I EASTER: THE FESTIVAL OF WARNING
The Event at Damascus and the new Knowledge of the Spirit
Ever since the early days of Christianity it has been the custom to
draw a distinction between the festivals of Christmas and of Easter in
that the Christmas festival has been made immovable, having been fixed
at a point of time a few days after the 21st of December, the winter
solstice, whereas the day of the Easter festival is determined by a
particular constellation of the stars, a constellation of the stars
which unites earth and man with the worlds beyond the earth. To-morrow
will be the first full moon of spring and upon this full moon will
fall the rays of the springtime sun, for since the 21st of March the
sun has been in the sign of spring. When, therefore, men on earth
celebrate a Sunday — a day, that is, which should remind them of
their connection with the sun-forces — when the Sunday comes that
is the first after the full moon of spring, then is the time to keep
the Easter festival. Easter is thus a movable festival. In order to
determine the time of the Easter festival, note must be taken each
year of the constellations in the heavens.
Principles such as these were laid down at a time when traditions
of wisdom were still current among mankind, traditions that originated
from ancient atavistic clairvoyant faculties and gave man a knowledge
far surpassing the knowledge that present-day science can offer. And
such traditions were a means for bringing to expression man's
connection with the worlds beyond the earth. They always point to
something of supreme importance for the evolution [of] mankind.
The rigid point of time fixed for the Christmas festival indicates
how closely that festival is bound up with the earthly, for its
purpose is to remind us of the birth of the Man into whom the Christ
Being afterwards entered. The Easter festival, on the other hand, is
intended to remind us of an event whose significance lies, not merely
within the course of earth-evolution, but within the whole world-order
into which man has been placed. Therefore the time of the Easter
festival must not be determined by ordinary earthly conditions; it is
a time that can be ascertained only when man turns his thoughts to the
worlds beyond the earth. And there is deeper meaning still in this
plan of a movable time for the Easter festival. It indicates how
through the Christ Impulse man is to be set free from the forces of
earth-evolution pure and simple. For through knowledge of that which
is beyond the earth, man is to become free of the evolution of the
earth, and this truth is indicated in the manner of dating the Easter
festival. It contains a call to man to lift himself up to the worlds
beyond the earth; it contains a promise to man that in the course of
world-history it shall be possible for him, through the working of the
Christ Impulse, to become free of earthly conditions.
To understand all that is implied in this manner of dating the
Easter festival, it will be helpful to turn our minds to early secrets
of the beginnings of Christianity, to some of those early mysteries
which during a certain period of earthly evolution have become more
and more veiled and hidden from the materialistic view of the world
which arose at the beginning of the Fifth Post-Atlantean epoch and
must now be vanquished and superseded. In order to see the whole
matter in a true light it will be necessary first of all to consider
the part played by the figure of St. Paul in the evolution of the
Christ Impulse within the whole history of mankind.
We should indeed remind ourselves again and again what a great
event in the evolution of Christianity was the appearance of the
figure of St. Paul. Paul had had abundant opportunity to inform
himself, by external observation, of the events in Palestine
that were associated with the personality of Jesus.
All that came to his notice in this way in the physical
world left Paul unconvinced; when these events in Palestine had come
to an end in the physical sense, Paul [was] still an antagonist of
Christianity. He became the Apostle of the Christians only after the
event at Damascus, after he had experienced the very Being of the
Christ in an extra-earthly, super-sensible manner. Thus Paul was a man
who could not be persuaded of the meaning of the Christ Impulse by
evidence of the physical senses, but who could be convinced only by a
super-sensible experience. And the super-sensible experience
that came to him cut deeply into his life — so deeply indeed,
that from that moment he became another man. Nay, more: he became an
Initiate.
Paul was well prepared for such an experience. He was thoroughly
acquainted with the secrets of the religion of the Jews; he was
familiar with their knowledge and their conception of the world. He
was thus well equipped to judge of the nature of the event that befell
him at Damascus and to have a right view and understanding of it. The
writings of Paul, as we know them, convey only a weak reflection of
all that he experienced inwardly. But even so, when he speaks of the
event of Damascus we can discern that he speaks as one who through
this event attained knowledge of cosmic happenings lying behind the
veil of the world of sense. From the very manner in which he speaks it
is plain that he is fully able to understand the difference between
the super-sensible world and the world of sense.
