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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment
Schmidt Number: S-2619
On-line since: 6th July, 2002
In these lectures we shall have to discuss important questions
intimately related to spiritual life. We shall have to speak of what
lies at the basis of so-called initiation and, after having indicated
some of its secrets and laws, we must go on to speak of the
significance of all that radiates out for life from initiation and
initiates in the course of human evolution. We shall have to speak of
all this in relation to what may be summed up in such contrasting
ideas as eternity and the passing moment, the light of the spirit and
the darkness of life. Then, having considered the life of man from the
point of view these ideas give, we shall return again to the power of
initiation and the power of initiates. It is the principle of
initiation, then, that on this occasion will be the limit of our
studies.
Eternity; we need only touch on this idea to feel resounding in us
something connected with the deepest longings of man's soul and with
the highest aims of his endeavour. The passing moment always brings
before us all that surrounds us in life, that reminds us of the
necessity to search in this passing moment of our lives for what is
able to give us a view into the land of our desire, into eternity. We
only have to call to mind how Goethe introduced into his Faust
the deepest secret of this his greatest poem, by making Faust say to
the passing moment. “Tarry yet, thou art so fair!” and
making him then confess that if such can become the soul's attitude,
if it can so identify itself with this confession as to say to the
passing moment, “Tarry yet, thou art so fair,” it must
necessarily follow that Faust should own that he deserves to fall
victim to Mephistopheles, the enemy of mankind on earth. Thus, Goethe
makes everything connected with the feeling that flows from the
passing moment the basic mystery of his greatest poem. It seems then
that what we live in — the passing moment — is in opposition
to what we call eternity, for which man's soul must constantly long.
The light of the spirit! In all the anthroposophical studies we have
pursued over the years, we have recognised that the striving after
spirit light has the fundamental aim of leading man out of the
darkness of life. Once more we feel how in Faust, one of the
greatest poems in human evolution, a poet, wishing to portray a great
and all-embracing soul, cannot but make it come forth out of the
darkness of life. What is it that entangles Faust at the beginning of
the poem? What envelops him? It is the darkness of life. How often
have we to emphasise that so great is the force and power of this
darkness over man, that the spirit light, finding him immature, may so
work upon him as not to illuminate but to dazzle and stun him. So that
the question may not only be, “What is the way to the light of
the spirit, where can it be found?” but rather and above all,
“How must man tread the path of the soul that is able to lead him
to the spirit light in the right way?”
These are only the guiding lines that should occupy us in these
lectures. We have reached such a stage in our anthroposophical work
that we need not develop our subject from the very start, but may
connect it to some of the things already familiar to us.
When we meet the word, initiation, which is for us so intimately
connected with the words eternity and spirit light, all the great men
of whom we have heard in the successive epochs of humanity as
initiates, become living in our souls. With them our souls call to
life, too, the several epochs themselves, how they ran their courses,
how men lived in them, and how the light streamed into humanity from
both initiates and initiation temples in order to make possible what
the impulses, the essential driving forces of human evolution, have in
all ages become. It would take us too far afield today to refer in
detail to all that happened in earth evolution before the Atlantean
catastrophe broke upon the face of the earth, completely changing it.
We can gain an adequate idea of what we are considering if we turn our
gaze to post-Atlantean times, remembering the particular configuration
of the human being and his various aspects throughout the ages.
