Today we will continue our study of the Apocalypse. Anyone who desires
to understand the whole meaning and spirit of a work like the
Apocalypse must, above all, have a clear idea of how the religions
work, and of how Christianity too worked at the beginning, that is to
say, what forces made it possible for Christianity, like the other
religious systems, to pour the life of the Spirit in might and glory
over mankind.
The belief is all too widespread today that plain, simple words,
comprehensible to everybody, must contain the truth, and there is a
certain disinclination to raise the spirit to the heights of thought,
to the heights of super-sensible vision. People are averse to this. We
often hear it said, even by theologians, that whatever cannot be
clothed in the simplest words which everyone can understand, can be of
little service to truth. Anyone who holds this view will be incapable
of understanding the meaning and spirit of a work like the Apocalypse
or the mystical Gospel of St. John. There is nothing to be said
against the justness of the saying that truth must be made known in
simple words, for one who would proclaim truth must find ways to speak
to the simplest hearts, they must find words in which to speak to
those who stand at the heights of science, culture and education, as
well as to those who go by the name of the simple folk.
But the power, the inner force cannot find expression in homely,
simple words. This power issues from the supreme heights of spiritual
life.
Christianity, too, in the early centuries, had Mystery Centers, places
of Initiation, where not only simple words, universally comprehensible
teachings were given, but the revelations of spiritual vision at its
highest level were made known. In the Gospel of St. John this
spiritual vision extends to the realms where space and time no longer
mean anything. Those who did not participate in the Mysteries were not
all of them capable of speaking of these revelations of the highest
realms of the spiritual world. Therefore the Church Father or Teacher
of the first Christian centuries found popular, simple words through
which to find access to the hearts of the unlearned folk. He himself
had within him the power, the force belonging to the proclamation from
the heights of spiritual life. There is some indication of this in the
Apocalypse itself. You only need to read with understanding the most
significant passages in the Apocalypse and you will find that what is
drawn down from the heights of spirit has been gathered into a great,
all-embracing picture of the world. Quotation from
Rev. 1:9:
I
John, who also am your brother and companion in tribulation, and in
the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ, was in the isle that is
called Patmos, for the word of God and for the testimony of Jesus
Christ. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day ... He says that
he was on the island of Patmos, meaning a place of initiation, and
received this revelation. And he had received it in the
spirit. In other places he speaks a little differently. At the
beginning of the fourth chapter, he says, After this I looked,
and behold a door was opened in heaven, and the first voice which I
heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me, which said,
Come up hither and I will show thee things which must be
hereafter ...
The first three chapters contain the gist of what I tried to convey
briefly in the last lecture. But then comes a description of the
destiny of the Root Race which will follow our own. That is why the
Apocalypse makes a clear distinction between the two kinds of vision,
Inspiration and Intuition. A lower form of Intuition suffices when it
is a matter of making known the destiny of a former Root Race, but a
higher form of Intuition is necessary in order to see what will come
to pass after our own Root Race, for example, during the sixth and
seventh Root Races. This lies beyond the range of the vision upon
which the first three chapters are based and can only be revealed to
the seer when he ascends to Devachan. The destiny of a Root Race never
unrolls before us in the region of astral vision, however highly
developed. Therefore the Apocalyptist says that he heard the voice
in the spirit. Up to the end of the third chapter of the
Apocalypse, we have to do with higher astral vision; from the fourth
chapter onwards, with Devachanic vision.
The Initiates of all epochs speak as St. John, the writer of the
Apocalypse speaks. But the Apocalypse of St. John differs in one
respect from other profound writings of Initiates. The standpoint is
different. The theologian, John, speaks in the Apocalypse as a
Christian, from the Christian standpoint. Therefore anyone who desires
to read the Apocalypse with true insight, with right feeling, must
steep himself not merely in the theological but in the human attitude
and feeling of a deeply initiated Christian who has himself
experienced the full power of the Christian revelation.
A significant saying is to be found in the first Epistle of St. John.
Quotation from
I John 5:7,8:
For there are three that bear
record in heaven, the Father, the word and the Holy Ghost ... And
there are three that bear witness in earth, the spirit, the water and
the blood ...
The three principles that bear record in heaven are known
to the theosophist as Atma, Buddhi and Manas. The Christian calls the
three principles which underlie the world: Father, Word and Holy
Spirit.
A Christian of the first centuries would have refrained from speaking
of the Father. No one cometh to the Father save through
Me. These words were uttered by the great Christian Master
Himself, by Him through Whom Christianity itself came into the world.
I am now speaking entirely in the sense in which an initiated
Christian of the first period of Christianity would have spoken. He
believed in the Father and he believed that he could come to know the
Father only through the Word.