When, even externally, we compare the life of Paul with the earthly
experience of Christ Jesus, we discover a strange and astounding fact
which becomes intelligible to us, only when with the help of spiritual
science, we are able to survey the whole evolution of mankind in a
particular aspect. [I] have often drawn attention to the great difference
in the development of the human soul in the several epochs. I have
shown you how man has changed in the course of evolution through the
Indian, Persian, Egypto-Chaldean, Greco-Latin epochs, on to our own
time. When we look back into the ancient past we find that man
remained capable of organic physical development until an advanced
age, The parallelism between the development of the soul and the
development of the body continued until an advanced age of life; it is
a parallelism that we can recognise now only in the three stages
marked by the change of teeth, puberty and the beginning of the
twenties. As far as out-ward appearance goes, mankind has lost the
experience of such transitions in later life. In very ancient Indian
times, however, men experienced a parallelism between the development
of soul and of body up to the fiftieth year of life, in Persian and
Egyptian times up to the fortieth year, and in Greco-Latin times up to
the thirty-fifth year. In ordinary consciousness, we experience a like
parallelism only up to the twenty-seventh year and it is not easy to
detect even for so long as that. Now the Christ Impulse entered into
the evolution of mankind at a time when men — especially those of
the Greek and Latin races — experienced this parallelism as late
as into the thirtieth year. And Christ Jesus lived His days of
physical earthly life for just so long as the duration of the span of
life which ran in a parallelism between the physical organisation and
the organisation of soul and spirit. Then, in relation to earthly
life, He passed through the gate of death. What this passage through
the gate of death means can be understood only from the point of view
of spiritual science; it can be understood only when we are able to
look into super-sensible worlds. For the passage through the gate of
death is not an event that can be grasped by any thinking concerned
entirely with the world of sense.
As physical man, Paul was of about the same age as Christ Jesus
Himself. The time that Christ Jesus spent in His work on earth, Paul
spent as an anti-Christian. And the second half of his life was
determined entirely by what came to him from super-sensible
experiences. In this second half of his life he had super-sensible
experience of what men at that time could no longer receive in the
second half of life through sense-experience, because the parallelism between
soul-and-spirit development and physical development was not
experienced beyond the thirty-fifth year of life. And the Event of
Golgotha came before Paul in such a way that he received, by direct
illumination, the understanding once possessed by men in an atavistic
way through primeval wisdom, and which they can now again acquire
through spiritual science. This understanding came to Paul in order
that he might be the one to arouse in men a realisation of what had
happened for mankind through the working of the Christ Impulse.
For about the same length of time that Christ had walked the earth,
did Paul continue to live upon earth — that is, until about his
sixty-seventh or sixty-eighth year. This time was spent in carrying
the teaching of Christianity into earth-evolution. The parallelism
between the life of Christ Jesus and the life of Paul is a remarkable
one. The life of Christ Jesus was completely filled with the presence
and Being of the Christ. Paul had such a strong after-experience
(acquired through Initiation) of this event, that he was able to be
the one to bring to mankind true and fitting ideas about Christianity
— and to do so for a period of time corresponding very nearly to
that of the life of Christ Jesus on earth. There is a great deal to be
learned from a study of the connection between the life lived by
Christ Jesus for the sake of the earthly evolution of mankind, and the
teaching given by Paul concerning the Christ Being. To see this
connection aright would mean a very great deal for us; only it is
necessary to realise that the connection is a direct result of the
super-sensible experience undergone by Paul.
When modern theology goes so far as to explain the event at
Damascus as a kind of illusion, as a kind of hallucination, then it is
only a proof that in our day even theology has succumbed to
materialism. Even theology has no longer any knowledge of the nature
of the super-sensible world, and entirely fails to recognise man's need
to understand the super-sensible world before he can have any true
comprehension of Christianity.
It is good that we should confess to-day, in all sincerity, how
difficult it is to find our way into the ideas presented in the
Gospels and in the Epistles of Paul — ideas that are so totally
different from those to which we are accustomed. For the most part we
have ceased to concern ourselves at all with such ideas. But it is a
fact that a man who is completely given up to the habits and ways of
thought of the present day, is far from being able to form the right
ideas when he reads the words of Paul. Many present-day theologians
put a materialistic interpretation upon the event of Damascus, even
trying to disprove and deny the actual Resurrection of Christ Jesus
— while professing at the time to be true Christians. Such
persons themselves bear testimony that they have no intention of
applying knowledge of the super-sensible to the essence of Christianity
or to the event of the appearance of Christ Jesus in earthly
evolution. The very fact that the figure of Paul stands at the summit
of Christian tradition, the figure, that is, of one who acquired an
understanding of Christianity through super-sensible experience, is
like a challenge to man to possess himself of super-sensible knowledge.
