The Gospel of John and Its Relation to the Other Gospels. Lecture 10 of 14.
Rudolf Steiner, Kassel, July 3, 1909:
Among the events
that occurred in Palestine at the beginning of our era there is one in
particular to which repeated reference has been made: the Baptism of Jesus of
Nazareth by John, and the fact was emphasized that regarding its essentials all
four Gospels are in agreement. What we shall do today is to consider this
Baptism from one particular aspect.
From the manner
of its presentation in the Gospels we gather that the Baptism points to an event
of the utmost import — an event also explicable by means of the akashic
record — which had to be characterized somewhat as follows: In about the
thirtieth year of Jesus of Nazareth's life there entered into his three sheaths
that divine Being Whom we call the Christ. We must distinguish, then — and this
is revelaed through a study of the askashic record — between two stages
in the life of Christianity's founder. In the first place we have the life of
the great initiate whom we call Jesus of Nazareth. In this Jesus of Nazareth
there dwelt an ego-being which we showed to have passed through many previous
incarnations, to have lived repeatedly on earth, to have ascended ever higher in
these succeeding lives, and to have risen by degrees to the capacity for the
great sacrifice. This sacrifice meant that toward Jesus of Nazareth's thirtieth
year his ego was able to renounce his physical, etheric, and astral bodies,
which hitherto he had purified, cleansed, and ennobled, thus providing a
threefold human sheath of incomparable purity and perfection. When the ego of
Jesus of Nazareth abandoned these sheaths at the Baptism, these received the
Being Who had never previously dwelt on earth, Whom we cannot think of as having
passed through previous incarnations. The Christ Being could formerly be found
only in the world existing outside our earth. Not until this moment of the
Baptism by John did this Individuality unite with a human body, in order to
accomplish, in the three years following what we must endeavor to set forth in
ever greater detail.
What I have just
told you was gathered by means of clairvoyant observation. The evangelists
clothe this event in their descriptions of the Baptism; and what they meant was
while a variety of experiences came to those whom John baptized, in the case of
Jesus of Nazareth there occurred the event of the Christ descending into His
three sheaths. I told you in the first of these lectures that this Christ is
the same Being of Whom the Old Testament says: And the Spirit of God moved (or
brooded) upon the face of the waters. This same spirit — that is, the
divine Spirit of our solar system — entered the threefold sheath of Jesus of
Nazareth.
I shall now set
forth what actually occurred at the Baptism by John; but inasmuch as this was
the supreme event in Earth evolution, I must beg you to realize from the outset
that it is necessarily difficult to comprehend. The minor events of Earth
evolution are naturally easier to understand than the great ones: who could
doubt, therefore, that the mightiest one of all must present the greatest
difficulties? I shall presently make various statements that may shock those who
are insufficiently prepared; but even they should remind themselves that the
purpose of the human soul's sojourn on earth is to keep constantly perfecting
itself — in the matter of gaining insight as well as in others — and that what
at first comes as a shock must in time appear wholly comprehensible. Were this
not the case one would needs despair of the possibility for development in the
human soul. As it is, however, we can remind ourselves daily that regardless of
how much or how little we have learned, it is our task constantly to perfect our
soul, that it may ever better comprehend this matter.
We have before
us, then, a threefold human sheath, a physical, etheric, and astral body, and of
these the Christ takes possession, so to say. That is indicated by the words
resounding out of the universe: This is my
Son, imbued with my love, in Whom I manifest myself. That is the right translation of this
utterance. One can readily imagine that mighty changes must have taken place in
the threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth when the God entered it; but you will
understand, too, that in the old initiations great changes were involved,
affecting the whole human being. You will recall that I described the last act
of the old initiation for you. After the neophyte, initiated in the divine
Mysteries, had undergone long preparation by means of study and exercises, he
was reduced to a deathlike state for three and a half days, during which his
etheric body was separated from his physical body; and this enabled the fruits
garnered by the astral body to express themselves in the etheric body. This
means that the candidate rose from the rank of a “purified one,” as the term is,
to an “illuminated one” who envisions the spiritual world.
