The Gospel of St. Luke
GA 114
20 September 1909, Basel
Lecture Six
It will be easier for us to understand details in the Gospel of St. Luke if during our preparatory study the beings and individualities concerned stand before our mind's eye as living figures. The need for a good deal of preliminary history must therefore not discourage us.
First and foremost we must learn to know the great central Figure of the Gospels in the whole complexity of His nature, and also certain other facts essential to any real understanding of the Gospel of St. Luke.
Let us first recall what has already been said about the Bodhisattva who in the fifth/sixth century before our era became Buddha. We have described what this most significant event meant for humanity and we will consider it in detail once again.
The content of Buddha's teaching had at some given time to be transmitted to men as their own possession. In none of the epochs before Buddha could there have existed on the Earth a human being capable of discovering within himself the teaching of compassion and love as expressed in the Eightfold Path. Evolution had not progressed sufficiently to enable any human being to discover these truths through his own contemplation and deepened life of feeling. Everything in the world comes into being and develops; for everything in existence there must be a cause. How, for example, could men in earlier times have obeyed the principles subsequently expressed in the Eightfold Path? They could have done so only because these principles were handed down as tradition, were inculcated into them from the occult schools of the initiates and seers. It was the Bodhisattva who taught in the secret Mystery-schools, where it was possible to rise to the higher worlds and receive from those realms knowledge that could not yet be imparted directly to the human intellect. In ancient times this teaching had had to be instilled into humanity by those who were fortunate enough to come into direct contact with the teachers in the Mystery-schools. It was necessary for men to be influenced in such a way that their lives were governed by these principles, although they would not themselves have been capable of discovering them.
Thus men who lived outside the Mysteries unconsciously obeyed the principles received from those who had access to them. As yet there existed on the Earth no human body constituted in a way that would have enabled a man to discover the content of the Eightfold Path himself, however deeply the spirit may have penetrated into him. The principles had to be revealed from above and then communicated in a suitable form. Consequently a Being such as the Bodhisattva, before he became Buddha, was never able to use a human body on Earth in the fullest sense. He could find no body capable of incorporating all the faculties through which he was to influence men. No such body existed. What, then, was necessary? How did the Bodhisattva incarnate? We must now ask this question.
What the Bodhisattva was as a spiritual Being did not fully incarnate. Clairvoyant observation of a body ensouled by a Bodhisattva would have revealed that the body enclosed only part of his nature and that his etheric body towered far above the human sheath; his connection with the spiritual world was never wholly relinquished; he lived in a spiritual and in a physical body simultaneously. The transition from Bodhisattva to Buddha meant that for the first time there existed a body into which the Bodhisattva could fully descend and through which his powers could take effect. Thus he exemplified the ideal human stature which men must strive to emulate in order that each individual may eventually discover from within himself the teaching of the Eightfold Path, as the Bodhisattva himself discovered it under the Bodhi tree. Were we to examine the previous incarnations of the Bodhisattva who became Buddha we should find that part of his being was obliged to remain in the spiritual world; he could send only part of himself into the physical body. It was not until the fifth/sixth century B.C. that for the first time there existed a human organism into which the Bodhisattva could descend in the fullest sense, thus exemplifying the possibility that the principles of the Eightfold Path can be discovered by humanity itself through the moral tenor of the soul.
The fact that some men lived with part of their being in the spiritual world was known to all religions and cognate modes of thought. It was known that there were Beings destined to work on the Earth, for whom human embodiment was too restricted to contain the whole Individuality. In the religious thought of Western Asia this kind of union of a higher Individuality with a physical body was called ‘being filled with the Holy Spirit’. This is a quite definite, technical expression. In the language of those regions it would have been said of a Being such as a Bodhisattva while incarnated on Earth that he was ‘filled with the Holy Spirit’—meaning that the forces and powers possessed by such a Being were not fully contained within his human organism and that something spiritual must work from outside. Thus it might with truth be said that the Buddha, in his previous incarnations, was ‘filled with the Holy Spirit’.
Having grasped this we shall be able to understand what is said at the beginning of the Gospel of St. Luke. We know that in the etheric body of the Jesus-child of the Nathan line of the House of David there was present the hitherto untouched part of the etheric body that had been withdrawn from humanity at the time of the ‘Fall into sin’. The etheric substance withheld from Adam had been preserved and was sent down into this child. This was necessary in order that a being so young and entirely untouched by any experiences of earthly evolution might be in existence and assimilate all that he was destined to assimilate. Would an ordinary human being who had passed through incarnations since the Lemurian age have been able to receive the overshadowing power of Buddha's Nirmanakaya? No indeed! A human body of great perfection had to be made available, one that could only be produced through part of the etheric substance of Adam—untouched by all earthly influences—being united with the etheric body of this Jesus-child. This etheric substance was imbued with the forces that had worked upon Earth evolution before the Fall and now, in the Jesus-child, their power was immeasurably enhanced. This made it possible for the mysterious influence referred to in the lecture yesterday to be exercised by the mother of the Nathan Jesus upon the mother of the Baptist—that is to say upon John himself before he was born.
It is also essential to understand the nature of the one known as John the Baptist. We can understand him only when we perceive the difference between the teaching given by Buddha in India and the teaching given to the ancient Hebrew people through Moses and his successors, the Hebrew prophets.
Buddha imparted to mankind what the human soul can find as its own law and obey in order to purify itself and thus reach the highest level of morality attainable on Earth. The ‘Law of the Soul’—Dharma—was proclaimed through Buddha in such a way that at the highest stage of development attainable by human nature, man can discover it himself, in his own soul. Buddha was the first to reveal it. But the evolution of humanity does not by any means proceed in a straight line. The several streams of culture and civilization must fertilize each other. The Christ Event was to come to pass in Asia Minor and this made it necessary that the development of the people there should remain behind that of the people of India, in order that men in Asia Minor might receive in greater freshness, at a later period, what had been imparted to the people of India in a different form.
Thus a people who developed in a quite different way and remained at a more backward stage than those living farther to the East, had to be established in Asia Minor. Whereas the people of the more distant East were destined by cosmic wisdom to advance to the stage of being able to behold the Bodhisattva as Buddha, it was necessary for the people of Asia Minor—especially the Hebrew people—to be left at a lower, more childlike stage. The same thing had to happen in the evolution of humanity on a large scale as might be seen on a small scale in the case of a human being who develops to a certain degree of maturity by his twentieth year and has acquired definite faculties. But acquired faculties are apt also to become shackles, hindrances. Such faculties tend to become fixed at the stage they have actually reached and to keep the person concerned at that stage. They have a firm hold upon him and later on, perhaps in his thirtieth year, it is not easy for him to transcend the stage reached when he was twenty. On the other hand, a second man who has kept himself longer in a childlike state and because he has acquired only very few faculties by his twentieth year is obliged to learn from the other—such a man can more easily attain the required stage and indeed at the age of thirty may reach a higher level than the first man who acquired his faculties in his early years. Anyone who observes life closely will find this to be the case. Faculties that a man has made his own possession may become shackles later on; whereas faculties that are not so intrinsically linked with the soul but have been acquired in a more external way are less liable to have that effect.
In order that humanity may advance, provision has always to be made for two streams of civilization, one of which receives into itself the rudiments of certain faculties and elaborates them, while the development of the other, adjacent, stream is as it were held back. The one stream develops certain faculties to a suitable degree—faculties which are then essentially part of this stream and of the men belonging to it. Evolution proceeds, and something new appears; but the first stream would not be capable of rising to a higher stage through its own powers. Provision has therefore to be made for another stream to run side by side with it. This second stream remains in a certain respect undeveloped, having not nearly reached the level of the first; nevertheless it continues its course and is eventually able to benefit from the faculties acquired by the first. Having in the intervening period remained youthful, it is able, later on, to rise higher. Thus the one stream has fertilized the other. Spiritual streams must run their course side by side in this way in the evolution of humanity and provision must be made accordingly by the spiritual guidance of the world.
In what way could it be ensured that side by side with the stream represented by the great Buddha a second stream should run its course and at a later time receive what Buddha had brought to mankind?
This could only be achieved by withholding from the stream known as the ancient Hebraic, the possibility of producing human beings capable of developing Dharma out of their own moral nature, that is to say, capable of finding the teachings of the Eightfold Path for themselves. In this stream there could be no Buddha. What Buddha brought to his spiritual stream in the form of deep inwardness, the other stream had to receive from outside. As a particularly wise measure, therefore, and long before the appearance of Buddha, this people of the Near East was given the ‘Law’, not from within but from outside, in the Ten Commandments known as the Decalogue. The teaching imparted to another people as a possession of the inner life was given to the ancient Hebrew people in the Ten Commandments—a number of external Laws received from outside and not yet united with the soul. Hence by reason of their childlike stage of evolution the ancient Hebrews felt that the Commandments had been given to them from heaven. The Indian people had been taught to realize that men evolve Dharma, the Law of the Soul, from their inmost being; the Hebrew people were trained to obey the Law given them from without. In this way they formed a wonderful complement to what Zarathustra had accomplished for his own civilization and for all civilizations originating from it.
Emphasis has been laid on the fact that Zarathustra directed his gaze to the outer world. Whereas Buddha gave deeply penetrating teachings concerning the ennoblement of man's inner nature, from Zarathustra came sublime teachings relating to the Cosmos, in order that men should be enlightened about the world out of which they are born. Buddha's gaze was directed inwards, Zarathustra's to the outer world, with the aim of understanding it through spiritual insight.
Let us now concern ourselves with what Zarathustra bestowed upon humanity from the time when he appeared as the proclaimer of Ahura Mazdao until his life as Nazarathos. The depth and impressiveness of his teachings about the great spiritual laws and beings of the Cosmos steadily increased. What he had given to Persian civilization concerning the Spirit of the Sun amounted to no more than indications; but then these indications were amplified and elaborated into the wonderful Chaldean knowledge that is so little understood to-day—knowledge relating to the Cosmos and the spiritual causes governing birth and existence.
If we study these cosmological teachings we find that they reveal one particularly significant characteristic. While teaching the ancient Persian people about the external spiritual causes of the material world, Zarathustra spoke of two Powers: Ormuzd and Ahriman or ‘Angra Manyu,’ who oppose one another throughout the Universe. But what may be called the element of moral fervour, moral warmth, would not have been found in this teaching. According to the ancient Persian view, man is enmeshed in the whole process of cosmic life. The struggle between Ormuzd and Ahriman is waged in the human soul, and it is because of the battle between these two Beings that passions rage in man. There was as yet no knowledge of the inner nature of the soul; all the teaching related to the Cosmos. By ‘good’ and ‘evil’ were meant the beneficial or harmful workings which run counter to each other in the Cosmos and also come to expression in man. Moral conceptions were not yet included in teaching that was concerned essentially with the outer world. Man was made acquainted with the beings governing the material world, with everything that prevails in the world as a good, or as a sinister influence. He felt himself enmeshed in these forces but the moral element itself in which the soul participates was not yet inwardly experienced. When, for instance, a man was confronted by another of apparently ‘evil’ nature, he felt that forces from the evil beings of the world were streaming through him, that the other man was ‘possessed’ by these evil beings and moreover could not be held to blame for it. Human beings were felt to be entangled in a system of cosmic existence not yet permeated by moral qualities. That was the characteristic feature of a teaching primarily concerned with the outer world—viewed, of course, with the eyes of spirit.
It was for this reason that the Hebrew teachings formed such a wonderful complement to the cosmological knowledge of the Persians, for they introduced the element of morality into revelations given from without, thus making it possible for the concept of ‘guilt’, of ‘human guilt’ to be imbued with meaning. Before the introduction of the Hebrew teaching, all that could be said of an evil man was that he was possessed by evil forces. The proclamation of the Ten Commandments made it necessary to distinguish between men who obeyed the Law and others who did not. Thus there arose the concept of human guilt. How it was introduced into the evolution of humanity can be grasped if we consider a record proving what a tragic uncertainty still prevailed as to the exact meaning of guilt. Study the Book of Job and you will discern the lack of clarity about the concept of guilt—the uncertainty as to what attitude a man should adopt when misfortune befalls him; there you will glimpse the dawning of the new concept of guilt.
