Six
POPE
NICHOLAS I AND THE SPIRITUAL LIFE OF EUROPE
IN THE
LAST few lectures we have been studying impulses of far-reaching
influence in the historical evolution of humanity — great
impulses which are like the tracks of stars across history,
illuminating our understanding of particular events. Knowledge of an
epoch in history can only be external and superficial if the underlying
impulses are not perceived and understood. For these impulses are real
powers; they work for the most part, and they work most powerfully,
through the unconscious forces of the soul; what transpires outwardly
and in full consciousness is only to be perceived in the right light
when its origin can be traced back to them.
We will think of an
event or, more precisely, a series of events well known to history and
of profound significance in the whole life of the West during the
Middle Ages — a series of events which, in the outer world, ended
in a comparatively short time, after about a century or a century and a
half, but the effects of which continued and (to those able to
understand the deeper currents in the flow of world-history) have
continued to this day. I refer to the Crusades which began in the
eleventh century — 1096 is the year usually assigned — and
as a series of outer events continued until the year usually given as
1170. But we find that even external history mentions all kinds of
enterprises and institutions that developed out of the Crusades.
We hear, for example, of
the Templar Knights, who first assumed their real significance in outer
life during the time of the Crusades. We hear, too, of Orders like that
of the Knights of St. John, later the Knights of Malta, and others.
Things that were inaugurated by these communities of secular and
spiritual life, and thus sprang from the spirit pervading the Crusades,
subsequently developed in such a way that, while their provenance in
the Crusading spirit was less and less remarked, their effects and
influences were clearly present in the life of the West.
Thinking, to begin with,
of the external course of history, we know how the Crusades originated.
Needs of the soul led adherents of Christianity in the West to believe
that pilgrimages to Palestine would imbue their Christian impulses with
fresh vigour; but they encountered obstacles, because Palestine and
Jerusalem had fallen into the hands of a people of very alien
character, namely, the Turks. The maltreatment inflicted by the Turks
upon these pilgrims to Jerusalem had provoked an outcry all over Europe
and from this was born the mood and spirit which gave rise to the
Crusades — a mood which had been present for a long time,
although in a different form. We see how men gave vent to this mood by
demanding the liberation of the Holy Places of the West, the Holy
Places of Christendom, from Turkish oppression.
We hear how Peter of
Amiens, himself a victim of this oppression, traveled through Western
Europe as a pilgrim and by his fervent preaching won over many hearts
to the project of liberating Jerusalem from the Turks.
We know too that, to
begin with, this led to no result. But soon a whole number of Knights
in the West, gathering together under the leadership of Godfrey of
Bouillon in the first real Crusade, succeeded in liberating Jerusalem,
for a time at least, from the Turks.
The course of these
events requires only brief mention, for the story is familiar enough in
history. The really important thing is to study with insight and
understanding what was working more or less unconsciously through human
souls, in such a way that again and again, and for a long period of
time, numbers of men, in most cases with extraordinary devotion and
valour, set out upon these journeys to the East, these seven Crusades,
under the leadership of the most distinguished princes of the West. The
real question is this: Whence came that first fiery enthusiasm which
swept across Europe, especially at the beginning of the Crusades? Once
the ball had been set rolling — if I may so express it —
interests of a different sort crept in, from the fourth Crusade
onwards. There were European princes who went to the East with quite
other motives, to enhance their power, their prestige and the like.
Nevertheless the beginning of the Crusades is an historical event of
prime importance. We cannot fail to be impressed by the spectacle of
this mighty force prompting a large part of European humanity to an
undertaking linked, as they felt, with the most sacred concerns of the
heart. Men felt that these sacred concerns were vitally connected with
the liberation of Jerusalem from the Turks, in order that Christians in
Europe desirous of visiting the Grave of the Redeemer might find their
ways cleared.
