THE
PROBLEM OF
JESUS
&
CHRIST IN
EARLIER
TIMES
RUDOLF
STEINER
Dornach, December 28, 1915
[Note 1]
IN
MY LECTURE YESTERDAY, I tried to indicate an important fact related to the
Christ problem as a whole — a fact that is no doubt surprising. A
great store of wisdom has in fact disappeared, and it is known today
only through a few fragments. From one of these fragments, I cited
certain passages to you yesterday from the beginning of the Book of Jeû.
[Note 2]
We must indeed ask ourselves now if it
possible that a store of wisdom that once existed can disappear
completely. In other words, can the reasons for such a disappearance
be completely external? You will recall the analogy I used: I said
that it is possible to imagine that everything we publish today and
that all our existing writings have been burned, so that only the
writings of our opponents remain, and posterity can be reconstructed
only from those records and not from what we have said. This is quite
possibly what did occur. Nevertheless, this hypothesis cannot be
sustained as-is and without qualification. Even if all the writings
were to disappear, many of us would still be alive — at least, we
could assume this possibility — and we know the content of those
writings and would be able to communicate those truths without the
help of the works of our adversaries, so that the store of wisdom
would continue to grow and spread, in spite of everything.
To bring about a
complete disappearance, it would in fact be necessary to eradicate,
to a certain extent, the capacity to understand our writings, the
ability to preserve them, and the possibility of communicating them
from generation to generation. This must be what occurred at that
time. It must have happened that people lost the capacity to
understand such teachings as the Gnosis of Valentinus, for example,
or the content of the Pistis Sophia manuscript, or the Book of
Jeû, and so on. In fact, this is what happened.
We must vividly
imagine to ourselves that, based on the broad foundation, so to
speak, of that ancient inheritance — which had already fulfilled
its purpose in the form of a primitive clairvoyance that then
gradually grew dim and faded away — a higher form of knowledge
evolved. It was nurtured by only the few who were initiated into the
Mysteries, yet it was a widespread knowledge nevertheless. And we
must imagine further that it was because of the gradual paralysis of
the capacity to understand such things that this knowledge was not
just forgotten, but it eventually disappeared. People simply no
longer had the capacity to understand such teachings. Only this could
bring about such a complete loss of a treasure of wisdom.
Thus, we may indeed
say that, when we look back at the time just before the period
following the Mystery of Golgotha, we can see how ancient capacities
disappear, far and wide, and how something new develops out of
entirely new and fresh forces. We may say without hesitation that, as
human evolution approached the Mystery of Golgotha, we can see a
gradual darkening and disappearance of a certain view and way of
thinking, which had a spiritual quality and would have enabled human
beings to understand the coming of Christ into the world as a
spiritual being. But this form of knowledge, as we said, had
disappeared.
As a result, at the
very time when the Christ united with earthly evolution, humankind
lost the kind of knowledge that might have enabled people to
understand, in a true and profound way, the nature of the Christ
being. This is a very important fact. Furthermore, I have already
indicated, several times, something very significant. I stated that
the announcement of Christ's coming was not itself a new
revelation, made known through the Mystery of Golgotha; in the
Mysteries, the Christ had already been mentioned as the “coming
one.” There were special teachings in the Mysteries that
proclaimed the coming of Christ. One viewed the Christ being, of
course, in the light of a past spiritual wisdom, but these Mysteries
had gradually degenerated, so that, when the Christ did come, people
were less able than ever to speak, as human beings, about the Christ.
This is evident not only from all that I have just explained, but
also from what remained alive in the souls of those who tried to
conceive of the Christ Mystery out of a fresh, new impulse.
Thus, during the very
first centuries of the Christian era, we find great spirits arising,
such as Clemens of Alexandria, for example, and Origenes — very
lofty spirits, both of them. If we want to describe them from one
perspective — Clemens, as well as Origenes, who came after the
Gnostics when Gnosis itself was already waning — we must say that
they did in fact strive for this knowledge. They asked themselves:
What is the truth behind the Mystery of Golgotha? On the one hand, we
are concerned with the Christ (they still knew this, of course); the
Christ can be understood only as a spiritual being connected with
spiritual and suprasensory impulses. This Christ descends from cosmic
spiritual spheres. They could no longer comprehend how the ancient
Gnosis had been able to understand the Christ, but they knew that he
could be understood, as a spiritual being, only through spiritual
faculties. This was what they knew about the Christ.
On the other hand,
they viewed Jesus as a historical personality. For them, the coming
of Jesus was a historical fact. Them might have said: A number of
years ago, in a certain part of the Middle East, a man named Jesus
was born; he carried the Christ, and God lived in that human being.
For them, this was the great problem. They thought: During the course
of historical evolution, we are concerned with a historical
personality; but in the realm of spiritual knowledge, we are
concerned with the Christ. How should we conceive the union of these
two? Thus we see great spirits like Clemens of Alexandria and
Origenes working and struggling with the problem of how the Christ
could have lived in the man Jesus.