Thus the moral code was given to the ancient Hebrew people as a revelation from without—like the revelations concerning the kingdoms of Nature. This could only come about because Zarathustra had made provision for the continuation of his work, as I explained, by passing on his etheric body to Moses and his astral body to Hermes. Moses was thereby endowed with the faculty to perceive, as Zarathustra had perceived, the forces at work in the external world; but instead of experiencing neutral forces only, Moses became aware of the moral power holding sway in the world, the power that can take the form of commandment. Hence the element of obedience, submission to the Law, was implicit in the life and culture of the Hebrew people, whereas the ideal contained in the stream represented by Buddha was to give direction to man's inner life in the teachings of the Eightfold Path. But it was necessary that this Hebrew people should be preserved until the right time arrived—the time of the advent of the Christ-principle of which we are about to speak. The Hebrew people had to be ‘screened’ from Buddha's revelation and kept at a less mature stage of culture—if we like to call it so. Hence among the ancient Hebrews there were personalities who could not themselves, as human beings, be bearers of the full powers of an Individuality whose mission it was to represent the ‘Law’. A personality such as Buddha could not have appeared within the Hebrew people. The Law could be apprehended only through enlightenment from without—through the fact that Moses bore the etheric body of Zarathustra and was able to receive something that was not born of his own soul. To give birth to the Law from their own hearts was beyond the power of the Hebrew people. But it was essential, as in all other such cases, for the work of Moses to be carried onward and so bear fruit at the right time. Hence it was inevitable that there should arise among the ancient Hebrew people Individualities such as the Prophets and Seers, one of the most important of whom was Elijah. What is there to be said about a personality such as his?
Elijah was destined to be one of the ruling figures in the régime inaugurated by Moses. But the folk-substance of the Hebrews could produce no human being able to represent the whole content of the Law of Moses—which could be received only as a revelation from above. What we described as being necessary in the ancient Indian epoch, also as the special nature of the Bodhisattva, had to be repeated again and again in the Hebrew people too: there had to be Individualities who were not wholly contained in the human personality; one part of their being was in the earthly personality and the other in the spiritual world. Elijah was an Individuality of this nature. Only part of his being was present in his personality on the physical plane; the Ego-hood of Elijah could not penetrate fully into his physical body. He must therefore be called a personality ‘filled with the Spirit’. A figure such as Elijah could not possibly be brought into existence through the normal forces by which other men are placed in the world. In the normal way the human being develops in the mother's body in such a way that through physical processes the Individuality who has been incarnated previously simply unites with the physical embryo. In the case of an ordinary man everything takes place as it were straightforwardly, without any intervention by forces outside the normal. This could not be so in the case of an Individuality such as Elijah. Other forces had to intervene, concerned with the part of the Individuality that reached into the spiritual world. His development was necessarily attended by influences working upon him from outside. Hence when such Individualities are incarnated they appear as men who are ‘inspired’, ‘impelled by the Spirit’. They appear as ecstatic personalities whose utterances far surpass anything that might issue from their normal intelligence. All the prophets in the Old Testament are figures of this kind. They are ‘impelled by the Spirit’; the Ego cannot always account for its actions. The Spirit lives in the personality and is sustained from outside. From time to time such personalities withdraw into solitude; the part of the Ego needed by the personality withdraws and inspiration comes from the Spirit. In certain ecstatic, unconscious states such a being is responsive to the inspirations from above. The man who lived as ‘Elijah’ was an outstanding example of this. The words uttered by his mouth and the actions performed by his hands did not proceed only from the part of his being actually present in his personality; they were manifestations of divine-spiritual Beings in the background.
When this Individuality was born again he was to unite with the body of the child born to Zacharias and Elisabeth. We know from the Gospel itself that John the Baptist is to be regarded as the reborn Elijah. But in him we have to do with an Individuality who in his earlier incarnations had not habitually developed or brought fully into operation all the forces present in the normal course of life. In the normal course of life the inner power or force of the Ego becomes active while the physical body of the human being is developing in the mother's womb. The Elijah-Individuality in earlier times had not descended deeply enough to be involved in the inner processes operating here. The Ego had not, as in normal circumstances, been stirred into activity by its own forces, but from outside. This was now to happen again. But the Ego was now farther from the spiritual world and nearer to the Earth, much more closely connected with the Earth than the Beings who had formerly guided Elijah. The transition leading to the amalgamation of the Buddha-stream with the Zarathustra-stream was now to be brought about.
Everything was to be rejuvenated. It was now the Buddha who had to work from outside—the Being who had linked himself with the Earth and its affairs and now, in his Nirmanakaya, was united with the Nathan Jesus. This Being who on the one side was united with the Earth but on the other withdrawn from it because he was working only in his Nirmanakaya which had soared to realms ‘beyond’ the Earth and hovered above the head of the Nathan Jesus—this Being had now to work from outside and stimulate the Ego-force of John the Baptist.
Thus it was the Nirmanakaya of Buddha which now stirred the Ego-force of John into activity, having the same effect as spiritual forces that had formerly worked upon Elijah. At certain times the being known as Elijah had been rapt in states of ecstasy; then the God spoke, filling his Ego with a force which could be communicated to the outer world. Now again a spiritual force was present—the Nirmanakaya of Buddha hovering above the head of the Nathan Jesus; this force worked upon Elisabeth when John was to be born, stimulated within her the embryo of John in the sixth month of pregnancy, and wakened the Ego. But being nearer to the Earth this force now worked as more than an inspiration; it had an actual formative effect upon the Ego of John. Under the influence of the visit of her who is there called ‘Mary’, the Ego of John the Baptist awoke into activity. The Nirmanakaya of Buddha was here working upon the Ego of the former Elijah—now the Ego of John the Baptist—wakening it and penetrating right into the physical substance.1There is a slight ambiguity in the German text and the reader will do well to turn to the passage in the this lecture (p. 119) where Dr. Steiner speaks again of the mysterious process connected with the birth of John the Baptist and of the influence of the Nirmanakaya of Buddha hovering above the Nathan Jesus.
What may we now expect?
Even as the words of power once spoken by Elijah in the ninth century before our era were in truth ‘God's words’, and the actions performed by his hands ‘God's actions’, it was now to be the same in the case of John the Baptist, inasmuch as what had been present in Elijah had come to life again. The Nirmanakaya of Buddha worked as an inspiration into the Ego of John the Baptist. That which manifested itself to the shepherds and hovered above the head of the Nathan Jesus extended its power into John the Baptist, whose preaching was primarily the re-awakened preaching of Buddha. This fact is in the highest degree noteworthy and cannot fail to make a deep impression upon us when we recall the sermon at Benares wherein Buddha spoke of the suffering in life and the release from it through the Eightfold Path. He often expanded a sermon by saying in effect: ‘Hitherto you have had the teaching of the Brahmans; they ascribe their origin to Brahma himself and claim to be superior to other men because of this noble descent. These Brahmans claim that a man's worth is determined by his descent, but I say to you: Man's worth is determined by what he makes of himself, not by what is in him by virtue of his descent. Judged by the great wisdom of the world, man's worth lies in whatever he makes of himself as an individual!’—Buddha aroused the wrath of the Brahmans because he emphasized the individual quality in men, saying: ‘Verily it is of no avail to call yourselves Brahmans; what matters is that each one of you, through his own personal qualities and efforts should make of himself a purified individual.’ Although not word for word, such was the gist of many of Buddha's sermons. And he would often expand this teaching by showing how, when a man understands the world of suffering, he can feel compassion, can become a comforter and a helper, how he shares the lot of others because he knows that he is feeling the same suffering and the same pain.
The Buddha, now in his Nirmanakaya, shed his radiance upon the Nathan Jesus-child and continued his preaching inasmuch as he let the words resound from the mouth of John the Baptist. These words were spoken under the inspiration of the Buddha and it is like a continuation of his former preaching when, for example, John says: ‘You who set so much store by your descent from those who in the service of the spiritual powers are called Children of the Serpent, and plead the Wisdom of the Serpent, who led you to this? You believe that you bring forth fruits of repentance when you merely say: We have Abraham to our father’ ... (now, however, John continues the actual preaching of Buddha) ... ‘Say not that you have Abraham to your father, but be good men, whatever your place in the world. A good man can be raised up from the stones upon which your feet tread. Verily, God is able of these stones to raise up children unto Abraham’ ... And then again he says: ‘He that hath two coats, let him give to him that hath none!’ Men came to him and asked: ‘Master, what shall we do?’—exactly as the monks once came to Buddha. All these sayings seem to be like utterances of Buddha himself, or a continuation of them. (See Luke III, 7–12).
Knowing that these Beings appear on the physical plane at different turning-points of time, we learn to understand the unity of religions and the spiritual proclamations made to mankind. We shall not realize who and what Buddha was by clinging to tradition but by listening to how he actually speaks. Five to six hundred years before our era, Buddha preached the Sermon at Benares, but his voice has not been silenced. He speaks, although no longer incarnated, when he inspires through the Nirmanakaya. From the mouth of John the Baptist we hear what the Buddha had to say six hundred years after he had lived in a physical body.
There we have a real indication of the ‘unity of religions!’ We must look for each religion at the right point in the evolution of humanity and seek for what is truly alive in it, not what is dead—for everything continues to develop. This we must learn to realize. To refuse to hear Buddha's utterances from the mouth of John the Baptist is like someone who had seen the seed of a rose-tree and later on, when the tree has grown and bears flowers, refuses to believe that the tree grew from the seed, insisting that it is something different! The truth is that what was once alive in the seed now blossoms in the rose-tree. And the living essence of the Sermon at Benares blossomed in the preaching of John the Baptist by the Jordan.
We now know something of another Individuality of whom the Gospel of St. Luke speaks so impressively. Only by endeavouring to understand each word as it is really meant can knowledge of the Gospel be acquired. St. Luke tells us in his introduction that he will recount information given by ‘seers’. Such persons were able to perceive the conditions revealing themselves gradually in the course of the ages; they did not see merely what was happening on the physical plane in the immediate present. One who saw only that might say: In India, five or six hundred years before our era, there lived one called the ‘Buddha’, the son of King Suddhodana, and then, later on, there lived a man known as John the Baptist. Such a person would not, however, find the thread passing from the one to the other, for that is perceptible only in the spiritual world. St. Luke says, however, that his account is based on the evidence of actual ‘seers’. It is not enough merely to accept the words of these sacred records; we must learn to understand their true meaning. But for this purpose we must have clear pictures in our minds of the Individualities in question and be cognisant of all the elements that streamed into them.
It has already been said that whatever may be the nature and rank of an Individuality who descends to the Earth, his development must be in conformity with the faculties available in the body in which he incarnates, and he must take these faculties and their character into account. If a Being of very lofty rank wished to descend to the Earth at the present time, he could not count upon finding bodily conditions other than those pertaining to a human organism of to-day. Recognition of who this Individuality actually is, is possible only in the case of a seer who perceives how the delicate threads of destiny are woven into his inmost nature. Such a Being, having attained a higher stage of wisdom, must however bring the body to maturity through childhood and onwards in such a way that at a particular point of time what that Being was in earlier incarnations can become manifest. If a Being is to awaken certain feelings in mankind the conditions of his earthly incarnation must be such that his body too is able to endure whatever is the object of his mission. In the spiritual world things do not present the same appearance as in the physical world. A Being whose mission it is to proclaim the possibility of the healing of pain and release from suffering must himself taste the very depths of suffering in order to find the right words applicable to it in the human sense.
The Being who subsequently passed into the body of the Nathan Jesus was the bearer of a message to the whole of mankind. It was a message intended to lead men out of the narrow ties of blood-relationship prevailing hitherto. It was not to set aside the tie between father and son, brother and sister, but to add to the love inherent in blood-relationship the ‘universal’ love that flows from soul to soul and transcends all ties of blood. This deepened love that has nothing to do with kinship of blood was to be brought by the Being who manifested Himself later on in the body of the Nathan Jesus. For this purpose it was necessary that the Individuality who had dwelt since his twelfth year in the body of the Nathan Jesus should himself experience on Earth what it means to feel no ties, no relationship with others through the blood. Then only could this Being experience in all its purity the link between man and man. He had first to feel himself free from all ties of blood—free even from the possibility of such ties. The Individuality in the Nathan Jesus was to stand before the world not only as a ‘homeless’ man (like the Buddha who left his home for unknown domains) but as one liberated from all family connections and from everything associated with the tie of blood. He had to experience all the pain that can be felt when a man must bid farewell to everything that is near him, and stand alone; he had to speak from the experience of utter loneliness and the abandonment of all family ties. Who was this Being?