And what was the Word? It is only possible to convey to the
non-initiate a feeble idea of what an initiated Christian of the first
centuries called the Word and even then, it can be done
only by means of a comparison. The highest to which man can raise
himself, is the Thought. Man raises himself through Thoughts to life
in Devachan. He lives in Devachan. Only, he is not conscious of it.
The characteristic of earthly man is that he lives simultaneously in
three worlds: the physical world, the astral world, and the Devachanic
world. But he is conscious of himself only in the physical world. The
highest manifestation which can exist in the world was for all
religions, and also for Christianity in its earliest form, the
world-creative Will. And when the Christian says anything at all about
the Father, It is always in the sense that the Father is the
world-creative, universal Will. When man desires to bring the highest
that is in him, the Devachanic, the Thought, to expression through the
Will, that is, through the world-creative principle, then this is
done, in the first place, through Speech. The Word is, in man, the
announcer of the Spirit through the Will. And so the early Christian
said: everything that constitutes our world is apprehended in the
highest sense through the Word, but now through the Word that has come
into being through the Highest, world-creative Will, just as man
brings the highest that is in him to expression in the words, through
the power of will. And so the Christian said, The Father brought
His Spirit, the Holy Spirit, to expression through the power of the
WORD. Hence it is written in the Gospel, All things were
made by the Word, and without the Word was not anything made that was
made.
The Third Person is the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the same for
the Cosmic All as the spirit of the individual man is for man. The
Spirit descends in the Cosmic Word. If the Christian wanted to picture
this to himself, he said, Just as when a man speaks, his words
sound forth into the air setting the air into wave-movement, and his
thought lives further in the waves of the air, just as the word is the
embodiment of the human spirit, so is the world the embodiment of the
Divine Word. Everything was made through the Word and without
the Word nothing was made that was made. Therewith it is affirmed that
the essential, basic principle is the highest that man can see
embodied in the world. This is the Word, and this Word is designated
as the Second Divine Person, or as the Son of God, as the Highest
Being, not as an abstract image of the World-soul conceived in a
pantheistic sense, but as a Being far more personal and individual
than the human personality, the human individuality. It must be firmly
held in mind that the Word is an expression for the
Highest Being, through Whom the entire universe works, just as man can
see with eyes, hear with ears, apprehend with the intellect. That
Being, for the early Christians, became Man, in Him Whom they
recognised as the Proclaimer of the Gospel.
Thus for the early Christians, the Event in Palestine was of cosmic
significance. He Who walked in Palestine was, for the first
Christians, not a man as other men. For them He was the Word made
Flesh, the One Who in the great Universe can be seen with eyes, heard
with ears, grasped with the understanding, and this infinite Being had
come in the form of a man. Whoever does not apprehend this, whoever
tries to twist the meaning of the God made Flesh, this Word which is
the God become Flesh, whoever does not hold the view that here was the
Incarnation of God in Jesus, cannot really understand the mind and
thought of the first Christians. He was in very truth a unique
Personality. The Gospel expresses this, too, in a glorious, most
powerful way. For those who can read aright, the Gospel clearly
indicates the fact that the Christian Initiate ascended to Devachanic
vision. In order fully to understand Christianity, however, I beg you
to consider the following.
In the narrative of the life of Jesus and of the life of Buddha there
is great similarity. This similarity in the Annunciation, in the years
of teaching, and so forth, has often been stressed. The mystic
understands the reason for this similarity because he knows that such
a life repeats itself in certain epochs of human evolution. But in the
Christ life there is something else something essentially different
from the Buddha-life, and the first Christian Initiates understood
this. If you follow the life of Jesus, you come to the event described
as the Transfiguration. Jesus went with His disciples Peter, John and
James to the mountain and was transfigured; He was illumined from
within, and Moses and Elias appeared on either side of Him. The
disciples then received significant revelations. This is an indication
of a moment of supreme importance. Moses and Elias appear on either
side of Christ Jesus. Time is transcended, the Past has become
Present. So it is in Devachan. In the physical world we have space and
time. In the astral world we have only time. In the Devachanic world,
however, there is no time, no space. Moses and Elias, long since
passed away, are immediately present. This means, therefore, that at
the Transfiguration the three disciples, Peter, James and John were
transported into the state of Devachanic vision. Following the
Transfiguration we first come to what is significant. It is the actual
sacrificial death, the suffering, the dying, which do not occur in the
life of Buddha. Buddha went out with his disciple Ananda and became
Illumined. When the scene is described in the life of Buddha it is
given a different form, adapted to the understanding of the people.
