Lecture I
April 19, 1924
Easter is felt by many to be associated on the one hand with
the deepest feelings and sensibilities of the human soul, and
on the other, with cosmic mysteries and enigmas. The
connection with cosmic mysteries becomes clear when we consider
that Easter is a so-called movable feast, the date of which is
fixed each year with reference to a specific constellation in
the heavens. We will have more to say about this in the
lectures to come. As for Easter's connection with the human
soul, if we examine the customs and rites that have become
associated with it through the centuries, we cannot fail to
observe the great significance with which a large part of
mankind has come to invest this festival.
For
Christianity, Easter was not important initially, but it became
so during the first few centuries. It is linked to
Christianity's basic tenet, the Resurrection of Christ, and to
the fundamental impulse to become a Christian provided by that
fact. Easter is therefore a celebration of the Resurrection,
but as such it points back to times and festivals predating
Christianity.
These earlier festivals centered around the spring
equinox, an event which, though not identical with
Easter, enters into the calculation of its date, and celebrated
nature's reawakening in the new life burgeoning forth
from the earth. And this leads us directly to the heart of our
subject, which is the Easter festival as a stage in the
evolution of the Mysteries.
For
Christians Easter commemorates the Resurrection. The
corresponding pagan festival in a sense celebrated the
resurrection of nature, the reawakening of what, as nature, had
been asleep throughout the winter. However, there the
similarity ends. It must be emphasized that with regard
to its inner meaning, the Christian Easter festival in no sense
corresponds to the pagan equinox celebrations. Rather, a
serious examination of ancient pagan times reveals that
Easter, in the Christian sense, is related to festivals that
grew out of the Mysteries and that were celebrated in the
fall.
This most curious fact demonstrates what serious
misunderstandings regarding matters of the highest
importance have occurred in the course of humanity's
development. In the early Christian centuries, nothing
less happened than the confusion of Easter with a
completely different festival, with the result that Easter was
moved from fall to the spring.
With this we touch upon something of enormous importance
in the development of humanity. Consider for a moment the
essential content of Easter. First, the figure central to
Christian consciousness, Christ Jesus, experiences death,
as commemorated by Good Friday. He then remains in the grave
for three days, symbolizing his union with earthly
existence. Christians observe this interval, the one
between Good Friday and Easter Sunday, as a period of mourning.
Finally, on Easter Sunday, the central being of
Christianity arises from the grave. In essence, then,
Easter involves Christ's death, lying in the grave, and
resurrection.
Let
us now turn to one of the many forms of the corresponding
pagan festival, for only in doing so can we grasp the relation
of Easter to the Mysteries.
Among many ancient peoples we find celebrations whose rituals
enact a content strongly resembling that of the Christian
Easter festival. One of these was the festival of Adonis,
which was observed by certain Near Eastern peoples over
long spans of pre-Christian antiquity. At the center of this
festival stood a likeness of the god Adonis, who represented
all that manifests itself in human beings as vigorous
youth and beauty.
The
ancients in many respects undoubtedly confused the god's image
with what is represented; hence their religions frequently
bordered on fetishism. Many indeed took the image of Adonis to
be the actually present god, the god of beauty and youthful
strength, of an unfolding seminal power that reveals in
splendorous outer existence all the inner nobility and
grandeur of which humanity is capable.
To
the accompaniment of songs and rites portraying humanity's
deepest grief and sorrow, the god's likeness was immersed for a
period of three days in the sea if the Mystery site was near
the sea, in a lake if it was near a lake, or otherwise in an
artificial pond that was dug nearby. For three days a profound
and solemn silence took hold of the entire community. When
after that time the idol was lifted from the water, the laments
gave way to songs of joy and hymns to the resurrected god, the
god who had come back to life.
This was an external ceremony, one that profoundly stirred the
souls of a great number of people. Even as it did so, however,
it hinted at what happened within the sacred Mysteries to every
person aspiring to initiation.
In
those times every candidate for initiation was led into a
special chamber. It was dark and gloomy and its walls were
black. The chamber contained nothing but a coffin or at least
something like it. Laments and dirges were sung around this
coffin by those who had led the neophyte into the chamber. The
latter was treated as if he were about to die. His teachers
made it clear to him that by being laid in the coffin he was to
undergo the experience of death and of the three days
following. The candidate was to achieve total inner clarity
regarding those experiences.
