IV SPIRIT TRIUMPHANT
THERE is a significant contrast between the Christmas thought and
the Easter thought. Understanding of the contrast and also of the
living relationship between them will lead to an experience which, in
a certain way, embraces the whole riddle of human existence.
The Christmas thought points to birth. Through birth, the eternal
being of man comes into the world whence his material, bodily
constitution is derived. The Christmas thought, therefore, links us
with the supersensible. Together with all its other associations, it
points to the one pole of our existence, where as physical-material
beings we are connected with the spiritual and supersensible.
Obviously, therefore, the birth of a human being in its full
significance can never be explained by a science based entirely upon
observation of material existence.
The thought underlying the Easter festival lies at the other pole
of human experience. In the course of the development of Western
civilisation this Easter thought assumed a form which has influenced
the growth of the materialistic conceptions prevailing in the West.
The Easter thought can be grasped in a more abstract way, to
begin with when it is realised that the immortal, eternal being
of man, the spiritual and supersensible essence of being that cannot
in the real sense be born, descends from spiritual worlds and is
clothed in the human physical body. From the very beginning of
physical existence the working of the spirit within the physical body
actually leads this physical body towards death. The thought of death
is therefore implicit in that of birth.
On other occasions I have said that the head-organisation of man
can be understood only in the light of the knowledge that in the head
a continual process of dying is taking place, but is counteracted by
the life-forces in the rest of the organism. The moment the forces of
death that are all the time present in the head and enable man to
think, get the upper hand of his transient, mortal nature at
that moment actual death occurs.
In truth, therefore, the thought of death is merely the other side
of that of birth and cannot be an essential part of the Easter
thought. Hence at the time when Pauline Christianity was beginning to
emerge from conceptions still based upon Eastern wisdom, it was not to
the Death but to the Resurrection of Christ Jesus that men's minds
were directed by words of power such as those of Paul: If Christ
be not risen, then is your faith vain.
The Resurrection, the triumphant victory over death, the overcoming
of death this was the essence of the Easter thought in the form
of early Christianity that was still an echo of Eastern wisdom. On the
other hand, there are pictures in which Christ Jesus is portrayed as
the Good Shepherd, watching over the eternal interests of man as he
sleeps through his mortal existence. In early Christianity, man is
everywhere directed to the words of the Gospel: He Whom ye seek
is not here. Expanding this, we might say: Seek Him in spiritual
worlds, not in the physical-material world. For if you seek Him in the
physical-material world, you can but be told: He Whom you seek is no
longer here.
The all-embracing wisdom by means of which in the first centuries
of Christendom men were still endeavouring to understand the Mystery
of Golgotha and all that pertained to it, was gradually submerged by
the materialism of the West. In those early centuries, materialism had
not reached anything like its full power, but was only slowly being
prepared. It was not until much later that these first, still feeble
and hardly noticeable tendencies were transformed into the materialism
which took stronger and stronger hold of Western civilisation. The
original Eastern concept of religion came to be bound up with
the concept of the State that was developing in the West. In
the fourth century A.D., Christianity became a
State religion in other words, there crept into Christianity
something that is not religion at all.
Julian the Apostate, who was no Christian, but for all that a
deeply religious man, could not accept what Christianity had become
under Constantine. And so we see how in the fusion of Christianity
with the declining culture of Rome, the influence of Western
materialism begins to take effect very slightly to begin with,
but nevertheless perceptibly. And under this influence there appeared
a picture of Christ Jesus which at the beginning simply was not there,
was not part of Christianity in its original form: the picture of
Christ Jesus as the crucified One, the Man of Sorrows, brought to His
death by the indescribable suffering that was His lot.
This made a breach in the whole outlook of the Christian world. For the
picture which from then onwards persisted through the centuries
the picture of Christ agonising on the Cross is of the Christ
Who could no longer be comprehended in His spiritual nature but in His
bodily nature only. And the greater the emphasis that was laid on the
signs of suffering in the human body, the more perfect the skill with
which art succeeded at different periods in portraying the sufferings,
the more firmly were the seeds of materialism planted in Christian
feeling. The crucifix is the expression of the transition to Christian
materialism. This in no way gainsays the profundity and significance
with which art portrayed the sufferings of the Redeemer. Nevertheless
it is a fact that with the concentration on this picture of the
Redeemer suffering and dying on the Cross, leave was taken of a truly
spiritual conception of Christianity.