Now, let us first
consider Clemens of Alexandria, the head of the catechetical school
of Alexandria, where those who wished to become Christian teachers
were trained. When we consider this significant individual, we find
something in his teachings that we may describe in this way: The
Christ belongs, of course, to the forces that participated in the
creation of the earth; he belongs to the spiritual world; he entered
earthly evolution through the body of Jesus of Nazareth. In this way,
Clemens of Alexandria looked up, first of all, to the Christ as a
spiritual being and tried to comprehend him in spiritual realms. But
Clemens also knew something else, which we have emphasized
often — that the Christ had, in fact, always existed for human
beings, but not in the earthly sphere. The only ones who could reach
him were those who had developed, through the Mysteries, forces that
enabled them to leave the physical body. When human beings left their
physical bodies through forces acquired in the Mysteries and ventured
into the spiritual realms, they were able to recognize the Christ and
felt that he was the “coming one.” Clemens of Alexandria
knew this. He knew that the ancient Mysteries spoke of the Christ as
the coming one, who was not yet united with earthly evolution. He
expressed this by saying that human beings were, of course, inspired
to expect the Christ.
Clemens of Alexandria
went so far as to say that, especially at two particular points in
the spiritual evolution of humanity, something was nurtured as a kind
of preparation for Christ's coming. He said, on the other hand,
that this took place through Moses and the prophets. What came into
the world through Moses and the prophets, said Clemens, was a
preparation — humankind first needed to become acquainted with
what came through Moses and the prophets, so that they might, through
personal experience, come to feel they had found the Christ. This was
the concept they had to form.
So we see that Clemens
knew nothing about the old Gnostic wisdom — or, at least, he did
not use it. But Clemens designated what entered human capacity
through Moses and the prophets as a “preparation.” Then,
as the second turning point, or “preparation” (and this
is very significant), Clemens placed Greek philosophy — Plato
and Aristotle — at the side of Moses and the prophets. He said,
approximately, that Moses and the prophets as well as the
philosophers prepared humanity for the event that took place with the
Mystery of Golgotha.
Origenes said, on the
other hand, that we are dealing with the Christ — the Christ who
can be grasped as a spiritual being with the aid of spiritual forces.
And we are dealing with the historical Jesus, who in fact once
existed as a real person in the sensory world. How can these two be
united, the God and the human being? How does the “God
human” come to be? Origenes, accordingly, constructed a view
that said: It is impossible for a god, without preparation, to live
within an ordinary physical human body; a specially prepared soul,
therefore, must have lived in Jesus so that his soul could mediate
between God and the human being and might united the God, as a pure
spiritual being, with physicality.
Thus, Origenes brought
in the soul element and, within Jesus Christ, distinguished between
the God, the pure Pneuma-being of pure spirit being — the psyche,
or soul — and the physical body of Jesus of Nazareth. He tried to
imagine how the Christ could dwell within Jesus of Nazareth. He no
longer possessed the early Gnosis, which would enable him to imagine
the dwelling of Christ on earth and the union of the Christ with
earthly evolution. It was necessary to make up an understanding out
of completely new and fresh elements, and his efforts went toward
achieving this. So we see that, right at the time when Christ as a
real being united with earthly evolution, human beings had the
greatest possible difficulty in understanding this fact; the capacity
for such understanding had never been so limited.
Clemens of Alexandria
still preserved at least some idea of why this was so. He wondered
what it was that inspired humankind in the ancient Mysteries. He
thought that they were inspired through the Christ's influence,
although from suprasensory worlds while they were out of their
physical bodies. Clemens of Alexandria expressed this clearly when he
said that Christ sent the angels to humankind. Indeed, he said openly
that, when the Old Testament mentions the appearance of an angel,
this means that the angel was sent by the Christ. He states
explicitly that, when Yahweh appears to Moses as the burning bush, it
is in reality the Christ who appears in this earthly, soul-spiritual
manifestation. Clemens of Alexandria thus states clearly that, in the
past, before the Mystery of Golgotha, the Christ appeared to human
beings through angels. If people developed the capacity to understand
the message of the angel, they were capable of standing as
disembodied initiates in the presence of the Christ and in the
presence of the spiritual world.
Thus Clemens of
Alexandria was still able to go as far as this. Further, he
said — and this was also part of the knowledge retained by
Clemens — that clearly, over the course of time, the Christ
passed from the nature of angel to the “Son nature”; he
became “Son.” Previously, he was able to manifest and
reveal himself through angels or as a host, or multitude, of angels.
When it so pleased him, he appeared to one person in one angelic
form, and to another as a different angel. Thus he appeared to human
beings in many and various forms. Later, however, he appeared in the
one form as the “Son.”
