IV
The Evolution of Christianity from the
Mysteries of Prechristian Times,
-or-
Contrasting Principles of Ancient and Modern Initiation
Dornach 27th December, 1918
We tried two days ago to
point to the impulses from which Christianity developed. We could see
how the real Ego of Christianity, the essence of Christianity, embodied
itself, as it were (one cannot say that, of course, except by way of
comparison) — embodied itself in three elements: the ancient Hebrew
soul, the Greek spirit, and the Roman body. In order to be able to apply
these thoughts to the immediate present, today we will carry them a
little further, and try to gain a few more glimpses of this inner being
of Christianity.
If we wish to trace the
development of Christianity, we must show to what extent it has evolved
from the Mysteries of pre-Christian times. (You will have found this
already in my book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact.)
Today it is not easy to speak of the general nature of the Mysteries,
because in the course of human evolution, happening as it did in
conformity to cosmic law, the epoch arrived — in a sense we are
still in it — in which the Mysteries declined. They could no longer
play the role they had played at the time when Christianity was evolving
out of them — as also out of other things. There is good reason
for the decadence of the Mysteries in our time; we will be able to go
into this in our discussion today and the following days. We will also
be able to see in what way the Mysteries are to be established anew.
I shall speak first, then,
of pre-Christian times, let us say to begin with, of pre-Christian Greek
and pre-Christian Egypto-Chaldean epochs. What impelled people to seek
out the Mysteries in those ancient times was this: their world conception
forced them to believe that the world they saw spread out around them
was not in itself the true world, but that they must find the means
of penetrating to the true world. They had a strong sense for a certain
fact when they faced any riddles of knowledge: they knew that however
one tries to discover the true nature of the world by external means,
it is impossible to do so. For one to realize the full importance of
this knowledge that people possessed in ancient times, one must remember
that we are speaking of an era in which most human beings still had
a completely objective view of elementary spiritual facts. Conditions
then were entirely different from those of today: people in those days
not only received the impressions of their outer senses; they also still
perceived spiritual realities within the phenomena of nature. They perceived
activities that were by no means limited to what we today call processes
of nature. Nevertheless, although they spoke generally of the manifestation
of elemental spirits in nature, they had a deep knowledge that these
observations of the external world, however clairvoyant, did not lead
to the true being of the world, that this true being of the world must
be sought by special paths. These special paths were beautifully summed
up in the Greek world conception in the words, “Know thou thyself.”
If we look for the real
meaning of the words “Know thou thyself”, we will find something
like the following: their power comes from the insight that to whatever
extent we may survey the external world or penetrate into it, we will
not only fail to find the being of this outer world but we will also
fail to find the being of man. Expressing it simply, in the sense of
our present-day world view, we could say: those ancient people believed
that a conception of nature could give no explanation of the being of
man. On the contrary, they were convinced that the being of man is connected
with the whole of nature spread out in the world; therefore, if a man
succeeded in penetrating into his own being, he would then be able through
knowledge of his own being to gain an understanding of the being of
the world as well. Therefore, “Know thou thyself in order to know
the world!”: that was the impulse, one might say; and that impulse
formed the basis of — well, let us say, of the Egypto-Chaldean
initiation. All initiation proceeds by stages; we have become accustomed
to call them degrees. Now, we may characterize the first stage, the
first degree, of the Egypto-Chaldean initiation in this way: the neophyte
must first pass through the “gate of man.” That means, the
human being himself was to be the gate of knowledge. First the human
being must be understood, because if we learn to know the being of man
through man himself, then we can penetrate into the being of the world
indirectly through man. Hence, “Know thou thyself!” is synonymous
with entrance into the being of the world through the “gate of
man.”
It is not my intention to
speak in detail today about the stages of Egypto-Chaldean initiation;
I would like to point out what is essential for the understanding of
Christianity. Therefore, do not regard what I shall say as an exhaustive
presentation. I wish simply to mention single characteristics of those
stages, which could and did have a particular preparatory influence
upon the development of the being of Christianity.
What the neophyte at the
“gate of man” was to learn to know, therefore, was the being
of man himself. That was something he could not find in what the outer
world revealed to him, however far and carefully he sought. In the Mysteries
it was known that some of the secrets of existence had remained in human
nature and could be discovered by human means, secrets that could not
be found by searching the outer world. Those ancient people were convinced
of this. If one directs his attention to the outer world, he finds,
of course, first of all the earthly substances and forces surrounding
him. But these earthly substances and forces, so far as man understands
them, are only a kind of veil. Whatever natural science may now have
to say about external nature as it presents itself, is such that it
throws no light whatever upon it. In earlier times the human being could
look up from external nature that he saw around him on earth to the
world of the stars; and in those ancient times he did that much more
intensively than he does today. There he saw many things, and he well
knew in those times that man is related to them just as he is related
to the plant, animal, and mineral kingdoms on earth. This is a knowledge
that has disappeared from the outer world today. Ancient man knew that
just as he is born out of the kingdoms of nature on earth, something
in him is also born out of the extra-tellurian, extra-earthly cosmos.
