Third Lecture
5th March, 1906
What we have said so far about the Gospel of St. John has taken us
deeply into the essence of Christianity, and has shown us what
profound mystical power lies hidden within this Christian document. We
have seen that it should not be read like a report of outer events, or
an historical account, but a script engraved by life, so that every
sentence re-lived, transforms something in us.
We have followed the seven stages of spiritual ascent in the life of
St. John. Today we will add something which goes even deeper. A few
examples will show that I have not forced an arbitrary meaning on the
gospel, but that by means of occult teaching we are able to understand
many things that otherwise would remain dark and unintelligible. First
I will remind you of the seven stages of initiation which existed at
the time of the birth of Christianity.
In the last lecture we came to know the Christian initiation, but it
was not Christianity that first made initiation possible. At all
times, ever since there were men as we know them on earth, it was
possible to become an initiate to ascend to higher stages of
human existence. Through Christianity all these things became more
inward. Since Christianity has provided us with such documents as the
John Gospel which only needs to be allowed to work and live in
us one can achieve much, and rise to spiritual heights. There
were no such documents in pre-Christian times available. One had to be
introduced into hidden mystery temples, or centres, and according to
the various peoples, the lower stages of initiation differed. In the
higher stages national peculiarities were of no account, and they were
the same for all peoples even in much older times.
I would like to describe the seven stages of initiation as they were
practised in the Persian Mithras cult. It was a form of initiation
that was cultivated in the whole of Asia Minor, in Greece and Rome,
and even as far as the Danube basin it was practised far into the
Christian era. For a long time it was possible to go through these
stages even in the hidden cultic centres and temples in Egypt which
were often built into the solid rock. They were only accessible to
those who came to know them as morally advanced pupils and initiates
after strict tests. The first grade was the Raven. As a
raven the neophyte carried the knowledge acquired in the outer sense
world into spiritual life. The idea of the raven has lingered in myths
and sagas. There are the Ravens of Wotan, the ravens of Elijah, and in
the German Barbarossa saga ravens are the intermediaries between the
emperor under a spell in the mountain and the outer world. In the
Mithraic mysteries Raven signified a grade of initiation.
The second grade was that of the Occult One. This was the
name for someone who had already received some important occult
secrets.
The third grade was that of the Fighter. These were
initiates who felt their higher self to the extent that they
understood sayings such as one finds in the second part of Light
on the Path. *[Stand aside in the coming battle, and
though thou fightest, be not thou the warrior. Light on the
Path, Mabel Collins, Theosophical University Press. Pasadena,
California, 1971.] Only an initiate of the third grade can understand
such sayings. This does not mean that the ordinary person cannot reach
a certain comprehension. Everyone has a higher self, and if one is
able to abnegate one's lower self and make it a servant of the higher
self then one can say in a certain sense: Though thou fightest
thou art not the fighter. But it is not until one has reached a
particular stage of initiation that one really knows what this
sentence signifies. What one formerly considered as higher interests
become mere subsidiary interests, mere servants of the fighter.
The fourth grade was achieved when complete inner harmony and calm,
equilibrium and strength are gained. This grade was called that of the
Lion. Such an initiate had so developed the occult life in
himself that he could represent the occult not only with words but
with deeds.
Meanwhile the consciousness of a person who has passed through these
four stages of initiation extended further and further. He identified
himself with ever larger groupings of people. All these names have a
hidden meaning. For instance, the expression, The Occult
One. What is a human being as we see him in front of us? He is
what is in him. As a Raven an initiate of the first grade he
tries to overcome what is only in him. Then his interests become
wider. What people around him are, what they feel and what they will,
becomes his own feeling and his own will. The terms were coined in
times when there were still communities which were kindred enlarged
families. How did one regard such a family? One said they were members
of a soul-family tracing right back to a common ancestral pair
members of a hidden ego.
