Second Lecture
26 February, 1906
Last time I spoke about the first twelve chapters of the Gospel of St.
John. We saw that the Lazarus miracle represents the initiation of a
man into the spiritual world. Every sentence of the John Gospel
directs one to the higher world. When we make it alive in us, we come
to know the Christian initiation. Those who know other forms of occult
training and are aware that there are other paths of initiation, also
know that he who seeks the path today will be led along different
ways. These are known to most of you. Those who have already some
contact with spiritual life know that there is an esoteric side to our
spiritual scientific strivings. The Christian initiation has
similarities with other ways of initiation, but today this path can no
longer be followed. He who would tread it must be led by the hand of
an experienced teacher, but in view of our modern normal mode of life,
it is questionable whether this path is still open. Let us again call
to mind the Lazarus miracle in connection with the Christian
initiation.
We will start from the normal state of sleep. What happens when a
person sleeps? In man we have the physical body, etheric body, astral
body and ego. What happens occultly, when a person sleeps? The
physical and etheric bodies remain in bed. The astral body, together
with the ego, rises out and floats over them in the form of a ring, in
the case of an undeveloped personality, and later, in the form of the
physical body. The astral body is not inactive. It has something to
do. When the person is awake, the astral body penetrates and
interweaves the physical body. When it is outside, it works on the
physical body, protecting and caring for it. The relation of the
astral body to the physical body, is like that of a workman to his
machine, but with the difference that in this case the workman is in
the machine, he ensouls the various parts, and makes them move. This
resemblance of worker to machine applies even better when the person
lies asleep. The astral body then works from outside. What does it do?
It makes good the damage suffered by the physical body during the day.
So one can see the disadvantages for people who sleep badly. Beings
belonging to the third elemental kingdom have an influence on the
astral body. Beings belonging to the second elemental kingdom get at
the etheric body and those belonging to the first elemental kingdom
get access to the physical body to destroy it. Only when the astral
body works on the physical body during sleep are these destructive
processes made good.
Just to know this does not have any influence. When however, a person
begins to work on his spiritual development, he must also create the
necessary conditions for the astral body to work upon the physical.
Meditation influences the work of the astral body upon the physical
and etheric bodies during the night. Only beneficent beings must be
allowed access to the human being . . . He who seeks initiation must
achieve the utmost calm. This includes the avoidance of all
stimulants, especially alcohol. Other requirements for any higher
striving are control of thought, a morally blameless life, the effort
not to be swayed to and fro by every feeling, be it pain or joy, but
to maintain balance in the soul. This makes it possible for good
beings to be active when the astral body works on the physical and
etheric bodies during sleep.
In the initiation described in the John Gospel, the astral body,
together with the etheric body, leaves the physical body. This latter
remains as though dead. This is what is meant when it is said that
Lazarus lay three days in the grave. The Lazarus miracle is thus the
scene of an initiation. The astral and etheric bodies need to be led
back into the physical body. This the master brings to pass. The
disciple is now an arisen one who can remember the
experiences in the higher worlds. This is possible for everyone.
However what, in the old days, was a process lasting three and a half
days takes place in a different manner today. The experience is the
same, but it is achieved by different methods.
The pupil of the Christian initiation has to undergo seven trials.
They were not only physical but spiritual experiences.
Those who had undergone them knew that real experiences are possible
outside of the body. At the first stage the pupil experiences how man
has become what he is. This was achieved through a train of thought as
follows: The plant must have a mineral soil. Minerals are of lower
rank than plants. But the plant must bow down and say, To thee
oh stone, though thou art lower than me, I owe my existence, my
life. The animal is of higher rank than the plant. It breathes
oxygen and exhales carbon dioxide. The plant exhales the oxygen. The
animal must say to the plant, To thee oh plant, I humbly bow,
for without thee I could not live. The same relation exists
between the higher ranking human being and the lower kingdoms. He too
must say to them, If you were not there, I should not be.