It is like a declaration that Christianity cannot possibly be
comprehended without having recourse to knowledge that has its source
in the super-sensible. It is essential that we should see in Paul a man
who had been initiated into super-sensible, cosmic happenings; it is
essential to see in this light what he laboured so hard to bring to
mankind. Let us try in the language of the present day to place
before our minds one of the things that seemed to Paul, as an
Initiate, to be of peculiar significance.
Paul regarded it of supreme importance to make clear to men how
through the Christ Impulse an entirely new way of relating themselves
to cosmic evolution had come to them. He felt it essential to declare:
that that period of the evolution of the world which carried within it
the experiences of the heathen of older times, had run its course; it
was finished for man. New experiences were now here for the human
soul; they needed only to be perceived.
When Paul spoke in this way, he was pointing to the mighty Event
which made such a deep incision into the evolution of man on earth;
and indeed if we would understand history as it truly is, we must come
back again and again to this Event. If we look back into pre-Christian
times, and especially into those times which possess to a striking
degree the characteristic qualities of pre-Christian life, we can feel
how different was the whole outlook of men in those days. Not that a
complete change took place in a single moment; nevertheless the Event
of Golgotha did bring about an absolute separation of one phase in the
evolution of mankind from another. The Event of Golgotha came at the
end of a period of evolution during which men beheld, together with
the world of the senses, also the spiritual. Incredible as it may
appear to modern man it is a fact that in pre-Christian times men saw,
together with the sense-perceptible, a spiritual reality. They did not
see merely trees, or merely plants, but together with the trees, and
together with the plants they saw something spiritual. But as the time
of the Event of Golgotha drew near, the civilisation that bore within
it this power of vision was coming to an end. Something completely new
was now to enter into the evolution of mankind. As long as man beholds
the spiritual in the physical things all around him, he cannot have a
consciousness which allows the impulse of freedom to quicken within
it. The birth of the impulse of freedom is necessarily accompanied by
a loss of this vision; man has to find himself deserted by the divine
and spiritual when he looks out upon the external world. The impulse
of freedom inevitably implies that, if man would again have vision of
the spiritual, he must exert himself inwardly and draw it forth from
the depths of his own soul.
This is what Paul wanted to reveal to men. He told them how in
ancient times, when men were only the race of Adam, they had no need
to draw forth an active experience from the depths of their own being
before they could behold the divine and spiritual. The divine and
spiritual came to them in elemental form, with everything that lived
in the air and on earth. But mankind had gradually to lose this living
communion with the divine and spiritual in all the phenomena of the
world of sense. A time had to come when man must perforce lift himself
up to the divine and spiritual by an active strengthening of his own
inner life. He had to learn to understand the words: “My kingdom
is not of this world.” He was not to be allowed to go on
receiving a divine and spiritual reality that came forth to meet him
from all sense-phenomena. He had to find the way to a divine and
spiritual kingdom that could be reached only by inward struggle and
inward development.
People interpret Paul to-day in such a trivial manner! Again and
again they show an inclination to translate what he said into the
language of this materialistic age. So trivial is their interpretation
of him that one is liable to be dubbed fantastic when one puts forward
such a view as the following concerning the content of his message.
And yet it is absolutely true.
Paul saw what a great crisis it was for the world that the ancient
vision, which was at one and the same time a sense-vision and a
spiritual vision, was fading away and disappearing, and that another
vision of the spiritual was now to dawn for man in a new kingdom of
light,
(see Note 1)
a vision which he must acquire for himself by his own inner
initiative, and which is not immediately present for him in the vision
of the senses. Paul knew from his own super-sensible experience in
Initiation that ever since the Resurrection Christ Jesus has been
united with earth-evolution. But he also knew that, although Christ
Jesus is present, He can be found by man only through the awakening of
an inner power of vision, not through any mere beholding with the
senses. Should any man think he can reach the Christ with the mere
vision of the senses, Paul knew that he must be giving himself up to
delusions, he must be mistaking some demon for the Christ.
