LECTURE TWO
MUNICH —
May 1, 1907
EIGHT DAYS AGO WE BEGAN WITH
a presentation to help
us understand the language of John. We considered how the Apocalypse
is to be read and what is hidden behind some of the mysterious expressions,
for example, behind the lamb as the beast with seven eyes and seven
horns. We also sought to explain the beast with two horns and considered
the number 666 as an example of how we must live into this mysterious
book. Today, we again seek to find the meaning of this book.
The record of the New
Testament is a record of initiation. Using individual images as examples
we have seen how deep their meaning really is. All the images have shown
us that the Gospels express, in pictorial form, the deepest imaginable
meaning of the evolution of the world. It could occur to someone to
ask why there are contradictions in the individual Gospels, why they
do not correspond to each other. What needs to be said concerning this
is already laid out in my book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact.
[See Note 1]
The Gospels are not records of the biography of Christ Jesus, but rather
records concerning initiation. And the Apocalypse is the profoundest
record. Augustine said: What is now called the “Christian
religion” is the ancient true religion. What was the true religion,
now is called the Christian religion.
[See Note 2]
We understand what is
meant by this statement when we consider the fundamental assertion of
Christianity: “Blessed are those who do not see and yet
believe.”
(John 20:29)
In this way something entirely new has come into the world.
The teachings are already contained in other religious systems. Among
those who understood who “Christ” is the main emphasis was
never placed on the content of this teaching. One can also find this
content in records from earlier times. What is important with Christ is
what this individual means for humankind. We can acquire an understanding
for this most readily if we take a look at the ancient mystery centers.
Until the time of Christ
only a few specially chosen people were initiated. After severe testing
they were permitted to learn the teachings that can now be found in
my book
Theosophy.
[See Note 3]
One had to wait
a long time until the higher degrees of vision were permitted. Only
the most initiated knew the tradition of how to carry out an initiation.
If someone wanted to become a pupil, as a first step they had to do this,
as a second step, that, and so forth. The initiation concluded when the
pupil had gone through the preparatory stages and was led by the wise
ones into the mysteries themselves. That took place in a state of
consciousness called “ecstasy,” a state of existence outside
the physical body. It was connected with a diminution of consciousness, but
at the same time with a vision of the spiritual world. An inner schooling
consisting of certain will impulses, meditations, and a purification
of the desires brought the pupil to a point where the last step was
possible. Then the pupil was put by the initiator into a state that
lasted three and a half days, a state like the one we enter when we
fall asleep at night. External sense impressions disappeared. When we
are asleep, nothing enters into the place where the sense impressions
of sight and sound have disappeared, but with those being initiated
a new world appeared. They were surrounded by a new world, a world of
astral light, not the darkness, nothing of what today's human being
experiences in the night appeared to them. The darkness was permeated
by spiritual light and beings that are incarnated within the spiritual
light. These beings became visible in the astral light. Then, after
awhile, the astral world full of flowing light began to resound with
the music of the spheres. What had merely been seen earlier began to be
heard; it was a pure, spiritual music. External music is only a shadow-like
reflection of the sounds of the spheres the seer hears, the seer who
also perceives the inside of spiritual beings. Suppose we enter a large
room filled with people; only when they begin to speak do they reveal
their inner life to us. That is how it is in the spiritual world. First
the beings become visible, then the inner life of the beings speaks
to us. That is the harmony of the spheres.
Then, when the initiates
were led back to vision of the physical world, they experienced themselves
fully transformed into new human beings. Everyone who returned in this
way then typically expressed: “My God, my God, how you have glorified
me!” (Compare
Matt. 27:46
and
Mark 15:34)
[See Note 4]
And so they returned,
knowledgeable concerning the spiritual world out of their own experience.
They were then seen as messengers from the spiritual world. What they
had experienced up to the point of entering the spiritual world was
prescribed precisely, stage by stage.