We know that he was the Being who until about his twelfth year had lived in the body of the Solomon Jesus, his father and mother having descended from the Solomon line. His father had died early, so the boy was orphaned on the father's side. Besides himself there were brothers and sisters in this family, and he lived with them as long as he (Zarathustra) was in the body of the Solomon Jesus. In his twelfth year he left this family, gave up mother, brothers and sisters, and passed into the body of the Nathan Jesus. Then the mother of the Nathan Jesus died and, later on, the father too. Thus when the Zarathustra-Individuality went out to work in the world he had parted from everything connected with ties of blood. Not only was he completely orphaned, not only had he given up brothers and sisters, but as Zarathustra he had to forgo ever founding a family and having descendants. For he had abandoned not only his father and mother, his brothers and sisters, but even his own body, and had passed into another body—that of the Nathan Jesus. This Being could then prepare the way for One still more sublime, who later on, in the body of the Nathan Jesus, entered upon His great mission—the proclamation of Universal Love. And when the mother and brothers came and the people said to Him: ‘Thy mother and thy brethren are without and seek for thee’, then, from the depths of His soul and without danger of being misunderstood or of wronging filial love, He could utter the words: ‘That they are not!’ ... for Zarathustra had relinquished even the body that was connected with this family. Then, pointing to those who were with Him in free community of soul, He could say: "Whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is my brother, and my sister, and mother." (See Mark, III, 35.)
The words of the scriptures are to be taken literally! In order that One Being might proclaim universal love He had actually to be incarnated in a form wherein He could experience the abandonment of everything that could be founded upon ties of blood.
Our feelings go out to this Being as if He were humanly near us—a Being who, having descended from sublime heights of spirit underwent human experiences and human suffering. The more spiritual our conception of Him, the truer it will be, and the more fervently will our hearts and souls acclaim Him!
Sechster Vortrag
Es wird uns verhältnismäßig leicht werden, die Einzelheiten des LukasEvangeliums zu verstehen, wenn wir zuerst in der entsprechenden Weise vorgearbeitet haben, so daß diejenigen Wesenheiten und Individualitäten, die in Betracht kommen, gewissermaßen lebendig vor uns stehen, daß wir wissen, mit wem wir es eigentlich zu tun haben. Daher dürfen Sie es sich nicht verdrießen lassen, wenn wir sozusagen viel «Vorgeschichte» haben. Erst müssen wir die große Gestalt, die im Mittelpunkt der Evangelien steht, in ihrer ganzen komplizierten Wesenheit kennenlernen, und auch einiges andere, ohne das wir niemals würden fassen können, was uns dann in aller Einfachheit im Lukas-Evangelium entgegentritt.
Da müssen wir zuerst an etwas erinnern, was wir schon in den letzten Tagen besprechen konnten: an die große Bedeutung jener einzigartigen Wesenheit, die wir als den Buddha bezeichnen, und von der wir sagen konnten, daß sie im fünften bis sechsten Jahrhundert vor unserer Zeitrechnung eben vom Bodhisattva zum Buddha sich erhob. Wir haben charakterisiert, was das für die Menschheit bedeutete, und wir wollen uns das noch einmal genau vor die Seele stellen.
Was der Inhalt der Lehre des Buddha ist, das mußte sozusagen einmal der Menschheit als ihr Eigentum übergeben werden. Wenn wir hinter das Zeitalter des Buddha zurückgehen würden, so würden wir für alle vorhergehenden Epochen der Menschheit sagen müssen: Es hat in diesen Zeiten keinen Menschen auf unserer Erde geben können, der aus sich selbst heraus diese Lehre vom Mitleid und der Liebe hätte finden können, die sich in dem achtgliedrigen Pfade ausdrückt. Die menschliche Entwickelung war noch nicht so weit, daß irgendeine Seele ‚durch Versenkung in das eigene Nachdenken, in die eigene Empfindung diese Wahrheiten l:ätte finden können. Alles wird ja erst in der Welt, alles entsteht erst, und für alles, was entstehen soll, müssen die Ursachen gegeben werden. Auf welche Weise konnten die Menschen in früheren Zeiten zum Beispiel dieGrundsätze des achtgliedrigen Pfades befolgen? Sie konnten es nur dadurch, daß sie ihnen in gewisser Weise überliefert wurden, daß sie ihnen wie eingeflößt wurden aus den okkulten Schulen der Eingeweihten und der Seher. Innerhalb der Mysterien, innerhalb der okkulten Schulen der Seher lehrte eben der Bodhisattva, weil in solchen Schulen die Möglichkeit gegeben war, sich hinaufzuheben zu den höheren Welten und dasjenige zu empfangen, was dem äußeren Menschenverstande, der äußeren Menschenseele noch nicht gegeben werden konnte. Das mußte aber in diesen alten Zeiten von denen, die der Gnade teilhaftig werden konnten, direkt mit den Lehrern in den okkulten Schulen in Verkehr zu kommen, der übrigen Menschheit sozusagen eingeflößt werden. Ohne daß die Menschen selbst auf die Grundsätze hätten kommen können, mußte ihr Leben so beeinflußt werden, daß es sich im Sinne dieser Grundsätze abspielte. Es befolgten also jene Menschen, die außerhalb der Mysterien lebten, in einer gewissen Weise unbewußt, was ihnen wie unbewußt auch gegeben wurde von denen, die ihnen aus den okkulten Schulen heraus das geben konnten. Es war noch kein Menschenleib auf der Erde, der so hätte organisiert werden können, auch wenn alles Geistige in ihn eingedrungen wäre, daß der Mensch aus sich selbst heraus den Inhalt des achtgliedrigen Pfades hätte finden können. Das mußte eine Offenbarung von oben sein, durch die entsprechenden Wege vermittelt. Daraus aber folgt, daß ein solches Wesen wie der Bodhisattva gar nicht in der Lage war, vor dem Zeitalter des Buddha einen Menschenleib voll zu benutzen. Er konnte auf der Erde keinen Leib finden, in dem er alle die Fähigkeiten hätte verkörpern können, durch die er auf die Menschen wirken sollte. Es gab einen solchen Menschenkörper nicht. — Was war also notwendig? Wie verkörperte sich ein-solcher Bodhisattva? Diese Frage müssen wir uns einmal vorlegen.
Er verkörperte dasjenige, was er als geistige Wesenheit war, nicht vollständig. Würde man einen solchen Leib, der von einem Bodhisattva beseelt war, hellseherisch angesehen haben, so würde man gesehen haben, daß er nur teilweise die Wesenheit eines Bodhisattva umschloß, die als ätherischer Leib weit hinausragte über die menschliche Hülle und in dieser Art ihre Verbindung mit dem Geistigen hatte, das sie nie ganz verließ. So verließ der Bodhisattva die geistige Welt nie vollständig. Er lebte zu gleicher Zeit in einem Geistleibe und in einem physischen Leibe. Das war nun der Übergang vom Bodhisattva zum Buddha, daß jetzt zum ersten Male ein solcher Leib vorhanden war, in den der Bodhisattva sozusagen ganz hineinsteigen und innerhalb dieses Leibes seine Fähigkeiten entwickeln konnte. Damit hatte er jene Menschenform hingestellt, der die Menschen nachzustreben haben, um ihr ähnlich zu werden, so daß sie ebenso aus sich selbst heraus die Lehre vom achtgliedrigen Pfad finden, wie sie der Bodhisattva unter dem Bodhibaume aus sich selbst heraus gefunden hat. Würde man also diejenige Wesenheit, die in dem Buddha verkörpert war, in ihren früheren Inkarnationen geprüft haben, so hätte man sagen müssen: Sie war so, daß sie zum Teil in der geistigen Welt bleiben mußte und nur einen Teil ihrer Wesenheit in den Leib hineinsenden konnte. Jetzt erst, im fünften bis sechsten Jahrhundert vor unserer Zeitrechnung, war die erste menschliche Organisation vorhanden, in welche der Bodhisattva ganz hineingehen und so das Beispiel geben konnte, daß die Menschheit selbst aus der moralischen Gesinnung der Seele heraus den achtgliedrigen Pfad finden konnte.
Diese Erscheinung, daß es Menschenwesen gab, die mit einem Teil ihrer Wesenheit in der geistigen Welt sind, kannten alle Religionen und Weltanschauungen. Sie wußten, daß es solche Wesenheiten gibt, für welche die Menschenwesenheit gleichsam zu eng ist, um die volle Individualität von solchen Wesenheiten aufzunehmen, die auf der Erde wirken müssen. Innerhalb der vorderasiatischen Weltanschauung nannte man diese Art der Verbindung der höheren Individualitäten solcher Wesenheiten mit einem physischen Leibe das Erfülltsein mit dem Heiligen Geist. Das ist ein ganz bestimmter technischer Ausdruck. Und in dem Wortgebrauch der vorderasiatischen Sprachen würde man von einer solchen Wesenheit wie einem auf der Erde verkörperten Bodhisattva gesagt haben, sie ist «erfüllt mit dem Heiligen Geist», das heißt, die Kräfte, die eine solche Wesenheit ausmachen, sind nicht ganz: in dieser Wesenheit darinnen, es muß da von außen etwas Geistiges hineinwirken. Man könnte also ebenso sagen: Der Buddha war in seinen vorhergehenden Inkarnationen erfüllt mit dem Heiligen Geist.
Wenn wir dies verstanden haben, werden wir uns auch in das hineinfinden können, was wir im Anfange des Lukas-Evangeliums lesen und was wir gestern schon berühren konnten. Wir wissen, daß in dem Ätherleibe des einen Jesuskindes, das physisch entsprossen ist der nathanischen Linie des davidischen Hauses, der bisher unberührt gebliebene Teil desjenigen Ätherleibes lebte, welcher der Menschheit bei dem Ereignis entzogen worden ist, das man den Sündenfall nennt, so daß also gleichsam jene ätherische Substanz, die aus Adam herausgenommen worden ist vor dem Sündenfalle, aufbewahrt und in dieses Kind hineinversenkt wurde. So mußte es sein, damit eine so junge, von allen Erlebnissen der Erdenentwickelung unberührte Wesenheit da war, die alles aufnehmen konnte, was sie aufnehmen sollte. Hätte denn ein gewöhnlicher Mensch, der seit der lemurischen Zeit seine Inkarnationen durchgemacht hat, die Überschattung durch den Nirmanakaya des Buddha aufnehmen können? Nimmermehr! Und noch weniger hätte er das aufnehmen können, was später in ihn hineingehen sollte. Es mußte ein so veredelter Menschenleib entstehen, der nur dadurch entstehen konnte, daß die von allen Erdenerlebnissen unberührte ätherische Substanz des Adam hineinversenkt wurde in den Ätherleib gerade dieses Jesuskindes. Dadurch aber war diese Äthersubstanz auch verbunden mit allen den Kräften, welche vor dem Sündenfalle auf die Erdenentwickelung gewirkt haben, die deshalb jetzt eine gewaltige Machtentfaltung in diesem Kinde hatten. Dadurch war möglich geworden, was wir eben gestern schon berührten: jener merkwürdige Einfluß, den die Mutter des nathanischen Jesus auf die Mutter Johannes des Täufers ausübte und auch auf diesen Johannes selber, bevor er geboren wurde.
Dazu müssen wir uns dann klarmachen, mit was für einer Wesenheit wir es in Johannes dem Täufer zu tun haben. Wir können diese Wesenheit des Johannes nur dann verstehen, wenn wir uns den Unterschied vor die Seele rücken, der zwischen jener eigentümlichen Verkündigung besteht, welche innerhalb Indiens durch den Buddha herabgeflossen ist — die wir für unser Ziel genügend charakterisiert haben -, und jener Verkündigung, die dem althebräischen Volke durch Moses und seine Nachfolger, die althebräischen Propheten, geworden ist.
Durch Buddha ist der Menschheit das geworden, was die Seele als ihre eigene Gesetzmäßigkeit finden kann, was sie aufstellen kann, um sich zu läutern und sich zu einer hohen moralischen Höhe hinaufzuorganisieren, wie sie auf der Erde erreicht werden kann. Das Gesetz der Seele, Dharma, wurde durch den Buddha verkündet, wurde so verkündet, wie es der Mensch auf der höchsten Entwickelungsstufe der Menschennatur aus der menschlichen Seele selber heraus finden kann. Und Buddha war derjenige, der es zuerst herausgelöst hat. Aber die Menschheitsentwickelung ist keine geradlinige. Die verschiedensten Kulturströmungen müssen sich gegenseitig befruchten.