This was what Paul was continually emphasising to those of his
hearers who were able to understand it: that the old spiritual vision
brings no approach to Christ, that with this old vision one can only
mistake some elemental being for the Christ. Therefore Paul exerted
all his power to bring men out of the habit of looking to the spirits
of air and of earth.
(see Note 2)
In earlier times men had been familiar with
elemental spirits, and necessarily so, for in those times they still
possessed atavistic faculties with which to behold them. But now these
faculties could not rightly be possessed by man. On the other hand,
Paul never wearied of exhorting men to develop within themselves a
force whereby they might learn to understand what it was that had
taken place, namely, an entirely new impulse, an entirely new Being
had entered earth-evolution. “Christ will come again to
you,” he said, “if you will only find the way out of your
purely physical vision of the earth. Christ will come again to you,
for He is there. Through the working of the Event of Golgotha, He is
there. But you must find Him; He must come again for
you.”
This is what Paul proclaimed, and in a language which at the time
had quite another spiritual ring than has the mere echo left us in our
translation. It sounded quite different then. Paul sought continually
to awaken in man the conviction that if he would understand Christ, he
must develop a new kind of vision; the vision that suffices for the
world of sense is not enough. To-day, mankind has only come so far as
to speak of the contrast between an external, sense-derived science,
and faith. Modern theology is ready to admit of the former that it is
complicated, that it is real and objective, that it requires to be
learned; of faith it will allow no such thing. It is repeatedly
emphasised that faith ought to make appeal to what is utterly
childlike in man, to that in man which does not need to be
learned.
Such is the attitude of mind which rejects the event of Damascus as
unreal, preferring to regard it as a kind of hallucination that befell
Paul. If, however, the event of Damascus was a mere hallucination
— or I might just as well say, if the event of Damascus was what
a great number of modern theologians would have it to be — then
we ought also to have the courage to say: Away with Christianity! For
Christianity has brought with it a belief that is absurd and
senseless.
This would be the necessary outcome of the teaching of modern
theology, if only people took it — first of all, seriously, and
secondly, with courage. As a matter of fact they do neither. They
shrink from having nothing but a merely external, sense-given science,
and yet at the same time they deny the real, inner impulse of the
event of Damascus, while still professing to hold fast to
Christianity! It is precisely in such things that the soul-and-spirit
sickness of our age comes to clearest expression; for a deep inner
lack of truth is here laid bare. Truth would be obliged to confess:
Either the event of Damascus was a reality, an event that can
be placed in the realm of reality, then Christianity has meaning;
or it was what it is asserted to be by modern theology, which
wants always to associate itself with modern science; then
Christianity has no meaning. It is important that people should face
such conclusions, for there is no doubt we live in an age of severe
testing. Through man's becoming inwardly untrue in regard to the very
matters that are most sacred for him — for he ought no longer to
call what he has, ‘Christianity’ — through this, a tendency to
untruth, often unconscious but no less destructive on that account,
has taken hold of mankind. That is the real reason for the existence
of this tendency. That is why this tendency to untruth is so closely
interwoven with the events that will inevitably lead to decadence in
the whole cultural life of Europe, unless men bethink themselves in
time and turn to spiritual knowledge.
And if we would turn to spiritual knowledge, it is emphatically not
enough in these days to rest content with looking at life in any
superficial way; it is absolutely essential for us to take things in
all their depth of meaning and to be ready to contemplate the
necessity of mighty changes in our own time.
Again and again we must ask: What is a festival such as that of
Easter for the greater part of mankind? It may be said of a very many
people that when they are in the circle of their friends who still
want to gather together to keep the festival, all their thinking about
Easter runs along the lines of old habits of thought; they use the old
words, they go on uttering them more or less automatically, they make
the same renunciation in the same formula to which they have long been
accustomed. But have we any right to-day to utter this renunciation,
when we can observe on every hand a distinct unwillingness to take
part in the great change that is so necessary in our own
time? Are we justified in using the words of Paul: “Not I,
but Christ in me!” when we show so little inclination to examine
into what it is that has brought such great unhappiness to mankind in
the modern age? Should it not go together with the Easter festival
that we set out to gain a clear idea of the destiny that has befallen
mankind and of what it is that alone can lead us out of the
catastrophe — namely, super-sensible knowledge? If the Easter
festival, whose whole significance depends upon super-sensible
knowledge — for knowledge of the senses can never explain the
Resurrection of Christ Jesus — if this Easter festival is to be
taken seriously, is it not essential that men should bethink
themselves how a super-sensible character can be brought again into the
human faculty of knowledge? Should not this be the thought that rises
up in men's minds to-day: All the lying and deception in modern
culture is due to the fact that we ourselves are no longer in earnest
about what we recognise as the sacred festivals of the year?