An initiate of the second grade, an Occult One, had so
ennobled his ego that it became the ego of his community; he made
their interests his own. The occult entity of a human community was
able to live in him. When the ego of such a human community became the
ego of an individual initiate then this community became his dwelling
place. The Fighter fought for the larger community. In
ancient Palestine one designated as a Lion, he who had
raised himself up to encompass the consciousness, the ego, of a whole
tribe. The lion of the tribe of Judah is the term applied
to someone who had reached such a stage of initiation that he bore
within himself the ego of the whole tribe.
The initiate of the fifth grade had so overcome his personality that
he could take up the folk-soul. The folk-spirit lived in him. In
Persia such an initiate was called a Persian. In Greece
one would have called him a Grecian, if it had been the
custom. What does this grade signify? For him everything individual
has vanished and his consciousness has become one with the whole. This
constitutes a higher state of consciousness.
Today it is different. Because of the splitting up of all communal
groups we meet with quite different stages of initiation. But at the
time of the birth of Christianity it still had a meaning when one
spoke of souls initiated to the fifth grade. You can verify this in
the John Gospel. Take the first chapter, verse 45:
Philip findeth Nathanael and saith unto him: We have found him
of whom Moses in the law and the Prophets did write, Jesus of Nazareth
the son of Joseph. And Nathanael said unto him: Can there any good
thing out of Nazareth? Philip saith unto him: Come and see Jesus saw
Nathanael coming to him and saith of him: Behold an Israelite indeed
in whom there is no guile!
Nathanael is here acknowledged as an initiate of the fifth grade. This
means that he had learned to know what for us men is the essence of
life, the Tree of Life. Earlier in life one tastes of the fruit of the
Tree of Knowledge. One partakes of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge
the moment one is able to say I to oneself. When the
higher, the spiritual, in man awakens it can happen that God has to
protect man. Jehovah was concerned lest man, after having eaten of the
Tree of Knowledge, should also eat of the Tree of Life before he was
ready for it. The initiate of the fifth grade learns what relieves
this concern and what raises one beyond all death and all that is
transitory. This is the spiritual element.
How can the spiritual element become established in man? For someone
who has penetrated more deeply into Theosophy it is something which
flows through the whole world. For him whose vision is able to
penetrate into higher worlds, all that is, to begin with, a stage of
inner development even on higher planes, is expressed at first on the
astral plane as a picture. When a person has reached the fifth grade
of initiation he always sees a picture on the astral plane, which
formerly he had not seen the picture of a tree, a finely
branched, white tree. This picture on the astral plane, which is to be
taken as a symbol of the fifth grade of initiation, is called the Tree
of Life. He who had reached this point is said to have sat under the
Tree of Life. Thus Buddha sat under the Bodhi Tree and Nathanael under
the Fig Tree. These are terms for the picture on the astral plane.
What is seen are reflections of inner even bodily inner things.
The Bodhi Tree is but the astral mirror image of the human nervous
system. He who through initiation is able to direct his gaze inward,
sees his inner life, even his bodily inner life, projected, reflected
into the outer astral world. So you see what is intended in this
chapter of the John Gospel.
Nathanael is addressed as one who knows. It is implied: We understand
each other. Jesus said unto him, Before that, Philip
called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw
thee. This means, we are brothers of the fifth grade of
initiation. It is a recognition between initiates. Nathanael
answered and saith unto him, Rabbi, thou art the Son of God,
thou art the King of Israel. You see the recognition is
complete. Jesus answered him, and said that it will become apparent
that he is more than an initiate of the fifth grade. He said,
Because I said unto thee I saw thee under the fig tree, thou
believest; thou shalt see greater things than these.
I would also like to draw your attention to the conversation with
Nicodemus, which you will find in the third chapter. There we have the
significant words, Verily, verily I say unto thee, except a man
be born of water and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom
of God. What does it mean to be born anew and to see the Kingdom
of God? It means to have awakened the higher self, to be born so that
the eternal core of one's being is awakened. What does it mean to
enter the kingdom of heaven? It means to see not only the reflection
of Devachan here on earth as we see it through our physical eyes, but
to see this realm directly itself. He alone can do this who has not
only been born for this physical world, but is born a second time.
