I
THE
theme on which I propose to speak in these lectures seems to me
of peculiar importance in view of present conditions. At the very
beginning let me emphasise that there is no element of sensationalism
or anything of that kind in the choice of the title:
The Fifth Gospel.
For I hope to show that in a definite sense and one that is of
particular importance to us in the present age, it is possible to
speak of such a Fifth Gospel and that in fact no title is more
suitable for what is intended.
Although, as you will hear, this Fifth Gospel has never yet
been written down, in future times of humanity it will
certainly be put into definite form. In a certain sense,
however, it would be true to say that it is as ancient as the
other four Gospels.
In
order that I may be able to speak about this Fifth Gospel, we
shall have, by way of introduction, to study certain matters
which are essential to any real understanding of it. Let me
say, to begin with, that the time is certainly not very far
distant when even in the lowest grade schools and in the most
elementary education, the branch of knowledge commonly called
History will be presented quite differently. It is certain
— and these lectures should be a kind of confirmation of
it — that in times to come the concept or idea of Christ
will play quite a different and much more important part
in the study of history, even the most elementary, than has
been the case before. I know that such a statement seems highly
paradoxical, but let us remember that there were times by no
means very far distant, when countless human hearts turned to
Christ with feelings of immeasurably greater fervour than is to
be found to-day, even among the most learned Christians in the
West. In earlier times these feelings of devotion were
incomparably more intense. Anyone who studies modern writings
and reflects on the main interests of people to-day will have
the impression that enthusiasm and warmth of feeling for the
Christ Idea are on the wane, especially so in those who claim
an up-to-date education. In spite of this, I have just said
that as this age of ours advances, the Christ Idea will play a
much more important part than hitherto in the study of human
history. Does this not seem to be a complete
contradiction?
And
now we will approach the subject from another side. I have
already been able to speak on several occasions in this very
town about the significance and the content of the Christ
Idea; and in books and lecture-courses which are available
here, many deep teachings of Spiritual Science concerning
the secrets of the Christ Being and of the Christ Idea are to
be found. Anyone who assimilates w hat has been said in
lectures, lecture-courses and indeed in all our literature,
will realise that any real understanding of the Christ
Being needs extensive preparation, that the very deepest
concepts and thoughts must be summoned to his aid if he desires
to reach some comprehension of Christ and of the Christ Impulse
working through the centuries. If nothing else indicated the
contrary, it might possibly be thought that a knowledge
of the whole of Theosophy or Anthroposophy is necessary before
there can be any true conception of Christ. But if we turn
aside from this and look at the development of the spiritual
life of the last centuries, we are met from century to century
by the existence of much profound and detailed knowledge aiming
at a comprehension of the Christ and His revelation. For
centuries and centuries men have applied their noblest, most
profound thought in attempts to reach an understanding of
Christ. Here too, it might seem as if only the most highly
intellectual achievements of men would suffice for such
understanding. But is this, in fact, the case? Quite simple
reflection will show that it is not.
Let
us, as it were, lay on one scale of a spiritual balance,
everything contributed hitherto by erudition, science and
even by theosophical conceptions towards an understanding of
Christ. On the other scale let us lay all the deep feelings,
all the impulses within men which through the centuries have
caused their souls to turn to the Being called Christ. It will
be found that the scale upon which have been laid all the
science, all the learning, even all the theosophy that can be
applied to explain the figure of Christ, will rapidly rise, and
the scale upon which have been laid all the deep feelings and
impulses which have turned men towards the Christ will sink. It
is no exaggeration to say that a force of untold strength and
greatness has gone forth from Christ and that erudite
scholarship concerning Him has contributed least of all to this
impulse. Truly it would have boded ill for Christianity if, in
order to cleave to Christ, men had had to resort to all the
learned dissertations of the Middle Ages, of the Schoolmen, of
the Church Fathers, or even to what Theosophy contributes
to-day towards an understanding of Christ. This whole
body of knowledge would be of very little help. I hardly think
that anyone who studies the march of Christianity through
the centuries with an unprejudiced mind can raise any serious
argument against this line of thought; but the subject can be
approached from still another side.
