II
THE
EASTER FESTIVAL AND ITS BACKGROUND
(The
first few paragraphs contain the answer given by Dr. Steiner to a
question. The lecture on the Easter Festival begins on page 25.)
Dr. Steiner:
As I shall be away next week I wanted to speak to you to-day about the
Easter Festival. Or have you some other question of importance at the
moment?
Questioner:
I had a question but it has nothing to do with the Easter Festival.
An article in a
recent Parisian newspaper stated that it is possible to be taught to read
and to see with the skin. Would Dr. Steiner say something about this?
I was very astonished by it.
Dr. Steiner:
A great deal of caution is necessary when information about a matter of this
kind comes from a newspaper and careful investigation is called
for. The article says that certain people ... the man really means
everyone ... can be trained to see with the skin, to read with
certain parts of the skin.
Now this has been
known for a long time. It is possible to train certain people to read with
some part of their skin. But let me say at once that such a thing is
really not so very astonishing. Human beings do not by any
means learn everything that they could learn; they do not
develop all their powers. Many faculties could be developed quite
quickly by setting to work in earnest. Children, for example, could
all be trained to read with their finger-tips by making them touch
and feel letters on a piece of paper. In the blank spaces between the
letters the paper is quite different to the touch. If you were to
make letters which stand out a little from the paper it would be
quite easy to read them! Letters made of wood could be read by touch
with the eyes shut. It is only a matter of refining this faculty,
making it more delicate.
When I was a boy
I trained myself to do something rather unusual, namely, to hold a pencil
between the big toe and the next toe and write with it. All these
things that one does not generally learn can be learnt and
then certain faculties will develop. These faculties can become so
delicate and sensitive that the result is quite astonishing. But it
really need not be so; what has happened is that the power of touch
has been greatly enhanced, and every part of the body has this power.
Just as we become aware of a jab from a nail, so we can become aware
of the tiny roughnesses caused by letters on paper.
This, however,
does not quite cover the case you mentioned, for the man claims that he
can develop in everyone the faculty of being able to read with the skin.
From the statement as it stands, the details could not all be put to
the test and it would be better to wait for scientific confirmation
before believing that if a page of a book were placed, say, over your
stomach, you would eventually be able to read it. One must be able to
discriminate whether it is a matter of a delicate and highly
sensitive faculty of touch or whether there is something bogus about
it — and this cannot be discovered from the newspaper report. I
myself was not at all astonished at the statement because I can well
imagine that such a thing might be possible; but what did
astonish me was the stupid comment of the journalists, who said that
if such a thing were really true, then it must have been discovered a
long time ago. — I ask you, how can anyone say about the
telephone, for example: If this is really true, then it must have
been known for a very long time! This kind of comment astonished me
far more than the phenomenon itself. The phenomenon itself is
not so very astonishing because a human being can do a great deal
towards developing his organs of feeling and touch. Seeing with the
eyes is not everything. The fingers, for example, can be developed
into most delicate organs of perception. And so reliable scientific
investigation would be necessary in order to prove whether or not,
after years of training, the man can make every part of the body able
to see. I have read reports in German, English and French newspapers
and I find it impossible to gather from them whether the man in
question is a lunatic, a humbug or a serious scientist.
THE
EASTER FESTIVAL AND ITS BACKGROUND
NOW let us think about the
Easter Festival in connection with the Mystery of Golgotha. As you
know, Easter is a movable festival — every year it is
celebrated on a different date. Why is the date variable? Because it
is determined, not by terrestrial but by celestial conditions. It is
fixed by asking: When does spring begin? March 21st is always the
beginning of spring and the Easter Festival takes place after this.
Then there is a period of waiting until the Moon comes to the full,
then another pause until the following Sunday, and Easter falls on
the first Sunday after the first full Moon after the beginning of
spring. The first full Moon can be on 22nd March, in which
case Easter is very early; or the first full Moon can be a whole
twenty-nine days after 21st March. If, for example, there is a full
Moon on 19th March, spring has not yet begun and then after some
twenty-eight days the Moon is again full; the Easter Festival in that
year will fall on the next Sunday — quite late in April.