Indeed, it was this connection of the human being to the cosmos beyond
the earth that became known to him when he passed through the “gate
of man.” He bore within him, one might say, remnants of the relationship
that he had discarded in his transition from Moon-nature to Earth-nature.
He bore within him the remnants of his relationship to the cosmos beyond
the earth. So he was led to the “gate of man,” where he
was to become acquainted with man himself. He came to know in himself
what externally he could only gaze at, especially in the world of the
stars.
In himself he learned that
as a true human being not only is he organized in an earthly body gathered
from the kingdoms of earthly nature, but also something coming from
beyond the earth, coming from the whole world of the stars, has flowed
into his entire human entity. A man discovered the nature of the starry
sky, one might say, through knowledge of himself. He came to know how
he had descended step by step, descended from heaven to heaven, so to
say, before he reached the earth and incarnated in an earthly body.
And through the “gate of man” he was to ascend these steps
again — eight of them were usually specified. During his initiation
he was to set out on the return, through the stages by which he had
descended to his birth in a physical body. Such insight could not be
gained without man's whole nature being profoundly affected. (I
am speaking now always of the pre-Christian Mystery knowledge.) The
man of today does not even like to form an idea of the preparation that
the neophyte had to go through in those times, because these ideas irritate
him. (I am choosing my words so as to express the facts as exactly as
possible.) A modern person would like to undergo initiation, if possible,
as something to be done casually somewhere along his life-path, something
to be done incidentally. He would like to inquire — as people
say today — into what leads to knowledge; but in any case, he
would not like to experience what the people of old seeking initiation
had to experience. To be deeply affected in his whole being by the preparation
for knowledge, to become a different man — that he would not like.
Those ancient people had to decide to become different human beings.
The descriptions you very often find of the ancient Mysteries give you
only a dim picture; they create the impression that the ancient initiations
were conferred upon individuals just as casually as are, let us say,
the so-called initiations of modern Freemasonry. But that was not the
case. Where ancient initiations are imitated today, we have to do merely
with all sorts of counterfeits of what was really lived through in those
ancient times — imitations that can be performed now as superficially
as the modern person may wish. But the essential preparation for the
man of old was this: he had to go through an inner soul-condition that,
if characterized by one word, must be called fear. He had to experience
to a most intense degree the fear that is always felt by someone who
is brought face to face with something wholly unknown to him. In the
ancient initiations that was the essential condition: that an individual
should have the most intense feeling of facing something that would
not be met with anywhere in external life.
Given all the soul-forces
the man of today expends upon his external life, this soul-condition
would today still never be reached. With the soul-forces he likes to
use he can eat and drink, he can conform to the social customs of the
various classes of society recognized today, he can carry on a business,
play the bureaucrat, even become a professor or a scientist —
all that: but with these capacities actually he can know nothing whatever
that is real. The condition of soul in which an individual sought enlightenment
in those ancient times — remember that I am speaking now steadily
about that ancient time — the condition of soul was essentially
different.
It could have nothing in
common with the soul-forces that are serviceable for external life;
it had to be derived from entirely different regions of the human being.
These regions are always present in man, but he has a terrible fear
of using them in any way. In the neophyte they were brought into activity
in a direct and purposeful way. They are that very part of a human being
that is avoided by modern man — by the ordinary, secular man of
ancient times too — in which modern man does not want to become
involved, and concerning which he likes to have illusions or to be indifferent.
One must understand the inner significance of what can be described
outwardly as the cause of a series of fear-conditions that had to be
undergone. Only what lies in the realm of the soul that man fears in
his ordinary external life: only this could be used to attain the desired
knowledge. This condition of soul was really experienced in those times,
and bravely gone through — a condition in which all the individual
felt was fear: fear of something unknown. This fear was to lead him
to knowledge. Only through this soul- condition was he then brought
face to face with what I have just characterized as the descent of the
human being through the regions of heaven, that is, of the spiritual
world, to which he was led up again through the eight stages. Naturally,
these are only imitated today, as they must be because of the customs
of our time; but in those days a man was actually brought to this experience.
Especially important for
us is what resulted for the individual who was brought to this “gate
of man.” When he had grasped the full meaning of being placed
there, he no longer considered himself the animal-on-two-legs—pardon
the expression—that is, a synthesis of the rest of the kingdoms
of nature here on earth. He began to feel himself as belonging to the
heavens one can see and also to those one cannot see. He began to consider
himself a citizen of the whole world, to feel himself really as microcosm,
not merely a little earth, but a little world. He felt his connection
with the planets and fixed stars, that he had been born out of the universe.