Although the rites of
initiation were not recorded exactly, still there were canons of initiation
containing prescriptions for all the steps. Everywhere, whether in the
Egyptian schooling of Hermes, or in the Persian school, or in the Greek
mysteries, or with the Druidic or Drotten mysteries, there were typical,
traditional rules concerning what was to be experienced by anyone wanting
to become an initiate.
Typical, similar
characteristics appear wherever the lives of the great apostles of
religions or world-views
are described. The lives of Orpheus, Pythagoras, Hermes, and Buddha
have many features in common, features that are important for all religious
heroes. Why is this? Superficial researchers have believed that one
borrowed from the other. But that is not true. Nevertheless, all of
these typical religious heroes passed through these steps up to the
highest stage of initiation. There were no biographies in ancient times
that took into consideration the external conditions of a person's
life. The further back we go before the turning point of time, the less
value we find ascribed to the externals of life. Absolutely nothing
was said concerning what the very greatest heroes of humankind experienced
externally on the physical plane. Their lives were entirely dedicated
to initiation. Telling the story of their initiation meant telling the
story of their life. The main thing about a Hermes or a Buddha was what
he had experienced until the initiation. Since the stages of initiation
were similar everywhere, one heard a spiritual description of the life
of the great initiates.
What in the past had been
experienced only in secret became historical fact in Christianity. What
could be described of Herme' experience took place in inner mysteries,
at locations far removed from profane eyes.
In Christianity, for the
first time, something was experienced as an external physical event
that otherwise only took place in the mystery centers. The course Christ's
life followed is the same as that experienced by all initiates when,
to begin with, they had their etheric bodies lifted out of their physical.
Everything that Christ Jesus experienced physically, on the physical
plane, they had experienced in the etheric realm. Their last words were
also, “My God, my God, how you have glorified me!” They
had experienced earlier in the etheric body what Christ experienced
in a physical body. In this way the prophecies of the prophets were
fulfilled. This one time only experience of Christ represents the greatest
decisive turning point in our world history and separates it into two
parts.
The evangelists did not
write ordinary biographies, but took rather the existing canonical
initiation books. All four Gospels are to be seen as initiation writings,
each presented from a different perspective. Since, however, initiation is
described everywhere in the same way, the Gospels are in agreement on
the most important things. We can describe the life of an initiate if
we consider it as a life dedicated wholly to initiation. It would have
seemed unholy to the evangelists to give an ordinary, external, historical
biography of Christ Jesus. They had to take the building blocks for
their writings from books derived from the mysteries. Hence, to a certain
extent, what the prophets had said was fulfilled.
In a certain sense the
Apocalypse represents a new kind of initiation; it shows how the old
mysteries were transformed into Christian mysteries. When we look back
at the old mysteries we find in them a more or less unified feature.
It consisted of the following: Whether we go to Egypt, or to Persia,
or to India, whether we are deepened in the Orphic or the Eleusinian
mysteries, we find there complete agreement in one feature: a prophecy
concerning the One who is to come.
[See Note 5]
This trait
is also found in the Northern European mysteries. There was an initiate
in the most ancient times who was signified by the name “Sig.”
The Drotten mysteries, which were in Russia and Scandinavia, the Druidic
mysteries in Germany all derived from an initiate with the name Sig, who
was the founder of the northern mysteries. What happened in the mysteries
has been preserved in the various myths and legends of the German nation
and other Germanic peoples. The myths and legends are pictorial
representations of what was experienced. In the Siegfried legend
[See Note 6]
we see most clearly that feature that
seeks for an end. This feature is expressed in mythological terms in
the “Gotterdammerung,” the twilight of the gods.
[See Note 7]
This is characteristic of all the northern mysteries.
