V
IN
the lecture yesterday we turned our attention to the life of
Jesus of Nazareth from about his twelfth year to approximately
the end of his twenties. You will certainly have realised from
what I was able to tell you, that during this period many
things took place of profound significance not only for the
soul of Jesus of Nazareth but for the whole evolution of
mankind. For your theosophical studies will have brought you
the knowledge that everything in the evolution of humanity is
interconnected, and that an event of such importance in the
life of a human soul so deeply bound up with the destiny of
mankind is also of importance for the whole of evolution.
From many different points of view we are learning to realise
what the Event of Golgotha signified for the evolution of
humanity. In this particular course of lectures we are learning
to realise it by studying the actual life of Christ Jesus. And
so having turned our minds yesterday to the period described,
we will turn once again to the soul of Jesus of Nazareth and
ponder what lived in this soul after the significant
events had taken place which led up to his twenty-eighth and
twenty-ninth years.
We
may perhaps begin to glimpse something of what was living in
this soul, from the description of a scene which took place
when Jesus of Nazareth was approaching the end of his twenties.
This scene which I have to relate concerns a conversation
between Jesus of Nazareth and his mother — she who since
the amalgamation of the two families had for long years been
his mother. For all these years there had been a very deep and
intimate understanding between Jesus and this mother, a far
closer understanding than prevailed between him and the
other members of the family in the house. Jesus himself could
have understood them but they, on their side, did not quite
know what to make of him. Even in earlier years he had spoken
with his mother about many of the impressions that had
gradually taken shape within him. But in this particular period
of his life there took place a memorable conversation which
lets us see very deeply into his soul. The experiences through
which he had passed had brought him increasing wisdom; infinite
wisdom was stamped upon his very countenance. But as is often
the case on a lesser scale, a certain inner sadness had
come over him. The first fruit of this wisdom had been
that the penetrating insight with which he could behold those
around him brought him deep sorrow. Added to this, in hours of
quietude at the end of his twenties, his thoughts turned more
and more to one particular event in his life — to the
great inner change, the revolution that had taken place in his
twelfth year as the natural result of the transference of the
Zarathustra-Ego into his own soul. During the subsequent years
he was aware only of the inexhaustible riches of the
Zarathustra-Ego within him. At the end of his twenties he
still did not know that the Zarathustra-Ego had reincarnated in
him, but he knew well that in his twelfth year a tremendous
change had come about in him. And now he often felt: Ah! how
different was my life before that change! His thoughts often
went back to the preceding years and to the infinite warmth of
heart that had characterised his life. As a boy he had lived
entirely aloof from mundane affairs; he had been keenly
sensitive to everything that speaks to man from the world of
nature, to the whole greatness and splendour of nature.
But he had little talent for the treasures amassed by human
wisdom, human learning. Scholarship as such interested him
little. It would be a complete mistake to imagine that up to
his twelfth year this Jesus child was, in the outward
sense, especially gifted. He had an inner gentleness, a
profound understanding of human life, deep and sensitive
feelings, tenderness, an angelic quality of being. Then, in his
twelfth year, it seemed as if all this had been driven out of
his soul. And now he was often mindful of how, before his
twelfth year, he had lived in the most intimate communion with
the deeper spirit of the universe, how open his soul had been
to the infinitudes. Then his thoughts went back to what his
life had been since his twelfth year, how he had found himself
able to assimilate Hebrew learning which seemed, however,
to well up quite spontaneously in his soul, how his journeys
had then acquainted him with the heathen cults, with heathen
knowledge and religion; he thought of how between his
eighteenth and twenty-fourth years he had been brought into
contact with the external treasures accumulated by humanity, of
how, in about his twenty-fourth year, he had entered into the
community of the Essenes and had there become acquainted with a
secret doctrine and with men whose lives were dedicated to this
doctrine. Many a time his thoughts turned to those years. But
he also knew that it was only the store of learning accumulated
by men since days of antiquity that had risen up into his
soul-treasures of human wisdom, of human culture, great moral
achievements. And he often thought of what he had been before
his twelfth year, when he felt as if he were united with the
divine ground of existence, when everything in him was
pristine, spontaneous, welling up from a warm and loving heart
and flowing into other forces of the human soul.
All
these feelings led to a memorable conversation between Jesus of
Nazareth and the mother. The mother loved him very deeply and
had often spoken with him about all the beauty and greatness of
the gifts that had shown themselves in him since his twelfth
year. But he had concealed from his mother in earlier years the
inner schism caused within him, so that she had seen only what
was great and beautiful. Therefore in this conversation
which was really like a full confession, much was new to her;
but she received it with a warm and tender heart. She had a
profound and intimate understanding of his mood of soul, of his
yearnings for all that he had been before his twelfth year. And
so she tried to comfort him by speaking of all the noble and
splendid gifts of which he had shown evidence since then.
She reminded him of the revival of the great Jewish doctrines,
the Jewish wisdom-teachings and codes of the law. She spoke of
all that had revealed itself through him. But his heart
grew heavy while his mother was speaking in this way, prizing
so highly what he himself felt had been surmounted. And he
replied: Be that as it may. If through me or through another it
were possible to-day to bring new life to all the spiritual
treasures of ancient Hebrew wisdom, what significance would it
have for mankind? All this is, in reality, meaningless. If
among the humanity around us to-day there were any with ears
still able to hear the wisdom of the ancient prophets, then a
revival of that wisdom would be of value. But if Elias himself
were to come to-day — so said Jesus of Nazareth —
and were to proclaim to our humanity the greatest of his
experiences in the realms of heaven — there are no
men who would listen to the wisdom of Elias, of the older
prophets, even of Moses, and back to Abraham. Everything these
prophets might proclaim to-day would fall upon deaf ears.