Even in those
old times — or rather, especially then, when such initiations were still
possible — one who had reached this stage had a certain power over his entire
corporeality; and after returning into his physical body he controlled it
superbly in respect of certain finer elements. Here you might ask, In facing
such an initiate, one who achieved so great a mastery over his various sheaths —
even the physical body — could one notice this — did he show it? — Well, it was
observed by anyone who had acquired the faculty of that sort of vision. Others
as a rule saw him as an ordinary, simple man and noticed nothing remarkable
about him. Why? Simply because the physical body, as seen by physical eyes, is
merely the outer expression of what underlies it, and the changes mentioned
refer to the spiritual element that underlies the physical body.
Now, all the old
initiates achieved a certain degree of mastery over their physical body as a
result of the procedure to which they were subjected; but there was one capacity
that no old initiation could ever bring under the dominion of the human spirit.
Here we touch the fringe, as it were, of a profound secret, or mystery. In the
structure of man there is one element to which the power of a pre-Christian
initiation could not penetrate: the subtle physicochemical processes in the
skeleton. Strange as it may sound to you, that is the case. Previous to the
Baptism of Christ Jesus there never had been a human individuality in earth
evolution, either among initiates or elsewhere, with power over the
chemico-physical processes in the skeleton. Through the entry of the Christ into
the body of Jesus of Nazareth the egohood of Christ acquired dominion even over
the skeleton. And the result was that, as a unique event, there lived upon earth
a body capable of employing its forces in such way as to incorporate the form of
the skeleton — that is, its spiritual form — in Earth evolution. Nothing
of all that man passes through in his earth development would endure were he not
able to incorporate in Earth evolution, as a law, the noble form of his
skeleton, were he unable gradually to master this law of the skeleton.
There is a
connection here with an old popular superstition — indeed, old traditions are
frequently associated with the occult. In certain circles it is customary to
employ the skeleton as a symbol when death is to be represented. This stands for
the idea that at the beginning of Earth evolution all the laws governing
the systems of the human organization other than the skeleton were so far
advanced that at the end of the Earth's evolution they would be present
again, though in a higher form; but that evolution would carry over nothing into
the future unless the form of the skeleton were taken over. The form of the
skeleton conquers death in the physical sense, hence He Who was to vanquish
death on the earth must have mastery over the skeleton — in the same manner as I
indicated this mastery over certain spiritual attributes in connection with
lesser faculties. Man has control of his circulatory system only to a slight
degree: in feeling shame he drives his blood outward from within, which means
that the soul acts upon the circulatory system; in turning pale when frightened
he drives his blood back inward into the center; in sorrow, tears come to his
eyes. All these phenomena represent a certain dominion of the soul over what is
bodily; but far greater mastery over the bodily functions is enjoyed by one who
has been initiated beyond a certain stage: among other powers, he has the
ability to control arbitrarily the movements of the various parts of his brain
in a definite way.
The human being,
then, that was the sheath of Jesus of Nazareth came under the dominion of the
Christ; and the will of the Christ, His sovereign will, had the power to
penetrate the skeleton, so that it could be influenced, so to speak, for the
first time. The significance of this fact can be set forth as follows: Man
acquired his present form, given by his skeleton, on the Earth — not
during a previous embodiment of our planet; but he would lose it again had it
not been for the coming of that spiritual power we call the Christ. He would
carry over into the future nothing in the way of harvest and fruits of his
sojourn on Earth had not Christ established His dominion over the
skeleton. It was therefore a stupendous force that penetrated to the very marrow
of the threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth at the moment of the Baptism by
John. We must visualize this moment vividly, for it is one of the events we are
considering.
