessing should have made use of the phrase, — ‘Is not all
Eternity mine?’ — in his book entitled The Education
of Mankind. These words imply that if we employ the
experiences gained during our repeated reincarnations, in such
manner as to suffer the Christ-force to abide ever more and more
within us, we shall at last reach the eternal spheres which
realms we cannot as yet hope to attain, because we have of our
own act, enveloped the inner being as with a veil. The idea of
reincarnation will present a wholly different aspect when
illumined by the glory of Christianity; but it is not merely the
actual belief in rebirth which matters for the present, for with
the advance of Christian culture, humanity will gradually be
driven to the acceptance of this concept as a truth brought
forward by Spiritual Science. But it is important that we should
realize that, whereas the deepest sentiments and convictions of
the Buddhist’s faith cause him to blame the World for
everything that is Maya — the Christian, on the other
hand, looks upon himself, and mankind in general, as responsible
for all earthly deception and illusion. The while he stores
within his innermost being those qualities which are prerequisite
and necessary to him, in order that he may rise to that state
which we term Redemption. In the Christian sense, however, this
does not only imply deliverance, but actual resurrection; for
when man has attained to this state, his Ego is already raised to
the level of that more exalted ‘I’ from which he has
fallen. The Buddhist, when he looks around upon the world, finds
himself concerned with an original sin, but feels that he has
been placed upon this earth merely for a time, he therefore
desires his freedom. The Christian likewise realizes his
connection with an original sin, but seeks amendment and to atone
for this first transgression. Such is an historical line of
thought, for while the Christian feels that his present existence
is associated with an incident which took place in olden times
among the ancients, he also connects his life with an event that
will surely come to pass when he is so advanced that his whole
being will shine forth, filled with that radiance which we
designate as the essence of the Christ-Being.
Hence it is that during the world’s
development we find nothing in Christianity corresponding to
successive Buddha-epochs coming one after another, as one might
say, unhistorically, each Buddha proclaiming a like doctrine.
Christianity brings forward but one single glorious event during
the whole of man’s earthly progress. In the same way as the
Buddhist pictures the Buddha, seated isolated and alone under the
Bodhi tree, at the moment when he was exalted and the great
illumination came to him; so does the Christian visualize Jesus
of Nazareth at that time when there descended upon Him the
all-inspiring Spirit of the cosmos. The baptism of Christ by
John, as described in the Bible, is as vivid and clear a picture
as is the Buddhist’s conception of the Illumination of the
Buddha. Thus we have, in the first case, the Buddha seated under
the Bodhi tree, concerned only with his own soul; in the second,
Jesus of Nazareth, standing in the Jordan, while there descended
upon Him that cosmic essence, that Spirit, symbolically
represented as a dove, which entered into His innermost
being.
To those who profess Buddhism, there is something
about the Buddha and his works which is as a voice ever saying,
— ‘Thou shalt still this thirst for earthly existence,
tear it out by the roots, and follow the Buddha — on to those
realms which no earthly words can describe.’ The Christian
has a similar feeling, with regard to the life and example of
Christ, for there seems to come forth an influence, which makes
it possible for him to atone for that primeval deed, committed by
ancient humanity. He knows that when in his soul, the Divine
cosmic influence (born of that great spiritual world which lies
behind this perceptual earth) becomes as great a living force as
in the Christ himself, then will he carry into his future
reincarnations the increasing realization of the truth of St.
Paul’s words: — ‘Yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me’; and he will be raised more and more, ever upwards, to
that Divine state from which he is now fallen. When such a faith
is ours, we cannot help but be deeply moved, when we hear the
story of how the Buddha, as he addressed his intimate disciples,
spoke to them as follows: — ‘When I look back upon my
former lives, as I might look into an open book, where I can read
page after page, and review each life in turn that is passed, I
find in every one of these earthly existences that I have built
for myself a material body, in which my spirit has dwelt as in a
temple; but I now know that this same body in which I have become
Buddha will of a verity be the last.’ Speaking of that
Nirvana, into which he would so soon enter, the Buddha said: —
‘I already feel that the beams (“Balken”) are
cracking and the supports giving way; that this physical body
which has been raised up for the last time will soon be wholly
and finally destroyed.’