We keep Easter, the festival of Resurrection, but in our
materialistic outlook we have long ago ceased caring whether or not we
have a real understanding of the Resurrection. We set ourselves at
enmity with the truth and we try to find all manner of ingenious ways
of accepting the cosmic jest — for indeed it would be, or rather
it is a jest that man should keep the festival of the Resurrection and
at the same time put his whole faith in modern science which
obviously can never make appeal to such a Resurrection. Materialism and
the keeping of Easter — these are two things that cannot possibly
belong together; they cannot possibly exist side by side. And the
materialism of modern theology — that too is incompatible with
the Easter festival. In our own time a book entitled “The Essence
of Christianity” has been written by an eminent theologian of
Central Europe, and is accounted of outstanding importance. Yet
throughout this work we find evidence of a desire not to take
seriously the fact of the Resurrection of Christ Jesus. There you have
a true symptom of the times!
Men must learn to feel these things deeply in their hearts. We
shall never find a way out of our present troubles unless we develop
understanding of the enmity cherished by the modern materialistically
minded man towards the truth, unless we learn to see through things
like this, for they are of very great significance in life to-day.
During the Fifth Post-Atlantean epoch a new tendency has been at
work, a tendency towards a scientific knowledge that is adapted to the
power of human reason and judgment; and now it is time that this
should go further and develop into a knowledge of the super-sensible
world. For the Event of Golgotha is an event that falls absolutely
within the super-sensible world. And the event of Damascus, as
Paul experienced it, is an event that can be understood only out of
super-sensible ideas. On the understanding of this event depends
whether one can in very truth feel something of the Christ Impulse, or
whether one cannot. The man of the present day is faced with a severe
test when he asks himself: In the time that has been christened
‘Easter,’ how do I stand to super-sensible knowledge? For Easter should
remind man, by the very way its date is determined, to look up from
the earthly to what is beyond the earth. The man of modern times has
left himself no more outlook into what is beyond the earth than at
most that which is given him in mathematics and mechanics, and now in
spectro-analysis. These sciences are the groundwork upon which he
tries to build up his knowledge concerning all that is beyond the
earth. He no longer feels that he is himself united with those
worlds, and that the Christ descended thence when He entered into the
personality of Jesus.
Let me beg you to give these thoughts which are so pertinent to our
present problems, your full and earnest attention. I have often
pointed out what a fine spiritual nature such as Herman Grimm must
needs think of the Kant-Laplace theory. It is true, the theory has
undergone some modification in our day, nevertheless in all essentials
it is still the prevailing theory of the universe. It is said that the
solar system has come out of a primeval nebula, and in course of
mighty changes undergone by the nebula and its densifications, plants,
animals and also man have come into being. And carrying the theory
further, a time will come when everything on the earth will have found
its grave and when ideals and works of culture will no longer send
their voice out into the universe, when the earth itself will fall
like a bit of slag into the sun; and then, in a still later time, the
sun will burn itself out and be scattered in the All, not merely
burying, but annihilating everything that is now being made and done
by man.
Such a view of the ordering of the world must inevitably arise in a
time when man wants to grasp that which is beyond the earth with
mathematical and mechanical knowledge alone. In a world in which he
merely calculates or investigates qualities of the sun with the
spectroscope — in such a world we shall never find the realm
whence Christ came down to unite Himself with the life of the earth!
There are people to-day who, because they cannot get clarity into
their thoughts, prefer not to let themselves be troubled with thought
at all, and go on repeating the words they have learned from the
Gospels and from the Epistles of St. Paul, simply repeating by rote
what they have learned, never stopping to think whether it is
compatible with the view of the evolution of the earth and man that
they acquire elsewhere. But that is the deep inward untruth of our
time: men slink away into some comfortable dark corner instead of
bringing together in their thought the things that essentially belong
together. They want to raise a mist before their eyes so that they may
not need to ‘think together’ the things that belong together. They
raise a mist before their eyes when they keep a festival like Easter
and are at the same time very far indeed from forming any true idea of
the Resurrection of which they speak; for a true idea of it can only
be formed with spiritual and super-sensible knowledge.