In the case of
an ordinary birth the attributes deriving from a previous incarnation unite with
what is given through heredity. The human individuality that had existed in
former lives merges with what is provided for him as his corporeal-etheric
sheath; in other words, something from the spiritual world unites with the
principle that is physical, of the senses. Those of you who have frequently
attended my lectures are aware that as regards outer appearances everything
presents itself as in a mirror, reversed, as soon as we enter the spiritual
world. So when a person becomes clairvoyant by rational methods, when his eyes
have been opened to the spiritual world, he must first gradually learn to find
his way about, for everything appears reversed. When he sees a number, say 345,
he must not read it as he would in the physical world, but backwards: 543. In
like manner you must learn to observe, in a certain sense, everything else as
well in reverse — not only numbers. Now, the event of the Christ uniting with
the outer sheath of Jesus of Nazareth appears, to one whose spiritual eyes are
open, in reversed order. While in a physical embodiment something spiritual
descends from higher worlds and unites with the physical, that which was
sacrificed — in this case in order that the Christ Spirit might enter — appeared
above the head of Jesus of Nazareth in the form of a white dove. Something
spiritual appears as it detaches itself from the physical. That is factually a
clairvoyant observation; and it would be far from right to consider it a mere
allegory or symbol. It is a real, clairvoyant, spiritual fact, actually present
on the astral plane for clairvoyant capacity. Just as a physical birth implies
the attraction of spirit, so this birth was a sacrifice, a renunciation; and
thereby the opportunity was provided for the Spirit, Who at the beginning of our
Earth evolution moved upon the face of the waters, to unite with
the threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth and to permeate it with power and
fervor, as described.
You will now
understand that when this took place an area was involved far greater than the
spot on which the Baptism occurred. It would be very shortsighted to imagine
that an event associated with any being whatever were circumscribed by the
boundaries visible to the eye. That is one of the powerful delusions to which
men succumb when they put their entire faith in the outer senses alone. Where is
a man's boundary, as the outer senses see it? A superficial verdict would say,
in his skin. That is where he stops in all directions. Someone might even add,
If I were to cut off the nose that is part of you, you would no longer be a
complete human being; which goes to show that everything of that sort is part of
your being. — But how short-sighted that is! When we limit ourselves to physical
perception we do not look for any integral part of a man even ten to twelve
inches or so outside his skin; but consider that with every breath you draw you
inhale air from the general air of your environment. Well, if they cut off your
nose you are no longer a complete human being; but the same is true if your air
is cut off. It is quite arbitrary to imagine that a man is bounded by his skin.
Everything surrounding him is part of him as well, even in the physical sense;
so that when something happens to a man at a given spot, it is not only the
space occupied by his body that participates in the occurrence. If you were to
try the experiment of poisoning the air in a circle having the radius of a mile,
surrounding the spot where man stood — poisoning it virulently enough for the
fumes to reach him — you would discover that the entire space within the mile
radius takes part in his life processes.
The whole earth
takes part in every life process; and if that is the case even in a physical
life process, you will not find it difficult to understand that in an event such
as the Baptism the whole spiritual world participated, and that much, very much,
occurred in order that this might take place. If within the radius of a mile you
poison the air surrounding a man to the extent of influencing his life
processes, and if then another man approaches him, the latter will suffer an
effect as well. This may differ, according to his proximity to the poisoned
area: if he is at a greater distance, for example, the effect will be less; but
some effect will nevertheless result. It will therefore no longer seem strange
to you if today we raise the question concerning the possibility of there having
been other influences resulting from the Baptism. And here we touch another
profound mystery of which we are constrained to speak with awe and reverence,
for the preparation needed to understand such things will come to mankind only
by slow degrees.
At the same
moment in which the Spirit of Christ descended into the body of Jesus of
Nazareth and the transformation occurred as described, an influence was exerted
upon the Mother of Jesus of Nazareth as well. It consisted in her regaining her
virginity at this moment of the Baptism; that is, her inner organism reverted to
the state existing before puberty. At the birth of the Christ, the Mother of
Jesus of Nazareth became a virgin.
Those are the
two momentous facts, the great and mighty influences indicated, though
cryptically, by the writer of the John Gospel. If we are able to read this
Gospel aright, all this can be found stated there in one way or another; but in
order to recognize its meaning we must link up with various matters upon which
we touched yesterday from other aspects.