Was sich in Vorderasien als das Christus-Ereignis zutragen sollte, das machte nötig, daß in gewisser Weise diese vorderasiatische Entwickelung hinter der indischen zurückblieb, um in frischerer Weise später aufzunehmen, was der indischen in anderer Art gegeben war. Es mußte sozusagen innerhalb Vorderasiens ein Volk geschaffen werden, hingestellt werden, das auf eine ganz andere Art sich entwickelte, das weiter zurückblieb als die Völker mehr nach dem Osten hin. Hatte man im Sinne der Weltenweisheit die Völker im Osten so weit gebracht, daß sie den Bodhisattva als Buddha schauen konnten, so mußte man bei den Völkern in Vorderasien — insbesondere bei dem althebräischen Volke — die Menschen auf einer kindlichen, niedrigeren Stufe lassen. Das war notwendig. Denn es mußte im großen in der Menschheitsentwickelung dasselbe gemacht werden, was wir etwa im kleinen beobachten könnten, wenn wir einen Menschen hätten, der sich bis zu seinem zwanzigsten Jahre zu einer gewissen Reife entwickelt; er hat sich dabei gewisse Fähigkeiten angeeignet, aber angeeignete Fähigkeiten sind in gewisser Beziehung zugleich eine gewisse Fessel, ein Hemmnis.
Wenn man sich in einem gewissen Lebensalter Fähigkeiten angeeignet hat, dann haben diese die Eigentümlichkeit, daß sie sich auf ihrer Stufe erhalten wollen, daß sie den Menschen auf dieser Höhe halten wollen. Sie halten ihn fest, und er kann dann später, in seinem dreißigsten Jahre, nicht leicht über die Stufe hinausrücken, die er sich in seinem zwanzigsten Jahre erworben hat. Wenn wir dagegen einen zweiten Menschen haben, der im zwanzigsten Jahre noch wenig durch sich selbst erworben hat und nun nachher diese Fähigkeiten von dem anderen lernt, dann kann der, welcher sich länger kindlich erhalten hat, leichter hinaufrücken auf diese Stufe und dann im dreißigsten Jahre eher auf einer höheren Stufe stehen als der erstere. Wer das Leben beobachten kann, der wird finden, daß es so ist. Erreichte Fähigkeiten, die man sozusagen zu seinem Eigentum gemacht hat, bilden auch eine Fessel für später, während das, was man nicht so sehr mit seiner Seele verknüpft hat, was man sich mehr äußerlich angeeignet hat, weniger eine Fessel ist.
Wenn die Menschheit vorrücken will, dann muß stets die Einrichtung getroffen werden, daß eine Kulturströmung vorhanden ist, die eine gewisse Summe von Fähigkeiten innerlich aufnimmt und verarbeitet, und eine andere Strömung muß gleichsam daneben herlaufen, die gewissermaßen in der Entwickelung mehr zurückgehalten wird. Dann haben wir eine Kulturströmung, welche gewisse Fähigkeiten bis zu einer entsprechenden Stufe entwickelt; diese Fähigkeiten sind nun verquickt mit dem innersten Wesen dieser Strömung und der Menschennatur. Es geht weiter: ein Neues tritt auf. Aber diese Strömung würde nicht imstande sein, aus sich selbst heraus zu einer höheren Stufe aufzusteigen. Daher mußte die Einrichtung getroffen werden, daß eine andere Strömung neben der ersten hergeht. Diese zweite bleibt in einer gewissen Weise unentwickelt, hat also keineswegs die Höhe der ersteren erreicht..Sie schreitet nun weiter und nimmt von der anderen das entgegen, was diese erreicht hat, und weil sie sich in der Zwischenzeit jung erhalten hat, kann sie dann später höher hinaufsteigen. So hat die eine die andere befruchtet. So müssen die Geistesströmungen nebeneinander herlaufen in der Menschheitsentwickelung. Und es muß durch die geistige Weltenleitung Vorsorge getroffen werden, daß dieses so ist.
Wie konnte in der geistigen Weltenlenkung Vorsorge getroffen werden, daß neben derjenigen Strömung, die in dem großen Buddha ihren Ausdruck gefunden hat, eine andere läuft, die erst später das aufnimmt, was der Buddhismus der Menschheit gebracht hat? Man konnte nur dadurch Vorsorge treffen, daß man jener Strömung, die für uns die althebräische ist, die Möglichkeit vorenthielt, Menschen aus sich hervorzubringen, die aus eigener moralischer Gesinnung heraus Dharma entwickeln, das heißt, etwa auf den achtgliedrigen Pfad kommen. Einen Buddha durfte diese Strömung nicht haben. Was der Buddha als Innerlichkeit seiner Geistesströmung gebracht hat, das mußte dieser anderen Geistesströmung von außen gegeben werden. Daher wurde, und zwar, damit die Sache besonders weise verlief, lange Zeit vor der Erscheinung des Buddha dieser vorderasiatischen Völkerschaft das Gesetz nicht innerlich gegeben, sondern äußerlich durch die Offenbarung im Dekalog, im Zehn-Gebote-Gesetz (2. Mose 20, 2-17). Was einer anderen Menschheitsströmung als innerlicher Besitz zukommen sollte, das wurde in dem Zehn-Gebote-Gesetz als eine Summe von äußeren Gesetzen dem althebräischen Volke wie etwas gegeben, was man von außen empfing, was noch nicht mit der Seele verwachsen ist. Daher empfindet der Angehörige des althebräischen Volkes die Gebote als etwas, was ihm vom Himmel herunter gegeben worden ist wegen der Kindlichkeit seiner Entwickelungsstufe.
Das indische Volk war herangebildet worden, anzuerkennen, daß die Menschen aus sich selber Dharma, das Gesetz der Seele, erzeugen, und das althebräische Volk war so gebildet worden, daß es gehorchte dem Gesetz, das ihm von außen gegeben worden ist. So aber bildet das hebräische Volk eine wunderbare Ergänzung zu dem, was Zarathustra für seine Kultur und für alle Kulturen, die daraus hervorgegangen sind, geleistet hat.
Das mußten wir ja hervorheben, daß Zarathustra den Blick auf die Außenwelt hingelenkt hat. Während wir bei Buddha tief einschneidende Lehren haben über die Veredelung des menschlichen Innern, finden wir bei Zarathustra die große, gewaltige Lehre über den Kosmos, das, was uns Aufschlüsse geben soll über die Welt, aus deren Schoß wir erwachsen sind. War der Blick des Buddha nach innen gerichtet, so war der Blick der Angehörigen des Zarathustra-Volkes auf die Außenwelt gerichtet, um diese geistig zu durchdringen.
Versuchen wir uns einmal in das zu vertiefen, was Zarathustra gab von seinem ersten Auftreten an, wo er die Verkündigung des Ahura Mazdao brachte, bis in die nächste Zeit, wo er als Nazarathos erschien. Er gab immer eindringlichere Lehren über die großen geistigen Gesetze und über die Wesenheiten des Kosmos. Gewissermaßen Andeutungen waren es erst, die der Zarathustra der persischen Kultur über den Geist der Sonne gab; dann aber wurden sie von ihm ausgebaut und treten uns entgegen als die wunderbare, heute nur so wenig verstandene chaldäische Lehre über den Kosmos und über die geistigen Ursachen, aus denen wir herausgeboren sind. Prüfen wir diese Lehren über den Kosmos, so zeigen sie uns eine wichtige Eigentümlichkeit.
Als Zarathustra noch dem urpersischen Volke von den äußeren geistigen Ursachen der Sinneswelt sprach, da stellte er vor die Menschen hin die zwei Mächte Ormuzd und Ahriman oder Angramainyu, die im ganzen Weltall einander entgegenarbeiten. Was sie aber nicht in dieser Lehre gefunden hätten, ist das, was wir nennen könnten die Seele durchdringende moralische Wärme. Der Mensch ist für die urpersische Anschauung sozusagen hineingesponnen in den ganzen kosmischen Prozeß. Es ist eine Angelegenheit von Ormuzd und Ahriman, die gegeneinander arbeiten, die da in der menschlichen Seele ausgemacht wird. Weil diese beiden miteinander kämpfen, deshalb toben Leidenschaften in der menschlichen Seele. Was innere menschliche Seele ist, das wurde noch nicht erkannt. Es ist kosmische Lehre, was gebracht wurde. Wenn man von Gut und Böse sprach, so meinte man die vortrefflichen, die nützlichen und die schädlichen Wirkungen, die sich im Kosmos gegenüberstehen und die sich auch im Menschen äußern. Die «moralische Weltanschauung» war gewissermaßen noch nicht in diese Lehre des Blickens nach außen aufgenommen. Man lernte in dieser Lehre alle die Wesenheiten kennen, welche die sinnliche Welt beherrschen, alles, was als Vortreffliches, Lichtvolles, und was als Schwarzes, Schädliches die Welt beherrscht. Man fühlte sich darin eingesponnen. Aber das eigentlich Moralische, an dem der Mensch mit seiner Seele beteiligt ist, fühlte man noch nicht so in seiner Seele, wie das später der Fall war. Man fühlte zum Beispiel, wenn man irgendeinen Menschen als einen «bösen» Menschen vor sich hatte, daß durch diesen Menschen Kräfte strömten von den bösen Wesenheiten der Welt; man fühlte ihn «besessen» von diesen bösen Wesenheiten der: Welt. Man konnte auch nicht sagen, daß ihn dafür die Schuld treffe. Eingesponnen von einem noch nicht von moralischen Eigenschaften durchsetzten Weltensystem fühlte man den Menschen. Das war die Eigentümlichkeit einer Lehre, die den Blick zunächst nach außen richtete, wenn es auch der geistige Blick war.
Deshalb bildet die hebräische Lehre eine so wunderbare Ergänzung zu dieser kosmologischen Lehre, weil sie in das, was von außen offenbart worden ist, das moralische Element hineinverlegt, das eine Möglichkeit gab, mit dem Begriffe von Schuld, von menschlicher Verschuldung einen Sinn zu verbinden. Vor dem hebräischen Element konnte man von einem bösen Menschen nur sagen: Er ist von bösen Kräften besessen. Die Verkündigung des Zehn-Gebote-Gesetzes hat notwendig gemacht, daß man unterschied zwischen Menschen, die dieses Gesetz beachteten, und solchen, die es nicht beachteten. Der Begriff von Schuld, von menschlicher Verschuldung tritt auf. Und wie er hineintritt in die Menschheitsentwickelung, das kann man fühlen, wenn man etwas vor seine Seele rückt, wo deutlich dargestellt wird, wie die Menschen noch im unklaren darüber sind, was eigentlich der Begriff von Schuld besagt, wo es tragisch wird, daß eine Unklarheit besteht über den Begriff der Schuld. Lassen Sie das Buch Hiob auf sich wirken, und Sie werden die Unklarheit über den Schuldbegriff bemerken, das Nicht-recht-Wissen, wie man es eigentlich zu halten hat, wenn einen ein Unglück trifft, und Sie werden doch schon das Hereinleuchten des neuen Schuldbegriffes darin finden.
So wurde als eine Offenbarung von außen — wie die anderen Offenbarungen über die anderen Reiche der Natur — das Moralische gerade diesem althebräischen Volke gegeben. Das konnte nur dadurch geschehen, daß Zarathustra für die Fortsetzung seines Werkes Sorge getragen hat, wie ich es Ihnen erzählt habe, indem er seinen Ätherleib übertrug auf Moses und auf Hermes seinen Astralleib. Dadurch wurde Moses fähig, in derselben Art wahrzunehmen, was in der äußeren Welt wirkt, wie es Zarathustra konnte, aber jetzt dabei nicht nur gleichgültige, neutrale Kräfte zu empfinden, sondern das, was die Welt moralisch regiert, was Gebot werden kann. Deshalb lebte dieses althebräische Volk so, daß es in seiner Kultur dasjenige barg, was wir nennen können Gehorsam, Unterwerfung unter das Gesetz, während die Geistesströmung des Buddha das Ideal in sich barg, die Richtung für das menschliche Leben in dem achtgliedrigen Pfad zu finden.