On
the third day, in a spot visible to the occupant of the coffin,
a branch appeared, signifying life's renewal. The earlier
laments gave way to hymns of joy, and the initiate arose from
his grave with transformed consciousness. A new language,
a new script were revealed to him, the language and script of
the spiritual world. He was permitted to see, and did see, the
world from the viewpoint of the spirit.
Compared with these procedures enacted deep within the
Mysteries, the external, public rites were symbolic, resembling
in their form the initiation ceremonies of the select few. At
the proper time these rites, of which the Adonis festival may
be taken as typical, were explained to their participants. The
rites took place in the fall, and participants were instructed
in somewhat the following way:
“Behold, autumn is now upon us; the earth loses its
mantle of plants and leaves. All is withering. In place of the
greening, burgeoning life that began to cover the earth in
spring, snow will now come, or at least a desolating
drought. Nature is dying. And as it dies all around you, you
shall experience that part of yourself that is similar to
nature. Human beings die as well. Each of us has his autumn.
And although when life comes to an end it is fitting that the
souls of those remaining should be filled with deep sorrow, it
is not enough to meet death only when it actually happens. In
order that you be confronted with death's full solemnity,
that you be able to remind yourselves of death again and again,
you are shown each fall the death of that divine being who
stands for beauty, youth, and human grandeur. You see that he
too goes the way of all nature. Yet, precisely when nature
becomes barren and begins to die, you must remember something
else. You must remember that although human beings pass through
the portal of death, although in this earthly existence they
experience only things that are like those that die in autumn,
at death they are drawn away from the earth and live their way
out into the vast cosmic ether, where for three days they feel
their being expand until it encompasses the whole world. Then,
while the eyes of those on earth are focused only on death's
outer aspect, on what is transitory, in the spirit world
the immortal human soul awakens after three days. Three
days after death it arises, born anew for the spirit
land.”
In
a process of intense inner transformation, the candidate
for initiation into the Mysteries actually experienced this
dying and reawakening within his own soul. The profound shock
inflicted upon people by this old method of initiation —
we shall see that in our day completely different methods
are necessary — awakened within them latent powers of
spiritual vision. They knew henceforth that they stood not
merely in the world of the senses, but in the spiritual world
as well.
What the students of the Mysteries received as timely
instruction might be summed up in the following words:
“The Mystery ritual is an image of events in the
spiritual world, of what occurs in the cosmos; the public
rituals in turn are a likeness of the Mysteries.” No
doubt was left in the students' minds that the Mysteries
encompassed procedures representing what human beings
experience in forms of existence other than the earthly, that
is, in the vastness of the astral and spiritual cosmos.
Those who could not be admitted to the Mysteries because
they were deemed not mature enough to receive directly the gift
of spiritual vision were taught appropriate truths in the
cultic rituals, which symbolized what occurred in the
Mysteries. These rituals, such as the Adonis cult, that took
place amid autumn's withering, when all of nature seemed to
speak only of the transience of earthly things, of the
inexorability of death and decay, served to instill in people
the certainty, or at least the idea, that death as experienced
by nature in the fall must also overtake human beings, overtake
even the god Adonis, representative of all the beauty,
youthfulness, and grandeur of the human soul. The god Adonis
also dies. He disappears into the earthly representative of the
cosmic ether, into water. But just as he is lifted out of it,
so too is the human soul raised from the waters of the world,
the cosmic ether, about three days after it has passed through
the portal of death.
The
secret of death itself was thus portrayed in the ancient
Mysteries through the corresponding autumnal festivals. These
festivals coincided in their first half with the withering and
decay of nature, and in their second half with the opposite,
namely, with the eternal essence of the human being. Humanity
was to contemplate the dying of nature in order to recognize
that human beings die as well, but that in accordance with
their inner nature they arise anew in the spiritual world. The
purpose of these ancient pagan Mystery festivals was thus to
reveal the true meaning of death.
As
humanity developed, the time came when a particular
being, Christ Jesus, carried down into bodily nature the
process of death and resurrection that the candidate for
initiation had achieved in the Mysteries only on the level of
the soul. People familiar with the ancient Mysteries can peer
into them and perceive that neophytes were led through
death to resurrection within their souls, that is, they
awakened to a higher consciousness. It is important to
note that their souls, not their bodies, died and that they did
so in order to rise again on a higher level of
consciousness.