Their words would be preached to the winds. Everything that I
believed had been bestowed upon me is valueless for the world
to-day. —
This was the sense in which Jesus of Nazareth spoke. He also
spoke of a man who had been a great teacher and whose words had
only lately ceased to be effective. For — so said Jesus
of Nazareth — although the good old Hillel [Hillel lived
from 75 B.C. to A.D. 4.] could not rank as an equal of the
ancient prophets, nevertheless he was a great and profound
teacher. Jesus knew well what the aged Hillel had meant for
very many souls in the Jewish world even during the days of
Herod when it was hard for any teacher to gain authority. He
knew how profound had been the words spoken by Hillel. It was
said of Hillel: The Thorah [The Thorah is the collection of the
oldest and most important Jewish laws.] has disappeared
within the Jewish people and Hillel has established it once
again. To those who understood him, Hillel seemed as one who
had revived and restored to life the primal, original Hebrew
wisdom. Hillel was a teacher who, like other teachers of the
wisdom, journeyed about the land. He came among the Jewish
people like a kind of new Messiah. All this is narrated in the
Talmud and can be confirmed by external scholarship. The people
were full of praise for Hillel and had much good to say of him.
I can only single out one story in order to indicate the mood
and vein in which Jesus of Nazareth spoke of Hillel to his
mother ... Hillel is described as a man of gentle and mild
disposition, who achieved mighty things through this very
gentleness and loving-kindness.
One
story that has been preserved about him is deeply indicative as
showing him to have been a man of infinite patience with
everyone who came to him. Two men once laid a wager about the
possibility of rousing Hillel's anger; for it was known
that nobody could ever make him angry. Having laid a wager, one
of the two men said: I will go to any lengths to make Hillel
angry. In this way he sought to win his wager. Just at the time
when Hillel was most fully occupied, when he was deeply
engrossed in preparations for the Sabbath, this man knocked at
Hillel's door and shouted rudely, without any form of
deferential address — although as chief of the highest
ecclesiastical court Hillel was accustomed to be addressed with
respect — Hillel, come out, come out quickly! Hillel
threw on his garments and came patiently out. The man said
brusquely: I have something to ask thee! Hillel answered: What
then hast thou to ask me, dear son? I wish to ask why the
Babylonians have such narrow heads? Hillel replied gently: The
Babylonians have narrow heads because their midwives have
so little skill. The man went off. Hillel had remained
unruffled. After a few minutes the man came back again and
called out gruffly: Hillel, come out, I have something to ask
thee! Hillel threw on his mantle, came out, and said: Now what
hast thou to ask, dear son? I wish to ask why the Arabs have
such small eyes? Hillel answered gently: The vastness of the
desert makes their eyes small; the eyes get small because they
are always gazing at the great desert. The man who had laid the
wager now grew very uneasy. Hillel returned to his tasks. But
after a few minutes the man was back again and called out
gruffly for the third time: Hillel, come out, I have something
to ask thee! Hillel put on his mantle, came out, and asked as
gently as before: Now what hast thou to ask me? I wish to ask
why the Egyptians have such flat feet? Because the ground there
is so swampy, answered Hillel, and went inside the house again.
After a minute or two the man returned and said to Hillel that
now he had nothing to ask — he had laid a wager that he
would make him angry but he saw this was impossible. Hillel
answered mildly: Dear son, better it is that thou shouldst lose
thy wager than Hillel his temper ...
This legend is told as evidence of Hillel's patience with
everyone who importuned him. Such a man — so said Jesus
of Nazareth to his mother — is in many respects like one
of the prophets of old; many utterances of Hillel sound like a
revival of the ancient wisdom of the prophets. He cited many
beautiful sayings of Hillel and then he said: The people say of
Hillel that he is like an ancient prophet who has come again.
Moreover it is dawning upon me that the knowledge I possess
does not come from Judaism alone. And in fact Hillel was born
in Babylon and only later found his way into Judaism. But
Hillel was a descendant of the House of David, was connected
from very early times with the House of David from which Jesus
of Nazareth and his kinsmen also traced their descent. And
Jesus said: Even if I too, as a son of the House of David,
could speak as the great Hillel spoke ... to-day there is
nobody to listen; such teachings are untimely. In olden days
men would have listened to them but there are no longer any
ears to hear. It is useless and meaningless to speak of these
things. And as it were gathering together what he had to say on
this subject, Jesus of Nazareth said to his mother: The
revelation of ancient Judaism is no longer suitable for the
earth, for the old Jews have passed away; the ancient
revelation is worthless on the earth as it is now. With strange
feelings in her heart the mother listened to what Jesus was
saying about the worthlessness of what she held most sacred.
But she loved him tenderly and was aware only of her infinite
love. Therefore deep understanding of what he was saying welled
up in her heart. Then, leading the conversation further, he
spoke of how he had wandered into places where heathen rites
were performed and of what he had experienced there.