Aber dieses althebräische Volk sollte auch bis zu dem rechten Zeitpunkt erhalten bleiben, den wir eben daran sind, zu charakterisieren: bis zu der Erscheinung des Christus-Prinzips. Es sollte sozusagen hinübergerettet werden über die Offenbarung des Buddha und auf einem - wenn wir es so nennen wollen — unreiferen Kulturzustand erhalten bleiben. Daher mußten sich innerhalb des althebräischen Volkes Persönlichkeiten finden, die so, wie sie als Menschen waren, nicht die ganze volle Wesenheit einer Individualität aufnehmen konnten, welche etwa das «Gesetz» zu vertreten hatte. Es konnte nicht innerhalb des althebräischen Volkes eine Persönlichkeit auftreten, die etwa wie der Buddha gewesen wäre. Es ist auch nur möglich gewesen, zu dem Gesetze zu kommen durch Erleuchtung von außen, dadurch, daß Moses den ÄAtherleib des Zarathustra gehabt hat und das empfangen konnte, was nicht aus der eigenen Seele geboren wird. Das Gesetz erstehen zu lassen aus dem eigenen Herzen, war dem hebräischen Volke nicht möglich. Aber fortgeführt werden mußte das Werk des Moses, fortgeführt so, wie jedes andere Werk fortgeführt werden muß, damit es zur rechten Zeit die rechte Frucht trägt. Daher mußten in dem althebräischen Volke diejenigen Individualitäten auftreten, die uns als die Propheten und Seher erscheinen. Und einer der bedeutendsten dieser Seher ist derjenige, den wir als den Elias kennen.
Wie müssen wir uns eine solche Persönlichkeit vorstellen? Elias sollte innerhalb des hebräischen Volkes einer der Statthalter dessen sein, was von Moses eingeleitet war. Aber aus der eigenen Volkssubstanz heraus konnten keine Menschen geboren werden, die ganz verwoben sein konnten mit dem, was das Gesetz des Moses enthielt, das man ja nur als eine Offenbarung von oben empfangen konnte. Was wir als notwendig für die indische Zeit charakterisiert haben, auch als die eigenartige Natur des Bodhisattva, das mußte daher auch im hebräischen Volke und immer wieder und wieder eintreten. Es mußte Individualitäten geben, die nicht ganz in der menschlichen Persönlichkeit aufgingen, die mit einem Teil ihrer Wesenheit in der irdischen Persönlichkeit waren und mit dem anderen Teil in der geistigen Welt. Eine solche Wesenheit war Elias. In dem, was wir auf dem physischen Plane als die Persönlichkeit des Elias finden, ist nur teilweise die Wesenheit des Elias enthalten. Die Ichheit des Elias kann nicht ganz eindringen in den physischen Leib des Elias. Ihn muß man nennen eine Persönlichkeit,. die «von dem Geiste erfüllt» ist. Und unmöglich wäre es, eine solche Erscheinung wie den Elias durch die bloß normalen Kräfte in der Welt hervorzurufen, wodurch sonst ein Mensch in die Welt gestellt wird.
Wenn im normalen Falle ein Mensch in die Welt treten soll, dann entwickelt sich aus den physischen Vorgängen die menschliche Wesenheit im mütterlichen Leibe so, daß zu einer bestimmten Zeit sich die Individualität, die früher inkarniert war, einfach mit der physischen Wesenheit verbindet. Alles geht beim gewöhnlichen Menschen sozusagen einen geradlinigen Weg, ohne daß besondere Kräfte eingreifen, die außerhalb des normalen Weges liegen. Das konnte nicht der Fall sein bei einer solchen Individualität, wie Elias es ist. Da mußten andere Kräfte eingreifen, die sich beschäftigen mit jenem Teil der Individualität, der in die geistige Welt hineinragt. Da muß von außen auf den sich entwickelnden Menschen gewirkt werden. Daher erscheinen solche Individualitäten, wenn sie in der Welt inkarniert werden, als inspiriert, vom Geist getrieben. Sie erscheinen als ekstatische Persönlichkeiten, die weit über das hinausgehen, was ihnen ihre gewöhnliche Intelligenz sagen kann. So erscheinen die alttestamentlichen Propheten alle. Der Geist treibt sie; das Ich kann sich nicht immer Rechenschaft geben von dem, was es tut. Der Geist lebt in der Persönlichkeit, und von außen wird er erhalten.
Solche Persönlichkeiten ziehen sich zuzeiten in die Einsamkeit zurück; aber das ist dann ein Zurücktreten jenes Teiles des Ich, den die Persönlichkeit braucht, und ein Einsprechen des Geistes von außen, In gewissen ekstatischen, unbewußten Zuständen lauscht eine solche Wesenheit den Eingebungen von oben. So war es besonders bei Elias. Was während seines Lebens als Elias lebte, was sein Mund sprach, was seine Hand deutete, stammte nicht nur von dem Teil, der in ihm lebte, sondern das waren Offenbarungen göttlich-geistiger Wesenheiten, die dahinterstanden.
Als diese Wesenheit wiedergeboren wurde, sollte sie sich mit dem Körper des Kindes verbinden, das dem Zacharias und der Elisabeth geboren wurde. Wir wissen aus dem Evangelium selber, daß wir Johannes den Täufer als den wiedergeborenen Elias aufzufassen haben (Matthäus 17, 10-13). Aber wir haben es dabei zu tun mit einer Individualität, die aus ihren früheren Inkarnationen nicht gewohnt war, durch die in dem normalen Lebensgange selbst liegenden Kräfte alles das zu entwickeln, was herauskommen. sollte. Beim normalen Lebensgange regt sich, während der menschliche physische Leib sich im mütterlichen Leibe entwickelt, die innere Kraft des Ich. Was damit innerlich verbunden ist, das hatte die Individualität des Elias in früheren Zeiten noch nicht durchgemacht, sie war noch nicht so weit hinuntergestiegen. Das Ich war nicht durch die eigenen Kräfte, wie in normalen Verhältnissen, in Bewegung gesetzt worden, sondern von außen. Das mußte wieder jetzt geschehen. Mehr aus der geistigen Welt heraus, näher schon der Erde ist das Ich dieser Wesenheit, die jetzt viel mehr mit der Erde verbunden ist als die Wesenheiten, welche früher den Elias geleitet haben. Es sollte ja jetzt der Übergang geschaffen werden zu der Verbindung der Buddha- mit der Zarathustra-Strömung. Alles sollte verjüngt werden. Jetzt mußte gerade diejenige Wesenheit von außen einwirken, welche sich mit.der Erde und ihren Angelegenheiten so verknüpft hatte wie der Buddha, der jetzt in seinem Nirmanakaya verbunden war mit dem nathanischen Jesus. Diese Wesenheit, welche auf der einen Seite mit der Erde verbunden war, anderseits aber doch wieder entrückt war, weil sie nur in dem Nirmanakaya wirkte, die «jenseits» der Erde lebte, weil sie wieder hinaufgestiegen ist, und nun über dem Haupte des nathanischen Jesus schwebte, sie mußte jetzt von außen hereinwirken und die Ich-Kraft Johannes des Täufers entfalten.
So war es der Nirmanakaya des Buddha, der auf die Entfaltung der Ich-Kraft des Johannes so wirkte, wie früher die geistigen Kräfte auf den Elias gewirkt haben. Damals war das Elias-Wesen in gewissen Zeiten entrückt in ekstatische Zustände; da sprach der Gott, füllte sein Ich mit einer realen Kraft, die es dann der Außenwelt mitteilen konnte. Jetzt war wieder eine geistige Wesenheit da, die als der Nirmanakaya des Buddha über dem nathanischen Jesus schwebte; die wirkte jetzt herein auf die Elisabeth, als der Johannes geboren werden sollte, regte im Leibe der Elisabeth den Keim des Johannes im sechsten Monate der Schwangerschaft an und weckte da das Ich. Nur bewirkte diese Kraft, weil sie jetzt näher der Erde stand, nicht bloß eine Inspiration, sondern wirklich die Herausgestaltung des Ich des Johannes. Unter dem Einflusse des Besuches derjenigen, welche da die Maria genannt wird, regte sich das Ich Johannes des Täufers. So wirkt der Nirmanakaya des Buddha aufweckend und bis in die physische Substanz hinein erlösend auf das Ich des einstigen Elias, auf das jetzige Ich Johannes des Täufers. Was können wir jetzt erhoffen?
Wie Elias einst im neunten Jahrhundert vor unserer Zeitrechnung seine gewaltigen Worte gesprochen hatte, wie das eigentlich Gottesworte waren und wie das, was seine Hand deutete, Gottesgebärde war, so mußte es jetzt bei Johannes dem Täufer ähnlich sein, indem das wieder auflebte, was in dem Elias vorhanden war. Was in dem Nirmanakaya des Buddha war, das wirkte als Inspiration hinein in das Ich Johannes des Täufers. Was sich den Hirten verkündete, was über dem nathanischen Jesus schwebte, das erstreckte seine Kraft hinein in Johannes den Täufer. Und die Predigt Johannes des Täufers ist zunächst die wiedererweckte Buddha-Predigt. Es erscheint dabei etwas höchst Eigentümliches, was tief auf unsere Seele wirken muß, wenn wir uns an die Predigt von Benares erinnern, wenn darin von Buddha gesprochen wurde von dem Leid des Lebens und von der Erlösung von dem Leid des Lebens durch den achtgliedrigen Pfad, den die Seele suchen soll. Damals hat der Buddha das verkündet, was er als achtgliedrigen Pfad erkannt hat; damals hat er seine Predigt auch öfter fortgesetzt, indem er sagte: Ihr habt bis heute die Lehre der Brahmanen gehabt; sie schreiben ihre Herkunft her von Brahma selber. Sie sagen, sie seien etwas Vorzüglicheres als die anderen Menschen, weil sie von diesem edlen Ursprunge abstammen. Diese Brahmanen sagen, der Mensch sei etwas wert durch seine Abstammung. Ich aber sagi uch: Der Mensch ist etwas wert durch das, was er aus sich selbst heraus macht, und nicht durch das, was durch seine Abstammung in ihn gelegt ist. Er ist wert der großen Weisheit der Welt durch das, was er als individueller Mensch aus sich selber macht. - Dadurch erregte Buddha gerade den Zorn der Brahmanenwelt, indem er auf die individuelle Qualität hinwies und sagte: Wahrlich, ich sage eu. :h, es mag sich einer noch so viel einen Brahmanen nennen, darauf kommt es nicht an, sondern darauf kommt es an, daß ihr aus euren eigenen persönlichen Kräften heraus einen geläuterten Menschen macht. — Das war, wenn auch nicht wörtlich, so doch der Sinn vieler Buddha-Reden. Und dann setzte er gewöhnlich diese Lehre fort, indem er zeigte, wie der Mensch, wenn er die Welt des Leidens versteht, Mitleid empfinden kann, Tröster und Helfer werden kann, wie er gerade teilnehmen wird am Geschick der anderen, weil er weiß, daß er mit ihnen das gleiche Leid und den gleichen Schmerz empfindet.
Jetzt war der Buddha in seinem Nirmanakaya, überstrahlte das nathanische Jesuskind und setzte dann seine Predigt fort, indem er die Worte ertönen ließ aus dem Munde Johannes des Täufers. Was der Mund des Johannes sprach, das geschah unter der Inspiration des Buddha. Und es klingt uns wie eine Fortsetzung der Rede, die der Buddha einst gehalten hat, wenn zum Beispiel der Johannes sagt: Ihr, die ihr viel darauf baut, daß ihr von denen euch herstammend nennt, die in dem Dienst der geistigen Mächte die «Kinder der Schlange» genannt werden, und euch beruft auf die «Weisheit der Schlange», wer hat denn euch dazu gebracht? Nur so glaubt ihr würdige Früchte der Buße zu bringen, indem ihr sagt: Wir haben Abraham zum Vater. Jetzt aber setzte Johannes die Predigt des Buddha fort: Sagt nicht, ihr habt Abraham zum Vater, sondern werdet dort wahrhaftige Menschen, wo ihr in der Welt steht. Ein wahrhaftiger Mensch kann an der Stelle des Steines erweckt werden, auf dem euer Fuß steht. Wahrlich, der Gott kann dem Abraham aus den Steinen Kinder erwecken (Lukas 3, 7-8). Und dann sagte er, so recht die Predigt des Buddha fortsetzend: «Wer zwei Röcke hat, der teile sie mitdem, der keinen hat» (Lukas 3,11). Sie kamen zu ihm und fragten: «Meister, was sollen wir tun?» (Lukas 3,12), genau so, wie auch die Mönche einst zu Buddha gekommen waren und gefragt haben: «Was sollen wir tun?» Das alles sind Worte, die sich ausnehmen wie die Worte desBuddha oder wie eine Fortsetzung derselben.