We have said
that in olden times people lived under the influence of endogamy, meaning that
marriage was entered into within the same tribe by blood relatives. Only as time
passed did it become customary to marry outside the tribe into other blood. The
farther back we go in time, the more we find people living under the influence
of this blood relationship; and the flowing of the tribal blood through men's
veins brought about the strong, magical forces of which we spoke. One who lived
at that time and could look far back in his line of ancestry, finding there only
tribally related blood, had magical force working in his own blood, making
possible the influence of soul upon soul as described yesterday. And people knew
that very well, even the simplest of them. But it would be utterly wrong to
conclude from this that nowadays consanguineous marriages would produce similar
conditions, that magical forces would come to light. You would be falling into
the same error as would the lily of the valley if it were suddenly to announce:
Henceforth I shall no longer bloom in May: I shall bloom in October! It cannot
bloom in October because the necessary conditions are lacking; and the same is
true of the magical forces: they cannot develop in an era in which the requisite
conditions no longer exist. In our time they must evolve in a different manner;
what was described applies only to the older epochs.
The crude
materialistic scientist can naturally not understand the idea that the laws
governing evolution have changed: he believes that what he witnesses today in
his physics laboratory must always have proceeded in the same way. But that is
nonsense, because laws do change; and those who have derived their faith from
modern natural science would have marveled at the events in Palestine, narrated
in the John Gospel, as something strange indeed. But those who lived at the time
of Christ Jesus, when living traditions told of an age in which such things were
wholly within the range of possibility, were not particularly amazed at them.
That is why I could say yesterday that no one was greatly astonished at what
occurred at the Marriage of Cana in the nature of a sign.
And why should
they have been astonished? Outwardly it was nothing but a repetition of
something they knew to have been observed time and again. Turn to the Second
Book of Kings, IV, 42-44: And there
came a man from Baalshalisha, and brought the man of God bread of the first
fruits, twenty loaves of barley, and full ears of corn in the husk thereof. And
he said, Give unto the people, that they may eat. And his servitor said, Should
I set this before an hundred men? He said again, Give the people, that they may eat:
for thus saith the Lord, They shall eat, and shall leave thereof. So he set it
before them, and they did eat, and left thereof, according to the word of the
Lord.
There you have
in the Old Testament the same situation we find in the feeding of the Five
Thousand, narrated in a manner suited to that time. Why should such a sign
excite wonder among people whose documents told them that it had happened
before? It is essential that we understand this.
Now, what took
place in a man who had been initiated in the old sense? He gained access to the
spiritual world: his eyes were opened to the spiritually active forces — that
is, he could penetrate the connection between the blood and the spiritually
active forces. Others had a faint glimmering of this, but the initiate's vision
reached back to the first ancestor from whom the blood had flowed down through
the generations; and he could apprehend that an entire folk ego expressed itself
in this blood, just as the individual ego is expressed in the individual's
blood. That is the way an initiate saw back to the source of the bloodstream
that coursed through the generations, and he felt identified in his soul with
the whole Folk Spirit whose physiognomy came to expression in the common blood
of the people. Such a one was to a certain degree initiated, and up to a point
he was master of definite magical powers in the old sense.
There is another
thing we must keep in view. The male and female principles cooperate in the
propagation of mankind in a manner that can be briefly characterized as follows.
Were the female principle to dominate completely, man would develop in such a
way as to keep constantly producing homogeneous characters: the child would
always resemble his parents, grandparents, and so on. Forces that bring about
resemblance are inherent in the female principle, while all that reduces it,
that creates differences, lies with the male principle. When, within a folk
community, you find a number of faces that resemble each other, you have what
derives from the female element; but certain differences are to be seen in these
faces enabling you to distinguish the separate individuals, and this results
from the male influence. If the influence of the female element alone prevailed
you would not be able to tell the different individuals apart; and if only the
influence of the male element were in evidence you could never recognize a group
of people as belonging to the same stock. So the manner in which the male and
female principles cooperate can be stated as follows: the influence of the male
principle individualizes, specializes, separates, while that of the female
principle tends to generalize
From this we can
see that whatever pertains to a people as a whole derives from the female
element: the force in woman carries over from generation to generation the
factor which otherwise expresses itself in the continuous bloodstream. A
further characterization of the origin of the magical forces residing in the
blood bonds could be given thus: they are linked with the female principle that
courses through the entire people and lives in all its members.