Take what I have used as a comparison, but one which is more than a
comparison. Take it literally. To be born means to proceed from an
embryo to a stage at which one perceives the outer world with the
senses. If one does not pass through an embryonic stage one can never
be ready to be born. Those who know this stage also know that ordinary
life is an embryonic stage for the higher life. This leads us deep
into the meaning of ordinary life. It could be quite easy for someone
who directs his gaze towards the spiritual world to become convinced
that there is such a world and that man is a citizen of it. He could
then proceed to disregard the physical world and to believe that one
cannot depart from it quickly enough, and that one should mortify the
flesh, the sooner to reach the spiritual world. This shows ignorance.
It is as senseless as if one would not allow the human embryo to
mature but would bring it into the world at two months, and expect it
to live there. Likewise for the higher world, one has to develop to
become mature. Such is he who has developed his higher self. The
physical world is the school. He who has developed his ego here is
ready to enter the kingdom of heaven, which means to be born again.
Man has to go through birth and death ever and again, until he has
gained his full maturity in order to enter the spiritual world itself,
so that he no longer needs physical organs. Thus we have to realise
that everything we do by means of our eyes, ears and other senses is
work done for the higher life.
Certainly, we have, frequently said that man must develop higher
senses, that he must develop the chakrams or holy wheels, which enable
him to enter the spiritual world and see it. But how does he come to
obtain these holy wheels? Through his work on the physical plane. Here
is the place of preparation. Our work here prepares the organs for a
higher world. As the human being is prepared in the mother's body, so
in the body of the great world mother where we are while
leading our physical life is prepared what is necessary to make
it possible for us to see and act in higher worlds. One is perfectly
justified to speak of a higher world and to value it higher than our
lower world, but we should only use these terms in a technical sense.
All worlds are, basically, equally valid expressions of the highest
principle, in different forms. We should not despise any world. In
this way we learn to relate ourselves rightly towards both the lower
and the higher worlds. This is the requirement for entering into the
third chapter of the John Gospel.
It must be understood that Jesus speaks to Nicodemus of a genuine
rebirth, and that, above all, he wishes to remind him that looked at
in this way, the ordinary, everyday life must be reborn as a higher
life and recognised as such. He who reads this chapter really
carefully will see that this is what is meant.
Many circles lay it against Theosophy that it teaches reincarnation
the gradual maturing of humanity through rebirth and repeated
earth lives. It is said that Christianity knows nothing of this
teaching of reincarnation. But actually in the John Gospel there is a
clear indication that when he spoke intimately with his disciples,
Jesus taught reincarnation. For instance, one can only make sense of
the ninth chapter (the healing on the Sabbath of the man born blind)
if one bases it on the idea of reincarnation. One must remember that
he spoke in the language current at that time. In Greece it was then
usual to speak of the power that permeates man's innermost being and
leads it forward. For the Greeks and all other peoples of that time,
the power that made man into man and caused him to develop was God. An
outer God, a God in the next world, was unknown in those days.
Therefore one called what lived in man, the God in man. Thus if one
spoke of the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob, it
was the higher self that was meant. One can only understand the Old
Testament if one appreciates this conception of God. Jesus too speaks
of the God living in man when talking intimately to his disciples:
His disciples asked him, saying, Master, who did sin, this
man or his parents, that he was born blind? Jesus answered,
Neither hath this man sinned nor his parents, but that the works
of God should be made manifest in him.
These three sentences speak clearly enough. Neither had he sinned in
his physical body, nor had his parents; therefore the Jewish law that
God will visit the sins of the fathers upon the children unto so and
so many generations does not hold good. But the works of God in man
shall be made manifest, i.e. the self in man that passes through all
his incarnations. These words which Jesus spoke to his disciples could
not be clearer. You know the orthodox explanation. Think, if someone
meant what is supposed to be said here: The glory of God should be
made manifest in a blind person. This presumes that it was arranged
that someone should be blind so that Jesus could heal him and the
glory of God be made manifest. Can this be reconciled with true
Christianity? No. Christianity would be morally degraded. Interpreted
theosophically, this image carries a truly beautiful and noble
meaning.