So erscheinen diese Wesenheiten auf dem physischen Plan durch . der Zeiten Wende, und so lernen wir verstehen die Einheit der Religionen und geistigen Verkündigungen der Menschheit. Was der Buddha war, lernen wir nicht dadurch kennen, daß wir an dem Traditionellen festhalten, sondern wenn wir hinhorchen auf das, was der Buddha wirklich spricht. Buddha hat fünf bis sechs Jahrhunderte vor unserer Zeitrechnung so gesprochen, wie wir es aus der Predigt von Benares hören. Aber des Buddha Mund ist nicht verstummt. Er spricht auch da, wo er nicht mehr verkörpert ist, wo er inspiriert durch den Nirmanakaya. Aus dem Munde Johannes des Täufers hören wir, was der Buddha zu sagen hatte sechs Jahrhunderte später, nachdem er in einem physischen Leibe gelebt hat. So ist die «Einheit der Religionen». Wir müssen eine jede Religion im Laufe der Menschheitsentwickelung an dem richtigen Punkte aufsuchen und in ihr das Lebendige suchen, nicht das Tote; denn alles entwickelt sich weiter. Das müssen wir verstehen und begreifen lernen. Wer aber nicht den Buddha-Spruch aus dem Munde Johannes des Täufers hören will, der kommt einem vor wie ein Mensch, der den Keim eines Rosenstockes gesehen hat und einige Zeit später, nachdem der Rosenstock aufgegangen ist und Blüten trägt, nicht glauben will, daß dieser Rosenstock aus diesem Rosenkeim entstanden ist, und der jetzt sagen würde: Das ist etwas anderes. — Was in dem Keim lebendig war, das blüht jetzt in dem Rosenstock. Und was in der _ Predigt von Benares lebendig war, das blühte in der Predigt Johannes des Täufers am Jordan.
Damit haben wir eine andere Individualität in ihrem Wesen kennengelernt, die uns in jener Zeit entgegentritt, und von der uns das LukasEvangelium so eindringlich redet. Wir lernen diese Evangelien nur dadurch kennen, daß wir uns nach und nach dazu aufschwingen, wirklich jedes Wort so zu verstehen, wie es gemeint ist. Und Lukas sagt uns in der Einleitung, daß er wiedererzählen will die Mitteilung derer, die als «Selbstseher» gewirkt haben. Aber diese Selbstseher sahen die wahren Verhältnisse, wie sie sich durch die Zeiten hindurch nach und nach offenbarten; sie sahen nicht bloß, was auf dem physischen Plane vorgeht. Wer nur das sieht, der könnte sagen: Fünf bis sechs Jahrhunderte vor unserer Zeitrechnung hat in Indien einmal ein Mensch gelebt, welcher derSohn des Königs Suddhodana war und welcher der Buddha geheißen hat, und dann hat einmal ein Johannes der Täufer gelebt. Er findet aber nicht dasjenige, was sich von dem einen zum anderen hindurchschlingt. Denn das ist erst zu sehen in der geistigen Welt. Lukas aber sagt, daß er nach denen erzählt, die «gesehen haben», die Seher waren. Es genügt nicht, daß wir die Worte der religiösen Urkunden nur hinnehmen; wir müssen diese Worte auch im richtigen Sinne lesen lernen. Dazu müssen aber die Individualitäten, die dabei auftreten, so recht anschaulich vor unserer Seele stehen. Anschaulich können sie aber nur vor unserer Seele stehen, wenn wir wissen, was alles in sie eingeflossen ist.
Eines wurde noch gesagt: Was auch immer für eine Individualität auf die Erde heruntersteigt, sie muß sich entwickeln im Sinne der Fähigkeiten, die aus dem Körper herauskommen können, in welchen sie sich hineininkarniert. Damit muß diese Wesenheit rechnen. Nehmen wir an, heute wollte eine hohe Wesenheit heruntersteigen; sie könnte dann nur mit den Gesetzmäßigkeiten rechnen, die eben heute ein Menschenleib haben kann. Erkennen, was diese Individualität eigentlich ist, das kann nur der Seher, der da sieht, wie die intimeren Fäden sich hineinverweben in das Innere des Wesens. Eine solche Wesenheit auf hoher Stufe der Weisheit muß sich aber durch die Kindheit herauf den Körper reif machen, damit in einem bestimmten Zeitpunkte das hervortreten kann, was diese Wesenheit in früheren Inkarnationen einmal war. Soll eine solche Wesenheit ganz besondere Empfindungen in den Menschen erregen, so muß auch demgemäß die irdische Inkarnation sein, so daß auch der Körper ertragen kann, was Gegenstand der Mission sein soll. In den geistigen Welten sieht es wahrhaftig nicht so aus wie in der physischen Welt. Will eine Wesenheit Heilung vom Schmerz, Erlösung vom Leid verkünden, dann muß sie die ganze Tiefe des Leides durchkosten, damit sie die rechten Worte finden kann, die im menschlichen Sinne darauf anwendbar sind.
Was später jene Wesenheit zu sagen hatte, die sich im Körper des nathanischen Jesus verbarg, das war etwas, was eine Kundschaft war an die ganze Menschheit. Das war etwas, was die Menschheit hinwegbringen sollte über alle frühere engere Blutsverwandtschaft. Nicht nehmen sollte sie die Blutsverwandtschaft, nicht aufheben, was zwischen Vater und Sohn, zwischen Bruder und Schwester steht, sondern zu der Liebe, die an die Blutsverwandtschaft gebunden ist, dasjenige hinzufügen, was man allgemeine Menschenliebe nennt, die von Seele zu Seele geht, die erhaben ist über alle Blutsbande. Das sollte diejenige Wesenheit bringen, die sich später in dem nathanischen Jesus zeigte. Sie sollte etwas bringen von Liebe, von Vertiefung der Liebe, die nichts zu tun hat mit dem, was an die Verwandtschaft des Blutes geknüpft ist. Dazu aber mußte diese Wesenheit, die in dem Körper des nathanischen Jesus lebte, erst auf der Erde selber erfahren, was es heißt, keine Verbindungen fühlen, nicht durch das Blut mit anderen zusammenhängen. Dann konnte sie rein empfinden, was nur von Mensch zu Mensch spielt. Frei mußte sie sich erst fühlen von allen Blutsbanden, ja von der Möglichkeit der Blutsbande. Nicht nur ein «heimatloser» Mensch werden wie der Buddha, der aus der Heimat in die Fremde gegangen ist, sondern als herausgetreten aus allen Familienzusammenhängen, aus allem, was mit irgendwelchen Blutsbanden etwas zu tun hat, mußte die Individualität des nathanischen Jesus vor der Welt stehen. All den tiefen Schmerz mußte sie empfinden, den man empfinden kann, wenn man von dem, was sonst dem Menschen nahestehen kann, Abschied nehmen muß, wenn man allein stehen muß; aus der großen Einsamkeit, der Familienverlassenheit heraus mußte die Individualität sprechen, die in dem nathanischen Jesus lebte. Wer war diese Wesenheit?
Wir wissen, es ist jene Wesenheit, welche etwa bis zum zwölften Lebensjahre in dem salomonischen Jesus lebte, es ist die Individualität, der Geist des Zarathustra, welcher in dem salomonischen Jesus lebte, der den salomonischen Vater und die salomonische Mutter zu Eltern hatte. Der Vater aber war früh gestorben, verwaist war der Knabe von väterlicher Seite. Außer ihm waren in dieser FamilieBrüder und Schwestern vorhanden. In dieser Familie ist er darinnen, solange er, der Zarathustra, in dem Leibe des salomonischen Jesus ist. Diese Familie verläßt er dann mit zwölf Jahren, gibt die Mutter auf, gibt die Brüder und Schwestern auf, um in den Leib des nathanischen Jesus hinüberzugehen. Da stirbt ihm auch die [nathanische] Mutter, da stirbt später der [nathanische] Vater. Und als er zu seinem Wirken in die Welt hinauszutreten hatte, da hater von allem Abschied genommen, was mit Blutsbanden etwas zu tun hat. Da ist er nicht bloß gänzlich verwaist, hat verlassen müssen Brüder und Schwestern, sondern da hat er auch als Zarathustra-Wesenheit darauf verzichten müssen, jemals Nachkommen zu haben, jemals eine Familie zu begründen. Denn die ZarathustraWesenheit hat nicht nur Vater und Mutter, Brüder und Schwestern, sondern auch den eigenen Leib verlassen, ist in einen anderen Leib hineingegangen, in den Leib des nathanischen Jesus. Diese Wesenheit konnte vorarbeiten für eine noch höhere Wesenheit, welche dann in dem Leibe des nathanischen Jesus sich vorbereiten konnte zu dem großen Beruf, die allgemeine Menschenliebe zu verkünden. Und als dann die Mutter und die Brüder dieser Wesenheit kamen und man ihr sagte: «Deine . Mutter und deine Brüder stehen draußen und wollen dich sehen», da konnte diese Wesenheit aus tiefster Seele heraus, so daß man sie nicht mißverstehen kann, vor allem Volke die Worte sprechen, ohne irgendeine Pietät zu verletzen: Das sind sie nicht! — Denn selbst den Leib hatte der Zarathustra verlassen, der mit dieser Familie zusammenhing. Und hinweisend auf die, welche in freier Seelengemeinschaft mit ihm waren, konnte er sagen: Das sind meine Mutter und meineBrüder, die das Wort Gottes hören und tun! (Lukas 8, 20-21). So weit sind die religiösen Urkunden wörtlich zu nehmen.
Damit einer einmal die allgemeine Menschenliebe verkünden konnte, mußte er wirklich einmal in einer Gestalt inkarniert sein, in welcher er erfahren konnte das Verlassensein von allem, was Blutsbande begründen können. Zu dieser Gestalt schweifen unsere Gefühle hin, so daß sie zu ihr ganz wie in menschliche Nähe treten, zu einer Gestalt, die von hohen geistigen Höhen heruntersteigt und menschlich Erfahrenes und Erlittenes zum Ausdruck bringt. Daher schlagen unsere Herzen ihr zu. Und je geistiger wir sie verstehen, desto besser werden wir sie verstehen, und desto mehr werden unsere Herzen ihr entgegenschlagen und unsere Seelen ihr zujauchzen.
Sixth Lecture
It will be relatively easy for us to understand the details of Luke's Gospel if we have first done the necessary preparatory work so that the beings and individuals in question stand before us, as it were, alive, so that we know who we are actually dealing with. Therefore, do not be discouraged if we have a lot of “background information.” First, we must get to know the great figure who stands at the center of the Gospels in all his complex being, as well as a few other things without which we would never be able to grasp what then appears to us in all its simplicity in the Gospel of Luke.
We must first recall something we discussed in the last few days: the great significance of that unique being whom we call the Buddha, and of whom we could say that in the fifth to sixth century before our era, he rose from bodhisattva to Buddha. We have characterized what this meant for humanity, and we want to bring this once again clearly before our minds.
The content of the Buddha's teaching had to be handed over to humanity as its property, so to speak. If we were to go back beyond the age of the Buddha, we would have to say of all previous epochs of humanity: In those times, there could not have been a single human being on earth who could have found this teaching of compassion and love, expressed in the eightfold path, out of themselves. Human development had not yet progressed to the point where any soul could have found these truths through immersion in its own thinking and feeling. Everything first comes into being in the world, everything first arises, and for everything that is to arise, the causes must be given. How, for example, could people in earlier times follow the principles of the eightfold path? They could only do so because they were handed down to them in a certain way, because they were instilled in them from the occult schools of the initiates and seers. Within the mysteries, within the occult schools of seers, the Bodhisattva taught precisely because in such schools it was possible to rise up to the higher worlds and receive that which could not yet be given to the outer human mind, to the outer human soul. But in those ancient times, this had to be instilled in the rest of humanity, so to speak, by those who were able to partake of the grace and come into direct contact with the teachers in the occult schools. Without people being able to arrive at the principles themselves, their lives had to be influenced in such a way that they unfolded in accordance with these principles. Those people who lived outside the mysteries thus followed, in a certain unconscious way, what was given to them, also unconsciously, by those who were able to give it to them from the occult schools. There was no human body on earth that could have been organized in such a way that, even if all that was spiritual had entered into it, the human being could have found the content of the eightfold path out of himself. This had to be a revelation from above, conveyed through the appropriate channels. But it follows from this that a being such as the Bodhisattva was not at all capable of making full use of a human body before the age of Buddha. He could not find a body on earth in which he could embody all the abilities through which he was to work on human beings. There was no such human body. — What was necessary, then? How did such a Bodhisattva incarnate? We must ask ourselves this question.