Then there crept into this conception of the Man of Sorrows, that
of Christ as Judge of the world, who must be regarded as merely
another expression of Jahve or Jehovah the figure portrayed so
magnificently in the Sistine Chapel at Rome as the Dispenser of
Judgment. The attitude of mind which caused the triumphant Spirit, the
Victor over death, to vanish from the picture of the grave from which
the Redeemer rises this same attitude of mind, in the year 869
at the Eighth Ecumenical Council in Constantinople, declared belief in
the Spirit to be heretical, decreed that man is to be conceived as
consisting only of body and soul, the soul merely having certain
spiritual qualities. Just as we see the spiritual reality expelled by
the crucifix, just as the portrayals of the physical give expression
to the pain-racked soul without the Spirit triumphant by Whom mankind
is guarded and sustained, so do we see the Spirit struck away from the
being of man by the decree of an Ecumenical Council.
The Good Friday festival and the Easter festival of Resurrection
were largely combined. Even in days when men were not yet so arid, so
empty of understanding, Good Friday became a festival in which the
Easter thought was transformed in an altogether egotistic direction.
Wallowing in pain, steeping the soul voluptuously in pain, feeling
ecstasy in pain this, for centuries, was associated with the
Good Friday thought which, in truth, should merely have formed the
background for the Easter thought. But men became less and less
capable of grasping the Easter thought in its true form. The same
humanity into whose creed had been accepted the principle that man
consists of body and soul only this same humanity demanded, for
the sake of emotional life, the picture of the dying Redeemer as the
counter-image of its own physical suffering, in order that this might
serve outwardly at least as a background for the direct
consciousness that the living Spirit must always be victorious over
everything that can befall the physical body. Men needed, first, the
picture of the martyr's death, in order to experience, by way of
contrast, the true Easter thought.
We must always feel profoundly how, in this way, vision and
experience of the Spirit gradually faded from Western culture, and we
shall certainly look with wonder, but at the same time with a feeling
of the tragedy of it all, at the attempts made by art to portray the
Man of Sorrows on the Cross. Casual thoughts and feelings about what
is needed in our time are not enough, my dear friends. The decline
that has taken place in Western culture in respect of the
understanding of the spiritual, must be perceived with all clarity.
What has to be recognised to-day is that even the greatest
achievements in a certain domain are something that humanity must now
surmount. The whole of our Western culture needs the Easter
thought, needs, in other words, to be lifted to the Spirit. The holy
Mystery of Birth, the Christmas Mystery once revealed in such glory,
gradually deteriorated in the course of Western civilisation into
those sentimentalities which revelled in hymns and songs about the
Jesus Babe and were in truth merely the corresponding pole of the
increasing materialism. Men wallowed in sentimentalities over the
little Child. Banal hymns about the Jesus Babe gradually became the
vogue, obscuring men's feeling of the stupendous Christmas Mystery of
the coming of a super-earthly Spirit. It is characteristic of
a Christianity developing more and more in the direction of
intellectualism that certain of its representatives to-day even go as
far as to say that the Gospels are concerned primarily with the
Father, not with the Son. True, the Resurrection
thought has remained, but it is associated always with the thought of
Death. A characteristic symptom is that with the development of modern
civilisation, the Good Friday thought has come increasingly to the
fore, while the Resurrection thought, the true Easter thought, has
fallen more and more into the background. In an age when it is
incumbent upon man to experience the resurrection of his own being in
the Spirit, particular emphasis must be laid upon the Easter thought.
We must learn to understand the Easter thought in all its depths. But
this entails the realisation that the picture of the Man of Sorrows on
the one side and that of the Judge of the world on the other, are both
symptomatic of the march of Western civilisation into materialism.
Christ as a supersensible, super-earthly Being Who entered
nevertheless into the stream of earthly evolution that is the
Sun-thought to the attainment of which all the forces of human
thinking must be applied.
Just as we must realise that the Christmas thought of birth has
become something that has dragged the greatest of Mysteries into the
realm of trivial sentimentality, so too we must realise how necessary
it is to emphasise through the Easter thought that there entered into
human evolution at that time something that is forever inexplicable by
earthly theories, but is comprehensible to spiritual knowledge, to
spiritual insight.
Spiritual understanding finds in the Resurrection thought the first
great source of strength, knowing that the spiritual and eternal
even within man remains unaffected by the physical and
bodily. In the words of St. Paul, If Christ be not risen, then
is your faith vain, it recognises a confirmation which in
the modern age must be reached in a different, more conscious way
of the real nature of the Being of Christ.
This is what the Easter thought must call up in us to-day. Easter
must become an inner festival, a festival in which we celebrate in
ourselves the victory of the Spirit over the body. As history
cannot be disregarded, we shall not ignore the figure of the
pain-stricken Jesus, the Man of Sorrows, on the Cross; but above the
Cross we must behold the Victor Who remains unaffected by birth as
well as by death, and Who alone can lead our vision up to the eternal
pastures of life in the Spirit. Only so shall we draw near again to
the true Being of Christ. Western humanity has drawn Christ down to
its own level, drawn Him down as the helpless Child, and as one
associated pre-eminently with suffering and death.