He felt that his being did not end with his fingertips, the tips of
his ears, the tips of his toes, but that it extended beyond his body
taken from the earth, that his being extended through endless spaces
and on through these endless spaces into the realms of spirit. That
was the result.
Do not try to form too abstract
a concept of this result! To say that man is a microcosm, a little world,
and then to have nothing but the abstract idea is not worth much; it
is only a delusion, a deception. The matter of importance in those ancient
Mysteries was the direct experience. The neophyte really experienced
at the “gate of man” his relationship to Mercury, Mars,
the Sun, Jupiter, the Moon. He really experienced the connection between
his own existence and those hieroglyphs standing in cosmic space through
which the sun takes its course (“apparently”—as we
say today), the pictures of the zodiac. Only this concrete knowledge
based on his immediate experience determined what I am now pointing
to as result. When these things are changed today into abstract concepts,
the result is not the same. When ancient experiences are converted today
into such concepts as: this star has this influence, that star has that
influence, and so on, they are nothing but abstract ideas. In those
ancient times the thing that mattered was the immediate experience,
the actual ascent through the various stages by which a man had descended
to birth. Only when the neophyte had this living consciousness,
only when he experienced that he was a microcosm, was he considered
ready to ascend to a second stage, a second degree, which at that time
was the real stage of self-knowledge. Then he could experience what
he himself was.
Thus what I have characterized
as Being, as also the Being of the World, was to be found by a person
of that time only in himself; if he wished to find his way into the
universe, he had to go through the “gate of man.” In the
second stage, everything that had been learnt in the first as experienced
knowledge began to take on motion. It is difficult today to give any
idea of this coming-into-motion of one's experiences. In this
second stage the neophyte not only knew that he belongs to the macrocosm,
but he was woven into the whole movement of the macrocosm. He went with
the sun through the zodiac, as it were, and from this journey through
the whole zodiac he came to know the full effect of any outer impression
upon man himself. When you confront the external world with only the
ordinary means of knowledge, you perceive merely the beginning of a
very detailed process. You see a color; you form an image of it; perhaps
you retain this image in your memory — and it goes no further.
These are three steps. If we were to consider this complete, it would
be precisely as if we considered the course of the day, which is twelve
hours of sunlight, as consisting only of three hours. For the outer
impressions a person receives and follows up, at most, as far as the
memory-image, continue within him by a further process beyond the memory-image
through nine more steps. The man then becomes a mobile being, inwardly
permeated, as it were, by a living, turning wheel, just as the sun describes
its heavenly circle (“apparently,” according to our present-day
concepts). In this way the neophyte came to know himself, and thereby
to know also the mysteries of the great world. As he learned in the
first stage how he stands within the world, so he learned in the second
stage how he moves within the world.
Without this knowledge as
life-knowledge, no neophyte in ancient times could reach what he then
had to experience at the third stage of initiation. We live now in an
epoch in which it is natural for people to disavow completely everything
three-membered — speaking in the sense of the Mysteries —
to erase utterly from human consciousness everything of a three-membered
nature. Whether they admit it or not, the people of our time really
presuppose that the entire universe is enclosed in space and time. You
will find that even very thoughtful people hold this opinion. You need
only recall, for example, how the idea of human immortality was conceived
in that part of the nineteenth century when materialism, theoretical
materialism, had reached its height. Very clever people in the middle
and the second half of the nineteenth century were insisting that if
men's souls were to separate from them at death, there would finally
be no room; the world would be so filled with souls that there would
be no space for them. Very clever people said this, because they assumed
that after death a man's soul would have to be taken care of in
some way that could only be thought of with space concepts. Or take
another example: There was — and it is said to exist still —
a Theosophical Society in which all sorts of things were taught about
the higher members of man's nature. I do not say that the enlightened
leaders fell into this error; but a large proportion of the members
imagined the astral body as quite spatial — of course, very tenuous,
like a cloud, but nevertheless like a spatial cloud, and they indulged
in speculation as to the whereabouts of this cloud in space when someone
goes to sleep and the cloud goes out of him spatially. It was difficult
to suggest to many of these members that such spatial concepts are unsuitable
for spiritual ideas.
It is exceedingly difficult
for anyone in our time to imagine that at a certain point on the path
of knowledge one does not merely enter into a different dimension of
space and time from that of everyday consciousness, but one actually
goes out of space and time. The truly supersensible does not really
begin until one has abandoned not only sense impressions and their time
processes, but space and time themselves. One enters into conditions
of existence entirely different from those that have to do with space
and time. If you would apply this to yourselves, you might find it difficult
to answer the question: What must I do in order to leave space and time
with my thinking? Yet that was the real achievement resulting from the
completion of the first two stages of the Mysteries. If a clear consciousness
of the secrets of the third stage had still existed in this age of materialism,
nothing so grotesque could have developed as the theory of spiritism.