Let us compare the above with the words of
Christ, as recorded in the Gospel of St. John (ii. 19), when
Jesus, intimating that He lived in a body which was external and
apart, said: — ‘Destroy this temple, and in three days I
will raise it up.’ Here we have an exactly opposite point
of view, which might be interpreted thus: — ‘I will
perform a deed which shall quicken and make fruitful, all that in
this world is of God, and has come down to man from primeval
times, and entered into his being.’ These words imply that
the Christian, during his recurrent earth lives must exercise his
every faculty, in order to give truth to the affirmation: —
‘Yet not I, but Christ Iiveth in me.’ We must,
however, clearly understand that Christ’s reference to the
rebuilding of the temple has an eternal significance and means
that the Christ-power ever enters into, and is absorbed by, all
who truly realize that they themselves must play a constructive
part in the collective evolution of humanity. It is entirely
wrong to speak of that event which gave rise to what we term the
Christ-impulse, as though we anticipated its recurrence in some
form during the further development of mankind.
The Buddhist, when he ponders in accordance with
the true concepts of his creed, pictures the advent of several
Buddhas, appearing one after another throughout recurring
Buddha-epochs, all of which during the course of their earth
lives had a similar character and significance. The Christian
looks back to a single past event which is described as — The
Fall of Man through Sin — while he points to its converse in the
Mystery of Golgotha. He who believes that the Christ-event will
at some later period be repeated, merely shows that he has not
grasped the true essence of the historical evolution of mankind.
History tells us that this idea has been frequently put forward
in the past and it is likely that it will again reappear in the
future.
The course of true history must always be
dependent upon some single basic event. Just as the arm of a
balance must have one point of equilibrium and the beam from
which the scales hang one point of support only; so in the case
of a true record of the evolution of mankind there must be some
single circumstance to which its historical development (taken
either backwards or forwards) ever points. It is as absurd to
speak of a repetition of the Christ-event as it would be to
assert that the beam of a balance could be supported and swing
upon two points. That Eastern wisdom should hold to the belief
that a number of similar spiritual personalities succeed each
other at intervals, as it does in the case of the Buddhas, is
characteristic of the difference existing between the Oriental
cosmic conception and that which has sprung up among the
Occidental countries, as the result of so much painstaking
observation and thought concerning the course of evolution. The
Western concept first began to take definite form at the time of
the manifestation of the Christ-impulse, which we must regard as
a unique circumstance. If we oppose the oneness and singular
character of the Christ-event, we argue against the possibility
of the true historical evolution of mankind; and to argue against
historical evolution betrays a misunderstanding of genuine
history.
We can, in its deepest sense, term that
consciousness possessed by individual man of indissoluble
association with humanity as a whole, the Christian
consciousness. Through it we become aware of a definite purpose,
underlying the course of all human evolution, and realize that
here indeed can be no mere repetition. Such consciousness is an
attribute of Christianity, from which it cannot be separated. The
real progress which mankind has made during its period of
development is shown in the advance from the ancient Eastern
cosmic conception to the philosophic concept of modern times —
from the unhistoric to the historic — from a belief that the
wheels of human chance roll on through a succession of similar
events to a conviction that underlying the whole of man’s
evolution is a definite purpose, a design of profound
significance.
We realize that it is Christianity which has
first revealed the true meaning of the doctrine of reincarnation.
We can now state that the reason why man must experience
recurrent earth lives is that he may be again and again instilled
with the true import of material existence; with this object he
is confronted with a different aspect of being during each of his
incarnations. There is throughout humanity an upward tendency
that is not merely confined to the isolated individual, but
extends to the entire human race with which we feel ourselves so
intimately connected. The Christ-impulse, the centre of all,
causes us to realize that man can become conscious of the glory
of this divine relation; then no more will he only acknowledge
the creed of a Buddha, who cries out to him: — ‘Free
thyself!’ — but will become aware of his union with The
Christ, Whose deed has reclaimed him from the consequences of
that decadence, symbolically represented as: — ‘The Fall
of Man through Sin.’