The Transfiguration, however, comes at the end of Buddha's life,
whereas the really significant epoch in the life of Jesus begins with
this event. Therewith is indicated Christ's teaching concerning all
the old religious systems of the previous sub-races of the Fifth Root
Race. Christ wished to say, We understand the prophecies, the
previous proclamations in the old religious systems of what the Gospel
now proclaims, we recognise that in the ancient Mysteries the word of
truth was taught and revealed. But one thing has become reality
through Christianity. And that is expressed by the words: Blessed are
they who do not see and yet believe. This epitomizes the great,
world-historic significance of Christianity in its Gospel. What was
formerly attained through Initiation by a few chosen ones in the
seclusion of the Mystery-Temples, attained through vision of the great
cosmic truths within the hidden crypts of the Mystery-Centers, could
now be attained by those who had not actual vision but who were able
to believe with inner freedom of soul. Therefore, what formerly took
place in concealment, in the seclusion of the Mysteries, the supreme
Mystery wherein man himself goes through the gate of death in order to
rise again in a higher life, this deepest of all Mystery-secrets which
a non-initiate cannot understand in its true significance, this was
enacted on the great stage of outer world-existence. What came to pass
in Palestine, came to pass as actual, historic fact, following in
every detail the sacred acts which had formerly taken place in
Mystery-rites. The rites of sacrifice and the sacrificial death were
constantly repeated, in the Mysteries. But the old Mystery-teachings
had to be presented to the world, in a more popular form. Therewith a
further step was achieved through Christianity, a step forward, in the
understanding of an early Christian Initiate, a step which leads man
beyond the stage to which the old religions could have led him.
Who were the old religious Teachers? They were Teachers of mankind.
What they taught, that was the important thing. It was the actual
teachings of Buddha, Zoroaster, Confucius, Hermes, Pythagoras,
Lao-tze, it was the words themselves that were all important. These
Teachers stood as it were on high mountain and from there proclaimed
the Most Holy Word. But something else was possible. The WORD Itself
descended and took on human form. Henceforward it was not a question
of what was proclaimed, but what was lived, lived in the very deepest
sense. The goal was fulfilled. In ancient times the path for our Fifth
Root Race was outlined. The teachings and commandments, the truths
given by the old founders of religions, Lao-tze, Confucius, Moses,
Buddha, were given for this purpose. But the WORD Itself came down in
fleshly form and lived among us. The Threefold utterance became
reality: I am the Way, the Truth and the Life. The Christian Initiate
indicated what I have said in words of great profundity. All the
Founders of ancient religions were regarded as embodied Angels,
messengers of the Godhead. Angel means the Messenger of
the Godhead. But now there came One before Whom the Angels veiled
their countenances in veneration and laid themselves at the feet of
the Mystical Lamb, at the feet of the God made Flesh. The Mystery is
that the Lamb Who became flesh denoted a deeper descent into humanity,
a life among men. The earlier Teachers had proclaimed the Word from
the mountain top. But Christ came down into the valley, lived as Man
among men. He did not command what is to be done; He did not merely
proclaim truths but in his very life He made manifest the Word. For
the Christians, this was what distinguished his religion from the
other religions. This was what brought him to the core and center of
what the Christian Initiate proclaims as the Apocalypse, or the secret
revelation. We will speak next time of why the Word made Flesh was
also called the Lamb.
It will have become clear to us that the Lamb must be regarded as the
central figure in the Apocalypse, and that only through the Lamb can
the future of Humanity be made known. In the 4th chapter of the
Apocalypse, where the man is led out, where the heaven opens, the
truths of the higher world are announced to him. It is the Mystical
Lamb Who opens the Seals of the World. Here is encountered the now
transfigured Flesh. Hence the question: What is revealed to a man who
has passed beyond the heights of Christian astral vision? The Mystical
Lamb is revealed to him. The Devachanic world lies open before him and
then he is able to unveil the innermost secret which must be revealed
when the time is fulfilled, i. e., when the 7th sub-race of our Fifth
Root Race is completed and a new race of mankind, together with a new
stage of evolution is at hand.
Thus we have in the Apocalypse a description of the Destiny of the 5th
sub-race and of the beginnings of a new configuration of the world,
characterised by the words: Pneumatology, Communal life based on love,
Morality.
This world is announced in the secret that is revealed through the
opening of the seven seals, revealed through Him Who made the
fulfilment of this secret possible, in that He came among men. And He
will fulfil it when the time is ripe, when our Root Race has become
ready to pass over into that world and to attain the stage of
evolution designated by these three words: Pneumatology, Communal life
based on love, Morality.
Such are the depths from which the content of the Apocalypse must be
drawn. This does not imply that true Christianity can be drawn only
from these depths. But true Christianity must be permeated by fire,
and man can only kindle this fire in himself when he draws its force
from higher vision. In Christianity, the fruit of this higher vision
is the Apocalypse.
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