Remembrance came to him of how he had fallen to the
ground while standing at the heathen altar, how he had heard
the Bath-Kol in its altered form. And then there flashed up
within him something that was like a renewal of the old
Zarathustrian teachings. He did not yet know with
certainty that he bore the Zarathustra-soul within him, but the
Zarathustrian teaching, the Zarathustrian wisdom, the
Zarathustrian impulse rose up within him during the
conversation — and in communion with his mother he
experienced the reality of this mighty impulse. All the beauty
and glory of the ancient Sun-wisdom came up into his soul. And
he reminded himself of the words of the Bath-Kol as I rendered
them yesterday, and repeated them to the mother:
AUM, Amen!
Es
walten die Übel,
Zeugen sich lösender Ichheit,
Von
andern erschuldete Selbstheitschuld,
Erlebet im täglichen Brote,
In
dem nicht waltet der Himmel Wille,
Da
der Mensch sich schied von Eurem Reich
Und
vergass Euren Namen,
Ihr
Väter in den Himmeln.
AUM, Amen!
The
Evils hold sway,
Witness of Egoity becoming free,
Selfhood-Guilt through others incurred,
Experienced in the Daily Bread,
Wherein the Will of the Heavens does not rule,
In
that Man severed himself from Your Kingdom
And
forgot Your Names,
Ye
Fathers in the Heavens.
And
with these words came a realisation of all the greatness of the
Mithras worship. He spoke to his mother at length about the
grandeur and the glory of what had been contained in the
ancient Mysteries of the different peoples, and of how much of
this had merged into the Mystery-cults scattered over Asia
Minor and Southern Europe. But at the same time his soul
remembered how this worship had gradually deteriorated and
fallen prey to demonic powers which he himself had experienced
in his twenty-fourth year. All that he had experienced at that
time came back to him. The ancient Zarathustra-wisdom itself
seemed to him to be something which the people of his day
could no longer assimilate. And then he made the second
significant utterance: Even if all the ancient Mystery-cults
were united into one and all that former greatness could be
revived, there are no longer any to respond. Those things are
of no avail! And if I were to go forth and proclaim to men what
I have heard as the altered voice of the Bath-Kol, if I were to
disclose the secret of why it is that in their physical life
men are no longer able to live in communion with the Mysteries,
no human beings would understand. To-day it would all be
distorted into demonic teaching. Even if I were to proclaim it,
it would neither be heard nor understood. Men have ceased to be
able to hear what was once heard and accepted. — For
Jesus of Nazareth knew that what he had heard as the altered
voice of the Bath-Kol gave expression to a sacred, primeval
teaching and had been an all-powerful prayer in the Mysteries
everywhere, a prayer once offered by men in the Mystery-Centres
but now forgotten. This prayer had been revealed to him when he
had fallen to the ground at the heathen altar. But at the same
time he realised and emphasised in that conversation that there
was no possibility of making it comprehensible to men. And then
in this conversation with the mother he went on to speak of
what he had learned among the Essenes. He spoke of the beauty,
the greatness and the grandeur of the Essene doctrine, of the
gentleness and meekness of the Essenes themselves. Then,
however, he made the third mighty utterance, arising from his
converse with the Buddha in a vision: that it is neither
possible nor is it meet for all men to become Essenes. Hillel
spoke words of profound truth when he taught: Sever not thyself
from the community but toil and labour in the community: for if
I stand alone, what am I! But that is what the Essenes do; they
separate themselves from men who thereby suffer unhappiness.
— And then Jesus spoke memorable words to his mother,
telling her of the experience I described in the lecture
yesterday. He said: Once when I was leaving after an intimate
and most significant conversation with the Essenes, I saw
Lucifer and Ahriman fleeing from the gate. Since then I have
known that by their mode of living and their secret doctrine
the Essenes protect themselves in such a way that Lucifer and
Ahriman must flee from their gates; but thereby the Essenes
send Lucifer and Ahriman to other human beings, in order that
they themselves may live in blessedness. These words
struck with tremendous force into the tender, loving heart of
the mother. And she felt as if she herself were transformed,
she felt as if her very being had become one with his. And
Jesus of Nazareth felt as if with this conversation everything
he had hitherto borne within him had passed away. He was aware
of this and the mother, too, perceived it. The more he spoke
and the more the mother listened, the more deeply did she
discern all the wisdom that had been alive within him since his
twelfth year. But from him it all seemed to have departed. He
had laid as it were into the heart of the mother what had lived
within him and what he had experienced.
And
he too, after that conversation, was as if transformed —
so greatly changed that the stepbrothers and other
kinsmen around him began to think that he had lost his senses.
It is sad, they said, for his knowledge was so great. True, he
was always very silent but now he has completely lost his
senses. He was given up as hopeless. And indeed for days he
went about the house as if lost in dream. The Zarathustra-Ego
was on the point of leaving this body of Jesus of Nazareth. And
his last resolution took the form of impelling him to leave the
house as if mechanically and to make his way to John the
Baptist with whom he was already acquainted.