(I speak now of the basic theory, not of external experimentation.)
Anyone who tries to find spirits, wanting to bring them into space as
rarefied bodies, does not realize that the procedure is utterly devoid
of spirit; that is, he is seeking a world that does not contain spirits
but contains something else. Had spiritism had any idea that to find
spirits it is necessary to go out of space and time, such grotesque
concepts could never have arisen as that of the need for spatial arrangements,
so that the spirits can announce themselves by external acts within
space and time!
Well, briefly, this is what
had to be achieved in the first two stages: the ability to get out of
space and time. The preparation for it was the striding through the
“gate of man,” and then through the second stage.
The third stage was designated
by an expression which perhaps we can translate into these words: the
neophyte passed through the “gate of death.” That means,
he knew that now he was really outside space — in which human
life is spent between birth and death, and outside time — in which
this human life takes its course. He knew how to move beyond space and
time, in duration. He came to know something that extends into the sense
world, as I have often emphasized, but that cannot be comprehended in
the sense world through what it brings, because what it brings, what
it contains is spiritual. He learnt about death and all that is connected
with it. That was the essential content of this third stage. However
we may regard the Mystery rites, varying as they did among the different
peoples, however they may be represented, their fundamental concern
was with death. Everywhere the starting-point for the third stage had
to be the possibility of a man experiencing within the life of the body
all that normally he can only experience when death takes him out of
the body. (I have to use a paradoxical expression for lack of something
better.) This was connected with the possibility of considering the
human being as he normally exists between birth and death as something
different, something apart from the being whom the neophyte had now
become in the third stage. The neophyte had now learnt in connection
with the phrase “to be outside the body” to conceive of
the “outside” not as spatial, but as super-spatial. He had
learnt to connect with these words a concept that could be experienced.
It was at this point also that the neophyte laid aside his connection
to the ordinary secular religion of his people. Most of all, he laid
aside at the “gate of death” the idea that he stood here
upon earth while his God or his Gods were somewhere outside him. He
knew himself at this moment to be one with his God; he no longer differentiated
himself from his God, but knew that he was completely united with Him.
It was really the experiencing of immortality that this third stage
gave to man, in the experience that a man could cast off his mortal
part, could separate himself from his mortal part.
But, dear friends, in contemplating
the result, let us not forget the entire path, which consisted in the
human being coming to know himself. That is the central feature of this
pre-Christian initiation, that the human being turned inward in order
to find in himself something that he could then take with him into the
outer world. This appeared to him then in the right light only after
he had separated himself from himself, so that he felt united with the
being of the outer world. He turned inward in order to go out of himself.
He turned inward to find what he could only find within himself: the
being of the world. He could not first have found it outside; now he
could really experience it. He went through the “gate of man,”
the “gate of self-knowledge,” and the “gate of death”
in order to enter into the world which was, of course, outside him,
into the ordinary world of nature—it is also, of course, outside
us—but he knew with certainty that he could only find what he
sought in it by turning inward.
After, then, he had passed
through the extraordinarily difficult third stage, he was at once ready
for the fourth. And one may say that simply through having practiced
living at the third stage for a certain time, he was prepared for the
fourth in a way that would hardly apply to a man of the present day.
For the man of today, simply because of the epoch of time, does not
become fully mature in the third stage. He does not easily get away
from conceptions of space and time except through certain ideas of force
— and these too have to be sought by different methods from those
of ancient times. (I will speak about this in coming lectures.) By what
the neophyte had now carried into the world from out of himself, he
was raised to the consciousness of the fourth stage: he became what
was expressed, when carried over and translated into later languages,
by the word Christophorus, or Christ-bearer. That was fundamentally
the goal of this Mvstery-initiation: to make the human being a Christ-bearer.
Naturally, only a few selected individuals became Christ-bearers. Moreover,
they could only become such by first seeking in themselves what was
not to be found in the outer world, by then taking back into the outer
world what they had found within, and then by uniting themselves with
their God. This is the way they became Christ-bearers. They knew that
they had united themselves in the universe with what is called in the
Gospel of Saint John the Logos, or the Word (this is not said
in an historical sense, but in anticipation); they had united themselves
with That out of which all things were made, and without which not anything
was made that was made. Thus in those ancient times the Christ Mystery
was separated from man, as it were, by an abyss; and man crossed the
abyss by becoming able, through self-knowledge, to go out of himself
and to unite himself with his God — to become a bearer of his
God.
