III THE DEATH OF A GOD AND ITS FRUITS IN HUMANITY
I SHALL Speak to-day of certain matters in a way that could not be
used in public lectures but is possible when I am speaking to those
who have been studying spiritual science for some considerable
time.
The importance of the subject of which we shall speak first, will
be evident to all serious students of spiritual science. Reference has
frequently been made to this subject but one cannot speak too often of
spiritual-scientific concepts, for they must become actual forces,
actual impulses in men of the present and immediate future. I shall
lay emphasis to-day upon one aspect of what spiritual science must
signify in the world, namely, the need to impart soul to our
world-body, as we may call it.
A comparatively short time ago in the evolution of humanity it
would not have been possible to speak, as we can speak to-day, of a
world-body. Looking back only a little into the historical
development of mankind, we shall find that in the comparatively recent
past, the idea of a world-body peopled by a humanity forming one whole
had not yet come into the consciousness of men. We find self-contained
civilisations, enclosed within strict boundaries. Guided by the
several Folk-Spirits, the Old Indian civilisation, the Old Persian
civilisation, and so on, embraced peoples living a self-contained
existence, separated from one another by mountains, seas or
rivers.
Needless to say, such civilisations still exist. We speak, and
rightly so, of Italian, Russian, French, Spanish, German culture, but
as well as this, when we look over the earth to-day we perceive a
certain unity extending over the globe something by which
peoples separated by vast distances are formed as it were into a
single whole. We need think only of industry, of railways, of
telegraphs, of recent inventions.
(see Note 1)
Railways are built, telegraph
systems installed, cheques made out and cashed, all over the globe,
and the same will hold good for discoveries and inventions yet to be
made.
Now let us ask: What is the peculiarity of this element that
extends over the globe and is the same in Tokyo, Rome, Berlin, London,
and everywhere else? It is all a means of providing humanity with food
and clothing, as well as with ever-increasing luxury goods. During the
last few centuries a material civilisation has spread over the earth,
without distinction between nation and nation, race and race. Greek
culture flourished in a tiny region of the earth and little was known
of it outside that region. But nowadays, news flashes around the whole
globe in a few hours and nobody would doubt the justification
of calling this material culture an earthly culture! Moreover
it will become increasingly material and our earth-body more and more
deeply entangled in it.
But those who realise the need for spiritual science will
understand with greater clarity that no body can subsist without a
soul. Just as material culture encompasses the whole body of the
earth, so must knowledge of the spirit be the soul that extends over
the whole earth, without distinction of nation, colour, race or
people. And just as identical methods are employed wherever railways
and telegraph systems are constructed, so will mutual understanding
over the whole earth be necessary in regard to questions concerning
the human soul. The longings and questionings that will arise
increasingly in the souls of men, demand answers. Hence the need for a
movement dedicated to the cultivation of spiritual knowledge.
Something comparable with cultural relations between individual
peoples will then take effect on a wide scale, weaving threads between
soul and soul over the whole earth. And what will weave from soul to
soul may be called a deep and intimate understanding in regard to
something that is sacred to individual souls everywhere, namely, how
they are related to the spiritual world.
In a future not far distant, intimate understanding will take the
place of what led in past times to bitterest conflict and disharmony
as long as humanity was divided into regional civilisations which knew
nothing of each other. But what will operate on a universal scale over
the globe as a spiritual movement embracing all earthly humanity, must
operate also between soul and soul. What a distance still separates
the Buddhists and the Christians, how little do they understand and
how insistently do they turn away from each other on the circumscribed
ground of their particular creeds! But the time will come when their
own religion will lead more and more Buddhists to Anthroposophy, and
Christianity itself will lead more and more Christians to
Anthroposophy. And then complete understanding will reign between
them.
That humanity is coming a little nearer to this intimate
understanding can be discerned to-day in the fact that the science of
comparative religion is also finding its place in the domain of
scholarship. The value of this science of comparative religion should
not be underrated, for it has splendid achievements to its credit. But
what is really brought to light when the different teachings of the
religions are set forth? Although it is not acknowledged, the basis of
this science of comparative religion amounts to no more than the most
elementary beliefs, long since outgrown by those who have grasped the
essence of the religions. The science of comparative religion confines
itself to these elementary beliefs.
But what is the aim of spiritual science in regard to the various
religions? It seeks for something that lies beyond the reach of the
scientific investigators, namely for the essential truths contained in
the religions.