He did not fully embody what he was as a spiritual being. If one had looked at such a body, which was animated by a Bodhisattva, with clairvoyant vision, one would have seen that it only partially enclosed the essence of a Bodhisattva, which extended far beyond the human shell as an etheric body and in this way was connected with the spiritual realm, which it never completely left. Thus, the Bodhisattva never completely left the spiritual world. He lived at the same time in a spiritual body and in a physical body. This was now the transition from Bodhisattva to Buddha, that for the first time such a body existed into which the Bodhisattva could, so to speak, enter completely and develop his abilities within this body. In this way, he had established the human form that human beings must strive to attain in order to become like him, so that they too can find the teaching of the eightfold path from within themselves, just as the Bodhisattva found it from within himself under the Bodhi tree. If one were to examine the essence that was embodied in the Buddha in his previous incarnations, one would have to say: It was such that it had to remain partly in the spiritual world and could send only part of its essence into the body. Only now, in the fifth to sixth century before our era, did the first human organization exist into which the Bodhisattva could enter completely and thus set the example that humanity itself could find the eightfold path out of the moral disposition of the soul.
All religions and worldviews were aware of this phenomenon, that there were human beings who were partly in the spiritual world. They knew that there were beings for whom human existence was too narrow to accommodate the full individuality of beings who had to work on earth. Within the Near Eastern worldview, this kind of connection between the higher individualities of such beings and a physical body was called being filled with the Holy Spirit. This is a very specific technical term. And in the usage of the languages of the Near East, one would have said of such a being as a Bodhisattva incarnated on earth that it was “filled with the Holy Spirit,” meaning that the forces that constitute such a being are not entirely within that being; something spiritual must be working on it from outside. One could therefore also say that the Buddha was filled with the Holy Spirit in his previous incarnations.
Once we have understood this, we will also be able to understand what we read at the beginning of Luke's Gospel and what we touched upon yesterday. We know that in the etheric body of the one Jesus child, the physically descended from the Nathanic line of the House of David, there lived the part of the etheric body that had remained untouched, which had been taken from humanity at the event known as the Fall, so that, as it were, the etheric substance that had been taken out of Adam before the Fall was preserved and poured into this child. It had to be so, in order that there might be such a young being, untouched by all the experiences of earth's evolution, who could absorb everything he was to absorb. Could an ordinary human being, who had undergone incarnations since the Lemurian epoch, have absorbed the overshadowing by the Nirmanakaya of the Buddha? Never! And even less would he have been able to absorb what was later to enter into him. A human body of such a refined nature had to come into being, and this could only happen through the etheric substance of Adam, untouched by all earthly experiences, being poured into the etheric body of this particular child Jesus. But this also meant that this etheric substance was connected with all the forces that had worked on earthly development before the Fall, and which therefore now had a tremendous power in this child. This made possible what we touched upon yesterday: the remarkable influence that the mother of the Nathanic Jesus exerted on the mother of John the Baptist and also on John himself before he was born.
To understand this, we must realize what kind of being we are dealing with in John the Baptist. We can only understand this beinghood of John if we bring to mind the difference between the peculiar proclamation that flowed down through India through the Buddha — which we have characterized sufficiently for our purpose — and the proclamation that came to the ancient Hebrew people through Moses and his successors, the ancient Hebrew prophets.
Through Buddha, humanity has received what the soul can find as its own law, what it can establish in order to purify itself and organize itself into a high moral state as can be attained on earth. The law of the soul, Dharma, was proclaimed by Buddha, proclaimed as it can be found by human beings at the highest stage of human nature's development, out of the human soul itself. And Buddha was the one who first brought it out. But human development is not linear. The most diverse cultural currents must fertilize each other.
What was to take place in the Near East as the Christ event made it necessary for this Near Eastern development to lag behind the Indian development in a certain way, in order to take up later in a fresher way what had been given to the Indian development in a different form. A people had to be created, so to speak, within the Near East, which developed in a completely different way and lagged further behind than the peoples further to the east. Once the peoples of the East had been brought to the point, in the sense of world wisdom, where they could see the Bodhisattva as Buddha, the peoples of the Near East — especially the ancient Hebrew people — had to be left at a childlike, lower stage. This was necessary. For in the great development of humanity, the same thing had to be done that we might observe on a small scale if we had a human being who developed to a certain maturity by the age of twenty; in the process, he has acquired certain abilities, but acquired abilities are, in a certain sense, also a kind of fetter, an obstacle.
When one has acquired abilities at a certain age, these have the peculiarity of wanting to remain at their level, of wanting to keep the person at that level. They hold him back, and later, at the age of thirty, he cannot easily move beyond the level he acquired at the age of twenty. If, on the other hand, we have a second person who has acquired little by himself in his twenties and now learns these abilities from the other, then the one who has remained childlike longer can more easily advance to this level and then, at the age of thirty, be at a higher level than the former. Anyone who can observe life will find that this is the case. Skills that have been acquired and made one's own, so to speak, also form a shackle for later life, while those that are not so closely linked to one's soul, those that have been acquired more externally, are less of a shackle.
If humanity wants to advance, then arrangements must always be made to ensure that there is a cultural current that absorbs and processes a certain amount of abilities internally, and another current must run alongside it, so to speak, which is held back somewhat in its development. Then we have a cultural current that develops certain abilities to a corresponding level; these abilities are now intertwined with the innermost essence of this current and human nature. It goes further: something new emerges. But this current would not be able to rise to a higher level on its own. Therefore, arrangements had to be made for another current to run alongside the first. This second current remains undeveloped in a certain sense, and has therefore by no means reached the level of the first. It now progresses further and takes from the other what it has achieved, and because it has remained young in the meantime, it can then rise higher later on. In this way, one has fertilized the other. Thus, spiritual currents must run side by side in human development. And provision must be made through spiritual world guidance to ensure that this is so.
How could provision be made in spiritual world guidance to ensure that, alongside the current that found expression in the great Buddha, another current runs that only later takes up what Buddhism has brought to humanity? This could only be ensured by withholding from that current, which for us is the ancient Hebrew current, the possibility of producing people who, out of their own moral convictions, would develop Dharma, that is, who would arrive at the eightfold path. This current was not allowed to have a Buddha. What the Buddha brought as the inner essence of his spiritual current had to be given to this other spiritual current from outside. Therefore, in order that the matter should proceed in a particularly wise manner, long before the appearance of the Buddha, the law was not given to the peoples of the Near East internally, but externally through revelation in the Decalogue, in the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:2-17). What was to become the inner possession of another human stream was given to the ancient Hebrew people in the Ten Commandments as a sum of external laws, as something received from outside, something not yet integrated into the soul. Therefore, members of the ancient Hebrew people perceive the commandments as something that has been given to them from heaven because of the childlike nature of their stage of development.
The Indian people had been educated to recognize that human beings generate Dharma, the law of the soul, from within themselves, and the ancient Hebrew people had been educated to obey the law that had been given to them from outside. Thus, the Hebrew people form a wonderful complement to what Zarathustra accomplished for his culture and for all cultures that emerged from it.
We must emphasize that Zarathustra directed his gaze toward the outside world. While Buddha gave us profound teachings on the refinement of the human inner life, Zarathustra gave us the great and powerful teaching about the cosmos, which is supposed to give us insight into the world from whose womb we have emerged. While Buddha's gaze was directed inward, the gaze of the followers of Zarathustra was directed toward the outside world in order to penetrate it spiritually.
Let us try to delve into what Zarathustra gave from his first appearance, when he brought the proclamation of Ahura Mazdao, until the next period, when he appeared as Nazarathos. He gave increasingly urgent teachings about the great spiritual laws and the beings of the cosmos. At first, these were only hints that Zarathustra gave to Persian culture about the spirit of the sun; but then he developed them further, and they appear to us as the wonderful Chaldean teaching about the cosmos and the spiritual causes from which we were born, which is so little understood today. If we examine these teachings about the cosmos, they reveal an important peculiarity.
When Zarathustra still spoke to the ancient Persian people about the external spiritual causes of the sensory world, he presented them with the two powers of Ormuzd and Ahriman or Angramainyu, which work against each other throughout the universe. But what they did not find in this teaching is what we might call the moral warmth that permeates the soul. According to the ancient Persian view, man is, so to speak, woven into the entire cosmic process. It is a matter of Ormuzd and Ahriman working against each other that is discernible in the human soul. Because these two are fighting each other, passions rage in the human soul. What the inner human soul is has not yet been recognized. What has been brought forth is cosmic teaching. When people spoke of good and evil, they meant the excellent, useful, and harmful effects that oppose each other in the cosmos and are also expressed in human beings. The “moral worldview” had not yet been incorporated into this teaching of looking outward. In this teaching, one learned about all the beings that rule the sensory world, everything that rules the world as excellent and light, and everything that rules the world as dark and harmful. One felt entangled in this. But the actual morality in which human beings participate with their souls was not yet felt in the soul as it was later. For example, when one had a person before one who was considered “evil,” one felt that forces were flowing through this person from the evil beings of the world; one felt that he was “possessed” by these evil beings of the world. Nor could one say that he was to blame for this. One felt that human beings were entangled in a world system that was not yet permeated by moral qualities. That was the peculiarity of a teaching that initially directed the gaze outward, even if it was a spiritual gaze.
That is why the Hebrew teaching is such a wonderful complement to this cosmological teaching, because it transfers into what has been revealed from outside the moral element that made it possible to connect meaning with the concept of guilt, of human culpability. Before the Hebrew element, one could only say of an evil person that he was possessed by evil forces. The proclamation of the Ten Commandments made it necessary to distinguish between people who observed this law and those who did not. The concept of guilt, of human indebtedness, emerges. And how it enters into human development can be felt when one brings something before one's soul where it is clearly shown how people are still unclear about what the concept of guilt actually means, where it becomes tragic that there is a lack of clarity about the concept of guilt. Let the Book of Job sink in, and you will notice the lack of clarity about the concept of guilt, the lack of knowledge about how one should actually behave when misfortune strikes, and you will already find the new concept of guilt dawning in it.
Thus, as a revelation from outside — like the other revelations about the other realms of nature — morality was given to this ancient Hebrew people. This could only happen because Zarathustra ensured the continuation of his work, as I have told you, by transferring his etheric body to Moses and his astral body to Hermes. This enabled Moses to perceive in the same way as Zarathustra what was at work in the outer world, but now he perceived not only indifferent, neutral forces, but also that which governs the world morally, that which can become a commandment. That is why this ancient Hebrew people lived in such a way that their culture contained what we can call obedience, submission to the law, while the spiritual current of Buddha contained the ideal of finding the direction for human life in the eightfold path.
But this ancient Hebrew people was also to remain until the right moment, which we are now in the process of characterizing: until the appearance of the Christ principle. It was to be saved, so to speak, through the revelation of the Buddha and preserved in a more immature state of culture, if we may call it that. Therefore, personalities had to be found within the ancient Hebrew people who, as human beings, were not able to take on the full essence of an individuality that had to represent the “law.” No personality could arise within the ancient Hebrew people who would have been like the Buddha. It was only possible to arrive at the law through enlightenment from outside, through Moses having the etheric body of Zarathustra and being able to receive what is not born from one's own soul. It was not possible for the Hebrew people to bring the law into being from their own hearts. But the work of Moses had to be continued, just as every other work must be continued, so that it might bear the right fruit at the right time. Therefore, individuals had to appear among the ancient Hebrew people who appear to us as prophets and seers. And one of the most important of these seers is the one we know as Elijah.