One must completely fill oneself with this feeling and bow oneself in
all humility. Out of deeply felt experience of gratitude, one must be
able to bow down before what is lower than oneself. This is the
washing of feet, the first stage of a Christian initiation. Christ
bows down before the disciples and washes their feet. What is here
experienced, represents a symbol of the higher world. He who is able
to live spiritually in the higher world, who has achieved this deep
feeling that Lazarus had, he experiences the washing of feet in
the higher world. He who experiences humiliation in the physical
world, goes through the washing of feet in a higher world. This
is the sign that he has reached the first stage on the way to
initiation. In his body, this is expressed by the feeling that all his
muscles are newly strengthened. When the muscles become steeled after
the feeling of humiliation, this signifies the first stage of
initiation.
The second stage of the Christian initiation is the scourging
and smiting. One must learn to bear calmly what formerly hurt one
to take upon oneself the suffering of the world. This too finds
expression in the higher world. The strength acquired by the soul is
symbolised as scourging and real blows. Then one day one feels a sort
of prickling or stinging all over the body a sign that one has
stood the test. This is a real experience that a person goes through
when he follows this path. The great mystics experienced it. Such a
person has reached the second stage.
The third stage is the crowning with thorns. At this stage one
does not only bear pain but also contempt from one's fellow men. One
has to win the fortitude to bear the feeling of obliteration, when
there is no one there to give one courage and strength except oneself
when one is considered entirely worthless, and yet one remains
inwardly upright. Thus must it be experienced. This is felt in the
spiritual world as the crowning with thorns. One sees oneself with the
crown of thorns. Pains in the head will be felt in the physical body.
Changes take place in the brain, something that later also becomes
noticable in the waking state.
The fourth stage is the crucifixion. Through this a person
learns to feel his own body as a foreign object, something like a
piece of wood. He no longer connects his ego with his body. In the
spiritual world he sees himself with the cross on his back. With this
the fourth stage is reached. Physically the stigmata appear. In the
case of certain saints this is no myth. It indicates that they have
reached the fourth stage. Such saints are bearers of the cross.
If a person has got as far as this he comes to the fifth stage. This
is the mystical death. The whole world appears as if covered
with a veil. Everything around has lost its old value. While a person
feels himself thus lost in darkness, suddenly the veil is rent and he
begins to see the ultimate spiritual and original aim. He gazes into a
quite new, world. At the same time he learns to recognise what lies at
the bottom of the human soul. He becomes a second person by the side
of himself and looks down on his lower self, which is separated from
him. His body is the mother that he sees standing below him and the
transformed lower self is the disciple who bears witness that Christ
lives. Now the higher self can say to the lower self, Behold thy
mother! (John, ch. 19, v 27)
When a person has gone through this fifth station he can progress to
the sixth stage, the burial and resurrection. Everything
pertaining to this planet becomes the body of the Christian mystic. He
feels as though the whole earth was part of him. He has ceased to be a
separate being. He is one with the whole life of the earth. Through
burial he is inwardly bound with it. The grave becomes the source of
his experience man and animal, plant and rock around him become
transparent. He has lost his own separate life, the higher life of the
whole Earth . . .
The seventh stage is known as the ascension into heaven. It
signifies that he is completely taken up into the spiritual world.
The John Gospel is a description of this Christian path of initiation.
He who takes it as an account of an external happening does not
understand it. It can only be comprehended if one has lived through it
inwardly. This is what Angelus Silesius means, when he says:
When thou dost rise above thyself
and let God hold his sway:
Then present in thy spirit is the ascension,
for ever and for aye.
*[Angelus Silesius, The Cherubinic Wanderer]
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As no creature can see the sunlight unless its eyes are opened so no
one can understand the mystery of Golgotha, if they have not inwardly
experienced it. Once one has come to such an inner experience, one can
appreciate why the reckoning of time is divided into before and after
Christ.
Christianity attains its real meaning when it is followed as an inner
path. The John gospel is a document which can be lived sentence by
sentence. If one has lived it, one knows that external criticism does
not apply. All criticism vanishes, and every doubt disappears, if one
knows that what is written is to be lived through and through. Every
line can be lived inwardly. The Christian spirit has to be experienced
in the depth of the soul. He who saw for himself how everything took
place knows that he speaks the truth and says so. For he is the risen
Lazarus.
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