We will let our gaze sweep back over the characteristic civilisation
that followed immediately after the face of the earth had been
re-formed by the Atlantean catastrophe. We have often spoken
reverently of all that in the first post-Atlantean epoch the great and
holy teachers of mankind brought to that part of the earth where later
the Indian civilisation was developed. We have remarked how the soul
cannot but look up from below to the lofty spiritual teachings that
came into the world at that time, through certain human
individualities who still bore within them all the inward greatness of
those men who in Atlantean times had direct communion, which was no
longer possible in later epochs of mankind, with the divine spiritual
worlds. We have pointed out how the heritage of Atlantean wisdom, now
accessible to the occultist alone, lived on in post-Atlantean form in
the ancient holy teachers of the first post-Atlantean period of
culture. We have also pointed out how great and significant man finds
all that then lived, to which, now, it is only the Akashic Records
that bear witness, when he receives reflections of it in Indian, or
any other oriental literature. The moral and spiritual sublimity
contained in these writings as an echo of primeval spiritual teachings
cannot be fully realised by present-day humanity insofar as external
culture is concerned. Least of all can it be realised in the countries
that have been prepared for their present external culture by what the
various forms of Christianity have accomplished during the last
centuries. Thus the soul felt directed upwards when it turned its gaze
to all the greatness that, so dimly sensed today, has only come down
to us as a faint echo of primeval spirituality. So, if man looks up to
the old wisdom and remembers above all what has often been mentioned
here, namely, that only in the seventh and last epochs of the
post-Atlantean age will mankind again reach the point of drawing up
out of the darkness of life the understanding of what once lived at
the beginning of post-Atlantean times and gave the impulse for human
evolution — if we consider that mankind must mature to the last
epoch before it can feel and experience in itself what at that time
was felt and experienced, then only shall we get a sense of how
exalted must have been the initiation principle that gave the impulse
to the ancient, holy, spiritual culture of mankind.
Then we see how, in the course of successive epochs, mankind,
struggling for other spiritual treasures, other treasures of earthly
life, seems to descend ever lower, how it takes other forms, but how,
according to the needs of the age, great initiates give to men from
the spiritual worlds what they require at any particular epoch as
impulse for their culture. Then, before our vision, arises the
Zarathustra culture that, if seen in its true light, entirely differs
from that of the holy Rishis.
We then see the Egyptian-Chaldean culture arise, and the ancient holy
mysteries of Greece, to which we referred from a quite different
aspect in our last lecture. Everywhere we see the light of the spirit
shining down, according to the needs of the different epochs, into the
darkness of life. If at the outset of our considerations we ask what
are our ideas of an initiate — it is obvious that at the
beginning of these lectures only approximate ideas can be given of so
vast a concept — we must first gather up much of all we have
already heard in the anthroposophical field. We must be clear that for
complete initiation it is necessary that man should not look out on
the world from within his physical body in the usual way, by
perceiving the world around him through his eyes and other sense
organs, nor must he gain knowledge of this world or any other world
around him through the intellect bound to the brain, nor through what
he may call his sense of orientation. He must not form concepts about
these worlds in the ordinary way. He must arrive at a stage in which,
by means of what we may term “the perceiving of worlds outside
his physical body,” he develops something in his life of soul
that may be called a super-sensible spiritual body, having within it
organs of perception, though of a higher kind, just as the physical
body has eyes and cars and other organs of perception and
understanding. “One who can see worlds without using the organs
of his physical body” can be given as an entirely explicit
definition of an initiate. The great initiates, who gave man the
important cultural impulses in the course of successive ages, had
attained in the highest measure independence of the sensory body, and
use of another quite different in character.
I do not wish to say much that is abstract. Wherever possible I shall
bring forward concrete examples, and today therefore I should like to
illustrate this life outside the sensory body in a higher organisation
belonging to the soul and to illustrate it by means of the following
example.
If one who has only gone a few steps on the way to initiation,
realises through self-observation what it is that he experiences in
and of himself, he may say something like, “One of the first
things I experienced of myself is that I have within me, besides my
physical body of flesh, a finer one that may be called an etheric
body, which in earth life is carried about with me just like the
physical body.” Anyone making his first steps toward initiation
realises this at first in such a way that he feels within this body
and experiences it just as, on another level, he feels what lives in
his blood or nervous system, or in what arises from his muscular
system. Such an inner feeling and experience is present, and it can
exist also for the etheric body. It is then particularly useful for a
student in the first stages of initiation to get to know the
difference, or one might say the relationship, between the realisation
of himself, the experience of himself in his physical body, on the one
hand, and on the other, in his etheric body. Man experiences himself
in the etheric body in the same way as one is conscious of the blood
or the beating of one's heart and pulse in the physical body.