The dry, prosaic
accounts of the historical facts to be read in books do not, as a rule,
convey any real impression of the fire of enthusiasm that flamed up in
Europe when that noble company of knights set out on the first Crusade,
nor of the re-kindling of this enthusiasm by the ardour of men like
Bernard of Clairvaux and others. There is an awe-inspiring grandeur
about the birth of the Crusades, and we cannot help asking ourselves:
What impulses were working in the hearts and souls of Europeans at that
time — what were the impulses out of which sprang the spirit of
the Crusades?
These impulses can only
be rightly understood if we trace their development back through the
centuries. A pivotal point in history and one which throws a flood of
light upon subsequent happenings of incisive importance in Europe, is
the reign of Pope Nicholas I, approximately in the middle of the ninth
century, between the years 858 and 867. Before his inner eye, Nicholas
I perceived three streams of spiritual life — three streams
confronting him like great question marks (if I may use the term) of
civilisation.
He saw the one stream
moving as it were in spiritual heights, across from Asia into Europe.
In this stream certain conceptions innate in oriental religion are
making their way, in a much modified and changed form, across Southern
Europe and Northern Africa, to Spain, France, the British Isles and
especially to Ireland. In view of what will presently be said, I will
call this the first stream. Springing from the Arabian regions of Asia,
it flows across Greece and Italy but also across Africa into Spain and
then upwards through the West. But its influence also rays out, in
different forms, towards other parts of Europe.
Little is said of this
stream in the tale told to us as history. We will speak today only of
two characteristic features of this stream — which was
immeasurably deep in content. One of these is what may be called the
esoteric conception of the Mystery of Golgotha. I have often spoken to
you of the conception of the Mystery of Golgotha held by those in whom
vestiges of the ancient, pre-Christian Initiation-knowledge survived.
There is an indication of this in the Bible itself — in the
coming of the three Magi or Kings from the East. With their knowledge
of the secrets of the stars they foresee the approaching Christ Event
and set out in search of it. Pre-eminently, therefore, the three Magi
are examples of men concerned less with the earthly personality of
Jesus of Nazareth than with the all-important fact that a Spiritual
Being had descended from worlds of spirit-and-soul, that Christ had
come to dwell in the body of Jesus of Nazareth and would impart a
mighty impulse to the further evolution of the earth. These men viewed
the Event of Golgotha from a wholly super-sensible standpoint. Vision of
the super-sensible truth was possible to men in whom the ancient
principles of Initiation had been kept alive, for comprehension of this
super-sensible Event, unintelligible in the natural and historical life
of the earth, could be achieved with the help of this ancient
Initiation-knowledge.
But it became more and
more difficult to keep alive these ancient principles of Initiation and
therefore more and more impossible to find appropriate language in
which to convey how Christ had come down from super-sensible worlds, had
passed through the Mystery of Golgotha, and how His Power continues to
work through all the subsequent evolution of the earth. Men simply had
no means of so shaping their concepts and ideas that they could find
words to convey what had actually come to pass through Christ and
through the Mystery of Golgotha.
And so in order to
clothe this Mystery in words, men were forced more and more to
pictorial forms of presentation. One such is the story of the Holy
Grail, of the precious Cup, said, on the one hand, to be the Cup in
which Christ Jesus had partaken of the Last Supper with His Apostles,
and, on the other, the Cup in which the Roman soldier at the foot of
the Cross caught the blood flowing from the Redeemer. This Cup was then
carried by Angels ... and here is the touch of the super-sensible,
tendered in faltering words, for what the old Initiates could have
conveyed in clear concepts could now only be conveyed by pictures ...
this Cup was carried by Angels to Mont Salvat in Spain and received
there by the noble King Titurel; he built a Temple for the Chalice and
there dwelt the Knights of the Holy Grail, keeping watch and ward over
the treasure that shields the impulse flowing onwards from the Mystery
of Golgotha.