From what does spiritual science take its start? From the fact that
mankind has originated from a common Godhead and that a primeval
wisdom belonging to mankind as one whole and springing from one Divine
source has only for a time been partitioned, as it were, in a number
of rays among the different peoples and groups of human beings on the
earth. The aim and ideal of spiritual science is to rediscover this
primeval truth, this primeval wisdom, uncoloured by this or that
particular creed, and to give it again to humanity. Spiritual science
is able to penetrate to the essence of the various religions because
its attention is focussed, not upon external rites and ceremonies, but
upon the kernel of primeval wisdom contained in each one of them.
Spiritual science regards the religions as so many channels for the
rays of what once streamed without differentiation over the whole of
mankind.
When a professed Christian, knowing nothing beyond the external
tenets of belief that have been instilled into the hearts of men
through the centuries, says to a Buddhist: If you would reach the
truth you must believe what I believe ... and the Buddhist rejoins by
declaring what he holds sacred, then no understanding is
possible between them. But spiritual science approaches these
questions in an entirely different way.
Those who can penetrate to the essence of Buddhism as well as to
that of Christianity through the methods leading to the development of
the new clairvoyance, come to know of sublime Beings who have risen
from the realm of man and are called Bodhisattvas. Herein lies the
central nerve of Buddhism. And the Christian, too, hears of a
Bodhisattva who arises from mankind and works within humanity. He
hears that one of these Bodhisattvas born 600 years before our
era as Siddartha, the son of King Suddhodana attained the rank
of Buddha in the twenty-ninth year of his life. A Christian who is an
anthroposophist also knows that a Being who has risen from the rank of
Bodhisattva to that of Buddha need not appear again on earth in a body
of flesh.
True, such teachings are also communicated to us by the scientific
investigators of religions, but they can make nothing of a Being such
as a Bodhisattva or a Buddha; the nature of such a Being is beyond
their comprehension; neither can they realise how such a Being
continues to guide humanity from the spiritual worlds without living
in a body of flesh.
But as anthroposophical Christians, our attitude to the Bodhisattva
can be as full of reverence as that of a Buddhist, In spiritual
science we say exactly the same about Buddha as a Buddhist says. The
Christian who is an anthroposophist says to the Buddhist: I understand
and believe what you understand and believe. No one who has come to
spiritual science from the ground of Christianity would ever dream, as
a Christian, of saying that the Buddha returns in the flesh. He knows
that this would wound the deepest, most intimate feelings of the
Buddhist and that such a statement would be utterly at variance with
the true character of those Beings who have risen from the rank of
Bodhisattva to that of Buddha. Christianity itself has brought him
knowledge and understanding of these Beings.
And what will be the attitude of the Buddhist who has become an
anthroposophist? He will understand the particular basis of
Christianity. He will realise that as in the case of the other
religions, Christianity has a Founder Jesus of Nazareth
but that another Being united with him. A great deal could be
said about all that has been associated with the personality of Jesus
of Nazareth through the centuries. But the Christian's view of the
personality of Jesus of Nazareth differs from the Buddhist's view of
the Founder of his religion. In the East it would be said: One
who is a great Founder of religion has achieved the complete
harmonisation of all passions and desires, of all human, personal
attributes. Is such complete harmonisation manifest in Jesus of
Nazareth? We read that he was seized with anger, that he overthrew the
tables of the money-changers, drove them out of the temple, that he
uttered words of impassioned wrath. This is evidence to us that he
does not possess the qualities to be expected of a Founder of
religion. Such is the attitude of the East.
We ourselves, of course, could point to many other aspects of this
question, but that is not what concerns us at the moment. The really
significant fact is that Christianity differs from all other religions
inasmuch as they all point to a Founder who was a great
Teacher. But to believe that the same is true of Christianity
would denote a fundamental misunderstanding. The essence of
Christianity is not that it looks back to Jesus of Nazareth as a great
Teacher. Christianity originates in a Deed, takes
its start from a super-personal Deed from the
Mystery of Golgotha.
How could this be?