Let
us turn our thought to the times before Christianity had come
into existence. I need only mention something of which those
sitting here are certainly aware. I need only remind you of the
ancient Greek dramas, especially in their earlier forms. When
portraying a god in combat or a human being in whose soul a god
was working, these dramas make the sovereignty and activity of
the gods concretely and perceptibly real. Think of Homer and of
how his great Epic is all inwoven with the workings of the
Spiritual; think of the great figures of Socrates, Plato,
Aristotle. These names bring before our mind's eye a spiritual
life that in a certain domain is supreme. If we leave all else
aside and look only at the single figure of Aristotle who lived
centuries before the founding of Christianity, we find there an
achievement which, in a certain respect, has remained
unsurpassed to this very day. The scientific exactitude of
Aristotle's thinking is something so phenomenal, even when
judged by present-day standards, that it is said: human
thinking was raised by him to an eminence unsurpassed to this
day.
And
now for a moment we will take a strange hypothesis, but one
that will help us to understand what will be said in these
lectures. We will imagine that there were no Gospels at all to
tell us anything about the figure of Christ, that the earliest
records presented to man to-day in the form of the New
Testament were simply not in existence. Leaving on one side all
that has been said about the founding of Christianity, let us
study its progress as historical fact, observing what has
happened among men through the centuries of the Christian era
... In other words, without the Gospels, without the story of
the Acts of the Apostles, without the Epistles of St. Paul, we
will consider what has actually come to pass. This, of course,
is pure hypothesis, but what is it that has really
happened?
Turning our attention first of all to the South of Europe in a
certain period of history, we find a very highly developed
spiritual culture, as represented in Aristotle; it was a
sublime spiritual life, developing along particular
channels through the subsequent centuries. At the time
when Christianity began to make its way through the world,
large numbers of men who had assimilated the spiritual culture
of Greece were living in the South of Europe. If we follow the
evolution of Christianity to the time of Celsus — that
strange individual who was such a violent opponent of
Christianity — and even on into the second and third
centuries after Christ, we find in Greece and Italy numbers of
highly cultured men who had absorbed the sublime Ideas of
Plato, men whose subtlety of thought seems like a continuation
of that of Aristotle. Here were minds of refinement and power,
versed in Greek learning; here were Romans who added to the
delicate spirituality of Greek thought the element of
aggressive personality characteristic of Roman civilisation.
Such was the world into which the Christian impulse made its
way. Truly, in respect of intellectuality and knowledge of the
world the representatives of this Christian impulse seem to be
uncivilised and uneducated in comparison with the numbers and
numbers of learned Romans and Greeks. Men lacking in culture
make their way into a world of mellowed intellectuality. And
now we witness a remarkable spectacle. Through these simple,
primitive people who were its first bearers, Christianity
spreads comparatively quickly through the South of Europe. And
if with an understanding of the nature of Christianity
acquired, let us say, from Theosophy, we think of these simple,
primitive natures who spread Christianity abroad in those
times, we shall realise that they knew nothing of these things.
We need not think here of any conception of Christ in His
great cosmic setting, but of much simpler conceptions of
Christ. Those first bearers of the Christian impulse who found
their way into the world of highly developed Greek learning,
had nothing to bring into this arena of Greco-Roman life save
their own inwardness, their personal connection with the Christ
Whom they so deeply loved; for this connection was as dear to
them as that with their own kith and kin. Those who brought
into the Greco-Roman world in those days the Christianity that
has continued to our own time, were not well-informed
theosophists, were by no means highly educated people. The
Gnostics who were the learned theosophists of those times had,
it is true, risen to sublime ideas concerning Christ, but even
they contributed only what must be placed in the rising scale
of the balance. If everything had depended upon the Gnostics,
Christianity would certainly not have made its victorious
headway through the world. It was no highly developed
intellectuality that came over from the East, causing the
comparatively rapid decline of the old Hellenic and Roman
culture. There we have one side of the picture.