I have often pointed out that the words, Death is evil,
fell from the Buddha's lips as long before the Mystery of
Golgotha as, after the Mystery of Golgotha, there appeared
the crucifix, the figure of the crucified One. And I have also shown
how then, in the sixth century, men looked upon death and felt it to
be no evil but something that had no real existence. But this feeling,
which was an echo from an Eastern wisdom even more profound than
Buddhisn, was gradually obscured by the other, which clung to the
picture of the pain-racked Sufferer.
We must grasp with the whole range of our feelings not with
thoughts alone, for their range is too limited what the fate of
man's conception of the Mystery of Golgotha has been in the course of
the centuries. A true understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha is what
we must again acquire. And be it remembered that even in the days of
Hebraic antiquity, Jahve was not conceived as the Judge of the world
in any juristic sense. In the Book of Job, the greatest dramatic
presentation of religious experience in Hebraic antiquity, Job is
presented as the suffering man, but the idea of the execution of
justice from without is essentially absent. Job is the suffering man,
the man who regards what outer circumstances inflict upon him, as his
destiny. Only gradually does the juristic concept of retribution,
punishment, become part of the world-order. Michelangelo's picture
over the altar of the Sistine Chapel represents in one aspect, a kind
of revival of the Jahve principle. But we need the Christ for Whom we
can seek in our inmost being, because when we truly seek Him, He at
once appears. We need the Christ Who draws into our will,
warming, kindling, strengthening it for deeds demanded of us for the
sake of human evolution. We need, not the suffering Christ, but the
Christ Who hovers above the Cross, looking down upon that which
no longer a living reality comes to an end on the Cross. We
need the strong consciousness of the eternity of the Spirit,
and this consciousness will not be attained if we give ourselves up to
the picture of the crucifix alone. And when we see how the crucifix
has gradually come to be a picture of the Man of suffering and pain,
we shall realise what power this direction of human feeling has
acquired. Men's gaze has been diverted from the spiritual to the
earthly and physical. This aspect, it is true, has often been
magnificently portrayed, but to those, as for example Goethe, who feel
the need for our civilisation again to reach the Spirit, it is
something, which, in a way, rouses their antipathy. Goethe has made it
abundantly clear that the figure of the crucified Redeemer
does not express what he feels to be the essence of Christianity,
namely, the lifting of man to the Spirit.
The Good Friday mood, as well as the Easter mood, needs to be
transformed. The Good Friday mood must be one that realises when
contemplating the dying Jesus: This is only the other side of birth.
Not to recognise that dying is also implicit in the fact of being
born, is to lose sight of the full reality. A man who is able to feel
that the mood of death associated with Good Friday merely presents the
other pole of the entrance of the child into the world at birth, is
making the right preparation for the mood of Easter which can,
in truth consist only in the knowledge: Into whatever human
sheath I have been born, my real being is both unborn and
deathless. In his own eternal being man must unite with
the Christ Who came into the world and cannot die, Who when He beholds
the Man of Sorrows on the Cross, is looking down, not upon the eternal
Self, but upon Himself incarnate in another.
We must be aware of what has actually happened in consequence of
the fact that since the end of the first Christian century, Western
civilisation has gradually lost the conception of the Spirit. When a
sufficiently large number of men realise that the Spirit must come to
life again in modern civilisation, the World-Easter thought will
become a reality. This will express itself outwardly in the fact that
man will not be satisfied with investigating the laws of nature only,
or the laws of history which are akin to those of nature, but will
yearn for understanding of his own will, for knowledge of his own
inner freedom, and of the real nature of the will which bears
him through and beyond the gate of death, but which in its true nature
must be seen spiritually.
How is man to acquire the power to grasp the Pentecost thought, the
outpouring of the Spirit, since this thought has been dogmatically
declared by the Eighth Ecumenical Council at Constantinople to be an
empty phrase? How is man to acquire the power to grasp this Pentecost
thought if he is incapable of apprehending the true Easter thought
the Resurrection of the Spirit? The picture of the dying,
pain-racked Redeemer must not confound him; he must learn that pain is
inseparable from material existence.
The knowledge of this was a fundamental principle of the ancient
wisdom which still sprang from instinctive depths of man's cognitional
life. We must acquire this knowledge again, but now through acts of
conscious cognition. It was a fundamental principle of the ancient
wisdom that pain and suffering originate from man's union with matter.
It would be foolishness to believe that because Christ passed through
death as a Divine-Spiritual Being, He did not suffer pain; to declare
that the pain associated with the Mystery of Golgotha was a mere
semblance of pain would be to voice an unreality. In the deepest
sense, this pain must be conceived as reality and not as its
mere counter-image. We must gain something from what stands before us
when, in surveying the whole sweep of the evolution of humanity, we
contemplate the Mystery of Golgotha.