Now why has the
Easter Festival been fixed according to conditions in the heavens? This is
connected with what I have been telling you. In earlier times men
knew that the Moon and the Sun have an influence upon everything that
exists on the Earth.
Think of a growing
plant. (Sketch on the blackboard.) If you want to grow a plant, you
take a tiny seed and lay it in the soil. The whole plant, the whole
life of the plant is compressed into this tiny seed. What comes out
of this seed? First, the root. The life expands into the root. But
then it contracts again and grows, still in a state of contraction,
into a stem. Then it expands and the leaves come and then the
blossom. Then there is again contraction into the seed and the seed
waits until the following year. In the plant, therefore, we see a
process of expansion — contraction; expansion —
contraction.
Whenever the plant
expands, it is the Sun which draws out the leaf or the blossom; whenever the
plant contracts (in the seed or the stem) the contraction is due to
the forces of the Moon. Between the leaves, the Moon is working. So
that when we take a plant with spreading leaves and root, we can say,
beginning with the seed: Moon — then Sun — again Moon
— again Sun — again Moon, and so forth ... with the Moon
at the end of the process. In every plant we see Sun forces and Moon
forces working in alternation. In a field of growing plants we behold
the deeds of Sun and Moon. I told you that the fashioning and shaping
of the physical human being when he comes into the world, is
dependent on the Moon;
[See the previous lecture.]
inner forces which make it possible for him to transform his own
character, come from the Sun. I told you this when we were speaking
about the Mystery of Golgotha.
In earlier times
these things were known but they have all been forgotten. Men asked
themselves: When is there present in spring the influence that does
most to promote the thriving and growth of vegetation? It is when the
influences of Sun and Moon together are at their strongest. This is
the case when the rays of the first full Moon after the beginning of
spring shine down upon the Earth, adding strength to the rays of the
Sun. The influences of Sun and Moon are mutually enhanced when the
springtime Sun at its strongest works in conjunction with the Moon
which is also at its strongest when its cycle of four weeks has been
completed. The time for Easter, therefore, is the Sunday — the
day dedicated to the Sun — after the first full Moon of spring.
The date of the Easter Festival was based on knowledge relating to
the winter solstice and the subsequent beginning of spring.
Now the Easter
Festival did not begin in the Christian era before the rise of Christianity
there was an old pagan festival — the Adonis Festival as it was
called. What was this Adonis Festival? It was instituted by the
Mysteries — those places for the cultivation of art, learning
and religion which I have described to you recently. And Adonis was
personified in a kind of effigy or image, representing the
spirit-and-soul in man. It was known, furthermore, that man's life of
spirit-and-soul is united with the whole universe. The ancient
pagan peoples took account of spiritual conditions and celebrated
this Adonis Festival in the autumn. The old Easter Festival —
which in a certain way resembled our own — fell in the
autumn.
[Dr. Steiner spoke in similar terms in four lectures
given at Dornach, 19th–24th April, 1924.]
The Adonis
Festival was celebrated in the following way. — The image of the
eternal, immortal part of man was submerged in a pond, or in the sea if
the place happened to be near the coast, and left there for three days,
to the accompaniment of songs of mourning and lamentation. The
submerging of the image was the occasion of solemnities resembling
those which might be associated with the death of a member of a very
united family. It was essentially a ceremony which had to do with
Death, and it always took place on the day of the week we now call
Friday. The name “Karfreitag” originated when the custom
found its way into the Germanic regions of Middle Europe.
“Kar” comes from “Chara” (Old High German)
meaning mourning. It was therefore the Friday of sadness or
mourning.
So little is
known of these things to-day that in England this Friday is called
“Good” Friday, whereas in olden time it was the Friday of
Death, the Friday of mourning and lamentation. It was a
festival connected with Death, dedicated to Adonis. And in places
where there was no water, an artificial pond was contrived into which
the image or effigy was plunged and taken out after three days, i.e.,
after the Sunday.
The image was
taken out of the water amid songs of jubilation and rejoicing. For three
days, therefore, the people were filled with deep sorrow and after these
three days with ecstatic joy. And the theme of their songs of
jubilation was always: “The God has come to us
again!”
What did this
Festival signify? — I must emphasise again that originally it was
celebrated in the autumn. On other occasions I have told you
that when the human being dies, the physical body is laid aside.