How should we imagine such a personality? Elijah was to be one of the representatives of what Moses had initiated within the Hebrew people. But no human beings could be born from the substance of this people who could be completely interwoven with what was contained in the law of Moses, which could only be received as a revelation from above. What we have characterized as necessary for the Indian epoch, and also as the peculiar nature of the Bodhisattva, had therefore to occur again and again in the Hebrew people. There had to be individualities that were not completely absorbed in the human personality, that were with one part of their being in the earthly personality and with the other part in the spiritual world. Elijah was such a being. What we find on the physical plane as the personality of Elijah contains only part of Elijah's being. Elijah's ego cannot completely penetrate Elijah's physical body. He must be called a personality who is “filled with the spirit.” And it would be impossible to bring about such an appearance as Elijah through the mere normal forces in the world, through which a human being is otherwise placed in the world.
When, in the normal case, a human being is to enter the world, the human being develops from the physical processes in the mother's body in such a way that at a certain time the individuality that was previously incarnated simply connects itself with the physical being. In ordinary human beings, everything follows a straight path, so to speak, without the intervention of special forces that lie outside the normal path. This could not be the case with an individuality such as Elijah. Other forces had to intervene, forces that deal with that part of the individuality that extends into the spiritual world. An influence must be exerted from outside on the developing human being. Therefore, when such individualities are incarnated in the world, they appear to be inspired, driven by the spirit. They appear as ecstatic personalities who go far beyond what their ordinary intelligence can tell them. This is how all the Old Testament prophets appear. The spirit drives them; the ego cannot always account for what it does. The spirit lives in the personality and is sustained from outside.
Such personalities sometimes withdraw into solitude; but this is then a retreat of that part of the ego which the personality needs, and an intervention of the spirit from outside. In certain ecstatic, unconscious states, such a being listens to the promptings from above. This was especially the case with Elijah. What lived during his life as Elijah, what his mouth spoke, what his hand signified, did not come only from the part that lived in him, but were revelations of divine-spiritual beings that stood behind him.
When this being was reborn, it was to connect with the body of the child born to Zacharias and Elizabeth. We know from the Gospel itself that we are to regard John the Baptist as the reborn Elijah (Matthew 17:10-13). But we are dealing here with an individuality that was not accustomed from its previous incarnations to developing everything that was to come out through the forces inherent in the normal course of life. In the normal course of life, while the human physical body develops in the mother's womb, the inner power of the I stirs. What is connected with this inwardly, the individuality of Elijah had not yet gone through in earlier times; it had not yet descended so far. The I had not been set in motion by its own powers, as in normal circumstances, but from outside. This had to happen again now. The ego of this being is more out of the spiritual world, closer to the earth, and is now much more connected to the earth than the beings who previously guided Elijah. The transition to the connection between the Buddha and Zarathustra currents had to be made now. Everything had to be rejuvenated. Now it was precisely the entity that had become so closely connected with the earth and its affairs, like the Buddha, who was now connected in his Nirmanakaya with the Nathanic Jesus, that had to act from outside. This being, which was connected to the earth on the one hand, but on the other hand was removed again because it only worked in the Nirmanakaya, lived “beyond” the earth because it had ascended again, and now hovered above the head of the Nathanic Jesus, had to work from outside and unfold the ego force of John the Baptist.
Thus it was the Nirmanakaya of the Buddha who worked on the unfolding of John's ego force in the same way as the spiritual forces had previously worked on Elijah. At that time, the Elijah being was at certain times transported into ecstatic states; then God spoke, filled his ego with a real power which it could then communicate to the outside world. Now there was again a spiritual being who, as the Nirmanakaya of the Buddha, hovered above the Nathanic Jesus; this being now worked upon Elizabeth when John was to be born, stimulated the germ of John in Elizabeth's body in the sixth month of pregnancy, and awakened the ego there. However, because it was now closer to the earth, this power did not merely cause inspiration, but actually brought about the formation of John's I. Under the influence of the visit of the one called Mary, the I of John the Baptist was stirred. Thus the Nirmanakaya of the Buddha has an awakening and redeeming effect, even into the physical substance, on the I of the former Elijah, on the present I of John the Baptist. What can we hope for now?
Just as Elijah had once spoken his powerful words in the ninth century BC, which were actually the words of God, and just as what his hand pointed to was God's gesture, so it had to be similar now with John the Baptist, in that what was present in Elijah was revived. What was in the Nirmanakaya of the Buddha worked as inspiration into the ego of John the Baptist. What was proclaimed to the shepherds, what hovered over the Nathanic Jesus, extended its power into John the Baptist. And the preaching of John the Baptist is first and foremost the reawakened preaching of Buddha. Something highly peculiar appears here, something that must have a profound effect on our soul when we remember the sermon at Benares, when Buddha spoke of the suffering of life and of liberation from the suffering of life through the eightfold path that the soul must seek. At that time, Buddha proclaimed what he had recognized as the eightfold path; at that time, he also continued his sermon several times, saying: Until now, you have had the teachings of the Brahmins; they trace their origin back to Brahma himself. They say that they are superior to other people because they descend from this noble origin. These Brahmins say that man is valuable because of his ancestry. But I say: Man is valuable because of what he makes of himself, and not because of what is inherent in him through his ancestry. He is worthy of the great wisdom of the world because of what he makes of himself as an individual human being. By pointing to individual qualities and saying, “Truly, I say to you, it does not matter how much one calls oneself a Brahmin, what matters is that you make yourself a purified human being through your own personal efforts,” Buddha aroused the wrath of the Brahmin world. — That was, if not literally, the meaning of many of Buddha's speeches. And then he usually continued this teaching by showing how, when a person understands the world of suffering, he can feel compassion, become a comforter and helper, how he will participate in the fate of others because he knows that he feels the same suffering and pain as they do.
Now the Buddha was in his Nirmanakaya, outshining the Nathanic baby Jesus, and then continued his sermon by letting the words sound from the mouth of John the Baptist. What John's mouth spoke was done under the inspiration of the Buddha. And it sounds to us like a continuation of the speech that the Buddha once gave when, for example, John says: You who place so much trust in those who call themselves descendants of those who, in the service of spiritual powers, are called the “children of the serpent,” and who invoke the “wisdom of the serpent,” who has brought you to this? Only thus do you believe that you will bear worthy fruits of repentance, saying, 'We have Abraham as our father.' But now John continued the sermon of the Buddha: 'Do not say that you have Abraham as your father, but become true human beings where you stand in the world. A true human being can be awakened in the place where your foot stands on the stone. Truly, God can raise children to Abraham from stones (Luke 3:7-8). And then, continuing the sermon of the Buddha, he said, “He who has two coats, let him share with him who has none” (Luke 3:11). They came to him and asked, “Master, what shall we do?” (Luke 3:12), just as the monks once came to Buddha and asked, “What shall we do?” All these are words that sound like the words of Buddha or like a continuation of them.
Thus these beings appear on the physical plane through the turning of the ages, and thus we learn to understand the unity of religions and spiritual proclamations of humanity. We do not learn what Buddha was by clinging to tradition, but by listening to what Buddha really says. Buddha spoke five to six centuries before our era, as we hear in the sermon at Benares. But Buddha's mouth has not fallen silent. He also speaks where he is no longer incarnated, where he is inspired by the Nirmanakaya. From the mouth of John the Baptist, we hear what the Buddha had to say six centuries later, after he had lived in a physical body. This is the “unity of religions.” We must seek out each religion at the right point in the course of human development and look for what is alive in it, not what is dead; for everything continues to develop. We must learn to understand and comprehend this. But those who do not want to hear the Buddha's saying from the mouth of John the Baptist are like a person who has seen the seed of a rose bush and, some time later, after the rose bush has sprouted and is bearing flowers, does not want to believe that this rose bush arose from this rose seed, and who would now say: This is something else. What was alive in the seed is now blooming in the rose bush. And what was alive in the sermon at Benares bloomed in the sermon of John the Baptist at the Jordan.
In this way we have come to know another individuality in its essence, which confronts us in that time and about which the Gospel of Luke speaks so emphatically. We can only come to know these Gospels by gradually rising to the task of truly understanding every word as it is meant. And Luke tells us in the introduction that he wants to retell the message of those who acted as “self-seers.” But these self-seers saw the true conditions as they gradually revealed themselves through the ages; they did not merely see what was happening on the physical plane. Those who see only that might say: Five or six centuries before our era, there once lived in India a man who was the son of King Suddhodana and who was called Buddha, and then there once lived a man named John the Baptist. But they do not find what connects the one to the other. For that can only be seen in the spiritual world. Luke, however, says that he is recounting what those who “saw,” who were seers, told him. It is not enough for us to simply accept the words of religious documents; we must also learn to read these words in their proper sense. To do this, however, the individualities that appear in them must be clearly visible to our soul. But they can only be clearly visible to our soul if we know everything that has flowed into them.
One more thing has been said: whatever individuality descends to earth, it must develop in accordance with the abilities that can emerge from the body into which it incarnates. This being must reckon with that. Let us assume that a high being wanted to descend today; it could then only reckon with the laws that a human body can have today. Only the seer who sees how the more intimate threads are woven into the inner being can recognize what this individuality actually is. However, such a being on a high level of wisdom must mature through childhood in the body so that at a certain point in time, what this being once was in previous incarnations can emerge. If such a being is to arouse very special feelings in human beings, then the earthly incarnation must also be appropriate so that the body can endure what is to be the object of the mission. In the spiritual worlds, things are truly not as they appear in the physical world. If a being wants to proclaim healing from pain and deliverance from suffering, it must experience the full depth of suffering so that it can find the right words that are applicable in the human sense.
What that being, who hid himself in the body of the Nathanic Jesus, had to say later was something that was a message to all of humanity. It was something that was to carry humanity beyond all former narrow blood ties. It was not to take away blood ties, not to abolish what stands between father and son, between brother and sister, but to add to the love bound to blood ties what is called universal human love, which goes from soul to soul and is exalted above all blood ties. This was to be brought by the being who later revealed himself in the Nathanic Jesus. It was to bring something of love, of a deepening of love that has nothing to do with what is linked to blood relationship. But in order to do this, this being, who lived in the body of the Nathanic Jesus, first had to experience on earth what it means to feel no connections, to be unrelated to others by blood. Then it could feel purely what only plays between human beings. It first had to feel free from all blood ties, indeed from the possibility of blood ties. The individuality of the Nathanic Jesus had to stand before the world not only as a “homeless” person like the Buddha, who left his homeland for a foreign land, but as someone who had stepped out of all family ties, out of everything that had anything to do with blood ties. He had to feel all the deep pain that one can feel when one has to say goodbye to what is otherwise close to one's heart, when one has to stand alone; out of the great loneliness, the abandonment of his family, the individuality that lived in the Nathanic Jesus had to speak. Who was this being?
We know that it is that being who lived in the Solomonic Jesus until about the age of twelve; it is the individuality, the spirit of Zarathustra, who lived in the Solomonic Jesus, who had the Solomonic father and the Solomonic mother as parents. But the father died early, and the boy was orphaned on his father's side. Apart from him, there were brothers and sisters in this family. He remained in this family as long as he, Zarathustra, was in the body of the Solomon Jesus. He then leaves this family at the age of twelve, abandons his mother, abandons his brothers and sisters, in order to pass into the body of the Nathanic Jesus. Then his [Nathanic] mother also dies, and later his [Nathanic] father dies. And when he had to go out into the world to do his work, he took leave of everything that had anything to do with blood ties. Not only was he completely orphaned, having had to leave his brothers and sisters, but as a Zarathustra being he also had to renounce ever having descendants or ever founding a family. For the Zarathustra being had not only left his father and mother, brothers and sisters, but also his own body, and had entered into another body, the body of the Nathanic Jesus. This being was able to prepare the way for an even higher being, who could then prepare himself in the body of the Nathanic Jesus for the great task of proclaiming universal love for mankind. And when the mother and brothers of this being came and were told, “Your mother and your brothers are standing outside and want to see you,” this being was able to speak from the depths of his soul, so that no one could misunderstand him, before all the people, without violating any piety: “They are not! For even the body that was connected to this family had been left by Zarathustra. And pointing to those who were in free spiritual communion with him, he could say: These are my mother and my brothers, who hear the word of God and do it! (Luke 8:20-21). This is how the religious documents are to be taken literally.
In order for someone to proclaim universal love for humanity, he had to be incarnated in a form in which he could experience being abandoned by everything that blood ties can establish. Our feelings are drawn to this form, so that they come close to it as if it were human, to a form that descends from high spiritual heights and expresses human experience and suffering. That is why our hearts beat for it. And the more spiritually we understand it, the better we will understand it, and the more our hearts will beat for it and our souls will rejoice in it.