It was always so when Jesus spoke intimately with his disciples. That
it was so, is especially revealed in the scene known as the
transfiguration. It is, however, not in the John Gospel. We find it in
the seventeenth chapter of St. Matthew and in the ninth chapter of St.
Mark. In St. John it is not to be found. The only reference that could
have any relation to it is the passage in the twelfth chapter, verse
28: Father glorify thy name. Then came there a voice
from heaven saying, I have both glorified it and will glorify it
again. And further in verse 31: Now is the
judgment of this world. Now shall the prince of this world be cast
out. And I, if I be lifted up from the earth will draw all men
unto me. Thus he said, signifying what death he should die. The
people answered him, We have heard out of the law that Christ
abideth for ever, and how sayest thou: the Son of Man must be lifted
up? Who is this Son of Man? Then Jesus said unto them, Yet
a little while is the light with you. Walk while ye have the light,
lest darkness come upon you for he that walketh in darkness knoweth
not whither he goeth. While ye have light, believe in the light, that
ye may be the children of light.
We find the transfiguration scene in all the evangelists except St.
John. This is significant. Let us clarify the meaning of this scene.
What takes place? Jesus goes with three disciples Peter, James and
John up a mountain: this means into the inner sanctuary where
one is initiated into higher worlds and where one also speaks in
occult language. Then it is said: the master took his disciples up
into a mountain it means that he went to that place where he
expounded the parable to them. The disciples were carried up into a
higher state of consciousness. They saw then that which is not
transitory but eternal. Moses and Elias appear and Jesus himself with
them. What does this mean? In occult science the word Elias means the
same as El the goal, the way. Moses is the spiritual
scientific word for truth. By the fact that Elias, Moses and Jesus
appear you have the fundamental Christian truth: I am the Way, the
Truth and the Life. Jesus himself says this is a fundamental
Christian mystical truth I am the Way, the Truth and the
Life. (John, ch. 14, v. 6)
The important thing is that here the eternal is shown as against the
temporal, and the disciples see into a world which lies beyond this
world. Afterwards they said to the master, All this should only
have come to pass once Elias has come again. Thus they spoke to
him as though reincarnation was taken as a matter of course, as also
in many other passages in the gospels. John asked, Art thou
Elias come again? Then answered the master, Elias is
indeed come again John the Baptist is Elias. But the people did
not recognise him. Say it unto no man until I come again. Here
we have the general, religious, profound truth of reincarnation
uttered in the intimate conversation between the master and his
disciples. At the same time it is set down as a testament: Say
it unto no man until I come again. This coming again refers to a
much later time, the time when all men will recognise Christ through
their higher comprehension. When this comes about then will He
reappear to them.
Thus time is being prepared through the theosophical world conception.
Christ will reappear in the world. The doctrine of reincarnation and
karma as a generally accepted idea was to be laid aside until this
time. At that time people should know nothing of reincarnation and
karma, so that they were obliged to take the life between birth and
death as something of particular value and importance. Humanity had to
pass through all stages of life experience. Up to the time of Christ,
reincarnation was generally accepted. Life between birth and death was
only a passing episode. But then man had to learn to take life on
earth as something important. An extreme form of this teaching was the
dogma of eternal punishment and eternal reward. This is an extreme
form. What mattered was that each human individuality, each
God-man, should pass through one incarnation in which he
knew nothing of reincarnation and karma and in which he appreciated
the vital importance of life between birth and death.
If you read theosophical books you will find that the time between the
two incarnations is fifteen to eighteen hundred years. This is about
the same length of time as between the birth of Christ, and the
present day. Those living then, appear again today. Because of this
they are able again to accept the new teaching. Therefore, the
theosophical outlook was really prepared on Mount Tabor by Christ
Jesus. If we look at world history in broad lines, we should not think
that we are dealing either with truth or with error which we can
censure. It is not a question of absolute truth or error, but of what
is right for man at any given time. If I sat here with a group of boys
no more than ten years old, and set about teaching them higher
mathematics, I would be teaching them truth and yet it would be folly.