Those who have been bereaved mourn in their own way for the dead with
solemnities not unlike those which accompanied the submerging of the
Adonis image. But there is something else as well. For a period of
three days after death, the human being looks back upon his earthly
life. His physical body has been laid aside but his ether-body is
still with him. The ether-body expands and expands and finally
dissolves into the universe. The human being then lives on in the
astral body and the “I.”
The purpose of
those who instituted the Adonis Festival was to make men realise that the
human being does not only die but after three days comes to life again in
the spiritual world. And in order that this might be brought every
year to men's consciousness, the Adonis Festival was instituted. In
the autumn it was said: Lo, nature is dying; the trees lose their
leaves, the earth is covered with snow; winds are cold and biting;
the earth loses her fertility and looks just as the physical human
being looks in death. We must wait until spring for the earth to come
to life again, whereas the human being comes to life again in soul
and spirit after three days. Of this men must be made conscious! ...
A festival of Death was therefore followed immediately by a festival
of Resurrection! — But this festival took place in the
autumn — the season when it is easy to realise the contrast
between man and nature. Nature is about to consolidate her life; she
will lie dead through the whole winter. But in contrast to nature,
man lives on after death in the spiritual world. When nature sheds
her leaves, is covered with snow, when cold winds blow, then is the
time to make man conscious: You are different from nature, inasmuch
as when you die, after three days you live again!
It was a most
beautiful festival, celebrated through long ages of antiquity. Men gathered
together at the places of the Mysteries for the period of this
festival, joining in the songs of mourning; and then, on the third
day, the consciousness came to them that every soul, every
“I” and every astral body come to life again in the
spiritual world three days after death. Their attention was turned
away from the physical world and their hearts and minds were drawn to
the spiritual world. The very season of the year played a part, for
in those days the festival did not take place in the spring when the
people who lived on the land were occupied with other tasks. The old
Easter Festival, the Adonis Festival, was celebrated when the fruit
had been harvested and the grape picking was over, when winter was
approaching. It was the appropriate season for an awakening in the
Spirit, and so the Adonis Festival was celebrated. The name varied in
different territories but the festival was celebrated in all ancient
religions. For all ancient religions spoke in this way of the
immortality of the human soul.
Now in the first
centuries of the Christian era itself, the Easter Festival was not celebrated
at the time it is celebrated to-day; not until the third or fourth
century did it become customary to celebrate Easter in the spring.
But by that time men had lost all understanding of the spiritual
world; they had eyes only for nature, concerned themselves only with
nature. And so they said: It is not possible to celebrate
resurrection in the autumn, when nothing comes to life! —
They no longer knew that the human being comes to life again in the
spiritual world, and so they said: In the autumn there is no
resurrection; the snow covers everything. Whereas in the spring, all
things burst into life. Spring, therefore, is the proper time for the
Easter Festival. — This kind of thinking was already an outcome
of materialism, although it was a materialism which still looked up
to the heavens and fixed the Easter Festival according to Sun and
Moon. By the third and fourth centuries of the Christian era,
materialism was already in evidence but at least it still looked out
into the universe; it was not the “earth-worm”
materialism which has eyes only for the Earth and has been described
as such because the earthworms live under the soil and only
come up when it rains. And so it is with the men of modern times;
they look simply at what is on the Earth. When the Easter Festival
began to be celebrated in the spring, even materialism still believed
that the myriad stars have an influence upon human beings. But from
the fifteenth century onwards, that too was forgotten. At the time
when the Easter Festival was transferred to the spring, certain
attempts were being made by the Christians to sweep away the ancient
truths. — I mentioned this when we were speaking about the
Mystery of Golgotha. — By the eighth or ninth centuries, men
had not the remotest inkling that Christ's Coming was in any way
connected with the Sun.
In the fourth
century there were two Emperors, one a little later than the other. The first
was Constantine, the founder of Constantinople and an extremely vain man.