Here we come to a very
important element, which I must ask you to note carefully, because it
is extremely important. Clemens of Alexandria still held to the view
that the Christ already existed before the Mystery of Golgotha in the
spiritual realms. The Christ had already reached the point where he
could reveal himself through angels, or messengers. But now, he came
even further by being able to fulfill himself as the Son. His ability
to fulfill his mission as the Son has the greatest imaginable
importance. What was it that now entered human understanding?
When we go through the
entire ancient Gnosis, we find a peculiar trait. If, for example, I
were to outline it in the form of a diagram, I might say something
like this: The Gnosis conceives, in evolution, the existence of a
human “person” as proceeding from the Father — from
the primal Father, the so-called Stillness, or primal Spirit. These
ancient Gnostics indicated thirty different stages, and named them
“Aeons,” and now I could name thirty of these. And then
comes the second current, or stream. Whereas the first stream is
spiritual, they also spoke of a second stream that belongs to the
realm of soul. Within these streams they saw the Christ and the
Sophia as the two principal Aeons, and as the source of all being.
Then there were numerous other Aeons besides. Moreover, the Gnostics
indicated yet a third stream — that of the Demiurge and matter.
These all united and formed humankind. It is possible to form such an
outline out of the way those Gnostics thought. Such concepts as
theirs are not entirely unreal, because human beings are complicated.
In a lecture once, I explained how many groups, or stages, containing
seven parts make up the human being, our friends were very surprised to
hear that so many differentiations must be looked for in the human being.
[Note 3]
Yet it is just these differentiations that remind
us of what the Gnostics, from their perspective, knew already.
On the other hand, we
always find, when we approach the Gnosis, one particular point that
impresses us — that the concept of time plays a very minor role.
Gnostic ideas may be expressed spatially; the role of time as an idea
is unimportant. Or we could say that Gnostic understanding is not
capable of understanding it completely. And to this extent we may
indeed call it progress from the Gnosis to Clemens of Alexandria.
Although the whole encompassing fullness of spiritual wisdom had been
lost, it was nevertheless a step forward that led to Clemens of
Alexandria, since he brought the concept of time into the evolution
of the Christ. He taught that the Christ had already existed
earlier — that he had previously revealed himself through angels
and later on as the Son; this was his evolutionary course.
Thus, the concept of
development, or evolution, was introduced. This, you can see, is the
significant point. Indeed, we cannot emphasize too often that the
development of civilization in the West occurred in order to bring an
understanding of the concept of time to the human worldview in the
right way. This is what is so important, so radically
important — to view the course of evolution and to realize that
the Christ was first able to manifest only through angels, and that
afterward, when he passed through the Mystery of Golgotha, he is able
to manifest as the Son. Through the angels, he is the messenger of
something outside the world. It is true that it permeates the world
completely, but to understand it correctly, we must nevertheless
recognize that it comes from outside the world, as the messenger.
Later, however, he appears as Son; he imbues all things.
Just as the Son is one
blood — one with the Father in the physical world — we must
also conceive the spirit as one and the same being with the Father in
the spiritual world. To be a Son is something other than being merely
an angel. So, when this being reveals itself as Son, it is an
evolutionary progress, in contrast to the earlier manifestations,
whereby he was able to appear only as an angel, or messenger. There
was, as it were, a kind of understanding of the Christ that went
further than the understanding of the ancient Gnosis. Yet, the
effects of the Gnosis were needed in order to say even what Clemens
could say. When the Gnosis gradually disappeared altogether, it was
no longer possible to say even what Clem- ens of Alexandria and
Origenes had said. People became increasingly familiar with those
impulses that belonged to a later period: purely materialistic
impulses.
So it came about that
the teachings of Origenes were condemned. They were pronounced
heretical. The element in them that caused them to be declared
heretical was the fact that people wished to renounce any form of
understanding that came from humanity itself and its own forces. This
was what they wanted to renounce; they felt that such an
understanding was no longer possible. And how do matters appear to us
now? What aspect must they assume for us? We see, in fact, that an
ancient form of spiritual wisdom had established itself extensively
on the foundation of ancient clairvoyance. It was there, but it
gradually disappeared. Contained in this spiritual
wisdom — though it dealt with a supra- sensory being — was
wisdom related to the Christ. Just at the time when the Christ
descended to earth, however, the wisdom had disappeared. The real
Christ was now united with the earth; knowledge about the Christ,
however, had disappeared by this time.
Here you have an
example, on a grand scale, that I must ask you to please consider in
the right way. We can cast our glance over the earth that was known
to humanity at that time — the earth as it was before the Mystery
of Golgotha. The further back we go, the more knowledge we find about
the Christ, who must be thought of as existent in suprasensory
realms. The farther back we go, the more knowledge we find, but it is
knowledge that can be communicated only through angels. This
constitutes evolution. This knowledge, this view of Christ, is made
known to many people. The Christ lived as the inspiration of many
human beings: evolution.