And
then there took place the event I have often described —
the Baptism by John in the Jordan. At that conversation with
the mother, the Zarathustra-Ego had withdrawn. The being whom
Jesus of Nazareth had been up to his twelfth year was present
once again, but now with an added greatness. And at the
Baptism in the Jordan the Christ Being sank into this body. At
the moment of this Baptism in the Jordan, the mother too was
aware of something like the climax of the change that had come
about in her. She was then between her forty-fifth and
forty-sixth years. She felt as though pervaded by the
soul of that mother who had died — the mother of the
Jesus child who in his twelfth year had received the
Zarathustra-Ego. Thus the spirit of the other mother had come
down upon the mother with whom Jesus had held that
conversation. And she felt herself as the young mother who had
once given birth to the Jesus child of St. Luke's Gospel.
Let
us try to picture the infinite significance of this event! Let
us try to feel it deeply and also to realise that an absolutely
unique Being was now living upon the Earth: the Christ Being
within a human body, a Being who until now had never lived in a
human body, had had no earthly life, had dwelt only in
spiritual realms, to whom the worlds of Spirit were known, not
the world of Earth! Of the earthly world this Being knew only
what had been garnered as it were in the three bodies: physical
body, ether-body and astral body of Jesus of Nazareth. The
Christ Being sank into these three bodies, into what these
bodies had grown to be under the influence of that life of
thirty years. He therefore passed through His first earthly
experiences as a Being completely free of all
antecedents.
The
Akasha Chronicle and the Fifth Gospel reveal to us that
the Christ Being was led, first of all, into “the
loneliness.” Jesus of Nazareth, in whose body the Christ
Being dwelt, had abandoned everything that had previously
connected him with the rest of the world. The Christ Being had
just come down to the Earth. To begin with, He was drawn to the
impressions, engraved paramountly in the astral body, which had
been made upon that body and had remained as it were in the
memory. It was as though the Christ Being said to Himself: This
is the body which experienced the fleeing of Ahriman and
Lucifer, the body which perceived that the Essenes, by their
very aspirations, drive Ahriman and Lucifer to other human
beings. It was to these other human beings who had been
delivered into the power of Ahriman and Lucifer that the Christ
Being felt Himself drawn; for it is with these powers that men
have to battle. And so the Christ Being, living for the first
time in the body of a man, went out into the loneliness to the
contest with Ahriman and Lucifer.
I
believe that the following description of the Temptation scene
is very largely correct. But it is very difficult to observe
such things in the Akasha Chronicle and I therefore emphasise
that one point or another could be slightly modified. But the
essentials hold good. The Temptation scene is, of course,
included in other Gospels but it is narrated there from
different standpoints, as I have often stressed. I have made
great efforts to investigate this scene of the Temptation and
will relate it as it actually transpired.
First of all, the Christ Being within the body of Jesus
encountered Lucifer in the loneliness — Lucifer with all
his power and influence, who draws near to men when they prize
the Self too highly and are lacking in humility and
self-knowledge. Lucifer's aim is to play upon the false pride,
the tendency to self-aggrandisement in man. Now he confronted
Christ Jesus and spoke approximately as recorded in the other
Gospels: Behold me! The other kingdoms into which man's
life has been set, the foundations of which were laid by
the primeval Gods and Spirits — these kingdoms have grown
old. I will establish a new kingdom. If thou wilt enter my
realm I will give thee all the beauty and the glory contained
in these old kingdoms. But thou must sever thyself from the
other Gods and acknowledge me! And Lucifer described all the
glories of his world, everything that makes an appeal to the
human soul whenever an iota of pride exists. But the
Christ Being came from the spiritual worlds and knew who
Lucifer is, knew how souls on earth must act if they desire to
resist the temptation of Lucifer. Untouched as He was by this
temptation, the Christ Being knew how the gods are truly served
— and He had the power to repel the onslaught of Lucifer.
Then Lucifer made a second attack but called Ahriman to his
support and both addressed the Christ. The one, Lucifer,
desired to goad His pride; the other, Ahriman, to play upon His
fear. Therefore it came about that the one Being said to
Him: If thou wilt acknowledge me, through my spiritual power,
through what I can give to thee, thou wilt be able to dispense
with what is now essential for thee inasmuch as thou, the
Christ, hast entered into a human body. This body subjugates
thee, compels thee to obey the laws of gravity. But I have
power to cast thee down, since the human body prevents thee
from breaking through the law of gravity. If thou wilt
acknowledge me, I will nullify the effects of the fall and no
harm will come to thee! Ahriman said: I will keep thee from
fear: cast thyself down! And both set upon Him. But as in their
onslaught the one held the balance against the other, Christ
Jesus could save Himself from them. He found the strength that
man must find on earth if he is to stand firm against Lucifer
and Ahriman. Then Ahriman spoke: Lucifer, I cannot use thee,
thou dost but hinder me, thou hast not enhanced my power but
weakened it. Then Ahriman bade Lucifer depart, made the final
attack as Ahriman alone, and spoke words of which the Gospel of
St. Matthew contains an echo: Turn mineral substance into
bread! Turn the stones into bread if thou wouldst boast of
Divine power! Then said the Christ Being: Men do not live by
bread alone, but by the spiritual forces which come from the
spiritual worlds. None knew this better than He for He had just
descended from the spiritual worlds. Then Ahriman said: Thou
mayest indeed be right but that cannot prevent me from keeping
a certain hold upon thee. Thou knowest only how the Spirit
acts, the Spirit who descends from the heights; thou hast not
yet lived in the world of men. There below, in the human world,
there are men who must perforce makes stones into bread, who
cannot draw their nourishment from the Spirit alone. That was
the moment when Ahriman communicated to Christ something that
could indeed be known on earth but that the God who had for the
first time come to earth could not yet know. He did not know
that there below it was necessary to turn mineral substance
— metal — into money, into bread. Ahriman had said
that men on the earth below must nourish themselves by means of
“gold.” That was the point where Ahriman still
retained power. And he said: I shall use this power. That is
the true account of the Temptation. And so one thing
remained unsolved at the Temptation. The questions were
not all of them finally solved: the questions of Lucifer, yes;
but not the questions of Ahriman. For that, something more was
necessary.