In all mysticism the image
of the feminine is used for the soul; this image is also used by Goethe
in his “chorus mysticus,” in the concluding scene of the
second part of Faust. It is the eternal in the human being,
the divine soul that draws the human being forward. Just as initiation
was described in ancient Egypt and Persia as the union of the soul with
the spiritual, so was it also described here in the north. Here in the
north it was understood best that a man proved his worth on the field
of battle. Those who counted for something in the north were honored
as fighters who fell in the field of battle; those were the ones who
entered into eternal life; the others died in their sleep. The fallen
fighters were received by the Valkyries,
[See Note 8]
their own soul; union with the Valkyries was union with the eternal. It
was said of Siegfried that he had already united with the Valkyries here
on earth; that shows he was an initiate. The meaning of the story, that
Siegfried had already experienced union with the Valkyries here on earth,
is that he was an initiate. This legend tells us something with the
death of Siegfried. When experiencing initiation in the ancient mysteries
the initiate is told: We can only bring you to a certain point ... further
than this only another can bring you — this other one is Christ Jesus
— all that we can give you will be darkened when he comes, the One
who will bring the new initiation. Siegfried is vulnerable to Hagen
[See Note 9]
on his back because the cross has not
yet been placed on the back of the one who will take over from the ancient
initiation. This part of the body will one day be made invulnerable
when the cross has been laid across it. In this way the northern mysteries
alluded to Christ Jesus.
All the ancient mysteries
looked toward him who was to come, who will live on the physical plane
so as to found a new world order. The new initiation is what will occur
through the impulses he gave. We find a portrayal of this in the
Apocalypse. It tells us how initiation will proceed until Christ Jesus
comes again in a new form. The Apocalypse refers to the time when an organ
for receiving Christ will be developed. The time until Christ Jesus again
will approach is described in the Apocalypse. We will understand the
individual words if we adopt the way of thinking of one who has
experienced such an initiation. We remember here the words of Christ
— if we understand them we will also understand the Apocalypse
— “Before Abraham was, I am.”
(John 8:58)
Christ directs his view from the past over
to the present because for him there is an eternal present.
If we wish to understand
what is meant by this we need only remember the fourfold human being
who consists of physical body, etheric body, astral body, and I. When
the I lights up in the course of evolution then the astral and etheric
bodies are changed; and then finally the physical body too. The I is
here for eternity; it is born out of the womb of a higher spirituality.
Whether we look into the past or into the future, this I is what is
eternal. If we observe an individual we can ask the question: What
transformation has this person's I gone through? If we look back to the
great Atlantean flood and then further back we do not find the I in a body
such as exists today. At that time we were in a state wherein we could not
think as well as we can now. When we look into the future we find the I in
bodies ever more perfect, bodies having a perfection that we today with our
thinking cannot even imagine. We cannot now imagine the perfection of
thinking, the purity of feeling, and so forth in the future bodies of
humankind. Initiates must make use of the form the human body has at
any given time. Christ, too, had to use the ordinary form of the human
body in his time. Still, when we look deeper we see in him a stage of
evolution that humankind will only achieve in the distant future. Christ
Jesus was the first born among those who could overcome death.
Let us compare the two
ways of developing. The human being is born, goes through a life on
earth, dies, goes through an astral condition, through devachan, and
is then born again. When we go back to the beings who were present before
the Lemurian age we have beings who do not die and are not reborn. They
are constantly exchanging sheaths, as we do between physical birth
and death. Then a certain revolution enters in. Today, human beings
alternate between spiritual and physical life. With the group souls
of animals it happens this way: Individual animals discard their bodies
but the group souls themselves never die.
If we try to imagine the
very highest being, the one who was as highly developed at the beginning
as others will be at the end of evolution, then we have the image of
Christ. He was the I that was as highly developed at the beginning as
the human being will be at the end. “Grace to you and peace from
him who is and who was and who is to come ...”
(Rev. 1:4)
He is the first and the last.
The one who gives the
Revelation to John is thus described. It is a Christian book; that is
proven by the passage that reads: “... and from Jesus Christ the
faithful witness, the first born of the dead and the ruler of kings
on earth. To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by his
blood and made us a kingdom, priests to his God and Father, to him be
glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.”
(Rev. 1:5,6)
Christianity represents
the greatest possible individualization of the human being, the freedom
of the human being as an individual. At the beginning of the human race
we see small communities held together by blood ties. Love was limited
to those of the same blood. Now Christ Jesus comes and expands all ethnic
groups and communities to include all of humanity. All ethnic religions
are overcome through him. Christianity is the religion of the world.