He ordered a certain treasure that had once been brought from Troy to
Rome to be transferred to Constantinople and buried in the ground
under a pillar which had upon it a statue of Apollo, the old pagan
god; then he sent to the East for wood said to have been taken from
the Cross of Christ, and caused a wreath to be carved, with rays
springing from it. But in the figure crowned with this wooden wreath,
people were expected to behold Constantine! And so from then onwards,
veneration was paid to Constantine, standing there on the pillar that
had been erected over the precious Roman treasure. By external
measures, you see, he brought it about that men ceased to know
anything about cosmic secrets, about the fact that Christ is
connected with the Sun.
The other Emperor,
Julian, had received instruction in the Mysteries which still survived,
although under very difficult conditions. Later on they were
exterminated altogether by the Emperor Justinian but for centuries
already their existence had been highly precarious. They were not
wanted; Christianity was their bitter enemy. Julian the Emperor,
however, had received instruction in the Mysteries and he knew:
There is not only one Sun, but there are three Suns
[See the lecture:
The Threefold Sun and the Risen Christ.
Given in London, 24th April, 1922.]
— This announcement caused an uproar, for it was a secret of the
Mysteries.
When you look at
the Sun you see a whitish-yellowish orb or body — it is the physical
Sun. But this Sun has a soul: it is the second Sun. And then there is
the third Sun: the spiritual .Sun. Like man, the Sun has body, soul
and spirit. Julian spoke of three Suns and maintained that in
Christianity men should be taught: Christ came from the Sun and then,
as Sun Being, entered into the man Jesus.
Now the Churches
did not wish this knowledge to be in the possession of men. The Churches did
not want the real facts about Christ Jesus to come to light, but only
such knowledge as was authorised by them. Julian the Emperor was
treacherously murdered on a journey to Asia, in order that the
world might be rid of him. That is why Julian is always known as the
Apostate, the heretic: Julian the Heretic! He desired that the
connection between Christianity and the ancient truths should be
maintained, for he thought: It will be easier for Christianity to
make progress if it contains the truths of the ancient wisdom than if
men are allowed to believe only what the priests tell them. So you
see, at the time when the Easter Festival was transferred to the
spring, knowledge that this festival is connected with
resurrection still survived. Although knowledge of the resurrection
of man had been lost, the resurrection of nature continued to be
celebrated in a festival. But even that has been forgotten in places
where Easter is still celebrated without any inkling of what it
really signifies; and to-day people have come to the point of asking:
Why need Sun and Moon have anything to do with the date of Easter? If
Easter were always to fall on the first Sunday in April, book-keeping
would be greatly simplified! The suggestion, therefore, is that the
date should be determined by commercial considerations! ... As a
matter of fact, the people who clamour for this are more honest than
the others who insist that conditions in the heavens shall still be
the determining factor, without having the slightest notion of
what this means. Those who say from their own point of view
that conditions in the heavens need not be taken into account are
really the more honest. But the sad thing is that people can only be
honest about this because they know nothing of the real connections.
What we have to do to-day is to emphasise that the Spiritual
must always be the decisive factor!
And so in olden
times men waited for the last full Moon after the beginning of autumn and
celebrated the Adonis Festival on the preceding Sunday. Sun and Moon
were taken into account but it was known that conditions are quite
different, indeed the reverse, when snow will soon be falling
from the heavens. The old Easter Festival, the Adonis Festival,
always took place between the end of September and the end of
October. This was the best time to be reminded of the resurrection of
man, because at that season of the year there was no question of a
resurrection in nature. This early festival, therefore, was known to
be connected with Death and also with Resurrection ... but this
knowledge too has been lost.
It is important
to be reminded of the ancient significance of these festivals, for we have
again to find the way to the Spirit. We must not celebrate Christmas
and Easter thoughtlessly but realise that such festivals have deep
meaning.
Now the world
cannot be turned topsy-turvy; nobody would wish the Easter Festival to be
transferred to the autumn. But it is good to be reminded that when a
man dies, he lays aside his physical body and looks back upon his
earthly life; then he lays aside the ether-body and comes to life
again in the spiritual world as a being of spirit-and-soul. Such
knowledge can greatly deepen our understanding of the Mystery of
Golgotha.
The Mystery of
Golgotha presents in external reality what was always presented in an
image at the Adonis Festival. The men of antiquity had an
image; Christians have the actual, historical event. But in the
historical event there are certain points of resemblance with the
imagery used in olden times. At the Adonis Festival the image of
Adonis was submerged and raised after three days. It was a true
Easter Festival. — But then, what had once been presented as an
image, came to pass as an actual happening. The Christ was in Jesus.