When Christ Jesus went out of the loneliness He felt
transported above everything He had experienced and
learned from His twelfth year onwards; He felt that the
Christ Spirit had united with all that had been alive in Him
before His twelfth year. He felt no longer any connection with
what had become old and withered in humanity. He was
indifferent even to the speech used in His environment —
and to begin with, he kept silence. He wandered around Nazareth
and still further afield, visiting many places He had known
previously as Jesus of Nazareth. And then a very singular
thing happened. — Remember, please, that I am relating
the contents of the Fifth Gospel and there would be no point in
looking for contradictory passages in the other four
Gospels. I am narrating from the Fifth Gospel. — In
quiet reticence, as if having nothing in common with the
environment, Christ Jesus wandered, to begin with, from one
dwelling-place to another, working among the people and with
the people wherever He went. Ahriman's words concerning bread
had left a deep impression upon Him. And everywhere He found
people who already knew Him, with whom He had worked before.
They recognised Him and He found among them those to whom
Ahriman actually had access, simply because it was necessary
for them to turn stones into bread — to turn money,
metals, into bread. His presence was not, after all, essential
among those who observed the moral precepts given by Hillel or
by other teachers. Christ Jesus consorted with those whom the
other Gospels call the publicans and the sinners for it was
their lot to make stones into bread. He was constantly among
these men.
But
now this strange thing happened. Many of these men had known
Him in the period preceding his thirtieth year, for He had
already been among them. They had come to know His gentle,
tender wisdom when He had gone about as Jesus of Nazareth, and
in every house, in every dwelling, He had been deeply loved.
This love had remained. In these dwellings the people spoke
much of the man Jesus of Nazareth who was so dear to them, who
had visited their houses and villages. And the following
happened — as if through the operation of Cosmic Law. I
am narrating scenes which were very frequent and are
revealed again and again to clairvoyant investigation.
There were families among whom Jesus of Nazareth had worked and
who after their labours would sit together after sunset, liking
to speak of the man who as Jesus of Nazareth had come among
them. They spoke constantly of His love and gentleness, of how
their own hearts and souls had warmed when He had lived under
their roof. In many of these dwelling-places, when for hours
together they had been talking in this way, it would happen
that the picture of Jesus of Nazareth appeared to them in the
room, as a vision shared by every member of the family. He came
to them in the Spirit, or they, on their side, conjured up a
spiritual picture of Him. You can imagine how deeply such
families were moved when He appeared to them in a vision in
which they all shared, and what it meant to them when after the
Baptism in the Jordan He came back again and they recognised
His outward form ... only now the light in His eyes was
stronger; they gazed at the radiant countenance that had once
been so dear to them and the Being whom they had seen among
them as a spiritual Presence. You can imagine, too, what an
extraordinary stir was created among such families, among the
publicans and sinners whose karma had brought them into an
environment where all the demonic beings held sway at that
time! And now, through the presence of Christ in Jesus of
Nazareth, the change in this Being was revealed very
clearly to these particular men. In earlier years they had felt
His love, His goodness, His gentleness; but now a magic power
went forth from Him. If in former days they had merely felt
comforted by His presence, now they felt that they were
actually healed. They went to their neighbours when they
too were in distress and brought them to Christ Jesus. And so
it was that after He had conquered Lucifer and only the sting
of Ahriman remained in men under Ahriman's domination,
Christ Jesus was able to perform the deeds described in the
Bible as the expulsion of the devils. Many of the demonic
beings He had seen when He was lying as if dead at the heathen
altar, now departed from the people when He stood before them
as Christ Jesus. The demons recognised their adversary. And as
He passed in this way through the land, the behaviour of the
demons in the souls of men reminded Him ever and again of
how He had lain at that ancient altar where instead of gods,
demons had gathered and where He had not been able to perform
the sacrificial rites. Inevitably His thoughts turned to the
Bath-Kol which had proclaimed to Him that ancient Prayer of the
Mysteries of which I have spoken to you. And the middle line of
the Prayer, especially, came into His mind:
“Experienced in the Daily Bread.” These men
among whom He sojourned were compelled to turn stones into
bread; there were many who depended for their sustenance on
bread alone. And the words from that ancient, heathen Prayer,
“Experienced in the Daily Bread,” engraved
themselves deeply in His soul. He realised and felt the whole
process of man's incorporation into the physical world. He felt
that because physical embodiment was a necessity in the
evolution of humanity, men were prone to forget the
“Names of the Fathers in the Heavens,” the names of
the Spirits of the higher Hierarchies. And He felt that there
were no longer any ears to hear the voices of the old prophets.
Now He knew that what had severed men from the Heavens, what
must inevitably drive men into egoism and lead them into the
clutches of Ahriman, was the life that is bound up with the
“Daily Bread.”