To gain a clear idea of this we may consider the etheric body in
connection with the physical body, in which one is more at home than
in the body that one only succeeds in reaching by means of a journey
into the spiritual. One may say to oneself, “In my etheric body I
have a part corresponding to my physical brain and to all that
constitutes my head. The head, the brain, is as though crystallised
out of the etheric body, and so rests within it that it might be
compared to a piece of ice floating in water — the water
representing the etheric body and the ice, the physical body
crystallised from the etheric body. An intimate connection is felt and
experienced between what may be called the etheric part of the head or
brain, and the physical brain itself. We then realise how we create
our thoughts, how we form memory images within the etheric body, and
how the physical brain is only a kind of reflector, but we also
realise how intimate is the connection of the brain with the etheric
body. This can be experienced with especial force when one has to work
hard at tasks connected with the physical plane in the physical life,
when prolonged thought about things is necessary, and when one must
exert the physical body to bring up memory images from the depths of
life and to hold them together. In such a process, the etheric body
always takes a direct part, whether one knows it or not. But inwardly
connected with it is the physical brain, and if this brain is tired
out, fatigue is markedly felt in the corresponding etheric part. We
then notice something like a block in what is experienced as the
etheric part of the brain, something like a foreign body, so that one
can no longer get at what one must know since mobility in the physical
brain must run parallel with mobility in the etheric body. You may
then have the distinct feeling that your etheric body never grows
tired. It would be able to gather up thought images to all eternity,
and bring to the surface all that you know. But before all this can be
expressed in the physical world, it must be reflected back, and this
the brain refuses to do. The etheric body never tires. Just because it
can be continuously active, it notices the fatigue of the brain all
the more. One notices as it were the forces of exhaustion produced by
the brain, and when the brain goes to sleep and falls into the torpor
of fatigue, one might say, “Now you must stop or you will be
ill.” The etheric body cannot be used up, but by giving the brain
too much to do it is possible indirectly to over tire it more and
more, thus bringing about a lifeless, deathlike condition. A living
organism will not suffer anything normally connected with it to be
partially deadened and brought into an abnormal state. Hence, out of a
free resolve, one must say, “So that I may not kill part of my
brain and leave it to go on consuming itself, I must stop when I begin
to feel it like something foreign inside me.”
That is what we experience when we try to find the relation between
that part of the human or etheric body, which corresponds to the brain
or head, and the physical brain or physical head itself. There is an
intimate connection between them. In effect, the external life of the
senses runs its course in such a way that it is impossible to break
down what is parallel between the two. Therefore, if we want to
express the relation, we may also say that in our head, especially in
our brain, we have a faithful expression of the etheric forces,
something that, in the external phenomena and external functions,
gives us a really faithful image of the functions and processes in the
corresponding etheric part.
It is different in the case of other organs of the human etheric body
and the corresponding physical sense organs. These things are quite
different. I will give you an example. Consider the hands. Just as
there exists in the etheric body an etheric part corresponding to the
head or brain, so there are etheric processes in the human etheric
body corresponding to the hands. But the difference between the
external physical hands and their tasks, and what lies at the basis of
the corresponding etheric part is far greater than the difference
between the physical head and its corresponding part in the human
etheric body. What the hands perform has far more to do with the world
of the senses and is much more a purely sensory function, while what
is done by the corresponding etheric organs is only manifest in a
small degree in what finds physical expression in the hands.
In order to describe the corresponding facts, I must, as is often the
case, say things that appear grotesque and strange for physical
experience, and for grasping physical observations in words. But what
I say is fully in accordance with basic facts, and everyone who knows
anything about these things will at once feel that they really are as
I am obliged to describe them. They are the etheric parts
corresponding to the physical hands. But apart from the fact that what
corresponds to these etheric parts finds its expression in the hands
and their movements, these etheric organs in the etheric body are true
spiritual organs. The etheric organs expressed in the hands and their
functions, work far more intuitively, more spiritually, and perform a
far higher task than is accomplished by the etheric brain. Whoever has
made progress in these matters will say that the brain with its
etheric basis is in effect by far the least skilful of the spiritual
organs man bears within him because as soon as he begins to bestir
himself in the etheric part of the brain, he soon becomes aware of
this foreign part of it.