This knowledge slowly
fades away and disappears, and its influence weakens. And in one
being, Jesus of Nazareth, we find everything concentrated that had
previously been distributed among many. Imagine, in the course of
evolution, a drop of the inner being of the Christ as living in a
priest of the Mysteries, another drop in a second priest, yet another
drop in a third, and so on. In the case of each of these initiates,
you would find that, when he went out of his body — when his
spirit abandoned his body — he had some portion of the Christ
within him. The Christ is thus multiplied in them. All of this
disappears, because everything that had once been distributed is
drawn together and concentrated in a single point, in the body of
Jesus of Nazareth: involution.
Involution is the very
principle or being that was taken away from all the others and
appeared in one body. Thus, we see that what had lived in evolution
in a distributed form had to disappear from the earth by becoming
concentrated into one point — the body of Jesus of Nazareth. This
is the important fact. Evolution ceases within the most significant
involution. Now begins the time, therefore, when the Christ himself
lives with the earth, but when the knowledge of the Christ no longer
lives in the earth; knowledge of the Christ must evolve anew.
At this point, the
very difficulties we spoke of appeared. On the one hand, we have
Jesus of Nazareth, and on the other, we have the Christ. Keep in mind
that the ancient wisdom concerning the connections of things in human
beings themselves were now completely lost. During that entire
period, there was no longer the slightest knowledge of anything
concerning humankind. Not until now are we beginning again to
differentiate in the human being our physical body, ether body,
sentient soul, and so on. Only now are we beginning this. Now, in a
single individual, we again differentiate between the physical
earthly part, which continues the line of heredity, and the higher
spiritual part, which has descended again from spiritual worlds.
Origenes did not know
this, nor did Clemens of Alexandria. They did not know about the
spiritual soul and the physical part in each individual human being
who walks on the earth. This was why they found it so difficult to
understand the single members of the being of Jesus Christ. The
knowledge related to the Christ became more and more at variance, and
it is infinitely important for an understanding of our own age to
realize how all of this, in turn, influences our own time, inasmuch
as it was necessary for the knowledge of spiritual science to appear
today. It is extremely important to keep in mind this separation of
Jesus and the Christ. This is a very serious and important matter.
And we encounter in a myriad of forms.
The Christmas event
was entirely unknown at that time. It entered human hearts only
gradually. This was the outer aspect: People came to know in images
what had occurred in Palestine; only gradually, with the aid of
dramatic performances, did they begin to form an idea of what took
place there. This was the aspect, I might say, of the Jesus Mystery.
We have seen the Christmas plays performed for us here. We could
still feel something of the Christ in one of them, the second. And we
could feel Jesus in his purity of form in the first play, which is so
primitive and simple. We could say that the child Jesus — the
first appearance of “Jesus” — gradually conquered
human hearts. Around the middle of the Middle Ages, we find that
people began to look up to the child; before then, Christians
participated in the Mass and heard about the Mystery of Christ. They
heard that he had passed through the experience of death, about St.
Paul's teachings, and so on, but the Bible, as we know, was not
allowed to become popular; it was kept entirely in the hands of the
priests. Believers were expected to participate in the Mass, which
was, moreover, celebrated in Latin. But there was no real
participation in the events of the holy rite itself. The essence of
the Gospels conquered human hearts and souls only very gradually. So
it happened that only after the middle of the Middle Ages could such
plays portraying the appearance of Jesus and so on be given to
ordinary people. Today, the actual view that we maintain is that the
Mystery of Golgotha once took place and that, after that event,
people knew something of this Mystery of Golgotha. Yet, what they
really knew was simply this: Christ had died on the cross; it was
mainly the Easter event that people felt.
We must keep in mind
that all of this took place at the same time when mystics such as
Tauler, Meister Eckhardt, and others were seeking the Christ through
mysticism. Thus, on the one hand, we have the first appearance of the
Christmas plays; Jesus is sought in the most external form
possible — in the form of a direct physical
portrayal — whereas the mystics sought the Christ. They worked to
develop the soul to such an extent that they could experience the
Christ arising within them; they sought to apprehend the Christ in
completely changed form, within the soul, a Christ far removed from
the world, existing as pure spirit. Mysticism, on the one hand, and
the Christmas plays on the other — Jesus and the Christ being
sought simultaneously along two different and widely separated paths.
What was a theoretical difficulty in the case of Origenes — the
impossibility of uniting the Christ with Jesus — appears directly
before us out in the villages. There, among the simple folk, Jesus is
shown as a child, whereas the deep- natured mystics looked for the
Christ by trying to guide their own souls to an inner
experience — to inner contact, so to speak — of the
Christ.
But where can we find
the connecting link? Where is it? Events follow their course, side by
side. Just consider the wide gulf between the childlike gaze of the
villagers and what they see in the Christmas plays and the deep
mysticism of a Meister Eckhardt or a Johannes Tauler. And yet, the
beginnings of these Christmas plays actually appear at the same time.