We
see the other side when we consider men of intellectual
distinction, beginning with Celsus — the opponent of
Christianity who even then brought forward all the arguments
that are still valid to-day — down to Marcus Aurelius,
the philosopher on the throne. We think of the Neo-Platonists
with their subtle scholarship, whose ideas make those of
philosophy to-day seem mere child's play, so greatly do they
surpass them in loftiness and breadth of vision. Thinking of
all the arguments against Christianity brought from the
standpoint of Greek philosophy by these men of high
intellectual eminence in the world of Greco-Roman
culture, the impression we get is that they did not understand
the Christ Impulse. Christianity was spread by men who
understood nothing of its real nature; it was opposed by a
highly developed culture incapable of grasping its
significance. Truly, Christianity makes a strange entry into
the world — with adherents and opponents alike
understanding nothing of its real nature. And yet ... men bore
within their souls the power to secure for the Christ Impulse
its victorious march through the world.
And
now let us think of men like Tertullian who with a certain
greatness and power entered the lists on behalf of
Christianity. Tertullian was a Roman who, so far as his
language is concerned, may almost be said to have re-created
the Latin tongue; the very certainty of aim with which he
restored to words a living meaning lets us recognise him as a
personality of real significance. But if we ask about his
ideas, there is a very different story to tell. In his
ideas and thoughts he gives very little evidence of
intellectual or spiritual eminence. Supporters of Christianity
even of the calibre of Tertullian do not accomplish anything
very considerable. And yet as personalities they are potent
— these men like Tertullian, to whose arguments no highly
educated Greek could attach much weight. There is
something about Tertullian that attracts one's attention
— but what exactly is it? That is the point of
importance.
Let
us realise that a real problem lies here. What power is
responsible for the achievements of these bearers of the Christ
Impulse who themselves do not really understand it? What power
is responsible for the influence exercised by the Church
Fathers, including even Origen, in spite of all their manifest
ineptitude? Why is Greco-Roman scholarship itself unable
to comprehend the essential nature of the Christ Impulse? What
is the reason of all this?
But
let us go further. The same spectacle stands out in still
stronger relief when we study the course of history. As the
centuries go by, Christianity spread over Europe, among peoples
like the Germanic, with quite different ideas of religion and
worship, who are, or at least appear to be, inseparable from
these ideas and who nevertheless accepted the Christ Impulse
with open hearts, as if it were part and parcel of their own
life. And when we think of those who were the most influential
missionaries among the Germanic peoples, were these men
schooled theologians? No indeed! Comparatively speaking, they
were simple, primitive souls who went out among the people,
talking to them in the most homely, everyday language but
moving their very hearts. They knew how to put the words in
such a way as to touch the deepest heart-strings of those to
whom they spoke. Simple men went out into regions far and wide
and it was their work that produced the most significant
results. Thus we see Christianity spreading through the
centuries. But then we are astonished to find this same
Christianity becoming the motive force of profound
scholarship, science and philosophy. We do not undervalue this
philosophy but we will focus our attention to-day upon the
remarkable fact that up to the Middle Ages the peoples among
whom Christianity spread in such a way that it soon became part
of their very souls, had lived hitherto with quite different
forms of thought and belief. And in no very distant future,
many other features will be stressed in connection with the
spread of Christianity. So far as the effect produced by this
spread of Christianity is concerned, it will not be difficult
to agree with the statement that there was a period when these
Christian teachings were the source of fervent enthusiasm. But
in modern times the fervour which in the Middle Ages
accompanied the spread of Christianity seems to have died
away.