And so we have there a
deeply esoteric stream, passing over into a mystery. On the one side we
perceive the influence of this deeply esoteric stream in the founding
of academies in Asia, where men studied the ancient Greek philosopher
Aristotle, endeavouring to understand the Event of Golgotha with the
aid of Aristotelian concepts. Later on, in European civilisation, we
see attempts made in such a poem as Parsifal to convey the
living content of this esoteric stream in pictures. We see this
same living content shimmering through the teachings that arose
especially in the Schools of Ireland. We see too how the best elements
of Arabian wisdom flowed into this stream but how, at the same time,
Arabian thought introduced an alien element, coarsened and corrupted
over in Asia by Turkish influence.
Of the character
imparted to this first stream by the Arabian influence and by its
advance from the East towards the West, we shall speak later, when the
other streams have been considered. To indicate the fundamental
character of this stream, one would be obliged to say: Those who were
connected in any real way with this stream of spiritual life, held that
the one and only way of salvation — and an echo of this is heard
in Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parsifal — lay in rising above
the sensible and material into the super-sensible, in having at any rate
some vision of the super-sensible worlds, in letting man share in the
life of the super-sensible worlds, in bringing home to him that his soul
belongs to a stream not immediately to be perceived by senses directed
to terrestrial events.
The feeling
characterizing this gaze upward into super-sensible, super-earthly
regions was that, in order to be a full human being, man must belong to
worlds transcending material existence, worlds whose happenings are
hidden, as were the deeds of the Knights of the Grail, from the outward
eye. The Mystery implicit in this stream was felt to be somehow
imperceptible to the eyes of sense.
This, then, was the
first stream, barely felt and yet looked at askance in Rome at the time
of Pope Nicholas I in the ninth century. The whole tendency in Rome was
to regard it as an inimical influence and one to which it would be
unwholesome for Western humanity to yield. In the religious and
intellectual life of Europe there must be nothing of the esoteric, nor
anything even faintly deriving from the esoteric — such was the
attitude.
This was the first and
assuredly the most awe-inspiring question before Nicholas I, for he
also discerned the grandeur of this stream of spiritual life. Although
much dimmed since the third or fourth century (when a society had
actually been founded in Italy for the extermination of all paths to
spiritual knowledge) its radiance still shone, by way of many hidden
embrasures, into the hearts of men, revealing itself now here, now
there. What broke through in this way into the experience of men, often
from mysterious strata underlying the progress of history, was
denounced as heresy. The feeling also prevailed that the esotericism
still faintly glimmering in this stream could no longer find its way
into those concepts which, in the culture of Latin Rome, had departed
more and more from the inwardness of Greek thought with its oriental
colouring and had adopted the forms of Roman Rhetoric — in other
words, had become formal and exoteric.
Yet on the other hand,
among individuals and communities denounced as heretical sects, this
stream flashed into life with tremendous power.
The second question of
world-history before the soul of Nicholas I was this. All the knowledge
gathered hitherto by the Catholic Church forced him to the conclusion
that the Europeans of the West were incapable of bearing the great
spiritual tension that is evoked in the souls of men if they are to
scale the heights of spiritual, esoteric understanding.
A great uncertainty
weighed upon the soul of Nicholas I. What will happen if too much of
this esoteric-spiritual stream makes its way into the souls of the
people of Europe?
In the East itself,
greater and greater confusion had crept into what had once been the
esoteric content of this stream. It was over in far-off Ireland that it
maintained its purest form and for some time there were Schools in
Ireland where the holy secrets were preserved in great purity.
But — so pondered
Nicholas I — this is useless for the people of Europe. Nicholas I
was, in reality, only repeating the view previously held by Boniface in
a somewhat different form, namely that owing to their intrinsic
character the people of Europe were not adapted for the inflow of
spiritual life into their souls. And so the strange position arose that
in the East the real, esoteric substance died away. Human beings living
in the East and also in the East of Europe, in the regions of
present-day Russia, could make no contact in their souls with this
esoteric substance. But over in the East, purely in the form of
feelings, and in so far as these feelings had not been utterly
exterminated by the gradual advance of the Turanian peoples — the
Turks — over in the East men had a dim feeling that the sublimely
esoteric, which is not to be comprehended by the dawning intellect,
flows in cult and ritual; but only when the cult has at the same time
an actual centre in the outer world, a geographical centre.