It was because for three years there dwelt in
Jesus of Nazareth a Being, Whom if we are to give Him a name
we call Christ. But a name cannot encompass the Divine Spirit
we recognise in Christ. No human name, no human word, can define a
Divinity. In Christ we have to do with a Divine Impulse spreading
through the world: the Christ Impulse which at the Baptism in the
Jordan entered in Him, into Jesus of Nazareth. The very essence of
Christianity lies in the Christ Impulse which came to the earth
through a physical personality, the physical personality of Jesus of
Nazareth into whose sheaths it entered. The Christ took these sheaths
upon Himself because the course of world-evolution is, first, a
descent, and then again an ascent. At the deepest point of descent the
Mystery of Golgotha takes place, because from it alone could spring
the power to lead humanity upwards.
After the Atlantean catastrophe came the ancient Indian epoch of
civilisation. The spirituality of that epoch will not again be reached
until the end of the seventh epoch. The ancient Indian epoch was
followed by that of ancient Persia, that again by the Egypto-Chaldean
epoch. When we survey evolution, even in its external aspect, the
decline of spirituality is evident. Then we come to Greco-Latin
civilisation with its firm footing in the earthly realm. The works of
art created by the Greeks are the most wonderful expression of the
marriage of spirit with form. And in Roman culture, in Roman civic
life, man becomes master on the physical plane. But the spirituality
in Greek culture is characterised by the saying: ‘Better it is to be a
beggar in the upper world than a king in the realm of the Shades.’
Dread of the world lying behind the physical plane, dread of the world
into which man will pass after death is expressed in this saying.
Spirituality has here descended to the deepest point.
From then onwards, mankind needed an impulse for the return to the
spiritual worlds, and this impulse was given in the Fourth
Post-Atlantean epoch through an Event at a level far transcending the
physical plane.
The Mystery of Golgotha was enacted in a remote comer of the earth,
for the sake of no particular race or denomination. It took place in
seclusion, in concealment. Neither outer civilisation nor the Romans
who governed the little territory of Palestine, knew anything of the
Event. The Romans were no followers of Christ the Jews still
less!
Who were present when the Mystery of Golgotha took place? Whom had
he gathered around him who in his thirtieth year had received the
Christ into himself? Had pupils gathered around this Being as they had
gathered around Confucius, Laotse or Buddha? If we look closely we see
that this is not so. For were those who until the Event of Golgotha
had been His disciples, already His apostles? No! They had scattered,
they had gone away when the One Whom they had followed hitherto
entered upon the path of His Passion. Only when having passed through
death, He gave them the certain knowledge of the power that had
conquered death only then did they become true Apostles and
carried His impulse to the peoples of the earth. Before then they had
not even understood Him. Even Paul, the one who after the Mystery of
Golgotha achieved most of all for the spread of Christianity,
understood Him only when He had appeared to him in the spirit!
So we see that, unlike the other religions, Christianity was not,
in essence, founded by a great Teacher whose pupils then promulgate
his teachings. The essential, basic truth of Christianity is that a
Divine Impulse came down to the earth, passed through death
and became the source of the impulse which leads humanity upwards.
When the individual personal element had passed through death, had
departed from the earth then and only then did the power which
came upon the earth through Christ, begin to work. It is not a merely
personal teaching that works on, but the actual Event that
Christ was within Jesus and passed through the Mystery of Golgotha,
and that from the Mystery of Golgotha a power streamed forth over the
whole subsequent evolution of mankind.
That is the difference between what Christianity sees as the
starting-point of its development and what the other religions see as
theirs. When, therefore, we turn our attention to the beginning of
Christianity, it is a matter of realising what actually came to pass
through the Mystery of Golgotha. Paul says, in effect: The descending
line of evolution was caused through Adam, even before the Fall,
before he was man, before he was a personality in the real sense. The
impulse for the ascent was given by Christ.
To feel this as a reality, we must go deeply into the occult truths
available to mankind. To grasp this stupendous fact, man's
understanding must be quickened by the deepest, most intimate occult
truths. It will then be comprehensible to him that, to begin with,
even in Christendom itself, the loftiest thoughts and deepest truths
could not immediately be understood. To grasp the full meaning of this
Divine Death and the Impulse proceeding from it, to realise that such
an Event cannot be repeated, that it occurred at the deepest point of
the evolutionary process and radiates the power which enables mankind
henceforward to tread the path of ascent to conceive this was
possible only to a few. And so in the centuries that followed, men
clung to Jesus of Nazareth for understanding of the Christ was
as yet beyond their reach. Moreover it was through Jesus that the
Christ Impulse also made its way into works of art. Men yearned for
Jesus, not for Christ.