I must give a person what he needs, at any given stage of his
development. It is not right for us today to say in retrospect, that
the Christian teaching contained errors. No. In order to master the
physical plane, one had to take this one life seriously. Certainly,
the priestly sages of Chaldea taught great spiritual truths. They
brought down a vast knowledge of the spiritual world, but they used
the most primitive tools, and did not know how to use the forces of
nature in everyday life. The physical plane had first to be mastered.
To do this, man's whole life of feeling must be directed towards it.
Christianity had to prepare mankind to master the physical world. This
was decreed, it is the testament from Mount Tabor. What lies behind
this declaration is something wonderful.
If one penetrates deeper, one will find more and more. If we want to
understand religious documents which came down to us from times which
had true knowledge of spiritual life and not a materialistic way of
thinking, we must realise that the mode of thought was so different,
that if one spoke of man, one spoke in a completely different way.
Now I must tell you something which though easy to understand
intellectually, is difficult for the man of today to grasp with his
whole soul. The time when the gospels were written was the dawn of
Christianity. One used names then in a way which I will now explain.
One did not look to the outer physical man, but one saw something
higher, the spiritual, shining through it. A name was not used as it
is today, it had a significance. Suppose someone was called James
(Jacobus). James really means water. Water is the spiritual scientific
term for the soul element. If I call somebody James, I say that his
soul shines through his body. With this, I signify that he belongs to
the watery element. If I give the name James to an initiate, he is to
me the symbol for water (Hebrew Jam). James is nothing but the
technical name for an initiate who especially governs the force of
water in its occult sense.
Thus were the three disciples who were taken up to Mount Tabor called
by their initiate names: James means water, Peter stands for earth, or
rock (Hebrew Jabascha), John signifies air (Ruach). Thus, John
means he who has attained the higher self. This leads us deep into the
secret doctrines. Transport yourself back into the time when man only
possessed the lower principles the third Root Race, the
Lemurian epoch. Mankind did not then breath air, he breathed through
gills. Lungs and breathing through lungs developed later. This process
coincided with the impregnation by the higher self. Air is, according
to the hermetic principle, the lower which represents the higher
the higher self. If I call somebody John (Johannes), then he is
one who has awakened his higher self, who governs the occult forces of
air. Jesus is the one who governs the occult forces of fire (Nur).
Thus you have in these four names, the representatives of earth,
water, air and fire. They are the names of the four who ascended Mount
Tabor.
| Jam James |
| Nur | Ruach |
|
| Jesus | Johannes |
| Jabascha Petrus |
Think of these four together on the Mount of Transfiguration. There
you have at the same time, the initiates who govern the four elements:
fire, water, air and earth. What happened? It was made manifest
spiritually that through the appearance of Jesus, the whole power of
the elements was renewed in such a way that the life pulsing through
the elements passed through a new, important phase of its development.
This is the transfiguration seen occultly. If somebody goes through
the transfiguration in this manner, if he has within himself the
stages of water, earth and air, and even rises to the forces of fire,
then he is a reawakened one, someone who has gone through the
crucifixion. Thus, in the case of the other evangelists, this scene is
but a preparation for the deeper initiation scene of the crucifixion
itself. In the John Gospel, everything is already prepared. The
preparatory scene does not appear, only the death on the Mount of
Golgotha. Jam, Nur, Ruach, Jabascha INRI this is the
meaning of the words on the cross.
One can go deeper and deeper into the religious texts and never finish
learning. Sometimes when one hears an explanation like this it sounds
forced. But every step that leads you deeper will furnish evidence
that it is not forced. Superficial explanations seek to avoid the
depths purposely. But there are depths in these writings.
Those who know something can always say to themselves: probably there
is much more in it, I have still much to learn. This is the attitude
of reverence that we can bring to religious texts.
This reverence is of the utmost importance, for it will become
strength in us drawn from the depths. There is one important sentence
that I can only touch on. In chapter 19, verse 33,we find: But
when they came to Jesus and saw that he was dead already they brake
not his legs . . . and in verse 36, For these things were
done, that the scripture should be fulfilled, A bone of him shall not
be broken. You know that this reminds one of a passage in one of
the books of Moses (Exodus 12.46). Rightly understood, it has a deep
meaning. It is deeply symbolical, but I can only touch on it.