And so in the East of
Europe, while the esoteric, spiritual reality was forgotten, men turned
to cult and ritual, clinging with greatest intensity of feeling to what
they held to be the very heart and core of the cult: the Grave of the
Redeemer.
Hard by the Grave of the
Redeemer in Jerusalem was the place where He had celebrated the Last
Supper with His Apostles, that Eucharistic meal that in metamorphosis
became the Death on Golgotha, was consummated by this Death and then
lived on — in the central rite, but also in the whole ritual
— in the Mass.
In their estrangement,
because they failed to reach an esoteric understanding of the spiritual
reality, men gave their hearts to cult and ritual, and to that with
which the cult was outwardly connected: the Grave of the Redeemer and
the Holy Places in Jerusalem. Pilgrimage to Jerusalem came to be
regarded as crowning all the solemn ceremonies, wherever they were
celebrated. For the individual man, the ceremonies and ritual were to
receive their crowning triumph when, having poured his very heart into
what he had experienced in image in the ceremonies, he himself went
forth on the pilgrimage to the Grave of the Redeemer.
Certain schools here and
there in Asia were still able to grasp the concepts that, under
tremendous stress, had been unfolded by the ancient Egyptians from
contemplation of the mummy, of the mummified human corpse, but this
knowledge had passed from the ken of the general population. Human
understanding was incapable of grasping what is at once the Mystery of
Man and of the Divine World.
And so in the days of
Pope Nicholas I, the farther one looked to the East, the more clearly
did one see this inward, heartfelt veneration of the cult; men clung
passionately to the cult and to all the experiences evoked by the
sacred acts, regarding as the crowning triumph of these experiences,
indeed as the supreme act of worship, the pilgrimage to the Holy
Sepulchre.
Looking over to the East
from ninth-century Rome, in the days of Nicholas I, there arose the
picture of the one influence — of which Nicholas I and his
counselors said: This is not for the peoples of Europe, for the peoples
of Middle and Western Europe — for they have too much of the
intellect that is now storming into human evolution to be able to
cling, with whatsoever fervour of the heart, to the mere contemplation
of the ceremonial acts and to the actual pilgrimage to the Holy
Sepulchre. In the people of Europe there is too much of the dawning
intellect to enable them in this way to be fully Man. It was perceived
that although this was possible in the East, it was not to be expected
of the peoples of Middle Europe and the West.
Meanwhile the first
great question still remained. Terrible danger seemed imminent if
Europe were swept by the stream charged with such deep esotericism,
with so much that can be fully grasped only by a spiritualised
thinking.
Let me put it like this.
Looking from the Rome of Pope Nicholas I towards the West, danger
loomed. Looking towards the East, again danger. The stream outspread in
the East and making its way far into Europe was seen, in reality, as a
series of streams, as the stream of the esoteric cult in contrast to
the other (Western) stream of esoteric life. Middle Europe must not,
dare not be seized by either stream ... this, or something like it, was
what was being said at the Papal Court of Nicholas I. What, then, must
be done? The great treasure perceptible to those truly belonging to
this first esoteric stream must be clothed in dogma. Words must be
found, formulae coined and proclaimed; but the possibility of
understanding through actual vision of what was thus proclaimed must be
withheld from men.
The idea of Faith was
born — the conception that without providing them with the means
of vision, men must be given in the forms of abstract dogma, those
things in which they can believe.
And so a third stream
arose, taking hold of the religious and also the scientific life of
Middle and Western Europe. The onset of the intellect was opposed by
dogmas, dogmas that could not be described as vision restated in ideas,
but such that the element of vision had departed from them; they were
simply believed.