We cannot describe Buddhism better than by
showing that it is the after-glow of a cosmic conception, the sun
of which has nearly set; but with the advent of Gautama it shone
forth with one last brilliant, powerful ray. We revere the Buddha
none the less, we honour him as a Great Spirit — as one whose
voice called into the past and brought back into this earthly
life, once again that mood which brings with it so clear a
consciousness of man’s connection with ancient primordial
wisdom. On the other hand, we know that the Christ-impulse points
resolutely towards the future, ever penetrating more and more
deeply into the very soul of man; so that humanity may realize
that it is not release and freedom that it should seek, but
Resurrection that glorious transfiguration of our earthly being.
It is in such a metamorphosis that we find the inner meaning of
our material life. It is futile to search among dogmas, concepts
and ideas for the active principle of existence; for the vital
element of life lies in our impulses, emotions and feelings, and
it is through these moods that we may apprehend the true
significance of man’s evolution and development.
There may be some who feel themselves more drawn
toward Buddhism than toward Christianity; and we must admit that
even in our time there is something about Buddhism which inspires
a certain sympathy in many minds, and which is to a certain
extent in the nature of a Buddha-mood or disposition. Such a
feeling, however, did not exist with Goethe, who sought to free
himself from the pangs which he endured owing to the
narrow-mindedness he found everywhere about him, at the time of
his first sojourn in Weimar. His endeavour in this respect was
wholly due to his love of life and conviction that interwoven
throughout all external being is the same spiritual essence which
is the true origin of the Divine element in man. Goethe strove to
achieve this Iiberation from distress through observation of the
outer world, going from plant to plant, from mineral to mineral,
and from one work of art to another — ever seeking that
underlying spirit from which the human soul emanates; the while
he sought to unify himself with that Divine essence which
manifests throughout all external things.
Goethe, when in converse with Schopenhauer
regarding the influence of his thoughts and ideas upon his pupil,
once said: — ‘When your carefully considered and worthy
conceptions come into contact with a wholly different trend of
thought, they will be found at variance with one another.’
Schopenhauer had established a maxim which, expressed in his
oft-repeated words, was as follows: — ‘Life is ever
precarious, and it is through deep meditation that I seek to
alleviate its burdens.’ What he really sought was that
illumination which would reveal and make clear the true origin
[and intent] of existence. It was therefore only natural that
Buddhist concepts should enter his mind and mingle with his
ideas, thus causing him to ponder upon this olden
creed.
During the progress of the nineteenth century the
different branches of human culture have yielded such great and
far-reaching results, that the mind of man seems incapable of
adjusting itself in harmony with the flood of new ideas which
continually pour in upon it, as a consequence of effort expended
in scientific research; and it feels ever more and more helpless
before the enormous mass of facts which is the unceasing product
of such investigations. We have found this vast world of accepted
truths to be wonderfully in accord with the concepts of Spiritual
Science, but it is worthy of note that during the last century,
although man’s reasoning powers increased greatly
nevertheless they soon failed to keep pace with the immense
inflow of scientific data. Thus it was that just toward the close
of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth
century, man realized that he could not hope to understand and to
master all this new knowledge by means of the human intellect
alone; for everything about us is connected with, and extends
into the cosmos and the world of spirit — and this outer realm
is still beyond the limits of man’s normal faculties of
comprehension. He must, therefore, seek another way, some as yet
untrodden path.
Hence it is that mankind has sought a cosmic
philosophy, not wholly at variance with all those facts coming
from the outer world which make inward appeal to the soul.
Spiritual Science is based upon the most profound conceptions and
experiences of divine wisdom, and is ever ready to deal with all
fresh truths and data brought forward by external science, to
assimilate them, and throw new light upon their significance,
showing at the same time that in all which has actuality in
external life, is embodied the divine essence — the spirit.
There are some people, however, who find the concepts of
Spiritual Science inconvenient and unsuitable. They turn away
from the world of reality, which demands so much thought and
effort for its unfoldment, and, according to their own knowledge
and personal ideas, seek a higher plane merely through the
development of their individual souls. Thus we have what may be
termed an ‘Unconscious Buddhism’, which has long
existed and been active in the philosophies of the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries. When an ‘Unconscious Buddhist’
comes into contact with true Buddhism then, because of indolence
and inertia, he feels himself more ‘at home’ with
this Eastern creed than with European Spiritual Science, which
comes to grips with widespread facts, because it knows that
throughout the entire range of reality the Divine spirit is ever
manifest.