Well, if a man
had risen through initiation to the point of being able to wield the forces, so
to speak, with which the common blood was inoculated through the female folk
element, what was his essential characteristic? The old Persian initiation
adopted certain names to distinguish the various degrees rising to spiritual
heights, and one of these names must be of special interest to us. The first
degree in the Persian initiation was termed the Raven; the second, the
Initiate; the third, the Warrior; the fourth, the Lion; the
fifth degree always bore the name of the people in question: a Persian, for
example, who had risen to the fifth degree of initiation was termed a
Persian.
First the
initiate became a Raven, which meant that he could carry on a study of the outer
world; and being a servant of those who dwell in the spiritual world he brought
to that world tidings of the physical world. Hence the symbol of the Raven as
emissary between the physical and the spiritual world — from the Ravens of
Elijah to those of Barbarossa. — On reaching the second degree the initiate came
within the spiritual world; and one initiated in the third degree, having
advanced past the second, is entrusted with the mission of interceding for
occult truths: he becomes a Warrior. An initiate of the second degree was not
permitted to contend for the truths of the spiritual world. — In the fourth
degree the spiritual truths became established, to a certain extent, in the
initiate. And the fifth degree is the one of which I said that here the initiate
learned to control all that flowed in the blood through the generations, learned
to deal with it by means of the forces descending with the blood through the
female element of propagation. What name, then, would be applied to a man who
had experienced his initiation within the Israelitic people? Israelite,
just as in an analogous case in Persia he would have been called a Persian.
Now observe the
following. Among the first to be brought to Christ Jesus, according to the
Gospel of St. John, was Nathaniel. The others, who were already followers of
Christ Jesus, say to Nathaniel: We have found
the Master, Him Who dwells in Jesus of Nazareth. To which
Nathanael replies: Can any
good thing come out of Nazareth? But when
Nathaniel is brought to Christ, Christ says to him: Behold an
Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile. An “Israelite”
indeed, in whom truth dwells! Christ says this because He knows to what degree
Nathaniel is initiated. Whereupon Nathaniel realizes that he is dealing with
someone who knows quite as much as he does — in fact, with One Who towers above
him, Who knows more than he does. And then, in order to stress the reference to
initiation, Christ adds: I saw thee
before thou comest to me: before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under
the fig tree, I saw thee. The term “fig
tree” is here used in exactly the same sense as in connection with Buddha: the
fig tree is the “Bodhi Tree.” It is the symbol of initiation. What Christ says
to him is, I recognize thee as one initiated in the fifth degree. The author of
the John Gospel indicates that Christ surveys from above, as it were, an
initiate of the fifth degree. Step by step this writer leads us on, in this case
by showing us that in the body of Jesus of Nazareth there dwells one who stands
above the fifth degree of initiation.
And more. We
have just learned that a fifth-degree initiate commands the occult-magical
forces residing in the blood flowing down through the generations: he has become
one, as it were, with the Folk Soul; and earlier we learned that this Folk Soul
expresses itself in the forces inherent in woman. Therefore one who is initiated
in the fifth degree will be dealing — in accord with the old conditions — with
the female forces. This, of course, must be viewed spiritually. But Christ's
relation to these forces is an entirely new one: He is dealing with the woman
who regained her virginity through the Baptism, who recaptures the new,
sprouting forces of the virgin state. That was the wholly new factor which the
writer of the John Gospel intended to indicate by saying that a certain current
flowed from the Son to the Mother. Everyone with occult knowledge at that time
knew quite well that a son, provided he was initiated in the fifth grade, was
able to employ magically the folk forces expressed in the folk element of his
mother, but Christ demonstrated in a loftier spiritual manner the forces of the
woman who had become virgin again.
Thus we see what
led up to the Marriage in Cana. We see that what occurred there had to be
brought about by an initiate excelling an initiate of the fifth degree, and we
are also shown that this fact bore a connection with the folk forces inherent in
the female personality. In a marvelous fashion the author of the John Gospel
prepares us for what came to pass there. As has been said, we shall approach the
miracle question itself later; but in the meantime you can readily imagine that
freshly drawn water is different from water that has stood for a time, just as a
flower freshly picked is different from one that has been wilting for three
days. Differentiations of that sort naturally do not occur to materialistic
observation. Water until recently united with the forces of the earth is very
different from stale water. In conjunction with the forces residing in the
freshly drawn water, one who is initiated as described can work through the
forces which are linked with a spiritual relationship such as that between
Christ and the Mother who has become virgin. Christ carries further what the
earth is capable of achieving. The earth can transform the water in the
grapevine into wine. The Christ, Who has approached the earth and become the
Spirit of the Earth, is the spiritual principle that is otherwise active in the
entire earth body; so if He is the Christ He must be able to accomplish as much
as the earth. And the earth, within the vine, transforms water into wine.