Let us suppose now
hypothetically, in order to help us forward, that the Mystery of Golgotha
had not taken place on earth, that the earth evolution had continued to the
present time without the Event of Golgotha ever having taken place. Only by
means of such contra-hypotheses is it possible to grasp the significance
of such an event as the Mystery of Golgotha. Therefore, let us suppose
that this Event had not occurred up to our present day. What would have
taken the place of that content which individuals found within themselves
as a result of the ancient Mysteries? The man of today would be able
to understand the Greek apollonian maxim, “Know thou thyself!”
he could intend to live up to it. He could try — because, after
all, the traditions have been preserved — to go through the same
method of initiation as, let us say, the Egypto-Chaldean initiation
of a king: that is, he could try to rise through the four stages, just
as they were gone through in those pre-Christian times, to become a
Christophorus. But in that case the human being would now have a very
definite experience. If he followed the maxim, Know thou thyself!”
and tried to turn inward, even to pass through the conditions of fear
that were suffered in that ancient time; if then he went through the
experience of transformation, the setting into motion of what had first
been known in a state of rest: he would now have the experience of finding
nothing in himself, of now not finding the being of Man in himself. That
is the essential fact. Certainly the maxim “Know thou thyself!”
is valid for a man of our time, but self-knowledge no longer leads him to
knowledge of the world. What a human being with the ancient
soul-constitution still had within himself, connecting him with the Being
of the world; what he could not find in the outer world but had to seek as
self-knowledge, in order then to have it as knowledge of the world —
that inner core of the human being, which he could then take back with him
into the outer world in order to become a Christ-bearer: this the human
being does not find in himself today. It is no longer there. It is
important to keep this in mind. People with the foolish notions encouraged
by the so-called science of our time have the idea that man is Man. A
contemporary Englishman or Frenchman or German is Man just as the ancient
Egyptian was. But in the light of real knowledge, that is nonsense,
absolute nonsense. For when the ancient Egyptian turned inward in obedience
to the rules of initiation, he found something there that a contemporary
man cannot find — because it has vanished. What could still be
found in the soul-constitution of pre-Christian times, and even- more
or less — in the Greek soul of the Christian era, has fallen away
from man and been lost. It has vanished from the being of Man. The human
organism is a different one today from that of ancient times.
Using other words, we might
say: When the human being turned inward in ancient times, he found his
ego; even though dimly sensed and not in fully conscious concepts,
still he found his ego. That does not contradict the statement that,
in a certain sense, the ego was first born with Christianity. Therefore
I say: Even though obscurely and not in fully conscious concepts, man
nevertheless found his ego. As active consciousness it was indeed first
born through Christianity. Nevertheless, the man of old did find his
ego. For something of this ego, of the real, true ego, remained in him
after he was born. You will ask: Then does the man of today not also
find his ego? No, my dear friends, he does not find it. For when we
are born the true ego comes to a stop. What we experience of
our ego is only a reflection. It is only something that reflects our
pre-natal ego in us. We actually experience only a reflection of our
real ego; only quite indirectly do we experience something of the real
ego. What the psychologists, the soul-experts, speak of as ego is only
a reflection that is related to the real ego as the image you see of
yourself in the mirror is related to you. The real ego, which could
be found in the time of atavistic clairvoyance, and even down into the
early Christian era, is not to be found today by looking into man's
own being — insofar as this being is united with the body. Only
indirectly does the human being experience something of his ego: namely,
when he comes into relation with other people and his karma comes into
play.
When we meet another person
and something connected with our karma takes place between us, then
some impulse of our true ego enters into us. But what in us we call
our ego, what we designate by that word, is only a reflection. And through
the very fact of experiencing this ego merely as a reflection in this
fifth post-Atlantean epoch, we are being made ready to experience the
ego in a new form in the sixth epoch. It is characteristic of this age
of the consciousness soul that the human being has his ego only as
reflection, so that he may enter the coming age of the Spirit-Self and be
able to experience the ego in a new form, a different form. But he will
experience it in a manner that now in our time would be unpleasant. Today
he would call it anything but “ego,” what is going to appear
to him as his ego in the coming sixth post-Atlantean epoch! People in the
future will seldom have those mystical inclinations that are still
experienced by some individuals today, to commune with themselves in order
to find their true ego — which they even call the Divine Ego. They
will have to accustom themselves to seeing their ego only in the outer
world. The strange situation will come about that every person we meet who
has some connection with us will have more to do with our ego than anything
enclosed in our own skin will have to do with it. We are heading toward
a future age in which a person will say to himself: My self is out there
in all those whom I meet; it is least of all within me. While I live
as a physical human being between birth and death, I receive my self
from all sorts of things, but not from what is enclosed in my skin.