If you look around the world you will have to admit that man as he is
now incarnated in the flesh has no power over life, nor over what
stands, above life. He is only master of the lifeless inorganic
forces. Man cannot oblige a plant to grow, or to grow faster. He would
have to acquire occult power, to do so. Far less is he able to master
what is higher than life forces. What he is able to control is the
lifeless outer world. There, he exerts his mastery in everyday work
over the materials with which nature provides him. He creates works of
art, pictures of the Almighty, but he cannot breathe life into them.
He can only copy life. He cannot awaken an intimation of life in the
lifeless, even in the most sublime Christian works of art. This is so
because man has enfolded his astral and etheric forces in the solid,
dense physical body. Thus he came to have this relation to the
outer world to be master only of the lifeless. The
higher forces which are not tied to the physical must be awakened, and
then man will again be able to master life. As it is, he can only
control physical forces, and not life itself.
This is connected with the fact that the human body which was once
soft and pliable has now become more and more solid. If you go back in
evolution you will see that man has changed very much. In Lemurian
times he had no skeleton. This was formed later. The bones were the
last things to appear in the human organism. He will have them until
he has spiritualised himself again, until he has awakened again his
inner forces and learned the lesson which he can only learn in this
dense body with its hard skeleton. Christ Jesus is that spirit whose
cosmic mission it was to be incarnated in just such a body in order to
show man the way out of this world into a higher world. He is the
leader and guide into the higher world. That which has to find its way
into the higher world is symbolised by the solid human skeleton. As
long as man had not reached the stage of having a hard skeleton, he
did not need a Messiah. But for this present epoch he needs the
Messiah, the Redeemer.
Thus it is evident that the forces in Jesus which are connected with
the higher world do not concern present day humanity. We can express
it by calling the skeleton the exterior; water, the etheric body;
blood, the astral body; and then the spirit. *[First Epistle of John,
ch. 5, v. 8, (literally) And there are three that bear witness:
the spirit and the water and the blood.] Therefore blood and
water can flow from the body of Christ. These are of no import for the
present cycle of human development. On the other hand, that which
supports the whole, which leads man upwards to the throne of the
Eternal, what he needs in order to learn the lesson, that must be kept
uninjured. This is the skeleton, the symbol for the lifeless in
nature. Through this skeleton, Christ is connected with the present
cycle of man's development. This is what must be kept intact until
such time as man shall have reached higher stages. We can follow this
back to the corresponding passages in the Books of Moses. But this can
be done some other time.
Today I wanted to add something which will have shown you that the
John Gospel is inexhaustible, and how full it is of strength and life.
As we take it in and absorb it, it gives us strength and life. This is
why this gospel is the leading scripture for those who wish to
penetrate deeper and deeper into theosophical Christianity. If
theosophy is to work for Christianity it is from this, above all, that
it must start. But clearly, if I were to explain the John Gospel in
its entirety to you, I should have to take the whole winter. I should
have to take it sentence by sentence and then you would see how deep
are the words ascribed to John, i.e. to him whose very name indicates
that he is a herald of the higher self. He is the representative of
air, and master of the higher forces, who, from the perception of the
higher self, wrote his Gospel according to St. John.
It would be futile and in vain, to attempt to fathom, or criticise
this gospel with the powers of the ordinary intellect. In our time the
intellect has achieved great things, but the John Gospel is not
written for the intellect. Only he who has overcome the intellect and
is able to lead it to the heights of spirit power as John did, can
understand his gospel. Theosophy would be quite wrong to undertake an
intellectual critique of this John Gospel. Instead, it should immerse
itself in it, in order to understand it. Then we should see that a new
spirit of Christianity not only the spirit of the past, but a
future Christianity, can proceed from the John Gospel. We will become
aware of the deep truth of one of the most beautiful and profound
sayings of Christ. Out of his mouth we are told that Christianity is
not something that has merely lived in the past, but that the same
power still lives today. True it is what Christ said: I am with you
always, even unto the end of time.
|