The only possible way in these days for man to unite a right
feeling with Easter is for him to direct his thought in this
connection to the world-catastrophe of his own time. For in very deed
a world-catastrophe is upon us. I do not mean merely the catastrophe
that happened in the recent years of the war, but I refer to that
world-catastrophe which consists in the fact that men have lost all
idea of the connection of the earthly with that which is beyond the
earth. The time has come when man must realise with full and clear
consciousness that super-sensible knowledge has now to arise out of the
grave of the materialistic outlook. For together with
super-sensible knowledge will arise the knowledge of Christ Jesus. In
point of fact, man has no other symbol that fits the Easter festival
than this — that mankind has brought upon itself the doom of
being crucified upon the cross of its own materialism. But man must do
something himself before there arises from the grave of human
materialism all that can come from super-sensible knowledge.
The very striving after super-sensible knowledge is itself an Easter
deed, it is something which gives man the right once more to keep
Easter. Look up to the full moon and feel how the full moon is
connected with man in its phenomena, and how the reflection of the sun
is connected with the moon, and then meditate on the need to-day to go
in search of a true self-knowledge which can show forth man as a
reflection of the super-sensible. If man knows himself to be a
reflection of the super-sensible, if he recognises how he is formed and
constituted out of the super-sensible, then he will also find the way
to come to the super-sensible. At bottom, it is arrogance and pride
that find expression in the materialistic view of the world. It is
human pride, manifesting in a strange way! Man does not want to be a
reflection of the divine and spiritual, he wants to be merely the
highest of the animals. There he is the highest. But the
point is, among what sort of beings is he the highest? This pride
leads man to recognise nothing beyond himself. If the natural
scientific outlook on the world were to be true to itself, it would
have the mission of impressing this fact again and again upon man: You
are the highest of all the beings of which you can form an idea. The
ultimate consequences of the point of view that sets out to be
strictly scientific, are such as to make a man turn pale when they
show him on what kind of moral groundwork they are based — all
unconscious though he may be of it. The truth is, we are to-day living
in a time when Christ Jesus is being crucified in a very special
sense. He is being put to death in the field of knowledge. And until
men come to see how the present way of knowledge, clinging as it does
to the senses and to them alone, is nothing but a grave of knowledge
out of which a resurrection must take place — until they see
this, they will not be able to lift themselves up to experiences in
thought and feeling that partake of a true Easter character.
This is the thought that we should carry in our hearts and minds
to-day. We still have with us the tradition of an Easter festival that
is supposed to be celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full
moon of spring. The tradition we have, but the right to celebrate such
a festival — that we have not, who live in present-day
civilisation.
How can we acquire this right again? We must take the thought of
Christ Jesus lying in the grave, of Christ Jesus Who at Easter time
vanquishes the stone that has been rolled over His grave — we
must take this thought and unite it with the other thought which I
have indicated. For the soul of man should feel the purely external,
mechanistic knowledge like a tombstone rolled upon him; and he must
exert himself to overcome the pressure of this knowledge, he must find
the possibility, not to make confession of his faith in the words:
“Not I, but the fully developed animal in me,” but to have
the right to say: “Not I, but Christ in me.”
It is related of a learned English scientist
(see Note 3)
that he said he would
rather believe that he had by his own force worked his way up little
by little from the ape stage to his present height as man, than that
he had descended from a once ‘divine’ height, as his opponent, who
could not give credence to the ideas of natural science, appeared to
have done.
Such things only serve to show how urgent it is to find the way
from the confession of faith: “Not I, but the fully developed
animal in me,” to that other confession of faith: “Not I,
but Christ in me.” We must strive to understand this word of
Paul. Not until then will it be possible for the true Easter message
to rise up from the depths of our hearts and souls and enter into our
consciousness.
Note 1:
- See Epistle to the Romans, XIII, 12.
- Note 2:
- See Epistle to the Galatians, IV, 3, 9.
- Note 3:
- T. H. Huxley.
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