This seeming paradox is already being indirectly prepared by the fact
that people begin to feel how little they themselves really are in the
reflection which they call their ego. I remarked recently that anyone
can discover the truth about himself by reviewing his own biography
— factually — and asking himself what he owes since birth
to this person or that. In this way he will gradually resolve himself
into influences coming from others; and he will find extraordinarily
little in what he usually considers his real ego (but which is really
only its reflection, as has been said).
Speaking somewhat grotesquely,
we may say: At the time that the Mystery of Golgotha took place, the
human being was hollowed out; he became hollow. And it is important
that we learn to recognize the Mystery of Golgotha as an Impulse that
has a reciprocal relation to this hollowed-out condition of man. If
we speak truly, we must make it clear that the hollow space in man,
which indeed could be found still earlier — let us say, in the
Egypto-Chaldean royal Mysteries — had to be filled up in some
way. In that ancient time it had been partly filled by the real ego;
but this now comes to a stop at birth — or at latest, in early
childhood; there is some evidence of its presence in the first years
of childhood. This hollow space has been filled by the Christ Impulse.
There you have the true process.
Let us say, here on the
left are human beings before the Mystery of Golgotha; in the middle,
the Mystery of Golgotha; on the right, human beings after that Event.
Before the Mystery of Golgotha
a human being had something in him that was found through initiation,
as has been said, (red) Since that time it is no longer there; he is
hollowed out, as it were, (blue) The Christ Impulse descends (lilac)
and fills the empty space. The Christ Impulse is not to be conceived
of, therefore, as a mere doctrine, a theory, but must be comprehended
in accordance with facts. Only one who really understands the possibility
of this descent in the sense of ancient Mystery initiation, will grasp
the inner significance of the Mystery of Golgotha. A man cannot today
become a Christ-bearer forthwith, as he could in the ancient Egyptian
royal initiation; but in any event he becomes a Christ-bearer in that
the Christ descends into the hollow space within him.
Therefore, the fact that
the principles of the ancient Mysteries lost their significance reveals
why the Christ Mystery is of such profound importance. You will find
that I have spoken of this in my book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact.
I said that what formerly was experienced in the depths of
the Mysteries, what made a man a Christophorus, has been brought out
on the great stage of world history and has been accomplished as external
fact. That is the truth. You will see from this also that since those
ancient times the principle of initiation itself has had to undergo
a transformation; for what the ancient Mysteries upheld as the thing
to be sought in man cannot be found there today.
People of our time have
no reason to be proud that our natural science views the modern Englishman,
Frenchman, German precisely as it would view the ancient Egyptian if
it could. It fails completely to consider what is the essential being
of man. Even the exterior human form has changed somewhat since those
ancient times. But the essential change has to be understood as we have
described it today. You can see from my description the necessity for
change in the principle of initiation. What would a man strive toward
today if he wished to obey the injunction “Know thou thyself!”
in the ancient sense? What would he attain if he knew all the ceremonies
and processes of initiation of the ancient Egyptians and applied them
now to himself? He would no longer find what was found in the ancient
Mysteries. What a neophyte in those days became at the fourth stage,
present-day man would accomplish unconsciously, but would not be able
to understand it. Even were he to go through all the initiation ceremonies,
were he to tread all the paths that at that time led to Christophorus,
he could not now approach the Christ in that way with any understanding.
The man of old, when he was initiated, really became a Christophorus.
But in the course of earth evolution man lost the possibility of finding
within himself that Being Who became the Light-of-the-World Being. When
a man of our time seeks in the same way, he finds within himself a hollow
space.
However, this is not without
significance in the world- process. When man loses something, he is
changed because of it. Now we go through the world as human beings having
that emptiness in us, but that in turn gives us special faculties. Certain
ancient faculties have been lost, but through their loss new ones have
been gained that now can be developed as the ancient faculties were
developed for the ancient need. In other words, the path that was followed
from the “gate of man” to the “gate of death”
must be travelled differently today. This is connected with what I said
previously: that the Spirits of Personality (the Archai) have taken
on a new character, and the new initiation holds a particular relation
to this new character.
In the first place, initiation
came to a kind of pause in the evolution of humanity. In the nineteenth
century especially, human beings were far removed from it. Only at the
end of the century was it again possible to approach a real, living
initiation. This real, living initiation is now being prepared, but
its procedure will be entirely different from that of earlier times.
I have described this earlier initiation today from a certain point of
view, in order to prepare you for a deeper understanding of Christianity.