We ourselves are still living at the dawn of true Christianity;
Christianity is only beginning to come into its own. And when men
plead to-day: Do not take from us the individual, personal Jesus who
comforts and uplifts our hearts, on whom we lean; do not give us,
instead of him, a super-personal event ... they must realise that
this is nothing but an expression of egoism. Not until they transcend
this personal egoism and realise that they have no right to call
themselves Christians until they recognise as the source of their
Christianity the Event that was fulfilled in majestic isolation on
Golgotha, will they be able to draw near to Christ. But this
realisation belongs to future time.
There may be some who say: Surely the Crucifixion should have been
avoided! But this is simply a human opinion no more than that.
These people do not know the difference between an utter impossibility
and what is merely a mistaken idea. For what came into the evolution
of humanity through the Mystery of Golgotha could proceed only from
the impulse of a god Who had endured all the sufferings and agonies of
mankind, all the sorrows, the mockery and scorn, the contempt and the
shame that were the lot of Christ. And these sufferings were
infinitely harder for a god than for an ordinary human being.
That the Mystery of Golgotha actually took place cannot be
authenticated in the same way as other historical events. There is no
authentic, documentary evidence even of the Crucifixion. But there is
good reason why no proof exists, for this is an Event which lies
outside the sphere of the general evolution of mankind. The Mystery of
Golgotha and this is its very essence is an Event
transcending that which has merely to do with the evolution of
humanity.
The Mystery of Golgotha was concerned with the descending path
which men have taken and with what must lead them upwards again
with the Luciferic influence upon mankind! Lucifer, together with
everything belonging to him, is verily not a human being. Lucifer and
his hosts are superhuman beings. Nor did Lucifer desire that
through his deeds men should be set upon a downward path; his purpose
was to rebel against the upper gods. He wanted to vanquish his
opponents, not to set men upon a downward path. The progressive gods,
the upper gods, and Lucifer with his hosts of the lower gods of
hindrance, waged war against each other, and from the very beginning
of earthly evolution, man was dragged into this warfare among gods. It
was an issue that the gods in the higher worlds had to settle among
themselves, but as a result of the conflict, men were drawn more
deeply into the material world than was originally intended. And now
the gods had to create the balance; humanity had to be lifted upwards
again, the deed of Lucifer made of no avail. And this could not be
achieved through a man but only through a Divine Deed, the deed of a
god. This deed of a god must be understood in all its truth and
reality.
If we ponder deeply about earthly existence, we find as its
greatest riddle: birth and death.The fact that beings can die is the
fundamental problem confronting humanity. Death is something that
occurs only on the earth. In the higher worlds there is
transformation, metamorphosis no death. Death is the
consequence of what came into human beings through Lucifer, and if
something had not taken place from the side of the gods, the whole of
mankind would have been more and more entangled in the forces which
lead to death. And so a sacrifice had to be made from the side of the
gods: it was necessary that One from among them should descend and
suffer the death that can be undergone only by the children of earth.
This was a deed which created the balance for the deed of Lucifer. And
from this death of a god streams the power which also radiates into
the souls of men and can raise them again out of the darkness in which
Lucifer's deed has ensnared them. A god had to die on the physical
plane.
This is not a direct concern of men ... they were here
spectators of an affair of the gods. No wonder that physical
means are incapable of portraying an Event which is an affair of the
higher worlds, for it falls outside the sphere of the physical
world.
But the fruits of this deed of a god which had perforce to be
wrought on the earth, became the heritage of humanity, and the
Christian Initiation gives men the power to understand it. And just as
mankind could come forth only once from the bosom of the Godhead, so
could the overcoming of what was then instilled into the human soul be
achieved only once.
If the Christian who has become an anthroposophist were to speak of
the nature of Christ to a Buddhist who has become an anthroposophist,
the Buddhist would say: ‘I should therefore misunderstand you were I
to believe that the Being Whom you call Christ is subject to
reincarnation. He is not subject to reincarnation any more than
you would say that the Buddha can return to earthly existence!’
Yet there is one fundamental difference. The Buddhist points to the
great Teacher who was the originator of his religion; but the true
Christian points to a deed of the spiritual worlds, enacted
in seclusion on the earth, he points to something entirely
non-personal, having nothing to do with any specific creed or
denomination. No single human being, to begin with, recognised this
deed; it had nothing to do with any particular locality on the earth.
In majestic seclusion the Divine Power poured from this deed into
the whole subsequent evolution of mankind.