And
now think of Copernicus, of the whole development of
natural science on into the nineteenth century. This natural
science which since the time of Copernicus has become an
integral part of Western culture, might appear to run counter
to Christianity. The facts of history may seem,
outwardly, to substantiate this. For example, until the
'twenties of the nineteenth century the writings of Copernicus
were on the so-called Index of the Roman Catholic Church. That
is an external detail, but the fact remains that Copernicus was
a dignitary of the Church. Giordano Bruno was burnt at
the stake by the Roman Church but he was, for all that, a
member of the Dominican Order. The ideas of both these thinkers
sprang from the soil of Christianity and their work was an
outcome of the Christian impulse. To maintain that these
teachings were not the fruits of Christianity would denote very
poor understanding on the part of those who claim to hold fast
by the Church. These facts only go to prove that the Church did
not understand the fruits of Christianity. Those who see more
deeply into the roots of these things will recognise that what
the peoples have achieved, even in the more recent centuries,
is a result of Christianity, that through Christianity, as also
through the laws of Copernicus, the gaze of the human mind was
turned from the earth out into the heavenly expanse. Such a
change was possible only within Christian culture and through
the Christian impulse. Those who observe the depths and not
merely the surface of spiritual life will understand something
which although it will seem highly paradoxical when I say it
now, is nevertheless correct. To this deeper observation, a
Haeckel, for all his opposition to Christianity, could only
have sprung from the soil of this same Christianity.
Ernst Haeckel is inconceivable without the base of Christian
culture. And however hard modern natural science may try to
promote opposition to Christianity, this natural science
is itself an offspring of Christianity, a direct development of
the Christian impulse. When modern natural science has got over
the ailments of childhood, men will perceive quite clearly that
if followed to its logical conclusions, it leads to Spiritual
Science, that there is an entirely consistent path from Haeckel
to Spiritual Science. When that is grasped it will also be
realised that Haeckel is Christian through and through,
although he himself has no notion of it. The Christian impulses
have given birth not only to what claims to be Christian but
also to what appears on the surface to run counter to
Christianity. This will soon be realised if we study the
underlying reality, not merely the concepts and ideas
that are put into words. As can be seen from my little essay on
“Reincarnation and Karma,” a direct line leads from
the Darwinian theory of evolution to the teaching of repeated
earthly lives.
But
in order to understand these things correctly we must be able
to perceive the influence of the Christian impulses with
entirely unprejudiced eyes. Anyone who understands the
doctrines of Darwin and Haeckel and is himself convinced that
only as a Christian movement was the Darwinian movement
possible (although Haeckel had no notion of this, Darwin was
aware of many things) — anyone who realises this is led
by an absolutely consistent path to the idea of reincarnation.
And if he can call upon a certain power of clairvoyance, this
same path will lead him to knowledge of the spiritual
origin of the human race. True, it is a detour, but with the
help of clairvoyance an uninterrupted path from Haeckel's
thought to the conception of a spiritual origin of the Earth.
It is conceivable, of course, that someone may accept Darwinism
in the form in which it is presented to-day, without
grasping the life-principles which in reality are
contained in it. In other words, if Darwinian thought becomes
an impulse in someone who lacks any deep understanding of
Christianity — which nevertheless lies in Darwinism
— he may end by understanding no more of Darwinism than
he does of Christianity. The good spirit of Christianity and
the good spirit of Darwinism may alike forsake him. But if he
has a grasp of the good spirit of Darwinism, then —
however much of a materialist he may be — his
thought will carry him back over the earth's history to the
point where he recognises that man has not evolved from
lower animal forms but must have a spiritual origin. He is led
to the point where man is perceived as a spiritual being,
hovering as it were over the earthly world. Darwinism, if
developed to its logical conclusion, leads to this recognition.
But if someone has been forsaken by the good spirit of
Darwinism and happens to believe in the idea of reincarnation,
he may imagine that he himself once lived as an ape in some
incarnation of the planet Earth. [The reference here is to
certain assertions made by the theosophists Annie Besant and C.
W. Leadbeater.] Anyone who can believe this lacks all real
understanding of Darwinism and of Christianity and must have
been forsaken by the good spirits of both! For Darwinism,
consistently elaborated, could lead to no such belief. In such
a case the idea of reincarnation has been grafted into the soil
of materialism. It is possible, of course, for modern Darwinism
to be stripped of its Christian elements. If this does
not happen, we shall find that on into our own times the
impulses of Darwinism have been born out of the Christ Impulse,
that the impulses of Christianity work even where they are
repudiated. Thus we find that in the early centuries,
Christianity spreads quite independently of scholarship
or erudition in its adherents; in the Middle Ages it spreads in
such a way that the Schoolmen, with all their learning, can
contribute very little to it; and finally we have the paradox
of Christianity appearing in Darwinism as in an inverted
picture. Everything that is great in the Darwinian
conception derives its motive power from the Christian
impulses. The Christian impulses within it will lead this
science of itself out of and beyond materialism.