The spiritual activities connected with the organs underlying the
hands, but incompletely expressed in the hands and their functions,
serve for a far higher, more spiritual kind of knowledge and
observation. These organs can lead into the super-sensible world and
can occupy themselves with our perception and orientation there. A
spiritual seer may express this, somewhat surprisingly but accurately,
by saying that the human brain is a most clumsy organ for research in
the spiritual world, and that the hands, or the spiritual basis of the
hands, are far more interesting and significant organs for gaining
knowledge of the world, and are certainly far more skilful organs than
the brain.
Not much is gained on the way to initiation by advancing from the use
of the physical brain to a free use of the etheric brain. The
difference is not great between what may be achieved through a
purified, intuitive brain-thinking, and regulated spiritual working in
the etheric spiritual counterpart of the brain. The difference becomes
much greater between what our hands accomplish in the world, and what
can be done by the etheric part that is the spiritual basis of the
hands, in the same way as the etheric brain is the spiritual basis of
the physical brain. On the path of initiation not much development of
the etheric brain is necessary, since it is not a particularly
important organ. But the etheric basis of the hands is connected with
the activity of the lotus flower in the region of the heart, as you
will learn in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment.
This lotus flower pours out its rays of force in such a way as to
build up the organism that, at the stage at which physical man now
stands, exists in an incomplete form in the hands and their functions.
When we learn this fact, and think of the great difference between the
mere use of physical hands and all that we can acquire as regards the
super-sensible world through the etheric organs underlying the hands
— such far more skilful organs than those of the etheric brain
— we gain a vivid conception of learning to experience initiation
and all the enrichment that it means for man. We do not acquire much
enrichment through the feeling that our brain radiates out to feel its
etheric counterpart. This is the case, but it is not a really
permeating and significant experience. The significant experience
begins when one feels that other parts are also expanding and making
contact with the universe. Though it may sound strange, yet it is true
that the least skilful organ for spiritual investigation is the brain,
since it is the least capable of development. On the other hand,
entirely new perspectives are opened out when we consider other
apparently subordinate organs.
Thus there takes place a complete transformation of what man
experiences in himself when he starts on the first steps toward the
heights of initiation. It is necessary that one should bring this to
consciousness, that one should grasp it as an inner transformation of
the human personality, like the principle of development elsewhere in
the universe; one thing passes over into another, the later being
called, though perhaps not always appropriately, the more perfect as
compared with the earlier. If we are clear how in the course of
evolution one thing is transformed into another, how the seed of the
plant is transformed and becomes leaves, flower and fruit, we can say
that the human personality, too, experiences something of this kind;
namely, what it is and what it can become through the methods given in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
which are the first beginnings of what may lead us right up to the
highest regions of initiation. It is good — and you will see why
— to arouse within us a living conception of how the men who are
destined to become spiritual leaders in the course of time develop
themselves inwardly, how all becomes transformed that is at first only
germinal and appears so imperfect in man, like the hands in comparison
with other organs. Outwardly, this transformation is not noticeable,
but the inward change is all the more significant. Just as the outer
world exists even for one who is blind and cannot see what is visible
to others but only appears if the eye is there, so the world that is
spiritual is present around us. But we have to bring to it what we can
in order that the spiritual content of the world should approach us.