There is no doubt that the present sympathy and
interest evinced with regard to Buddhism is due, in part, to
feebleness of will and want of faith, faith, born of undeveloped
spiritual knowledge. The whole essence of the Christian cosmic
conception, which seems to have been in Goethe’s mind,
demands that man shall not give way to his own weak spiritual
understanding and talk of ‘the limitations of human
knowledge’, but feel that there is within him a something
which will carry him above all illusion and bring him to truth
and reality, thus freeing him for evermore from terrestrial
existence. A cosmic conception of this nature may call for much
patient resignation, but such is of quite a different order to
that which shrinks before the contemplation of the limits of
human understanding. Resignation, in the Kantian sense, implies
that mankind is altogether incapable of penetrating the deep
secrets of the cosmos, and its chief feature lies in the special
acknowledgment of the feebleness of man’s comprehension;
but that of Goethe is of a different character, and is expressed
in these words: — ‘Thou hast not as yet come so far, that
thou canst apprehend the Universe in all its glorious reality,
but thou art capable of developing thyself.’ Resignation of
this kind leads on to that stage of growth and progress when man
will truly be in a position to call forth his Christ-nature from
within his being; he yields, because he realizes that the highest
point of his mundane development has not yet been attained. Such
an attitude is noble and fully in accord with human
understanding. It implies that we pass from life to life, with
the consciousness of being, looking ever forward into the future
in the knowledge that with regard to recurrent earthly existence
all eternity is ours.
When we consider man’s evolution, we find
ourselves confronted with two modern currents of thought, each
leading to a different cosmic conception. One of which, due to
Schopenhauer, pictures the world with all its misery and
suffering, as of such nature that we can only realize and
appreciate man’s true position when we gaze upon the works
of the great artists. In these masterpieces we oft-times find
portrayed the form and figure of a being, who through asceticism,
has attained to something approaching to liberation from earthly
existence, and already hovers, as it were, above this lower
terrestrial life. Fundamentally, Schopenhauer was of opinion that
in the case of a human being thus freed, retrospection concerning
material conditions no longer exists and that herein lies the
pre-eminent characteristic of such liberation. Hence, he who has
thus won his way to freedom, can truly say: — ‘I am still
clothed in my bodily garment, but it has now lost all
significance, and there is nought left about me which might in
time to come recall my earthly life. I strive ever upward, in
anticipation of that state with which I shall gain contact when I
have at last wholly overcome the world, and all that appertains
thereto.’ Of such nature was the sentiment of Schopenhauer,
after he had become imbued with those ideas and convictions,
which Buddhist teaching has spread abroad in the world.
Goethe, on the other hand, led on by his truly
Christian impulse, regarded the world after the manner of his
character —
Faust.
When we cease to look about us in trivial
mood, when we truly realize that all material works must perish,
and death at last overtake the body, then with Goethe we can say:
— ‘If we but take heed and ponder concerning our earthly
activities there will come knowledge born of experience, teaching
us that while all those things wrought and accomplished which are
of this world must pass away, that which we have built up within
ourselves through toil and striving during our contact with the
‘School of Earthly Life’, shall not perish, for such
is indeed everlasting.’
So with Faust we think not of how our mundane
works may endure, but look forward to the fruits which they shall
bring forth in the course of the soul’s eternal life; thus
are we carried far out and beyond the narrow confines of the
Buddhist creed, into a world of thought which finds brief
expression in those impressive words of Goethe:-
‘Eons cannot erase
The traces of my days on earth.’
Notes for this
lecture:
1. Bodhisattva
(Sanskrit). A Bodisat, one whose essence is enlightenment, that
is, one destined to become a Buddha. A Buddha Elect (vide, A
Concise Dictionary of Eastern Religion, by
Winternitz).
2. Bodhi Tree —
Fig-tree (Ficus religiosa); known also as the Bo Tree.
[Ed.]