The
Christian impulses have spread by strange channels — in
the absence, so it appears, of intellectuality, learning,
erudition. Christianity has spread irrespectively of the views
of its adherents or opponents — even appearing in
an inverted form in the domain of modern materialism. But what
exactly is it that spreads? It is not the ideas nor is it the
science of Christianity; nor can we say that it is the morality
instilled by Christianity. Think only of the moral life of men
in those times and we shall find much justification for the
fury levelled by men who represented Christianity against those
who were its real or alleged enemies. Even the moral power that
might have been possessed by souls without much intellectual
education will not greatly impress us. What, then, is this
mysterious impulse which makes its victorious way through the
world? Let us turn here to Spiritual Science, to clairvoyant
consciousness. What power is at work in those unlearned
men who, coming over from the East, infiltrated the world
of Greco-Roman culture? What power is at work in the men who
bring Christianity into the foreign world of the Germanic
tribes? What is really at work in the materialistic natural
science of modern times — the doctrines of which
disguise its real nature? What is this power? — It
is Christ Himself Who, through the centuries, wends His way
from soul to soul, from heart to heart, no matter whether souls
understand Him or not. It behoves us to leave aside the
concepts that have become ingrained in us, to leave aside
all scientific notions and point to the reality, showing how
mysteriously Christ Himself is present in multitudinous
impulses, taking form in the souls of thousands and tens of
thousands of human beings, filling them with His power. It is
Christ Himself, working in simple men, Who sweeps over the
world of Greco-Roman culture; it is Christ Himself Who stands
at the side of those who in later times bring Christianity to
the Germanic peoples; it is He — Christ Himself in all
His reality — Who makes His way from place to place, from
soul to soul, penetrating these souls quite irrespectively of
the ideas they hold concerning Him.
Let
me here make a trivial comparison. How many people are there
who understand nothing at all about the composition of
foodstuffs and who are none the less well and properly
nourished? It would certainly mean starvation if scientific
knowledge of foodstuffs were essential to nourishment.
Nourishment has nothing whatever to do with understanding the
nature of foodstuffs. Similarly, the spread of Christianity
over the earth had nothing to do with men's understanding
of it. That is the strange fact. There is a mystery here, only
to be explained when the answer can be found to the question:
How does Christ Himself wield dominion in the minds and hearts
of men?
When Spiritual Science, clairvoyant investigation, puts this
question to itself, it is led, first of all, to an event from
which the veils can really only be lifted by clairvoyant vision
— an event that is entirely consistent with what I
have been saying to-day. This above all will be clear to us:
the time when Christ worked in the way I have described, is
past and gone, and the time has come when men must
understand Christ, must have real knowledge of
Christ.
It
is therefore also necessary to answer the question as to why
our age was preceded by that other age when it was possible for
the Christ Impulse to spread independently of men's
understanding. The event to which clairvoyant consciousness
points is that of Pentecost, the sending of the Holy Spirit.
Clairvoyant vision, quickened by the power of the Christ
Impulse, was therefore directed, in the first place, to this
event of Pentecost, the sending of the Holy Spirit. It is this
event that presents itself first and foremost to clairvoyant
investigation carried out from a certain standpoint.
What was it that happened at the moment in the earth's evolution
described to us, somewhat unintelligibly to begin with, as the
descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles? When with clairvoyant
vision one investigates what actually happened then, an answer
is forthcoming from Spiritual Science as to what is meant when
it is said that simple men — for the Apostles themselves
were simple men — began to utter in different tongues, truths
which came to them from the depths of spiritual life and which none
could have thought them capable of uttering. It was then that the
Christian impulses began to spread, independently of the
understanding of those human beings to whom they made their way.
From the event of Pentecost pours the stream that has been described.
What, then, was this event of Pentecost? This question presented
itself to Spiritual Science and with the spiritual-scientific
answer to it begins — the Fifth Gospel.
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