Now, in the various epochs of humanity there must stream into the
course of evolution as impulse all that can be given through living
oneself into the spiritual world. This is what was always behind
everything proceeding from the mysteries, the initiation centres. A
true idea of the course of human evolution may be gained by thinking
of the great initiates as the real driving force, the real
individualities, behind what is to be perceived externally. The
connection between what these great initiates have to do and what
happens externally in the World, often only becomes perceptible
through anthroposophy or some other form of occultism. The external,
purely historical knowledge of the learned only sees that human
history, human evolution, is running its course; it does not see the
driving forces behind it. In external history we follow what seems
like a chain of phenomena, one link following another in a succession
of external events. But that at certain points of the chain impulses
are entering from quite another world by way of initiation, this we
only learn to accept through anthroposophical development. Thus,
anthroposophically we see the inmost centre in the course of time and
all that, fundamentally, gives to evolution its whole stamp and
character. We perceive the various developments of religion as an
out-streaming from the initiates. We perceive how the impulses flowing
from the mysteries and initiation centres pass over into the general
life of mankind.
Whoever regards the evolution of mankind in this way becomes, as a
matter of course, free from any kind of a priori preference for a
particular religion. This has always been the case with genuine
occultism. It is one of the first requirements of initiation to divest
oneself of all prejudices and preconceived feelings that grow up in a
human soul when it incarnates into a particular religious system or
community. In self-education one has to watch carefully that nothing
remains in the soul that might give preference to any one religion. We
must meet with absolute impartiality all that is contained in the
various religions that, through initiation as impulse of development,
has entered human evolution. As soon as there is any preference for a
particular religion, something like an astral mist is formed through
which no free vision is possible. Anyone who, by reason of an
inclination that is a matter of course in ordinary life, harbours a
preference in his soul for any religion, will never be able to
understand other religions. Though he may not know it, he will
perceive the predominance of one part of the contents of initiation
and will never attain impartial knowledge of the other. Thus, for an
occult view, it is obvious that one should confront without prejudice
the various streams and impulses flowing from initiation. No one in
studying a plant would give the flower preference over the root
because he then would not be able to form an objective judgement of
its whole structure. Just as little can a correct judgement of the
inner content of one religious principle be gained if one is unable to
observe other religions with complete impartiality.
In these lectures we shall be speaking of the demands the soul must
make upon itself when taking the first steps toward initiation. I
should like first to arouse a feeling of how initiation is related to
life, and of how the various initiation centre's and initiation
impulses stand in regard to human evolution, particularly in
post-Atlantean times.
Now occult investigation, in following up this course of human
evolution, has a peculiar experience that can only be properly
appreciated when such words as have just been spoken about the equal
value of all religions are genuinely understood. When these ideas
become a matter of course, something remarkable is experienced that
will be increasingly better understood during the course of these
lectures.
Let us turn our gaze to the initiates who give light to mankind as the
ages go by. A man living primarily in the physical world, looking back
on the initiates as historical and traditional figures, may say,
“Those are the great figures of world history.” When
necessary, history has taken good care that as little as possible
should be known of them. Although this may sound paradoxical, it is a
good thing that humanity should know so little of Homer, for example,
since it has not been possible for his image to be distorted by the
learned as has been done in the case of other personalities. So will
it be — we may well long for this — with Goethe when once he
has become as unknown a personality as Homer is today. Man's soul then
can look out into the external world at these personalities, and see
what they did there. Then he may himself take the first steps in
initiation and become able to turn his gaze on the great figures of
initiation such as Buddha or Zarathustra. He may be able to remember
what Buddha or Zarathustra was to him in the world of the senses, what
sort of impression he there received of these human individualities.
Then, when some degree of spiritual light has dawned for him through
initiation, he may ask, “How does Buddha now appear to me, and
how Zarathustra?” And he will say, “I now have more
knowledge of Buddha and Zarathustra. I know something I was not able
to know in the world of the senses.” Such a man may then develop
even further, until he comes to the stage when he will see better what
these beings are as spiritual entities. One learns to know a Buddha, a
Zarathustra, better the more one lives oneself into spiritual light
until, when at last a certain limit is reached, it stops. That is one
secret phenomenon, however, that has no need to be discussed further
here. Suffice it to say that, as higher worlds are approached, further
knowledge may come to a stop. This is the case as regards all
initiates whom we meet in world evolution.
Now the spiritual student, who has not advanced too far, can easily be
mistaken in these matters. That, however, is not of much consequence.