In fact, mysticism also continues to live. And today, in our own
time, just think what the whole event of the Mystery of Golgotha has
become for many theologians. Among the most advanced theologians,
what is it that draws their attention? They consider that, once upon
a time, at the beginning of our era, a man was born in Nazareth, or
Bethlehem, or somewhere else — a chosen one, chosen especially to
experience gradually within himself the human connection with the
spiritual world. He was a noble man, the noblest of all — so
noble, in fact, that one might say that he was almost ... but here,
you see, they are somewhat at a loss. Here they are not so sure of
themselves. What is there to add to the fact that he was viewed
absolutely as a god during the evolutionary course of Christianity?
And so they turn backward and forward, until all the theories and
teachings of Euken and Harnack come along. Isn't it true that
they cannot understand it al all, yet they wish, in one way or
another, to appear smart and to be able to view Jesus as something
special — and to be able to conceive of the Christ. Then they
consult the Gospels, and as modern persons, of course, they are
ashamed to admit the truth of the miracles, so they struck out
whatever can be struck out, and construct from the Gospels something
as natural as possible — something that may be explained
away.
Then we come to the
event of Jerusalem and the death on the cross. Theologians can pursue
things as far as this death, you see, but they are unable to go so
far as the resurrection. And then we see examples such as
Harnack's statement that this resurrection, the grave from
which Jesus Christ supposedly arose — indeed, this Easter
Mystery — allows us to penetrate only the knowledge that this
Easter Mystery took place in the garden, near the Place of the
Skulls. It was there that the Easter Mystery arose, and the idea of
the resurrection comes from there. We are expected to hold to this,
without concerning ourselves with what actually occurred there,
because the conviction of the resurrection proceeded from there.
This is indeed very
strange, is it not? If you read Harnack's book
The Essence of Christianity,
you will find this extraordinary idea of the
resurrection. I once pointed this out in a certain city at a meeting
of the Giordano Bruno Union by saying that this is a strange thought
indeed. If you wish to solve the problem of the resurrection with
such a statement, it is better to leave the actual event untouched
and to point our simply that the resurrection belief — the belief
in the Easter Mystery — arose from that grave. A certain
gentleman who was present objected by saying that Harnack could not
have written this, since this would in fact be almost Roman
Catholic — a Roman Catholic superstition. It would be no
different than believing that the holy garment of Treves had some
hidden meaning. This would indeed be superstition, and Harnack could
not have written it. Yet it is a fact that he did write it, and since
I did not have the book handy, I had no choice but to send that
gentleman a post card the next day, stating that the passage could be
found on such and such a page. This are the sort of thing that leads
to many difficulties. People are at a loss when they try to find the
path leading from Jesus to the Christ. Someone once said to me,
“We modern theologians can no longer do anything with a
Christology. The only thing that is of any real use to us is a
‘Jesuology.’” And it was that same person, not I,
who added this statement: “What a pity that the name Jesuits
is already taken, since the followers of modern theology really ought to
be called ‘Jesuits.’” Please note that it was not I
who said this, but a modern theologian.
Now this is one side
of the historical picture. The other side is this: A number of modern
theologians are, in turn, holding more to the Christ. They study the
Gospels, but they do not interpret certain passages in the Gospels,
as do the other theologians I've mentioned. They do not speak
of what one is able to believe, as a rational person might believe
about another human being, even if that human being is divine. Yet,
when describing this individual as a divine being, they are not at
all clear in their minds about how far they should go in their
application of divine status. “A noble man,” they say,
more noble than Socrates, certainly, but here they go no further.
Thus we have the one
class of people, the “Jesuolgians,” since it would be
difficult indeed to apply to them the name theologians. The word
theology means “wisdom of God,” but it is just this
godly element that they wish to eliminate. And then there is the other
group, who take things more seriously and who find, after studying
certain Gospel passages, that it is impossible to view the one who
pronounced such words as an ordinary human being. There are passages
in the Gospels, as we know, that cannot, if we are honest, be so
lightly attributed to a mere human being. Furthermore, such people
take the story of the resurrection seriously. They consider
themselves “Christologians,” in contrast to the
“Jesulogians.” At the same time, they come to yet another
conclusion. For example, just read the book
Ecce Deus,
among others. In this book, they say, “If you read the Gospels
honestly, it is impossible to believe that they refer to an ordinary human
being. They speak of a God — of a true and real God.” Hence,
these people, for their part, lose Jesus; they lose him very seriously,
because here they say, “Throughout the Gospels, certainly, we
find the mention of God; but God can not possibly have
existed — in fact, he could not have lived on earth. Therefore,
we must hold on to the Christ. But the Christ is the one of whom
people have said that he never lived on earth.” Christology
without Jesuology; this is the other direction. Yet these two
directions find no way to unite. This is true today; those who speak
of the Christ have lost Jesus, and those who speak of Jesus have lost
the Christ. Christ has become an unreal god, and Jesus an unreal man.
And it would have to continue this way, inevitably, if something new
could not be added.