If that esoteric stream
which penetrated to Ireland and died away in later times had been
pursued in deed and truth, the souls of those belonging to it would
inevitably have experienced union with the spiritual world. For the
great question living in this esoteric stream was in reality this: How
is the human being to find his orientation in the ether-world, in the
etheric cosmos? The visions, which also included the conception of the
Mystery of Golgotha as I described it just now, were connected with the
etheric cosmos. Here, then, the great question was that concerning the
nature of the etheric cosmos.
But in the middle stream
which until far into the Middle Ages was clothed for the most part in
Latinised forms of thought, the knowledge bearing upon the etheric
cosmos became the content of dogma.
Just as in the West the
question concerning the mystery of the etheric cosmos was an
unconscious one, so in the East there had arisen the great, unconscious
question as to the nature of the etheric organism, the etheric body
of man.
Unconsciously astir in
all those trends of feeling and knowledge in the East, which poured
into cult, ceremony and ritual, was the question: How is man to adjust
himself to the workings of his etheric body? — Just as in the
South and West the question was: How is man to adjust himself to the
etheric cosmos?
In earlier times the
truth of the super-sensible world had been within man's reach as an
outcome of his natural, dreamlike clairvoyance. It was not necessary
for him to become conscious of the etheric in the cosmos and in his own
being. A significant feature of the modern age was the great question
which now arose concerning the nature and content of the etheric world
— in the West, the question as to the etheric cosmos, in the East
as to man's own etheric body.
The question concerning
the etheric cosmos demands the exercise of supreme spiritual effort. A
man must unfold thought to its highest potency if he is to penetrate
the mysteries of the cosmos. In the lecture yesterday I told you that
the way is opened up by study of Goethe's conception of
plant-metamorphosis, but that this must pass on to the mighty
metamorphosis that leads over from one earthly life to the next.
But in Rome, especially
at the time of Pope Nicholas I, this was considered to be full of
danger ... the living content of this stream must be stifled and
concealed.
The Eastern stream too
was involved in the struggle concerning the etheric world but
particularly the etheric nature of man, the etheric body of man.
With his physical body, man lives in contact with the outer world of
nature, with the animals, plants and minerals, the machines and the
like. But to live in and through the etheric body during his existence
here on earth is only possible for man by the external means presented
by ceremony and ritual, by participation in happenings and actions
which are not, in the earthly and material sense, real. In the East,
men longed to share in these acts in order that they might thereby
experience the inner nature and working of their own etheric
organism.
In the Rome of Pope
Nicholas I, this too was considered unsuitable for Europe. It was
decided to retain in the West only what the intellect had formulated
into a body of dogmas — wherein super-sensible truths are matters
of faith alone, no longer of actual vision. The dogmas were then
promulgated over wider areas of the West and the esoteric stream was
entirely obscured. The inner attraction to cult and ritual that had
characterized Eastern Europe was also thought to be out of keeping with
the nature of the peoples of Middle and Western Europe, and from this
was born the modified form of the cult which now exists in the Roman
Catholic Church.
If you compare the cult
and ritual of the Eastern Church, the Orthodox Russian Church, with the
form of cult practised in the Roman Catholic Church, you will perceive
this difference: in the Roman Catholic Church it is more of the nature
of a symbol for the eyes to contemplate; in the East it is something
into which the soul penetrates with ardent devotion. In the West, men
grew increasingly aware of the need to turn away from the cult —
wedded as it now was to dogmatic interpretation — to the dogmas,
and from the dogmas to explain the cult. In the East, cult and ritual
worked as a power in themselves and what found its way over to the West
was gradually confined within the externalised forms preserved in
various occult communities. These communities exist to this very day
and though emptied of all the esotericism of olden time, still play no
insignificant apart in affairs.