He died and rose to life again. And at Easter now, this is all that
is remembered.
In a way, there
is a good side to this. For why was an image always set before the people
at the Adonis Festival? It was because they needed something that their
senses could perceive. Although they still looked at the
universe in a spiritual way, in the material world they needed an
image. But when Christ had passed through the Mystery of Golgotha
there was to be no image; men were called upon to remember purely
in the Spirit what had happened at that time. The Easter
Festival was to be an essentially spiritual celebration. Men
must no longer make a pagan image but perform the act of
remembrance entirely within the life of soul. It was thought
— and Mysteries still existed in the days of Christ Jesus
— that the Easter Festival would in this way be
spiritualised.
Think once again
of the old Adonis Festival. It is impossible in present-day Europe to
realise what such festivals meant to the ancient pagan peoples. You
yourselves would say: This is only an image — and those at
least who had been initiated in the Mysteries would have regarded it
as such. But every year the statue of the god was displayed to large
numbers of the people and then submerged. This gave rise to what is
known as fetishism. A statue of such a kind was a fetish, an idol, a
god; worship of such an object was called fetishism — and that
of course is undesirable. And yet in a certain respect, an element of
the same tendency has remained in Christianity, for the Monstrance
with the Sanctissimum, the Sacred Host, is worshipped in Catholicism
as the Real Christ. It is said that the Bread and the Wine are
transformed, in the physical sense too, into the Body and Blood of
Christ. This is a survival, not of enlightened pagan wisdom which
beheld the Spiritual behind every sense-phenomenon, but of the
fetish-worship in which the statue was taken to be the god
himself.
Nowadays —
unless examples have occurred in one's own experience — it is almost
impossible to picture the intensity with which people believed in
these images of the god I myself once knew a very clever professor
— all such men are clever, only modern science does not lead
them to the Spiritual. The man was a Russian and he made a journey
from Japan across Siberia. In the middle of Siberia he became aware
of a deep uneasiness, he felt lonely and forsaken. And what did he
do? Something that none of you, nor indeed any Westerner, would ever
think of doing. But although this man was very learned, he was
half-Asiatic. He made a figure of a god out of wood, took it with him
on his further travels and prayed to it fervently. When I knew him
his nerves were in a terrible state; the illness had come from
worshipping his wooden god. It is difficult for you to conceive what
it means to worship an idol of this kind!
Now the Mysteries
still existing at the time of the founding of Christianity were deeply
concerned as to how men might be led to the Spiritual. And so what in
earlier epochs had been presented before their eyes in the Adonis
Festival was now to be revived in remembrance only, by prayer. This
was the intention ... but instead of becoming spiritual, everything
became materialistic; it was all externalised, made formal. By the
third and fourth centuries A.D. all kinds of
emotions were aroused in the people on “Kar” Friday; the
priests offered up prayers; and at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the
hour at which Christ is said to have died, the bells stopped ringing.
Everything was still. And then, outwardly again, just as in the old
Adonis Festival, the Crucifix, a figure of Christ on the Cross, was
buried; at a later period it was covered with a veil. After three
days came Easter — the festival of Resurrection. But the manner
and form of the celebration are the same, fundamentally, as in the
old Adonis Festival. The form of the celebration indicates that
little by little the souls of men were coming under the authority of
Rome.
In many districts,
for example in the place where my youth was spent — whether it
happens here I do not know — it is customary on the Friday
before Easter for the boys to gather around the Church with rattles
and musical toys, singing the words:
Wir
rätschen, wir rätschen am Dom.
Die Glocken ziehen nach Rom.
[Approximate translation: We shake our rattles around
the church ... but the bells draw us to Rome.]
Everything, you
see, pointed towards Rome, especially at the time of the Easter Festival.