The new element to be
added must be spiritual science, which is capable of understanding
anew how the Christ could live in Jesus. In fact, one of the most
important points in the spiritual scientific teaching is this: It can
lead us to understand how the Christ, by way of the two Jesus
children, could actually become the one who assumed the position at
the center of earthly and human evolution. Spiritual science can do
this, because it has a new vision of what the human being really is
and how the spirit, soul, and body are united in the human being.
Consequently, if we build on this, we can understand once again how
the Christ united with Jesus. This is complicated, of course, and it
is not easy to understand. Nevertheless, it can be understood. You
will thus be able to see how what humankind has lost can, with the
help of spiritual science, be built up again from its original
source. This is also true of our comprehension of the Mystery of
Golgotha. When the Christ appeared in the world, it was impossible
for people to understand him. Such understanding can be acquired only
gradually. His achievements took the form of actual facts. The points
of departure that can lead us to an understanding can be found
everywhere. Even the simplest Christmas play can help us find such
points.
What do such plays
show us? So far as the Paradise Plays are concerned, the following
fact is placed before us: A human being enters the world, and we
realize, merely through incidental occurrences, that this human being
is Jesus. We enter the world as children. I said that the Paradise
Play — the beginning of earthly evolution — was connected
with this, the Mystery of Golgotha.
Certainly, we must
consider the fact that, at the beginning of earthly evolution, human
beings were exposed to luciferic temptation. Consequently, their
normal progress of evolution was changed. Thus we are faced,
symbolically, with Adam cast out of paradise; his being is other than
what it was destined to be before luciferic temptation. How does this
manifest? Imagine that Lucifer had never approached humankind, and
that human beings had lived without the luciferic impulse. In that
case, human beings would have lived in a different way in their ether
body. When we pass through the portal of death, we still retain our
ether body, and then we cast it off. Nevertheless, this ether body
more or less continues its existence. As a result of luciferic
temptation, it caries the impressions of everything we do and think.
We know that human beings die; that they pass through the portal of
death; that the physical body is surrendered to the elements; that,
after a few days, the ether body detaches itself from the human
being; and that human beings then continue along whatever path them
must take. At the same time, in this etheric part are the impressions
of what the ether body had become as a result of thinking, feeling,
and actions, in an inevitable accordance with luciferic
temptation.
Now imagine the earth.
The human physical body enters this earth; it is given over to the
earthly elements, but the ether body remains connected with the
earth. Thus, we have the ether bodies of human beings; they are
present in the atmosphere of the earth. And they are different from
what they would have been had the luciferic temptation never taken
place. Everything I've said thus far about ether bodies in
general refers, of course, to these ether bodies. But what I am
saying today also refers to them. So we may repeat: Human beings are
embedded in the earth; what we leave behind on the earth — all
that our ether body has become during earthly life — has become
more dry, more “woody,” than it would have become had the
luciferic temptation not occurred. More wood-like, drier — in
fact, this difference does exist. Imagine that the luciferic
temptation had never taken place; after death, human beings would
leave behind a far more rejuvenated ether body, a much
“greener” ether body, as it were. Because of the
luciferic temptation, human beings leave behind a far more dried-up
ether body than would have otherwise been the case.
This was expressed in
the legend that tells us a dried-up Tree of Paradise arose from
Adam's grave. But what lives in the earth actually lived before
the Mystery of Golgotha in the human ether body, infected by Lucifer.
It was precisely this element into which the body of Jesus of
Nazareth entered as a healer, or as a “phantom,” as I
explained in my lectures at Karlsruhe.
[Note 4]
Imagine that Adam's grave — Adam surrendered as a physical body
to the earthly elements. Arising from his grave is the dried-up ether body,
the representative of the human past that was infected by Lucifer and
remains intact after death. This is, at the same time, the tree upon
which one may be crucified. In fact, such a crucifixion actually does
take place when the “phantom” of Jesus of Nazareth
remains behind on earth after the Mystery of Golgotha, and through it
unites with the earth. This is expressed in the legend that tells us
this tree was handed down from generation to generation and became,
in turn, the cross on Golgotha. This is a pictorial view that
corresponds to the fact — that, through the crucifixion, the
phantom of Jesus of Nazareth united with what lived in the earth
etherically, as a totality of ether bodies infected by Lucifer. Those
bodies were, of course, scattered, rarified, and dissolved, but they
were nevertheless existent in the form of forces. This is very
significant and infinitely profound fact that we must keep in mind,
and it illuminates for us the mysteries of the earth.
But what is it, in
fact, that brings about our connection with the ether body infected
by Lucifer? It is the fact that we enter the physical world as
children. We still do not, of course, find the whole answer in that
point were one becomes a child, because if we look with the right
feeling, we see in the child a being free of Lucifer. And if we are
able to do this — to look at a child with the right feeling,
seeing how one enters the world — we can see the human
relationship to the Christ.