What aspirants to initiation experienced only in their souls,
Christ Jesus passed through in the body, that is, on a
different level. Because Christ was not of the Earth, but
rather a sun-being in the body of Jesus of Nazareth, he could
undergo on Golgotha in the entirety of his human nature
what initiates had formerly experienced only their souls.
Those who still possessed intimate knowledge of the old Mystery
initiation, from that time on to our own, understood the event
at Golgotha most profoundly of all. They knew that for
thousands of years people had gained knowledge of the spiritual
world's secrets through the death and resurrection of their
souls. During the process of initiation body and soul had been
kept apart, the soul being led then through death to eternal
life.
What a number of select people had thus undergone in their
souls was experienced all the way into the body by the being
who descended from the sun into Jesus of Nazareth at the time
of his baptism in the Jordan. An initiation process repeated
over many, many centuries became in this way a historical
fact.
That was the essence of what people familiar with the Mysteries
knew. They knew that because a sun-being had taken possession
of the body of Jesus of Nazareth what had formerly occurred for
the neophyte only at the level of the soul and its experiences
could now take place on the plane of the body as well. In spite
of Christ's bodily death, in spite of his dissolution
into the mortal earth, the Resurrection could be brought about
because Christ ascended higher in soul and spirit than was
possible for a candidate for initiation. The neophyte was
incapable of bringing the body into such profoundly subsensible
regions as Christ did, so that he could not rise as high
in resurrection. Except for this difference in cosmic
magnitude, however, it was the ancient initiation process
that appeared in the historic deed on sacred Golgotha.
In
the first Christian centuries very few people knew that a
sun-being, a cosmic being, had lived in Jesus of Nazareth, or
that the earth had actually been made fruitful by the
coming of a being previously visible only in the sun for
students of initiation. And for those who accepted it
with genuine knowledge of the old Mysteries, Christianity
consisted essentially in the fact that Christ, who could be
reached in the old Mysteries by ascending through initiation to
the sun, had descended into a mortal body. He had come
down to earth, into the body of Jesus of Nazareth.
A
mood of rejoicing, even of holy elation, filled the souls of
those who understood something of this Mystery when it
occurred. Living awareness then gradually gave way, through
developments we shall discuss presently, to a festival in
memory of this historical event on Golgotha.
While this memory was taking shape, awareness of Christ's
identity as a sun-being grew dimmer and dimmer. Those
familiar with the ancient Mysteries could not be mistaken about
that identity. They knew that genuine initiates, by being made
independent of the physical body and experiencing death in
their souls, had ascended to the sphere of the sun and
there found the Christ. From the Christ they received the
impulse to resurrection. Having raised themselves up to
him, they were cognizant of his true nature. From the events on
Golgotha they knew that the being formerly accessible only in
the sun had descended to mankind on earth.
Why? Because the old rite of initiation, through which
neophytes had risen to Christ in the sun, could no longer be
performed. Over time human nature had changed. Evolution had
progressed in such a way as to make initiation by means
of the old ritual impossible. Human beings on earth could no
longer find Christ in the sun. For this reason he came down to
enact a deed to which earthly humanity could now turn its gaze.
This secret is among the holiest things of which we may speak
here on earth.
What was the situation then for those living in the
centuries immediately following the Mystery of Golgotha?
If I were to draw it, I would have to sketch something like
this:
In
the old initiation center (red, at right), neophytes gazed up
to the sun and through initiation became aware of the Christ.
To find him they looked out into space, so to speak. In order
to show later developments, I must here represent time in terms
of the earth proceeding along a line from right to left —
its subsequent positions from year to year represented by arcs
beneath the line — even though the earth does not
actually move this way through space. At the left, let us say,
is the eighth century; the Mystery of Golgotha (cross, at
center) had already taken place. Human beings, instead of
seeking Christ in the sun from a Mystery temple, now look back
toward the turning point of time, to the beginning of the
Christian era. They look back in time (yellow arrow in figure)
toward the Mystery of Golgotha, and there find Christ
performing an earthly deed.
The
significance of the Mystery of Golgotha was that it changed a
previously spatial perception into perception through time.
Furthermore, if we reflect upon what transpired in the
Mysteries during initiation, remembering that initiation was an
image of human death and resurrection, and then consider
the form taken by the cult — the festival of Adonis, for
example — which was itself a picture of the Mysteries,
then these three things appear raised to the ultimate degree,
unified and concentrated, in the historical deed on
Golgotha.