As
with these thoughts He went about the country, those who were
most deeply aware of the change that had come about in Jesus of
Nazareth became His disciples and followed Him. From many
dwelling-places one or another went with Him, followed Him
— followed Him because of the feeling and conviction I
described. And so very soon a band of such disciples had
gathered together. In these disciples He had around Him people
who in their whole mood and attitude of soul were new beings,
who had become, through Him, quite different from those
men of whom He had once been compelled to say to His mother
that they had no longer any ears capable of listening to the
ancient wisdom.
And
then there dawned in Him ... it was the earthly experience of
the God: What I have to tell human beings is not how the gods
prepared the path from the Spirit to the Earth but how men can
find the path leading upwards from the Earth to the Spirit. And
now there came back to Him the voice of the Bath-Kol, and He
knew that the ancient supplications and prayers must be
re-cast, made new; He knew that now man must seek the
path into the spiritual worlds from below upwards. He
transposed the last line of the old Prayer, adapting it
to the needs of men living in the new era and making it bear
reference now not to the multiple spiritual Beings of the
Hierarchies but to the one supreme Spirit: “Our Father in
Heaven.” And the second line He had heard as the
penultimate line of the Mystery-Prayer: “And forgot Your
Names,” He transposed into: “Hallowed be Thy
Name” as the words must run for men of the new era. And
the third line from the end of the old Prayer: “In that
Man severed himself from Your Kingdoms,” He transposed
into: “To us may Thy Kingdom come.” And the line:
“Wherein the Will of the Heavens does not rule,” He
transposed into the form suitable for the ears of men now,
since they had no ears to hear the old setting of the words
— He transposed them because the direction of the path
leading into the spiritual worlds was to be completely
reversed: “Thy Will be done on Earth as it is in
Heaven.” And the mystery of the Bread, of incarnation in
the physical body, the mystery of the sting of Ahriman which
had now been fully revealed to Him, He transposed so that men
should discern the truth that the physical world too issues
from the spiritual world even if this truth is not within their
immediate ken. He made this line concerning the Daily Bread
into a supplication: “Give us this day our Daily
Bread.” And the words: “Selfhood-Guilt through
others incurred,” He transposed into: “Forgive us
our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against
us.” The line which came second in the old
Mystery-Prayer: “Witness of Egoity becoming free,”
He transposed into: “But deliver us,” and the first
line: “The Evils prevail,” He changed into:
“From the evil. Amen.” And so the altered voice of
the Bath-Kol heard by Jesus of Nazareth when he fell at the
heathen altar, was transposed into the “Lord's
Prayer” known to Christianity ... it was the Prayer of
the new Mysteries taught by Christ Jesus, it was the new Lord's
Prayer. In a similar manner — and much remains to be said
about this — arose the Sermon on the Mount and other
teachings given by Christ Jesus to His disciples.
Christ Jesus worked upon His disciples in a strange and
wonderful way. Please remember that I am simply relating what
is to be read in the Fifth Gospel. As Christ Jesus went about,
His environment was affected in a strange way. He was
together with the Apostles and disciples and in
communion with them, but — because He was the
Christ Being — not as if He were merely present there in
the body. As He went about the country, many a one felt as if
He, Christ Jesus, were reigning within his own soul, as if this
Being were actually within him, and he would begin to speak
words which, in reality, only Christ Jesus could have spoken.
This band of disciples went about and came into contact with
the people ... and the one who spoke was by no means always
Christ Jesus, but was often one of the disciples, for
everything — even His wisdom — was shared with the
disciples. I must confess that I was astonished in the highest
degree when I discovered that the words in the conversation
with the Sadducees related in St. Mark's Gospel were not spoken
by Christ Jesus out of the body of Jesus but out of the lips of
one of the disciples. It was a frequent phenomenon, too, that
sometimes when Christ Jesus left the band of disciples, He was
nevertheless still among them. He either went about with them
spiritually or He appeared to them in His ether-body while He
was actually far away. His ether-body was among them and also
went about the land; and often it was not possible to
distinguish whether He was present in the physical body or
whether it was the ether-body that had become visible. Such was
the manner of the intercourse with the disciples and with
individuals among the people when Jesus of Nazareth had become
Christ Jesus.
The
experience He Himself underwent was as I have indicated.
Whereas in the first periods the Christ Being had been
comparatively independent of the body of Jesus of Nazareth, He
had more and more to become one with it. And the longer His
life continued, the more closely was He knit with the body of
Jesus of Nazareth. In the last years, the union with the body
of Jesus of Nazareth — which had itself become
increasingly frail — caused Him deep suffering.
Nevertheless a great multitude now accompanied Christ Jesus as
He went about the country. Here or there one among the band of
the Apostles would speak — here or there, another —
and the people might easily believe that the speaker was Christ
Jesus, for He spoke through all of them. One can listen to the
scribes speaking together to this effect: It would be possible,
after all, to pick out any one of these followers and put him
to death in order to frighten the people; but it might be the
wrong one, for they all speak alike. Such an act would be of no
use to us, for the real Christ Jesus might still be living. We
must find which one He really is. — Only the disciples
themselves could distinguish Him but they most certainly
did not divulge to the enemy who was the right one. But
because of the question that had remained unsolved, the
question that Christ could not solve in the spiritual worlds
but only on the earth, Ahriman had gained sufficient power. As
a result of the most terrible of all deeds, Christ must
experience what it means to turn stones into bread. For Ahriman
made use of Judas from Karioth. On account of the way Christ
worked, there would have been no spiritual means of discovering
among the men who revered Him which was, in truth, the Christ.