How to inaugurate in
Europe a form of cult which does not, as in the East, take hold of the
etheric nature of the human being, and to establish a system of dogma
which would make it unnecessary for men to direct their gaze to the
spiritual world ... how to inaugurate a twofold stream of this
character — such was the third great question confronting
Nicholas I. And at this he laboured. The outcome of it all was the
complete severance of the Eastern, Greek Church, from the Roman
Catholic Church. Here, in what I have indicated, lie the inner
reasons.
All that I have just
been describing to you was still clearly perceptible in the middle of
the ninth century, at the time of Pope Nicholas I. In the West,
vestiges of esotericism still survived. In Spain particularly, but also
in France and in Ireland, esoteric Schools existed. There were men who
could still look into the spiritual worlds, whose understanding of
Christianity derived from actual vision. Later on, nothing remained of
this earlier power of vision, save a hint, save those mysterious,
repeated glimpses of the Holy Grail or its secular reflection and
counterpart, the Round Table of King Arthur. There men did feel the
presence of something actually connected with vision of worlds beyond
the earth, with living experience of these worlds.
Middle Europe, extending
into those regions of the West where esotericism still survived, was
the home of devout belief sustained by dogmas, combined with a world of
ceremonies and rites not quite connected with the human etheric body.
Of what was living in the East, I have already spoken. Any true
portrayal of the life of soul as it was in Europe during the ninth
century, would have to include description of these three different
moods-of-soul in their many variations.
The account given by
history is but a cursory, superficial expression of what was actually
reigning in the depths. But as time went on, the esoteric stream was
followed by a current, which in the forms of Arabian thought was
becoming increasingly exoteric and formal. What men over in Asia had
made of the Aristotelian teachings — that too flowed over in the
wake of what had once been a very spiritual understanding, and under
this influence the content of this esoteric stream became more and more
materialistic. Already in the eleventh and twelfth centuries we see how
esotericism begins to flicker out, to melt away as it were; this
esoteric stream itself takes on a materialistic mode of thinking, that
mode of thinking which in later metamorphosis becomes the materialism
of natural science — which has its real origin in Arabian
thought.
The middle stream
— actually brought into being by Nicholas I but previously
fostered by Boniface and supported by the Merovingians and Carolingians
— although for long centuries bearing faint traces of the
influence exercised by the Grail and other sacred lays in turning the
eyes of soul to the super-sensible world, this middle stream tended more
and more to introduce the element of materialism into cult and dogma.
The older and purer conceptions of Transubstantiation, of the
celebration of the Mass, for example, were followed by those crude,
materialistic conceptions, which alone could have resulted in
controversy over the Eucharist. When these quarrels arose they were
proof of the fact that men no longer understood the Eucharist as
originally conceived. Indeed it is a mystery that can be understood
only in the light of spiritual knowledge.
And so materialism found
its way into the stream that had flowed across to the West from the
South and East; it found its way into the middle stream, and,
fundamentally, also into the Eastern stream. The waves of materialism
were surging on — and everywhere men strove to dam them back as
best they could.
We pass now from the
ninth century, from the days of Pope Nicholas I, to the eleventh
century. We must picture the three great question marks standing like
three terrible powers, soul-torturing powers, before a man like Pope
Nicholas I. For he could not say — as in Congresses later on,
when frontiers were drawn on maps according to opinions based upon
external considerations — he could not say: I decree that there
shall be a frontier here, and another frontier here ... for souls
cannot be divided off in this way. What he could do was to
indicate lines of direction and impart to the middle stream a certain
strength, and herein his genius was particularly effective.
Nevertheless the mood prevailing in the East spread far, far into the
West. What mood? The mood in which the etheric organism of man is set
aflame from within by the sacred acts of cult and ritual and in which,
in a way more characteristic of Western Europe, these acts were now
linked with their centre in Jerusalem.