The first sign,
therefore, performed by Christ Jesus as set forth in the John Gospel is one that
links up, so to speak, with what could be accomplished in olden times by an
initiate who controlled the forces extending through the blood ties of the
generations, as we have just learned out of the Books of Kings.
But now we find
a continuing increase in the strength of those forces which Christ develops in
the body of Jesus of Nazareth — not those that the Christ had within Himself.
Therefore, do not ask, Can it be, then, that the Christ has to develop?
Certainly not. But what did have to be developed through the Christ was the body
of Jesus of Nazareth, however purified and ennobled: it had to be guided upward
step by step by the Christ; for into this body were to be poured the forces
intended to manifest themselves shortly.
The next sign is
the healing of the nobleman's son, and the following one, the healing of him who
had lain sick for thirty-eight years by the Pool of Bethesda. What
intensification have we here of the forces through which Christ worked on this
earth? It consists in the fact that now Christ could influence not only those
who surrounded Him, those actually present in the flesh. At the Marriage of Cana
He caused the water to become wine as the people drank it: He worked upon the
etheric bodies of those present; for by the infusion of His force into the
etheric bodies of the people surrounding Him the water became wine in their
mouths — that is, the water tasted like wine. Now, however, the effect was
intended not alone for the body, but for the very depths of the soul; for only
in that way could Christ influence the nobleman's son through the mediation of
his father, and only thus could He penetrate the sinful soul of him who had lain
sick for thirty-eight years. To send His forces into the etheric body alone
would not have sufficed: the astral body had to be acted upon, for it is the
astral body that sins. By exerting an influence upon the etheric body, water can
be turned into wine; but in order to affect another personality it is necessary
to penetrate to something deeper. And this demanded that Christ continue to work
upon the threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth. — Note well that Christ does not
thereby change, thereby become another: He merely works upon the threefold
sheath of Jesus of Nazareth; and this He does henceforth in such a way that the
etheric body can become more independent of the physical body than it was
previously.
So the time came
when the etheric body in the threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth became freer,
less closely bound to the physical body. This resulted in greater mastery over
the latter: more powerful works could be accomplished, so to speak, in this
physical body than hitherto — that is, powerful forces could be employed in it.
The potentiality for this was given with the Baptism in the Jordan, and now it
was to be further developed with special intensity. All this, however, was to
come about through spirit. The power of the astral body was to become so great
in the threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth that the etheric body could acquire
the control over the physical body that was indicated. Now, by what means alone
can the astral body attain such power? By acquiring the right feelings, by
devotion to the right feelings toward all that takes place around us; above
all, by achieving the right attitude toward human egotism. Did Christ
accomplish this with the body of Jesus of Nazareth? Did His work result in the
right attitude toward all the egotism He encountered, in exposing the
fundamentally egotistical character of the souls present? Yes: the author of the
John Gospel tells us how Christ appears as the purger of the Temple when he
meets with those who do homage to egotism and defile the Temple by making it
into a trading center. Thus He was able to say that His astral body had achieved
sufficient strength to rebuild His physical body in three days, should it
perish. This, too, is indicated by the writer of the John Gospel: Jesus
answered and said unto them, Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise
it up. Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this temple in building, and
wilt thou rear it up in three days? But he spake of the temple of his
body. This indicates
that the sheath which had been offered Him in sacrifice now has the power to
control and master the physical body completely. Now this body, become
independent, can move about at will, no longer subject to the laws of the
physical world: regardless of the usual laws of the world of space, it can bring
about and direct events in the spiritual world. Again we ask, does this occur?