For wherever the Spirit was working, wherever even a trace of
convincing power was working, He could not be taken. Only where
there was one who employed the means which Christ did not
know, which He could only learn to know as the result of the
most terrible deed wrought on earth — only where Judas
was working could He be seized. The only means of recognising
Him was through one who placed himself in the service of
Ahriman, who in actual fact betrayed Him for the sake of money
alone. Christ Jesus was connected with Judas because at the
Temptation there remained something which, in a God, is
comprehensible — He did not know that it is only true in
the heavens that stones are not needed for bread. Because
Ahriman had retained this sting, the Betrayal took place. And
then Christ must come perforce under the dominion of the Lord
of Death — and Ahriman is the Lord of Death. Such is the
connection of the story of the Temptation and the Mystery of
Golgotha with the Betrayal by Judas.
Much more could be said about the contents of this Fifth Gospel
than has been said here. But as the evolution of humanity
proceeds the other portions of this Gospel will assuredly
also come to light. What I have tried to do by means of the
narratives selected is rather to give you an idea of its
character. At the conclusion of these lectures there comes
before me what I said at the end of the first, namely,
that it is a necessity of the times to speak now of this Fifth
Gospel. And I would beg you, my dear friends, to treat what has
been said as it should be treated. We have quite enough enemies
to-day already and the way they act is really very curious. I
do not propose to enlarge upon this for you probably know
about it from the News Sheets. You are certainly aware of
another strange fact. There are people who have been saying for
a long time that the teaching I give is tainted by every kind
of bigoted Christian dogma, even by Jesuitism. This malicious
allegation is made chiefly by certain devotees of
“Adyar Theosophy” as it is called and they talk
sheer, unscrupulous nonsense. But our teachings have also been
indescribably falsified from a quarter which had violently
attacked the intolerance, the distortions and the
allegations. A man from America who spent weeks and months
getting to know our teachings, transcribed and carried them off
in a watered-down form to America, where he has given out a
plagiarised “Rosicrucian Theosophy.” True, he
says he learnt a good deal from us over here but that he was
afterwards summoned to the Masters and learnt more from them.
He keeps silence, however, about the source of the deeper
information contained in the then unpublished
lecture-courses. When something like this happens in America,
one may of course emulate the aged Hillel and be lenient; nor
need one stop being lenient when these things make their way
across to Europe. In a quarter from which the most violent
attacks were launched, a translation was made of what these
circles in America had taken from us and it was said in an
introduction to this translation: True, a Rosicrucian
conception of the world is making its appearance in Europe too,
but in a bigoted, Jesuitical form; this kind of thought can
really only thrive in the pure air of California. Well ... here
I will pause! Such are the methods of our opponents. We may
regard these things with leniency and even with compassion
— but we should not shut our eyes to them. When things
like this happen it behoves even those who for years have been
remarkably forbearing with people who acted so unscrupulously,
to be wary. Perhaps one day everyone will have their eyes
opened. If the service of truth did not demand it, I should
much prefer not to speak about these matters, but they must be
faced fairly and squarely.
Even if on the one side these allegations are spread by others,
we are not protected, on the other side, against the battle
waged by people — and such there are — who find
these things displeasing for rather more honest reasons. I will
not bother you with all the foolish stuff which between them
these two parties have written. The curious writings of
Freimark, Schalk, Maack and others now being published in
Germany may be ignored, for they are really too second-rate.
But there are people who cannot bear the very thought of
anything that resembles the nature of this Fifth Gospel.
And perhaps no hatred was as sincere as that voiced by
the critics who at once rose up in arms when something of the
mystery of the two Jesus children — which also belongs to
the Fifth Gospel — reached the outside world. True
Anthroposophists will treat this Fifth Gospel which has been
given in good faith, as it should be treated. Take it with you,
speak about it in the groups, but also say how it ought to be
treated! See that it is not irreverently bandied about among
those who may scoff at it!
With things of this nature, based as they are upon the
clairvoyant investigation that is necessary for our time, we
stand opposed to the whole present age, above all to the kind
of learning by which the age is dominated. Of this too we have
tried to be mindful. Those of us who were together when the
Foundation Stone of our Building was laid, tried to envisage
the urgent need for spiritual teachings to be proclaimed with
faithful observance of truth. We tried to picture what a wide
distance separates the culture of our times from this search
for the truth. It can verily be said that the cry for the
Spirit rings through the age but that men are either too
arrogant or too limited to be willing to know the actual truths
of the Spirit. The sense of truth in the degree essential for
understanding the proclamation of the Spirit, has yet to grow.