Within it there are only human beings; Christianity knows only human
beings. Christianity would never be able to speak of the community of
religions, but only of community of human beings. An age began when
the secret mysteries became accessible to everyone through the mystery
of Golgotha, which was placed in the center of the world. The chosen
priests and kings gradually cease to exist. A final state is pointed to
wherein everyone is a priest and a king, a state wherein all distinctions
are swept away and all human beings are made equal. Therefore, the
Apocalypse speaks of: “... a Kingdom, priests to his God and
Father.”
(Rev. 1:6)
The book portrays a real
initiation, an ascent, to begin with, through learning on the physical
plane. This step is portrayed in the words concerning the seven letters
to the seven communities. The seven letters present what must first
be learned. Then a number of pictures lead us to the astral plane. We
see groups of beings undergoing transformation in the astral light:
“... and he who sat there appeared like jasper and carnelian, and,
round the throne was a rainbow that looked like an emerald.”
(Rev. 4:3)
“And before the throne there is as it were a sea of glass,
like crystal.”
(Rev. 4:6)
The quality and being of the astral light is indicated by the
transparency. In the astral light we can see through objects; they
appear like glass. The entire astral world is like a glass sea.
The four living creatures
then follow; they are to represent the human group souls. They were
full of eyes within and without and had no peace day or night. There
is constant movement in the astral world — astral eyes are everywhere
and everything is transparent to them, both within and all around.
We see how, at first,
the mysteries of the physical plane are described and then, out of
the sealed book, the astral imaginations. They approach us in pictures.
After the seer has perceived
the spiritual beings in the astral light for awhile, they begin to sound
forth. This is described in the resounding of the trumpets when the
sixth seal is opened. That is the condition of devachan. The seer becomes
“clairaudient,” able to hear spiritual sounds — the
spiritual ear is opened.
The stage then follows
when the seer expands his consciousness over the entire earth. This
is indicated in the swallowing of the book. It expresses the ascent
into the higher regions of the spiritual worlds.
Notes:
Note 1.
Rudolf Steiner,
Christianity as Mystical Fact
(Hudson, N.Y.:Anthroposophic Press, 1993).
Note 2.
Actual words: “For what is now called
the Christian religion existed even among the ancients and was not
lacking from the beginning of the human race until ‘Christ
came in the flesh.’ From that time, true religion, which already
existed, began to be called Christian.” Augustine,
The Retractions
Book I, chapter 12, section 3, trans. Mary Inez Bogan in
The Fathers of the Church
(Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 1968).
Note 3.
Steiner,
Theosophy
(GA 9) (Hudson, N.Y.: Anthroposophic Press, 1993).
Note 4.
Compare lecture of September 12, 1910 in
The Gospel of St. Matthew
(GA 123) (Hudson, N.Y.: Anthroposophic Press. 1965).
Note 5.
Compare the lecture cycle
Wonders of the World, Ordeals of the Soul, and Revelations of the Spirit
(GA 129) (London: Rudolf Steiner Press, 1963);
Mystery Centers
(GA 232) (London: Rudolf Steiner Press, 1973); and
World History in the Light of Anthroposophy
(GA 233) (London: Rudolf Steiner Press, 1977).
Note 6.
Compare the lecture of October 21, 1904:
“Die Siegfriedsage” in
Esoterik und Weltgeschichte in der grieschischen und germanischen Mythologie
[“The Legend of Siegfried” in Esoteric and
World History in Greek and German Mythology]
(Dornach, Switzerland: Rudolf Steiner Verlag, 1955).
Note 7.
Compare the lecture of August 14. 1908 in the lecture cycle
Universe, Earth and Man
(GA 105) (London: Rudolf Steiner Press, 1987).
Note 8.
The virgin heroines of Germanic mythology.
Note 9.
One of the main heroes of the Nibelungen saga: he treacherously
suffocates Siegfried after a hunt while Siegfried is drinking at
a fountain.
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