Yes: it is indicated in the chapter following the one in which the purging of
the Temple is related. There was a
man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews: The same came to
Jesus by night, and said unto him ... Why does it say here, “by night”? The
explanation that the Jew was simply afraid to go to Jesus by the light of day,
so he crept through the window in the night, is as trivial a one as could well
be imagined. Anybody can make up explanations of that sort. By night means
nothing else than that this meeting between Jesus and Nicodemus occurred in the
astral world: in the spiritual world, not in the world that surrounds us in our
ordinary day-consciousness. This means that Christ could converse with Nicodemus
outside the physical body — by night, when the physical body is not present,
when the astral body is outside the physical and etheric bodies.
Thus the
threefold sheath of Jesus of Nazareth was prepared by the Christ, Who dwelt in
it, for the acts that were to follow: for what was to be infused into the souls
of men. This implied a degree of sovereignty in the soul dwelling in Jesus of
Nazareth that would enable it to act upon other bodies. But acting upon another
soul is an entirely different matter from the type of influence we discussed
yesterday. It comes to light in the next intensification, in the Feeding of the
Five Thousand and in the Walking on the Water. To be seen in the flesh without
being physically present called for something more; and so powerful had the
force become, even at that stage, in the body of Jesus of Nazareth that the
Christ was seen not only by His disciples but by others as well. Only, here
again we must read the John Gospel carefully; for someone might take the
standpoint of readily believing this sign in the case of the disciples, but not
in the others.
The day following, when the people which stood on the other side of the sea saw that there was none other boat there, save that one whereinto his disciples were entered, and that Jesus went not with his disciples into the boat, but that his disciples were gone away alone; (Howbeit there came other boats from Tiberias nigh unto the place where they did eat the bread, after that the Lord had given thanks:) When the people therefore saw that Jesus was not there, neither his disciples, they also took shipping, and came to Capernaum, seeking for Jesus. Let me emphasize that it says here, the people who sought Jesus. The narrative continues: And when they had found him on the other side of the sea, they said unto him, Rabbi, when camest thou hither? That implies the same occurrence as in the case of the disciples. It does not say that every ordinary eye saw Him, but that He was seen by those who sought Him and who found Him, by virtue of an increase in their soul force. To say that someone saw another person does not imply that the person seen stood there in the flesh as a spatial figure visible to the physical eye. What in outer life is generally called "taking the Gospel literally" is really anything but that.
If you note that
in all of this we have once more to do with what is essentially an
intensification, you will understand that again something had to precede it,
something to show that Christ had been working on the threefold sheath of Jesus
of Nazareth in a manner to render its force ever mightier. His work was that of
a healer: He was able to transmit His force to the other's soul. This He could
only do by working henceforth in the manner He Himself describes in His
conversation with the Samaritan woman by the well: I am the
living water. At the Marriage in Cana He had
revealed Himself as an initiate of the fifth grade, having dominion over the
elements: now He makes it clear that He works in the elements and dwells in
them. Later He manifests Himself as one with the forces active on the whole
earth and throughout the world. This occurs in the chapter dealing with Jesus, who
hath power over life and death: over life and death by virtue of His
power over the forces active in the physical body. That is why this chapter
precedes the sign the performance of which called for a still greater force.
Then we see the
force still increasing. Yesterday we pointed out that in the sign described as
the healing of the man born blind Christ intervenes not only in matters
pertaining to life between birth and death, but in that which passes from life
to life as the individuality of the human soul. The man was born blind because
the divine individuality in him manifested itself in its works; and his sight is
to be restored by means of the force Christ infuses into him, a force that will
wipe out that which happened — not through the man's personality between birth
and death, nor as a result of heredity, but which was incurred by his
individuality.
I have
repeatedly explained that Goethe's beautiful aphorism, “The eye is formed by
means of light, for light,” [1] which proceeded from a deep
understanding of the Rosicrucian initiation, has a profoundly occult basis. I
pointed out that Schopenhauer was quite right in saying that there can be no
light without the eye; but how does the eye originate? Goethe says truly that
had it not been for light, no organ sensitive to light, no eye, would ever have
come into existence. The eye was created by the light. A single illustration
proves this: when animals equipped with eyes migrate into dark caverns they soon
lose their sight through lack of light. Light is what formed the eye. If Christ
is to imbue a human individuality with a force able to create in him the
capacity for making the eye into an organ responsive to light, such as it had
not been previously, there must reside in the Christ the spiritual force that
lives in light. Let us see where this is indicated in the John Gospel. The
healing of the blind man is preceded by the chapter in which we read: Then spake
Jesus unto them, saying, I am the light of the world. The healing of the blind man is
narrated only after having been anticipated by the revelation “I am the
light of the world.”