For in spiritual culture as it is to-day, this sense of truth
is not present in the requisite degree and — what is
worse — its absence is not noticed. Treat what has been
given here in connection with the Fifth Gospel in such a way
that it is treated reverently in the groups. This we must ask,
not out of egoism but for quite other reasons. For the Spirit
of Truth must abide in us and the Spirit must stand before us
in Truth. People to-day talk of the Spirit but even when they
do so, they have no inkling whatever of the realities of the
Spirit. There is a man — and why should names not be
given — who has won great respect simply because he is
forever talking about the Spirit. I refer to Rudolf Eucken. He
talks the whole time of Spirit, but when one reads through all
his books (just try it sometime) one finds ad infinitum:
The Spirit exists, we must experience the Spirit, commune with
the Spirit, be mindful of the Spirit ... and so on, in endless
phrases running through every one of these books. Spirit,
Spirit, Spirit! This is how men speak of the Spirit to-day
because they are too lazy or too arrogant to go to the very
wellsprings of the Spirit. And such men are greatly respected
nowadays. For all that, it will be difficult in the modern age
to make headway with anything drawn from the Spirit in such a
concrete form as was necessary in describing the
contents of the Fifth Gospel. Earnestness and an inner
sense of truth are required for this. One of Eucken's most
recent publications is a volume entitled:
Können wir noch Christen sein?
[Leipzig, 1911. An English translation,
Can we still be Christians?
was published in 1914.]
Pages and pages follow one another merely
reiterating Soul and Spirit, Spirit and Soul, and so it goes on
through many volumes. For one gains immense repute and
authority if one declares to the people that one knows
something about the Spirit. In their reading, however, people
do not perceive the inner untruthfulness of it all ...
One would like to think that ultimately people really will
learn how to read ... On one of the pages we find the sentence:
Humanity to-day has passed beyond the stage of believing
in daemons; one cannot any longer expect people to believe in
daemons! But at another place in the same book there is this
remarkable sentence: The daemonic arises when Spirit touches
Soul. Here the man is speaking seriously of daemons, after
having spoken, on another page of the same book, the words I
quoted. Is not this the very deepest inner untruth? The time
must come at last when such inwardly untruthful teachings about
the Spirit are refuted. But I have never noticed that many of
our contemporaries are alive to this inner untruthfulness.
And
so when we serve the truth of the Spirit to-day we stand
opposed to the times. This has to be remembered in order that
we may see clearly what we have to do in our hearts if we would
be co-bearers of the proclamation of the Spirit, co-bearers of
the new life of the Spirit that is essential for mankind. When
efforts are made through spiritual teaching to lead the souls
of men to the Christ Being, how can one hope for much response
in face of contemporary thought which contents itself with
truths put forward to-day by all the shrewd philosophers and
theologians: that there was a Christianity in existence before
Christ! Evidence is produced to show that the cult and also
certain typical narratives were already current in the East in
pre-Christian times. And then these clever theologians explain
to everyone who will listen to them that Christianity is simply
the continuation of what was already there before. This kind of
literature commands great respect, really tremendous respect
among our contemporaries and they have not the slightest
inkling what the real relationship is. When the Christ is said
to have come down to the Earth as a Spiritual Being and then,
later on, is found to be worshipped in forms of cult the same
as those connected with the worship of heathen gods — and
when such arguments are used, as they are to-day, to
disavow the Christ Being ... this is a kind of logic of which
the following is an illustration. Somebody or other goes into a
house and leaves his clothes behind. It is known that the
clothes belong to this particular man. A little later, such a
man as Schiller or Goethe comes to the house and owing to
certain circumstances is obliged to put on these clothes. Then
he comes out in the clothes belonging to the other. And now
somebody who has seen Goethe in these clothes, goes about
saying: What are people talking about? Why is he supposed to be
a man of special importance? I have examined the clothes
minutely and I know that they belong to so-and-so who is a
person of no importance whatever. Because the Christ
Being made use of the garments, so to speak, of the ancient
cults, there come these clever people who do not understand
that the Christ Being clothed Himself in these forms as a
garment only, and that the spiritual reality present in these
old ritualistic forms now, is the Christ Being Himself.
And
now — look through whole libraries, look through the
countless dissertations of scientific monism to-day. All this
kind of literature brings evidence concerning the garment
around the Christ Being — and moreover the evidence, in
itself, is correct! Dabblers in the field of the evolution of
culture stand in high repute to-day and their science is
accepted as profound wisdom. This is the picture we must have
before us if we desire to realise not only intellectually but
also in our feeling, what the communication of this Fifth
Gospel means. It means that together with the truth known to us
we must be alive to how and where we stand in the world to-day,
realising how impossible it is to make the new tidings of the
Spirit comprehensible to the thought-life of the past. And so
when we have again to take leave of one another, reference may
be made to words from the Gospel. With the way of thinking now
prevailing in humanity, no progress is possible in the
coming phase of spiritual evolution. Therefore this way of
thinking must be changed, must be given another direction!
Those who like to compromise and are unwilling to form a clear
picture of things as they are and must be in the future, will
not be able to contribute much to the spiritual teachings and
spiritual service necessary for mankind.
It
was my duty to speak of the Fifth Gospel which is very sacred
to me. And I take leave of your hearts and souls with the wish
that the bond created between us by many other things, may have
been strengthened through this spiritual investigation of
the Fifth Gospel — for this investigation is precious to
me. Your hearts may perhaps be warmed by the thought that even
if we are physically separated in space and in time,
nevertheless we will remain together and feel together what we
must inwardly assimilate and what is demanded by the duty laid
upon the souls of men to-day by the Spirit. May the labours of
every individual soul further our aims in the right way.
I
think that this wish is the best form of the farewell
greeting I should like to give, particularly at the end of this
course of lectures.
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