The
profoundly intimate rites of the Mystery sanctuaries now
stood forth as an external, historical event. All humankind now
had access to what was previously available only to initiates.
No longer was it necessary to immerse an image in the sea and
symbolically resurrect it. Instead human beings were to think
of, to remember, what actually took place on Golgotha. The
physical symbol, referring to a process experienced in
space, was to be supplanted by the internal, immaterial
thought, by the memory of the historical deed on Golgotha
experienced within the soul.
A
remarkable development began to take place during the centuries
that followed. Human beings were less and less cognizant of
spiritual realities, so that the substance of the Mystery of
Golgotha could no longer gain a foothold in their souls.
Evolution tended toward the development of a sense for
material reality. Human beings could no longer grasp in their
hearts that precisely where nature presents itself as
ephemeral, as dying and desolate, the spirit's vitality
can best be witnessed. The autumnal festival thus lost its
meaning. It was no longer understood that the best time to
appreciate the resurrection of the human spirit was when
outer nature was dying, that is, during the fall.
Autumn simply became an unsuitable time for the festival
of resurrection, for it could no longer turn people's minds to
spiritual immortality by underscoring nature's transience.
People began to depend upon material symbols, upon
enduring elements of nature, for their understanding of
immortal things. They focused upon the seed's germinating
force, which, though buried in the fall, sprouts forth again in
spring. People adopted material symbols for spiritual
things because matter could no longer stimulate them to
perceive the spirit in its reality. Human souls lacked the
strength to receive autumn's revelation of the spirit's
permanence in contrast to the impermanence of nature. Help from
nature, in the form of an outwardly visible resurrection, was
now necessary. People needed to see plants sprouting from the
ground, the sun gaining strength, light and warmth increasing,
in other words, a resurrection of nature, in order to
celebrate the idea of resurrection itself.
But
this meant that the immediate connection to the spirit present
in the festival of Adonis, and potentially present in the
Mystery of Golgotha, disappeared. An intense inner
experience that was possible in ancient times at every human
death gradually faded out. In those times people had known that
although a departed soul's first experiences beyond the gate of
death were indeed a matter for solemn reflection, after three
days the living could rejoice, for they knew that then the
departed soul arose out of earthly death into spiritual
immortality.
Thus the power inherent in the festival of Adonis
disappeared. It lay in humanity's nature that this power
should at first arise with great intensity. Ancient peoples
beheld the death of the god, the death of human beauty,
grandeur, and youthful vigor. This god was immersed in the sea
on a day of mourning. The mood was somber, for people were at
first to develop a feeling for the ephemeral. This mood,
however, was to yield in turn to a different one, to that
evoked by the human soul's super-sensible resurrection
after three days. When the god — or rather his likeness
— was raised out of the water, rightly instructed
believers saw in it an image of the human soul as it
exists a few days after death. The fate of departed souls in
the spiritual world was placed before them in the image of the
risen god of beauty and youth.
Thus each year in the fall human minds were awakened to a
direct contemplation of something deeply connected with
human destiny. At that time it would have been deemed
inappropriate to convey this by means of outer nature. Truths
that could be experienced spiritually were represented in the
cult's symbolic rituals. However, when the time came for the
ancient, physical idol to be replaced with the inner
experience of the unseen Mystery of Golgotha, a Mystery that
embodied the same truth, humanity at first lacked the
strength, for the spirit had retreated into deeply hidden
regions of the human soul.
The
need to look to nature for symbols of the spirit has continued
into our own time. Nature, however, provides no complete
image of our destiny in death; and while the idea of death has
survived, that of resurrection has increasingly disappeared.
Even though resurrection is spoken of as a tenet of faith, the
fact of resurrection is not a living one for people of more
recent times. It must, however, once more become so through
anthroposophical insight that awakens a feeling for the true
concept of resurrection.
If,
therefore, as has been said on appropriate occasions, we
as anthroposophists must cherish the Michael idea as a
heralding thought, and must deepen our understanding of
the Christmas idea, so too must our experience of the
Easter idea be particularly festive. For it is anthroposophy's
task to add to the thought of death that of resurrection, to
become an inner celebration of the resurrection of the human
soul, imbuing our philosophy with an Easter mood. Anthroposophy
will be able to achieve this when people understand how the
ancient Mystery concepts can live on in the true concept of
Easter, and when once again a proper view prevails of the
body, soul, and spirit of the human being and of the fates of
these in the physical, soul, and divine-spiritual worlds.
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