Now turn to the
last chapter before the Raising of Lazarus and try to visualize some of the
disclosures made there. You need only consider the passage reading: Therefore
doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I might take it again.
No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it
down ... If I do not the works of my Father, believe me
not. Everything said
here about the “good shepherd” is intended to indicate Christ's feeling that He
is one with the Father, that henceforth He will no longer think of Himself as
"I" other than as He is imbued with the Father force. As earlier He said “I am
the light of the world,” so now: I renounce my
ego force by receiving the Father in me, so that the Father may work in me, that
the primordial principle may permeate me and then flow forth into another being.
I lay down my life that I may take it again. That is what precedes the Raising of
Lazarus.
And now, keeping
all these considerations in mind, try to grasp the John Gospel in respect to its
composition. Notice that up to the Raising of Lazarus, not only is a marvellous
intensification indicated in the development of the forces residing in the body
of Jesus of Nazareth, but before each increase we are told exactly what it is
that acts upon his body. Oh, you will find everything in the John Gospel so
closely knit that, if only you understand it, you will realize that not a
sentence could be omitted. And the explanation of such marvelous composition is
that it was written as we have said, by one who was initiated by Christ Jesus
Himself.
Our point of
departure today was the question, What occurred at the Baptism in the Jordan?
and we found that the potential capacity for vanquishing death came into the
world with the descent of the Christ into the threefold sheath of Jesus of
Nazareth. We saw the change that came over the Mother of Jesus of Nazareth with
the coming of the Christ: through the influence exercised upon her at the
Baptism she became virginal again. The assertion, then, that was to be vouchsafed
mankind through the John Gospel is indeed true: When at the Baptism the Christ
was born in the body of Jesus of Nazareth, the Mother of Jesus of Nazareth
became a virgin.
That is the point of departure of the Gospel according to St. John; and if you grasp it in conjunction with the mighty cosmic influence exercised in the event that occurred on the bank of the Jordan, then you will also understand that an accurate description of such an event — the first description of it — could only have been achieved by one whom Christ Himself had initiated, by the risen Lazarus “whom the Lord loved,” thenceforth always mentioned as the disciple whom the Lord loved. It was the risen Lazarus who bequeathed us the Gospel; and he alone was able so firmly to weld its every passage because he had received the mightiest impulse from the greatest initiator, from Christ. He alone could point to something that later Paul, through his initiation, comprehended in a certain sense: that at that moment the germ of victory over death had entered Earth evolution.
That is the point of departure of the Gospel according to St. John; and if you grasp it in conjunction with the mighty cosmic influence exercised in the event that occurred on the bank of the Jordan, then you will also understand that an accurate description of such an event — the first description of it — could only have been achieved by one whom Christ Himself had initiated, by the risen Lazarus “whom the Lord loved,” thenceforth always mentioned as the disciple whom the Lord loved. It was the risen Lazarus who bequeathed us the Gospel; and he alone was able so firmly to weld its every passage because he had received the mightiest impulse from the greatest initiator, from Christ. He alone could point to something that later Paul, through his initiation, comprehended in a certain sense: that at that moment the germ of victory over death had entered Earth evolution.
Hence the
momentous words spoken of Him Who hung on the Cross: Not a bone of
him shall be broken. Why? Because the form over which
Christ must retain His dominion was not to be desecrated. Had they broken His
bones, a base human force would have interfered with the power Christ must
exercise even over the bones of Jesus of Nazareth. None must touch that form,
for it was written that this should remain wholly subject to Christ's
dominion.
This will serve
as a starting point for a consideration of the death of Christ, which we will
undertake tomorrow.
Notes:
Source: http://wn.rsarchive.org/GA/GA0112/19090703p02.html
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