This, it was expected,
would be the feeling experienced by those seeing Jesus thus portrayed
in the Christmas plays: They were expected to feel what I have
described in the first pages of my little book on the progress of the
human being and humanity.
[Note 5]
There I spoke of the first
three years of human life and about our entrance into the world. If
the same thing that permeates the human being during those first
years were to permeate one in the middle of life (as I mentioned in
the book), one would have some idea of the way the Christ lived in
Jesus. This opportunity to see something in children that is not yet
infected by Lucifer is also possible when we see the Christmas
plays.
Now let's
consider what all of this means. It is indeed tremendously important
when we look at the child. In that little book I explained that
during our earliest years we are far wiser than we are later
on — although unconsciously — because we must then build up
the body; later, we can no longer do that. We are far smarter and
wiser than we are later on, and we are much better at penetrating our
human nature, but we do not yet posses the Luciferic element. In
working on ourselves inwardly in this way, during our earliest
infancy — before that time we can recall later on — we work
on the most delicate shaping of the body, and we work according to
infinitely wise laws. Once Lucifer and Ahriman have permeated our
knowledge later on, we haven't the faintest notion of those
laws. While we are at work within this infant being, we are free of
everything we enter later on, when we experience the world through
the body; we are still unhampered by all differences, even by the
difference of the sexes. We do not live during early infancy within
the male or female element; we are not yet involved in the
differences created by social position and race; we are not yet
involved in national differences. We are human beings, pure and
simple. We are then, in reality, within the same element inhabited by
those who face one another in war, impelled by something they
experience externally for the first time: hatred.
The fact that it is
possible for human beings in the world to face one another in hatred,
just because they belong to different nationalities, is something
that develops through forces into which we enter through the
connection with our physical body. Before acquiring such a connection
through the physical body, children still live in an element that
transcends all national and social differences. They live in an
element where all souls could live, no matter where they were born on
earth. Consider this: Human beings may face one another as bitter
enemies and kill one another, yet those who have killed may pass
through the portal of death, mutually united in the Christ who
belongs to them all, the Christ in whom they live, if they have
remained unaffected by the differences that exist among humankind.
What makes people fact one another in hatred is something that they
acquire only through the physical body; but this has no connection
whatsoever with what lies outside the physical body.
Our age has much to
learn — especially this age. It must find its way back to
veneration for the infant Jesus, when he is portrayed as a child and
not yet as one who has entered the element that brings differences
among human beings, leading them into conflict and strife. It is only
when their experiences change human beings from the child, about whom
we are told at Christmas, that war and strife arise. It is human
beings themselves who are portrayed in the Christmas play, human
beings as they really are in their connection with cosmic
powers — but portrayed in such a way that it reveals, in a unique
way and on the physical level, something that does not become
involved in strife; it is something that may even be carried, in a
similar way, in the hearts of those who are fighting a physical
battle to the death with one another.
It is profoundly
significant that this is presented to humankind in particular
relation to the “Nathan” Jesus Child. We connect with the
side of our being, so to speak, through which we enter the world,
without the slightest trace of discrimination, because we have not
yet become involved in distinguishing nationality and so forth. We
develop such discrimination only through our life in connection with
the physical body. The Jesus idea, which is expressed fully only in
the Jesus child, unites with the Christ idea, which is fulfilled when
human beings are able go clearly recognize the spiritual also in
Jesus as a man, when he was between thirty and thirty-three years of
age — in other words, the Christ being. In a twofold way, through
the “Nathan” Jesus and the “Solomon” Jesus, a
body is prepared, which is able to remain apart from all that causes
discrimination among human beings. The Christ is able to reveal
himself only in such a body.
[Note 6]
Thus we see, according
to spiritual science (and I have explained this in a similar way in
my little book on the progress of the individual and humanity), the
coalescence of the Jesus idea and the Christ idea. This is the
greatest, most meaningful human need of our time. Until now, human
beings have had a Christmas festival and an Easter festival, but
these two festivals remained unrelated. Easter is a Christ festival,
and Christmas a Jesus festival. Easter and Christmas eventually
become related as we gain the ability to understand how the Christ
and Jesus are interrelated. It is spiritual science that builds the
bridge between the Christmas festival and the Easter festival. From
the simple “Shepherd Play,” a bridge will lead us to the
finest attainable comprehension if we cultivate spiritual science to
the degree that we have the mentality of the shepherds rather than
that of the innkeepers. The contrast between materialism and
spiritualism is wonderfully described in the characters of the
innkeepers and the shepherds. In fact, the great problem of our time
is whether we wish to be innkeepers or shepherds. Many of
today's events may be traced to the fact that people prefer to
be innkeepers. The innkeeper nature is widespread in the world today;
we must again work to become the shepherds. Naturally, there are many
disbelievers, even among the shepherds. When one of the shepherds
says, “I think I see a light yonder” (which means,
“I perceive something of a spiritual nature.), there will
always be another shepherd who will be slow to agree, saying it is
just a fantasy.