The task of the spiritual-scientific conception of the world is to
seek for the truths contained in the different religions, and to seek
for the kernel of truth in them all is the augury of peace.
When an adherent of some creed truly understands his religion in the
light of spiritual science, he will never force its particular ray of
truth upon adherents of another religion. As little as the
anthroposophical Christian will speak of the return of the Buddha
for then he would not have understood him as little will
the anthroposophical Buddhist speak of the return of Christ for
that too would be a misunderstanding. Provided personal bias is laid
aside, the truth concerning Buddha and the truth concerning Christ
never makes for discord and sectarianism, but for harmony and peace.
This is a natural consequence of truth, for truth is the augury of
peace in the world. At the highest level of truth, all nations and all
religions on the earth can belong to Buddha the great
Teacher; and at the same highest level of truth, all nations
and all religions can belong to Christ, the Divine Power.
Mutual understanding augurs peace in the world. This peace is the
soul of the new world. And to this soul, which must reign all
over the globe as the science of the Spirit belonging to all men in
all earthly civilisations, Anthroposophy should lead the way.
From the 13th and 14th centuries onwards,
such knowledge was cultivated in the Rosicrucian Schools. It was known
there that together with such knowledge, peace draws into the souls of
men. And in these Rosicrucian Schools it was known, too, that many a
one who on earth cannot experience this peace, will experience it
after death as the fulfilment of his most treasured ideals when
he looks down to the earth and beholds peace reigning among the
peoples and nations to the extent to which men open their hearts to
receive such knowledge.
As I have spoken here to-day, so did the Rosicrucians speak in
their small, enclosed circles. To-day these things can be communicated
to larger gatherings of men. Those to whom it has been entrusted to
carry into effect through spiritual science what streams into humanity
from the Mystery of Golgotha, know that every year at Eastertide,
Jesus, who bore the Christ within him, seeks out the places where the
Mystery of Golgotha was fulfilled. Whether actually in incarnation or
not, every year he visits these places, and there his pupils who have
made themselves ready, can be united with him.
A poet Anastasius Grün felt the reality of this.
He describes five such meetings of the Master with his pupils. The
first, after the destruction of Jerusalem; the second, after the
capture of Jerusalem by the Crusaders; the third Ahasver, the
Wandering Jew, lingering on Golgotha; the fourth a praying
monk, yearning and pleading for deliverance from his conqueror. For
while sects of different kinds scattered over the earth are at strife
among themselves, he through whom the greatest of all tidings of peace
was brought to the earth, looks again at the places that were the
scene of his earthly deeds.
These four pictures are given of past visits of Jesus to the scene
of his work on Golgotha. Then, in the poem printed under the title of
Five Easters, Anastasius Grün pictures another return
to Golgotha, in the far future. In this far future of which he gives
us a glimpse, the power of peace will then have prevailed on the
earth, a peace based, not on denominational Christianity, but on
Christianity as it is understood in Rosicrucianism. He sees children
who, while they are at play, dig up an object of iron and do not know
what it is. They alone who still possess some remote information of
the strife waged among men in what is for them the distant past
they alone know that this object is a sword. In that age of peace the
purpose of a sword is no longer known it has been replaced by
the ploughshare. Then a farmer digging in the earth finds an object
made of stone ... Again it is not recognised. For a time this
was banished from the earth, say those who still have some
knowledge, for men no longer understood it! Once upon a time
they used it as a symbol of strife. It is a cross of
stone, but now, when the impulse given by Christ Jesus for all
future time gathers men together, now it has become something
different!
How does this poet, writing in the year 1835, describe this symbol
of the mission of the Christ Impulse, when rightly understood? He
describes it as follows:
Though known to none, yet with its ancient blessing,
Eternal in their breast it stands upright;
There blooms its seed abroad on every pathway,
A Cross it was this stranger to their sight.
The Cross of Stone now stands within a garden,
A strange and sacred relic from of old;
Flowers of all patterns lift their growth above it,
While roses, climbing high, the Cross enfold.
So stood the Cross, weighty with solemn meaning,
On Golgotha, amidst resplendent sheen
Long since 'tis hidden by its sheath of roses;
No more, for roses, can the Cross be seen.
(see Note 2)
- Note 1:
- Since this lecture was given wireless broadcasting has been
perfected.
- Note 2:
- The whole poem consists of 108 verses, in five parts.
|