What was quite impossible in earlier times — namely, to find any
reality in the external world — is now a possibility through the very
circumstance of our having become inwardly hollow. And this possibility
will increase. It already exists to a certain extent, and may now be
attained by the paths described in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
What is possible today is this: to acquire in a certain way a deeper
view of the outer world, using the same soul-faculties (if we use them
properly) with which we now view it. Natural science does not do this;
its aim is limited to finding laws, the so-called natural laws, which
are nothing but abstractions. If you acquaint yourselves a little with
current literature, which cloaks the natural-scientific concepts in
a sort of little philosopher's mantle — I might also say, puts
a philosopher's little hat on them — if you make yourselves
acquainted with this literature, you will see that the people who talk
about these things are quite unable to relate their natural laws to
reality. They reach natural laws, but these remain abstract concepts,
abstract ideas. Such an individual as Goethe tried to push beyond natural
laws. And what is significant in Goethe and Goetheanism is something
little understood: namely, that Goethe tried to penetrate beyond the
laws of nature to the forms of nature, to nature formation. Hence, he
originated a morphology on a higher level, a spiritual morphology. He
tried to capture not what the outer senses yield, but the processes
of formation: what is not to be discovered by the senses, but is hidden
in the forms. Thus, we can really speak today of something that corresponds
to the “gate of man. We can speak of the “gate of nature-forms.”
I might say that there were already signs of this dawning, though still
dim, when out of the chaotic mysticism of the Middle Ages such a man
as Jacob Boehme
[
Note 12 ]
spoke of “the seven forms of nature. This was in his own language,
and neither very clear nor very comprehensive. Nevertheless, these forms
are what modern initiation must come to more and more, forms that reveal
themselves within the external physical forms but extending out beyond
space and time.
I have often referred to
that famous conversation between Goethe and Schiller as they came from
a lecture by the scientist Batsch. Schiller said to Goethe that Batsch
certainly had a very splintered way of observing the world. In their
day it was still far from being as splintered as that of present-day
physical scientists; but nevertheless Schiller felt that it was very
prosaic. Goethe remarked that of course a different method of observation
could be employed, and in a few characteristic strokes he sketched his
idea of the primordial plant and the metamorphosis of plants. Schiller
could not grasp that and said: “That is not a matter of experience”
(he meant, that is something not existing in the external world), “it
is an idea.” Schiller stayed with the abstraction. Whereupon Goethe
replied: “If it is an idea, I am satisfied; for then I see my
ideas with my eyes.” He meant that what he had described was not
just an idea that he only created inwardly, but that it really existed
for him even though it could not be seen with one's eyes as one sees
colors. That is real forming, supersensible forming (Gestaltung)
in the senses. To be sure, Goethe did not develop it very far. I have
told you in some of our lectures that a straight continuation of this
metamorphosis of the plant and animal world — which Goethe developed
only in an elementary way—brings us to a true perception of repeated
earth- lives. Goethe saw the colored petal as a transformed leaf, the
skull bones as transformed dorsal vertebrae. That was a beginning. If
someone continues with the same mode of observation, he reaches only
forms, it is true, but it is the “gate of nature-forms”
that he reaches; it is imaginative insight into those forms. And then
he really begins to observe, not merely the skull bones that are transformed
vertebrae, but the whole human cranium. He discovers that the human
head is the whole human form metamorphosed from the previous incarnation,
except only the former head. Of course the physical matter passes over
into the earth; but the body that you carry around with you today, except
just your head, the supersensible part of that form persists and becomes
your head in the next incarnation. There you have metamorphosis at its
highest level of development.
But you must not be deceived
by appearances in precisely the modern fashion. If you deal with that
kind of appearances, you will be like people who point to the passage
in Shakespeare where Hamlet says in his despair, that the earthly dust
of Julius Caesar must still exist; that perhaps the remains, the atoms,
that once constituted the Roman emperor are now in some dog.
My dear friends, people
who think in such a manner simply do not investigate the course taken
by the physical organism, whether it is buried in the earth or burnt.
The metamorphosis that actually takes place is the following: only the
head disappears, vanishes from the earth, for it goes out into the universe;
but your present body in this incarnation, except the head, is transformed,
and you will find it as your head in your next incarnation. You cannot
escape it. You need not consider the material substance at all. Even
now you do not have the same matter in your body that you had seven
years ago. You need only think of the transformation of the form. It
is just as much a first stage as the “gate of man” was in
the ancient sense: it is the “gate of forms.” And when a
man has fully comprehended this “gate of forms,” he can
then enter into the “gate of life,” where he has no longer
to do with forms, but with stages of life, elements of life. This corresponds
to what I described earlier as the second stage in the ancient Egyptian
royal initiation. The third stage is equivalent to entrance into the
“gate of death”: it is initiation into different states
of consciousness. Between birth and death, of course, man knows only
one; but this is one out of seven, and one must know all the various
states of consciousness if one really wishes to understand the world.
Remember that you have an
account of these three successive conditions in my
Occult Science, an Outline,
where they refer to cosmic evolution. You have there
the seven different forms of consciousness, Saturn, Sun, Moon, Earth,
and so on. In each of these stages of consciousness, Saturn, Sun, etc.,
there are seven life-stages; and in each life-stage, seven stages of
form. What we describe as our epochs of culture—ancient Indian,
ancient Persian, Egypto-Chaldean, Greco-Latin, and our present epoch
— are also forms. In these we are at the “gate of forms,”
corresponding to the “gate of man”; out of the world of
forms we can shape conceptions about the successive cultural epochs.
