The Bhagavad Gita and the Epistles of St. Paul
The nature of the Bhagavad Gita and the significance of the Epistles of St. Paul. How the Christ Impulse surpasses the Krishna Impulse.
Schmidt Number: S-2674
On-line since: 9th January, 2001
LECTURE IV
The nature of the Bhagavad Gita and the significance of the Epistles of St. Paul. How the Christ Impulse surpasses the Krishna Impulse. 31 December, 1912
AT the beginning of yesterday's lecture I pointed out how different
are the impressions received by the soul when, on the one hand, it
allows the well-balanced, calm, passionless, emotionless, truly wise
nature of the Bhagavad Gita to work upon it, and on the other hand
that which holds sway in the Epistles of St. Paul. In many respects
these give the impression of being permeated by personal emotions,
personal views and points of view, by a certain, for the whole
collective evolution of man on earth, agitating sense of propagandism;
they are even choleric, sometimes stormy. If we allow the manner in
which the spiritual content of both is expressed to work upon us, we
have in the Gita something so perfect, expressed in such a wonderful,
artistically rounded way, that one could not well imagine a greater
perfection of expression, revealed poetically and yet so
philosophically. In the Epistles of St. Paul, on the other hand, we
often find what one might call an awkwardness of expression, so that
on account of this, which sometimes approaches clumsiness, it is
extremely difficult to extract their deep meaning. Yet it is
nevertheless true that that which relates to Christianity in the
Epistles of St. Paul is the keynote for its development, just as the
union of the world-conceptions of the East is the keynote of the Gita.
In the Epistles of St. Paul we find the significant basic truths of
Christianity as to the Resurrection, the significance of what is
called Faith as compared with the Law, of the influence of grace, of
the life of Christ in the soul or in the human consciousness, and many
other things; we find all these presented in such a way that any
presentation of Christianity must always be based on these Pauline
Epistles. Everything in them refers to Christianity, as everything in
the Gita refers to the great truths as to liberating oneself from
works, to the freeing of oneself from the immediate life of action, in
order to devote oneself to contemplation, to the meditation of the
soul, to the upward penetration of the soul into spiritual heights, to
the purification of the soul; in short, according to the meaning of
the Gita, to the union with Krishna. All that has just been described
makes a comparison of these two spiritual revelations extremely
difficult, and anyone who merely makes an external comparison will
doubtless be compelled to place the Bhagavad Gita, in its purity, calm
and wisdom, higher than the Epistles of St. Paul. But what is a person
who makes such an outward comparison actually doing? He is like a man
who, having before him a fully grown plant, with a beautiful blossom,
and beside it the seed of a plant; were to say: “When I look at
the plant with its beautiful, fully-developed blossom, I see that it
is much more beautiful than the insignificant, invisible seed.”
Yet it might be that out of that seed lying beside the plant with the
beautiful blossom, a still more beautiful plant with a still more
beautiful blossom, might some day spring forth. It is really no proper
comparison to compare two things to be found side by side, such as a
fully-developed plant and a quite undeveloped seed; and thus it is if
one compares the Bhagavad Gita with the Epistles of St. Paul. In the
Bhagavad Gita we have before us something like the ripest fruit, the
most wonderful and beautiful representation of a long human evolution,
which had grown up during thousands of years and in the Epistles of
St. Paul we have before us the germ of something completely new which
must grow greater and greater, and which we can only grasp in all its
full significance if we look upon it as germinal, and hold
prophetically before us what it will some day become, when thousands
and thousands of years of evolution shall have flowed into the future
and that which is planted as a germ in the Pauline Epistles shall have
grown riper and riper. Only if we bear this in mind can we make a
proper comparison. It then also becomes clear that that which is some
day to become great and which is first to be found in invisible form
from the depths of Christianity in the Pauline Epistles, had once to
pour forth in chaotic fashion from the human soul. Thus things must be
represented in a different way by one who is considering the
significance on the one hand of the Bhagavad Gita, and on the other of
the Pauline Epistles for the whole collective evolution of man on
earth, from the way they can be depicted by another person who can
only judge of the complete works as regards their beauty and wisdom
and inner perfection of form.