With all the ardour for
pilgrimage and the intense yearning towards the real centre in
Jerusalem, Peter of Amiens, with less effect at the beginning, and
then, later on, Bernard of Clairvaux with veritably blinding fervour,
preached the Cross. With this mood of ardour in Europe there mingled
the remains of the stream which had been kept alive in the West by the
cult of the Grail, by the Arthurian cult — the remains of the
esotericism which had here found its outlet ... and there arose the
picture of Man in his physical form as a being to whom the earth is not
really earth, but a particular place in the cosmos.
Some such conception was
alive in the world of chivalry and knighthood or at least in that part
of it that took shape in Western and Middle Europe and allied itself
with the Crusading Spirit. And as a faint undertone only, but as the
Crusades proceeded steadily increasing in strength, there mingled with
this mood the temper of mind that had been engendered by Nicholas I as
appropriate for European civilisation.
That is why there is
something about the Crusades not fully to be explained by later
circumstances. For the middle stream spreads out; beside it remains the
stream belonging to the East of Europe, regarded in Europe itself as a
backward tendency in religion; and the Western stream converts itself
into branches of the occult, esoteric life, into all kinds of occult
societies, Masonic Orders and the like. In the world of Scholasticism,
the middle stream finally lays hold of science too, and then of the
child of Scholasticism: natural science in its later form.
The spirit inspiring the
Crusades cannot be understood by those who look only at what happened
in later times; it can be understood only by those who perceive the
effects of these impulses from the fourth and fifth centuries of the
Christian era to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and who grasp
the full significance of the question with which Nicholas I, in the
ninth century, was so profoundly concerned: How can happenings in the
outer world in which the human being himself participates, pre-eminent
among them being the sacred acts of the cult, how can these be brought
into connection with the living flow of spiritual life, with the life
of the Spiritual Beings? In the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries,
the problem had already been set for the peoples of Europe. Just as on
the one side they had lost the realities contained in cult and ritual,
so too, on the other side, they had lost the realities yielded by
spiritual vision. Just as in the East the realities of cult and ritual
vanished into the mists of Asia and the conquests of the Turks sealed
off the holy place around which the acts of the Christian cult must be
centred, so, if I may speak in metaphor, did the esoteric secrets
contained in the Western stream disappear into the Atlantic Ocean. And
there arose as a reaction the mood, which asked: How are the sacred
acts of the cult, with their centre in Jerusalem, to be infused with
spiritual life?
Anyone who reads the
sermons of Bernard of Clairvaux can feel to this very day how on the
one hand, fervent devotion to the cult, to the outer symbol in which
the esoteric is contained, speaks from his lips, and how, on the other
hand, his heart is fired through and through by all that was once astir
in the esotericism of the West.
Resounding in the tone
and tenor of the sermons of Bernard of Clairvaux, not in what he
actually says but in the artistic grandeur and majesty of his
utterances, are those mysteries which the etheric cosmos would fain
reveal to man and can no longer reveal, and on the other side all that
strives, from out of the earth, to work in man's own etheric body. That
is what drives men over to Asia, seeking for what they had lost in the
West.
Esotericism, however,
was really the driving force. By making a new link with the Grave of
the Redeemer, men desired to glimpse again what the West had lost. The
tragedy of the ensuing age was that this was not understood, that there
were no ears ready to listen, let us say, to Rosicrucianism — I
mean Rosicrucianism in its genuine form — which sought for Christ
in heights of the Spirits, not at the physical grave.
Now, however, the time
has come for mankind to realise that just as those who after the
Redeemer's death came to the tomb, were told: He Whom ye seek is no
longer here, seek Him elsewhere, so, too, it was said to the Crusaders:
He Whom ye seek is no longer here, seek Him elsewhere.
The age is upon us when
He Who is no longer here must be sought elsewhere, when He must be
sought through a new revelation of the spiritual worlds. That is the
task of those who are living at this present time and of that I wished
to speak to you, in connection with our recent studies.
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