There are seven of them in each life-stage; and when we speak of life-
stages, we mean the seven successive stages of which our present post-Atlantean
age is one. We are now in the fifth life-stage; the Atlantean was the
previous one, the Lemurian still earlier. The purpose of these life-stages
has been that man might attain the consciousness he has today. This
consciousness developed out of Old Moon consciousness; that,
out of Old Sun consciousness. Man's final, most perfect
consciousness, he will acquire during the Vulcan evolution.
Thus you see how man gains
a survey of the cosmos through the three successive Mystery stages.
Then from this knowledge of the cosmos he acquires knowledge of man.
Also from this knowledge of the cosmos he now has the possibility of
bringing understanding to the Mystery of Golgotha.
Toward this understanding,
today we have received, I might say, just a few incomplete ideas. But
at least we have been able to grasp why, for example, the Mystery of
Golgotha took place in the fourth culture-form (the Greco- Latin) of
the fifth (the post-Atlantean) life-stage, and why it occurred on earth.
If you read the Leipzig cycle
[
Note 13 ]
you will see how preparation was made on this earth for the Mystery
of Golgotha. But all that is needed to understand the Mystery of Golgotha
can be learnt from the principles of modern initiation. Thus, ancient
initiation proceeded essentially from knowledge of man to knowledge
of the world; modern initiation proceeds from knowledge of the world
to knowledge of man.
This has been said, however,
from the standpoint of initiation. You stand on one side, as it were,
and on the other side you see the reflection of it. To acquire this
knowledge of the world, you must start from a modern knowledge of man.
I spoke recently about that. And the way we speak of ancient times must
be entirely different from the way we speak of modern times. Ancient
times reached knowledge of the world through knowledge of man. Speaking
theoretically, we might say that what man went through as a life-process
was, when completed, knowledge of the world; and with knowledge of the
world in his consciousness, he could work back to man. If today you
pass through forms, life, and consciousness of this world, what you
really reach in this way is knowledge of man. (Look this up in my
Occult Science.)
Everything else in the knowledge of nature vanishes,
and man becomes comprehensible. In the same way, from having gained
knowledge of the world, man becomes comprehensible as a three-membered
being (as I have shown you) — nerve-sense being, rhythmic being,
and metabolic being. From man we can then pass again to knowledge of
the world.
These are not contradictions.
You will find such apparent contradictions at every step if you intend
to enter the world of truth! If you want dogmatism, you will not be
able to accept the contradictions, for they make you uncomfortable.
you want dogmatism, you can find it in one place or another, but it
will never give you an understanding of reality, only something to swear
by when you need it. If you want to understand reality, then you must
realize that it has to be presented from various sides. From the standpoint
of life, the man of old had to proceed from the world to man; modern
man must go from man to the world. From the standpoint of knowledge,
ancient man went from man to the world; modern man must go from the
world to man. That is a matter of necessity. It is also uncomfortable
for a man of modern times, but everyone must now make his way through
a state of instability, a state of uncertainty. Remember how in the
second stage of the Egyptian royal initiation a man came into a state
of mobility, of rotation. In our time, if a man really strives to reach
life through forms, he must be able to say to himself: Even if I hold
concepts ever so beautiful from this or that traditional religious confession,
they may be quite fine, but I still do not attain reality by means of
them unless I can also set the opposite concept before me.
I have called your attention
to the fact that the Mystery of Golgotha itself makes it necessary to
have the two opposite concepts, so that you may say to yourself: It
was truly an evil deed when men murdered the God Who was embodied in a
man; but in reality that very deed was the starting- point of Christianity.
For if the murder on Golgotha had not occurred, Christianity in its
reality would not exist. This paradox relating to a supersensible fact
may be an example of many paradoxes with which you must come to terms if
you really want to attain a comprehension of the supersensible world. For
it cannot be otherwise. Earlier, fear was required. Now, it is necessary
to cross the abyss that gives us the feeling of standing in the universe
without any center of gravity. But this must be gone through, so that
concepts may no longer be something to swear by, but may be regarded
as something that illuminates things from various sides — like
pictures taken of a tree from various sides. The dogmatist, the scientist,
the theologian believe that they can grasp the whole of reality by means
of dogmas of some sort. Someone who stands within reality knows that
any assertion coming from dogmas may be likened to a photograph taken
from one side, giving only one aspect of reality. He knows that he must
have at least the opposite aspect, so that by seeing the two together
he may approach the reality of the subject. More of this tomorrow.
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