Men of the present
age must emerge from materialism into a life of spiritual knowledge; they must
learn to understand things in a spiritual way, above all such things
as the Easter Festival. Every year at the Easter Festival we can
remind ourselves that the day of mourning, the Chara,
commemorates the departure of the human being from the physical
world; for three days after death he is still looking back on the
physical world; then he lays aside his ether-body as a second corpse;
but then in his astral body and “I,” he rises to life
again in the spiritual world. This, too, is part of the act of
remembrance, although it would be barbarous to expect songs of
jubilation three days after a death has occurred. And yet we can be
reminded of these songs of jubilation when we think of the
immortality of the human soul and of how, after three days, the soul
comes to live again in the spiritual world.
There is a
connection between the Easter Festival and every human death. At every
human death our attitude should be that although mourning is inevitable,
the Easter Festival is near, when we shall remember that every soul
after death rises to life again in the spiritual world. — You
know, of course, of the festival which commemorates the death of all
human beings: it is called the Festival of All Souls and is still
celebrated in the autumn. When the knowledge of its connection
with the Easter Festival had been lost, the Day of All Saints, All
Saints' Day, was placed before it in the calendar. But All Souls' Day
should, in reality, be celebrated as the day of the Dead and the
Easter Festival as the day of Resurrection. They belong together
although they are separated now by the span of nearly half a year!
From the calendar as it now stands it is often impossible to
understand what really lies behind these festivals.
But remember:
everything on Earth is in reality directed by the Heavens. People are
surprised if it ever snows at Easter because that is the time for the plants
to be sprouting, not for snow. They are surprised because they feel that
the Easter Festival is intended to commemorate the resurrection, the
immortality of the human soul.
This attitude and
knowledge make the whole Easter Festival into a deep, heart-felt experience,
reminding those who celebrate it of something that is connected
with man himself and with his life as the seasons of the year run
their course. The only kind of connection with the yearly seasons to
which any thought is given to-day is that in the winter one puts on a
winter coat and in the summer a summer coat, that one sweats in the
summer and shivers in the winter — all purely material
considerations. What is not known is that with the coming of spring,
spiritual forces are actively at work drawing forth the plants from
the Earth and that with the coming of autumn, spiritual forces are
again in operation as forces of destruction. When this is understood
men will see life and being in the whole of nature. Much of what is
said about nature to-day is nonsense. People see a plant, tear it out
of the soil and set about studying botany ... because they know
nothing about the essentials. If I were to tear out a hair and
proceed to describe it, this would be nonsense, because the hair
cannot arise of itself; it must be growing on a human being or an
animal. Nothing that you might apply to any part of a lifeless stone
will make a hair grow from it. For a hair to grow, life must
be at the source. The plants are like the hair of the Earth, because
the Earth is a living being. And just as man needs the air in order
to live, so does the Earth need the stars with their spirituality;
the Earth breathes in the spiritual forces of the stars in order to
live. Man moves over the Earth and the Earth moves through the
Cosmos, lives in. the Cosmos. The Earth is a living being.
This remembrance
at least can still come to us at the Easter Festival — the remembrance
that the Earth herself is a living Being. When the Earth brings forth
the plants she is young, just as the child is young when the soft
hair grows. The old man loses his hair just as in autumn the Earth
loses the plants. It is only that the Earth's life runs its course in
a different rhythm: youth in the spring, age in the autumn; youth
again, age again — whereas in man the periods are much longer.
Everything in the universe is alive. In thinking of the Easter
Festival and with the spectacle of newly awakening nature before us,
we can say: Death is not ever-present; beings have to pass through
death but life is the essential reality. Life is everywhere
victorious over death. The Easter Festival is there to remind us of
this victory and to give us strength. If men gain this kind of
strength it will enable them to set about the improvement of external
conditions with insight and intelligence — not in the way
that is usual at the present time. First and foremost we need
Spiritual Science in order again to ally ourselves with the spiritual
world — which is a world of life, not of death.
In this sense I
hope that the Easter Festival will be as full of beauty in your souls as are
the spring flowers growing out of the Earth. — After Easter we
shall meet together again and speak about scientific matters.
At the Easter
Festival, then, let us feel: Men can go to their work with fresh courage and
with joy. Even if in these days there are not many opportunities of
finding joy in daily work, perhaps here it is different! In
any case I wanted to say these things to you to-day and to wish you a
beautiful Easter in the sense of the knowledge born from Spiritual
Science.
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