It may happen that some human individuality, who in bygone ages stood
high as a spiritual seer, on being reincarnated later, seems to have
descended from his former spiritual heights. But the truth is simply
that there are certain connections in human evolution where those who
have already been initiates, are reincarnated as non-initiates because
time conditions call for them to accomplish certain deeds for which
their initiation, latent during one or more incarnations, may work in
some special way. Mistakes may easily arise about such individualities
as they appear to us here or there making their way in external life,
and quite wrong ideas may be formed about them. But in the course of
progress these mistakes have gradually to be corrected. On the whole,
therefore, it is a fact that man's relation to the initiates is such
that he learns to know them better as he himself ascends toward the
light of the spirit.
In the successive epochs of human evolution we find one remarkable
phenomenon. I could give examples of what I have just told you of the
confusing way in which initiates on reincarnating sometimes appear to
have come down from their heights. You would probably be much
surprised if I told you, for instance, in what way Dante was
reincarnated in the nineteenth century. But it is not my task here to
discuss further this result of my own investigation and what was
established for me. Rather have I to bring forward with strong proof
the things known to everyone conversant with occultism, letting
everything else recede into the background and stating nothing that is
not generally recognised where bona fide occultism is upheld.
Now another remarkable phenomenon appears to us that can best be
expressed by saying that we meet with a Being regarding Whom it would
be senseless to say that He was initiated like other initiates. While
through Him the principle of initiation stands before us in the world
objectively and is there, yet it would be meaningless to speak of this
Individuality as having been initiated on earth like other initiates
in the course of human evolution. I have often touched on this fact. A
certain degree of misconception has arisen by understanding this fact
as originating in specifically Christian prejudice. In reality it is
not any kind of Christian prejudice, but should be stated as the
objective result of occult research. This Individuality Who was not
initiated like other initiates, of Whom it would be quite meaningless
to speak as having gone through initiation like others, is Christ
Jesus Himself. Let us again emphasise that, just as it is impossible
to understand a scale if it is said that it should be suspended from
two points instead of one since the one point constitutes its very
nature — just as it would be impossible for a competent mechanic
to maintain that a scale should be suspended from two or more points,
it would be equally impossible for any genuine occultist to maintain
that our earth evolution could have more than one fulcrum, more than
one centre of stability. I have said that this is an objective result
of occult research that may be recognised by anyone, be he Buddhist or
Moslem.
Anyone who has made certain progress in occult development learns to
know the initiates insofar as they are great personalities or have
done great deeds. He learns to know them in the spiritual worlds as he
ascends toward initiation, and the higher he rises the better he
learns to know them. Let us take the example of a man who possibly had
no opportunity in his earthly life to learn to know the Buddha and had
never concerned himself about him. I know people who have entered
deeply into the whole life of the occident without having any idea of
the Buddha. It might be said of them that in their bodily life in the
physical world they never had anything to do with him. Or take someone
who in his earthly life has never interested himself in the great
leaders of the Chinese religion. Imagine men of this kind entering the
super-physical worlds through initiation or, as in some of the cases I
know, entering these worlds for the first time after physical death.
They can then become acquainted with Buddha, Moses and Zarathustra
because they can meet them as spiritual beings and gain a real
knowledge of them. If they want to gain knowledge of these
personalities, the fact that they had no opportunity to do so on earth
is no hindrance. But it is quite different in the case of Christ. I
beg you to receive this as an occult fact. Suppose a man had never in
any of his incarnations established a relation with the Christ Being.
That is a hindrance to him when, in order to find Christ in higher
worlds, he is using his perceptive faculties in an ultra-physical
world, for Christ cannot then appear to him in His true form. It is on
earth that it is essential to prepare for the vision and recognition
of the Christ Being in higher worlds. This is the occult difference in
the relation of man to other initiates. The Christ event is such that
something specific becomes related to the actual physical evolution of
the earth in its most important phase, radiates down into the earth's
physical evolution and forms its centre of gravity.