There is one detail,
however, that must not be ignored. Of course, we must be able to
distinguish between the nature of an innkeeper and a shepherd; after
all, don't innkeepers surround us on all sides? Wherever we go,
they surround us, yet we convince ourselves that we are shepherds.
This is natural, but we must not ignore this: We must investigate, at
least in a small way, the innkeeper's nature within ourselves,
and not view ourselves too certainly as the shepherds. We must
occasionally ask ourselves, “Are we already able to see the
approaching light, which will proclaim what must come through the new
spiritual science?” We should cultivate inwardly everything
that can keep alive the inner feeling for celebrating Christmas in
our hearts through this new spiritual direction; this feeling will
help us seek the light in the midst of darkness. We must seek and
truly be willing to seek, however, in the right way. While we are
seeking, we must truly have the feeling that we cannot reach our goal
by trying only once; we must return again and again as the shepherds
did, for they promised that they could come again and would not be
satisfied to come only once.This is a fact; yet, people can become
shepherds if they can begin now to develop within themselves the side
of their nature that is not derived from earthly experience — if
they can find, instead, a connection with what they brought to earth
with them in their innermost being from the heavenly realms. People
today stand far too firmly within the “house” where they
can get what the innkeeper has to offer — what was brought from
the earthly realms, and this can be evaluated only through earthly
discrimination. On the other hand, those who still have a certain
relationship with everything spiritual that surges and pulses through
the world — those who have kept their shepherd nature — will
be able to find the paths; they are able to discover that, in
reality, ordinary knowledge finds only the outer appearance. People
will gradually begin to understand Christmas when they learn to
distinguish the innkeeper's nature from that of the shepherd,
and when they come to realize how predominant the innkeeper's
nature is today.
There is still much to
be learned through the simple Christmas play, and because of this it
seems to me a good idea to cultivate among us and to experience the
Christmas mystery in this simplest of all forms. There are many and
diverse hard battles ahead, my dear friends. They must be faced in
the near future by just this sort of spiritual scientific work. To
find the path, we must truly learn to be shepherds through spiritual
understanding of the Christmas mystery — possessing all the
humility of the shepherds, but at the same time, all the wisdom in
seeking that belongs to the shepherds who are united with the
universe. Let us engrave this in our hearts and souls at this
Christmastime, so that we may continue to become seeking shepherds,
and so that we may eventually learn to find what is holy within the
human soul, just as it was found in the ordinary, everyday atmosphere
of the simple folk. I have explained how this most sacred form of
Christmas play arose, little by little, out of a carnival holiday
mood, not from any sort of holy recreation. If we look for the
spiritual in connection with what the Christmas plays show us, we
find it in the right way as shepherds, not as innkeepers who have
already lost their connection with the Christmas child, just as the
play shows us symbolically. This is sorely needed in our age, when
materialism has conquered such broad and far-reaching areas of life,
both outer and within the human life of feeling. There, a spiritual
worldview finds it difficult even to rediscover the right
words — in contrast to the misused words that people use to
express themselves — so that it may say what the right words
mean.
Notes:
Note 1: From
Die geistige Vereinigung der Menschheit durch den
Christus-Impuls,
13 lectures in Dornach, 1915–1916 (GA 165).
This translation was generously published in Anthroposophic News
Sheet, General Anthroposophical Society, Dornach, Feb. 1936 (kindly
supplied by Rudolf Steiner Library, Ghent, NY). This edited version
copyright © 2004 SteinerBooks.
Note 2: The
two books of Jeû are contained in the Bruce Codex. The
first is considered speculative and cosmological, the second
practical and related to overcoming the hostile world powers and
securing salvation by practicing certain rites. The latter book is
called “The Book of the Great Logos according to the
mystery.” See G.R.S. Mead's introduction to
Pistis Sophia
(Spiritual Science Library, 1984, p. xxxv). The Bruce Codex
was translated into German by C. Schmidt in 1892 and is probably
the source quoted by Rudolf Steiner.
Note 3: This
reference is to a course of lectures by Rudolf Steiner in
Oslo, Norway, June 2–12, 1912,
Man in the Light of Occultism, Theosophy, and Philosophy,
Rudolf Steiner Press, 1964 (GA 137).
Note 4: Steiner
refers to his 11 lectures in Karlsruhe, October 4–14, 1911 (GA 131),
From Jesus to Christ,
Rudolf Steiner Press, London, 1973.A
Note 5: See
The Spiritual Guidance of the Individual and Humanity: Some
Results of Spiritual-Scientific Research into Human History and
Development, written in 1911 from 3 lectures, Copenhagen, June 1911
(GA 15), Anthroposophic Press, Hudson, NY, 1991.
Note 6: For
more about Steiner's views on the two Jesus children,
see his course of 10 lectures in Basel, September 1909 (GA 114):
According to Luke: The Gospel of Compassion and Love Revealed,
Anthroposophic Press, Great Barrington, MA, 2001.
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