When the picture of the man who had attained freedom at the highest
level was presented to the candidates for ancient Initiation after
they had completed the preparatory stages, had undergone all the
exercises by which they could acquire certain knowledge presented to
them in dramatic imagery, they were led at last before the figure of
the Chrestos the man suffering within the physical
body, in the purple robe and wearing the crown of thorns. The sight of
this Chrestos was meant to kindle in the soul the power that makes man
truly man. And the drops of blood which the aspirant for Initiation
beheld at vital points on the Chrestos figure were intended to be a
stimulus for overcoming human weaknesses and for raising the Spirit
triumphant from the inmost being. The sight of pain was meant to
betoken the resurrection of the spiritual nature. The purpose of the
figure before the candidate was to convey to him the deepest import of
what may be expressed in these simple words: For your happiness you
may thank many things in life but if you have gained knowledge
and insight into the spiritual connections of existence, for that you
have to thank your Buffering, your pain. You owe your knowledge to the
fact that you did not allow yourself to be mastered by suffering and
pain but were strong enough to rise above them. And so in the ancient
Mysteries, the figure of the suffering Chrestos was in turn replaced
by the figure of the Christ triumphant Who looks down upon the
suffering Chrestos as upon that which has been overcome. And now again
it must be possible for the soul to have the Christ triumphant before
and within it, especially in the will. That must be the ideal before
us in this present time, above all in regard to what we wish to do for
the future well-being of mankind.
But the true Easter thought will never be within our reach if we
cannot realise that whenever we speak of Christ we must look beyond
the earthly into the cosmic. Modern thinking has made the
cosmos into a corpse. To-day we gaze at the stars and calculate their
movements in other words we make calculations about the corpse
of the universe, never perceiving that in the stars there is
life, and that the will of the cosmic Spirit prevails in
their courses. Christ descended to humanity in order to unite the
souls of men with this cosmic Spirit. And he alone proclaims the
Gospel of Christ truly, who affirms that what the sun reveals to the
physical senses is the outer expression of the Spirit of our universe,
of its resurrecting Spirit.
There must be a living realisation of the connection of this Spirit
of the universe with the sun, and of how the time of the Easter
festival has been determined by the relationship prevailing between
the sun and the moon in spring. A link must be made with that cosmic
reality in accordance with which the Easter festival was established
in earth-evolution. We must come to realise that it was the
ever-watchful Guardian-Spirits of the cosmos who, through the great
cosmic timepiece in which the sun and the moon are the hands in
respect of earthly existence, have pointed explicitly to the time in
the evolution of the world and of humanity at which the Festival of
the Resurrection is to be celebrated. With spiritual insight we must
learn to perceive the course of the sun and moon as the two hands of
the cosmic time piece, just as for the affairs of physical existence
we learn to understand the movements of the hands on a clock. The
physical and earthly must be linked to the super-physical and the
super-earthly.
The Easter thought can be interpreted only in the light of
super-earthly realities, for the Mystery of Golgotha, in its
aspect as the Resurrection Mystery, must be distinguished from
ordinary human happenings. Human affairs take their course on the
earth in an altogether different way. The earth received the cosmic
forces and, in the course of its evolution, the human powers of will
penetrate the metabolic processes of man's being. But since the
Mystery of Golgotha took place, a new influx of will streamed into
earthly happenings. There took place on earth a cosmic event, for
which the earth is merely the stage. Thereby man was again united with
the cosmos.
That is what must be understood, for only so can the Easter thought
be grasped in all its magnitude. Therefore it is not the picture of
the crucifix alone that must stand before us, however grandly and
sublimely portrayed by art. He Whom ye seek is not here
is the thought that must arise. Above the Cross there must
appear to you the One Who is here now, Who by the spirit
calls you to a spirit-awakening.
This is the true Easter thought that must find its way into the
evolution of mankind; it is to this that the human heart and mind must
be lifted. Our age demands of us that we shall not only deepen our
understanding of what has been created, but that we shall become
creators of the new. And even if it be the Cross itself, in all the
beauty with which artists have endowed it, we may not rest content
with that picture; we must hear the words of the Angels who, when we
seek in death and suffering, exclaim to us: He Whom ye seek is
no longer here.
We have to seek the One Who is here, by turning at
Eastertime to the Spirit of Whom the only true picture is that of the
Resurrection. Then we shall be able, in the right way, to pass from
the Good Friday mood of suffering to the spiritual mood of Easter Day.
In this Easter mood we shall also be able to find the strength with
which our will must be imbued if the forces of decline are to be
countered by those which lead humanity upwards. We need the forces
that can bring about this ascent. And the moment we truly understand
the Easter thought of Resurrection, this Easter thought
bringing warmth and illumination will kindle within us the
forces needed for the future evolution of mankind.
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