Now let us assume that the beings who live out their lives as human
souls did not at first pay any attention to the earth. It might be
that something happened in the course of the world to make these souls
say, “We will take no notice of the earth; why should we
incarnate down there?” This is, of course, impossible but let us
assume it for a moment.
Then, insofar as what belongs to the earth is spiritual, these human
souls would be able to experience it in the spiritual worlds, and all
the great, sublime principles that were active in the initiates would
there be visible to them. Were such a soul in the higher worlds to put
the question to cosmic evolution, “Of all the beings in the
higher worlds I want to know the Christ, to learn to understand His
world mission and His essential task,” then the answer would have
to be, “If you would know the Being Who is for us the Christ,
then you must incarnate on earth. You must in some way participate in
the Mystery of Golgotha in order to enter into relation with the
Christ Being.”
The Christ Mystery had to take place on earth in accordance with
cosmic law. The earth is the stage where, in accordance with cosmic
law, the Mystery of Golgotha has had to be enacted, and where the
essential foundation has had to be laid for an understanding of the
Christ. The understanding of the Christ that man gains on earth is a
preparation, on a different scale to any other preparation that takes
place on earth, for any vision and knowledge of this Being in the
higher worlds. Therefore, in the Christ Being the principle of
initiation was lived out in quite a different way from that of other
initiates. They experienced a super-sensible world, indeed, sometimes
profoundly, and gave the various impulses out of that world into the
course of human evolution. But when they had experience of the higher
worlds, when they were within them, they were out of their physical
bodies. Though it did not require much effort on the part of high
initiates to leave the physical body, though but a small step was
necessary to issue from it into the fullness of spiritual facts, yet
it is true that this transition from the physical body to the higher
bodies has to be made. In the Christ Jesus we have the distinctive
phenomenon that, in reality, in accordance with the principle of
initiation — in accordance, that is, with what man needs in order
to bring about initiation — He never, during the whole three
years He was living on earth, deliberately left the physical body as
is done in initiation. He always remained within it. All that He
brought into life and gave to the world during those three years He
gave through His physical body. The other initiates gave what they had
to give to mankind through their super-physical bodies. In Christ we
have the one and only individuality Who has given all that He gave,
all that He said, all that went out from Him into human evolution,
through His physical body and never indirectly through the higher
bodies.
In ordinary consciousness this is experienced in such a way that the
sense of it can be summed up by saying that in Christ we have a
phenomenon that can be understood by the most primitive consciousness
that anyone possesses through the body by means of which we speak in
everyday life. Hence, the intimate, brotherly union with the Christ
Individuality, the possibility of understanding the Christ
Individuality without the aid of education, simply by means of
original primitive human feeling; hence, the necessity for working up
to a higher form of comprehension, if one wishes to understand the
other initiates. Thus what I have often emphasised in these last ten
years is true. In Christ we have a Being Whom the simplest mind can
understand, although anyone who has raised himself to this higher
comprehension will understand Him better. In Christ Jesus all that can
be connected with a human body was present, spiritualising the human
body to the greatest possible extent, and working in the human body
through Christ Jesus. The other initiates were not able to be so fully
active while giving forth what was spiritual because they had always
to go out of their physical body and return to it later in order to
reveal what they had retained of the super-sensible world. Christ,
however, always had to live everything out in the physical world
through the physical body.
Such things must be taken into consideration if we would go into the
true connections. Everything else is empty talk, as for instance, when
it is discussed whether Christ or the other initiates stand the
higher. Nothing is gained by such classification; that is quite beside
the mark. The essential thing is to look into the connection between
the beings. It is a matter of personal preference whether the founder
of one religion is deemed “higher” than another. That will
not do much harm; men are always subject to such little weaknesses.
The important thing is to realise wherein consists the actual
distinction between the position of Christ and that of the other
initiates in the world. We may then calmly allow people to say,
“I consider this or that individuality the higher on account of
what he did.” When the difference I have described is understood,
the distinction will also be understood between the impulses that have
come into the world through the various initiates.
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Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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