If we wish to draw a comparison between the different views of life
which appear in the Bhagavad Gita and the Epistles of St. Paul, we
must first inquire: What is the chief point in question? The point in
question is that in all we are able to survey historically of the two
views of life, what we are chiefly concerned with is the drawing down
of the “ego” into the evolution of mankind. If we trace the
ego through the evolution of mankind, we can say that in the
pre-Christian times it was still dependent, it was still, as it were,
rooted in concealed depths of the soul, it had not yet acquired the
possibility of developing itself. Development of an individual
character only became possible when into that ego was thrown, as it
were, the impulse which we describe as the Christ-Impulse. That which
since the Mystery of Golgotha may be within the human ego and which is
expressed in the words of St. Paul: “Not I, but Christ in
me,” that could not formerly be within it. But in the ages when
there was already an approach to the Christ-Impulse — in the last
thousand years before the Mystery of Golgotha — that which was
about to take place through the introduction of the Christ-Impulse
into the human soul was slowly prepared, particularly in such a way as
that expressed in the act of Krishna. That which, after the Mystery of
Golgotha, a man had to look for as the Christ-Impulse in himself,
which he had to find in the Pauline sense: “Not I, but Christ in
me,” that he had, before the Mystery of Golgotha, to look for
outside, he had to look for it coming to him as a revelation from
cosmic distances. The further we go back into the ages, the more
brilliant, the more impulsive was the revelation from without. We may
therefore say: In the ages before the Mystery of Golgotha, a certain
revelation came to mankind like sunshine falling upon an object from
without. Just as the light falls upon this object, so did the light of
the spiritual sun fall from without upon the soul of man, and
enlightened it. After the Mystery of Golgotha we can speak of that
which works in the soul as Christ-Impulse, as the spiritual sunlight,
as though we saw a self-illumined body before us radiating its light
from within. If we look at it thus, the fact of the Mystery of
Golgotha becomes a significant boundary line in human evolution. We can
represent
the whole connection, symbolically. If we take this circle (Diagram 1) as representing the human soul, we may say that the spiritual light streams in from without from all sides into this human soul. Then comes the Mystery of Golgotha, after which the soul possesses the Christ-Impulse in itself and radiates Forth that which is contained in the Christ-Impulse (Diagram 2). Just as a drop which is illumined from all sides radiates and reflects this illumination, so does the soul appear before the Christ-Impulse. As a flame which is alight within and radiates forth its light, thus does the soul appear after the Mystery of Golgotha, if it has been able to receive the Christ-Impulse.
Bearing this in mind we can express this whole relation by means of
the terms we have learnt in Sankhya philosophy. We may say: If we
direct our spiritual eye to a soul which, before the Mystery of
Golgotha, is irradiated from all sides by the light of the spirit, and
we see the whole connection of this spirit which pours in upon the
soul from all sides radiating to us in its spirituality, the whole
then appears to us in what the Sankhya philosophy describes as the
Sattva condition. On the other hand, if we contemplate a soul after
the Mystery of Golgotha had been accomplished, looking at it from
outside as it were, with the spiritual eye, it seems as though the
spiritual light were hidden away in its innermost depths and as if the
soul-nature concealed it. The spiritual light appears to us as though
veiled by the soul-substance, that spiritual light which, since the
Mystery of Golgotha, is contained in the Christ-Impulse. Do we not
perceive this verified up to our own age, indeed especially in our own
age, with regard to all that man experiences externally? Observe a man
today, see what he has to occupy himself with as regards his external
knowledge and his occupation; and try to compare with this how the
Christ-Impulse lives in man, as if hidden in his inmost being, like a
yet tiny, feeble flame, veiled by the rest of the soul's contents.
That is Tamas as compared with the pre-Christian state, which latter,
as regards the relation of soul and spirit, was the Sattva-state. What
part, therefore, in this sense does the Mystery of Golgotha play in
the evolution of mankind? As regards the revelation of the spirit, it
transforms the Sattva into the Tamas state. By means of it mankind
moves forward, but it undergoes a deep fall, one may say, not through
the Mystery of Golgotha, but through itself. The Mystery of Golgotha
causes the flame to grow greater and greater: but the reason the flame
appears in the soul as only a very small one — whereas before a
mighty light poured in on it from all sides — is that progressing
human nature is sinking deeper and deeper into darkness. It is not,
therefore the fault of the Mystery of Golgotha that the human soul, as
regards the spirit, is in the Tamas condition, for the Mystery of
Golgotha will bring it to pass in the distant future that out of the
Tamas condition a Sattva condition will again come about, which will
then be set aflame from within. Between the Sattva and the Tamas
condition there is, according to Sankhya philosophy, the Rajas
condition; and this is described as being that time in human evolution
in which falls the Mystery of Golgotha. Humanity itself, as regards
the manifestation of the Spirit, went along the path from light into
darkness, from the Sattva into the Tamas condition, just during the
thousand years which surrounded the Mystery of Golgotha.
If we look more closely into this evolution, we may say: If we take
the line a-b as the time of the evolution of mankind, up to about the
eighth or seventh century before the Mystery of Golgotha, all human
civilisation was then in the Sattva condition.
7th Century B.C. 15th, 16th Century A.D.
A-------------------------x------------------------x-----------------------B
Chald-Egypt. Graeco-Latin Period. Our own age.
Then began the age in which occurred the Mystery of Golgotha, followed
by our own age some fifteen or sixteen centuries after the Mystery of
Golgotha. Then quite definitely begins the Tamas age, but it is a
period of transition. If we wish to use our customary designations we
have the first age — which, in a sense, as regards certain
spiritual revelations, still belongs to the Sattva condition —
occurring at the same epoch as that which we call the
Chaldean-Egyptian, that which is the Rajas-condition is the
Graeco-Latin, and that which is in the Tamas condition is our own
age.' We know, too, that what is called the Chaldean-Egyptian age is
the third of the Post-Atlantean conditions the Graeco-Latin the
fourth, and our own the fifth. It was therefore necessary one might
say, in accordance with the plan of the evolution of mankind, that
between the third and fourth Post-Atlantean epochs there should occur
a deadening, as it were, of external revelation. How was mankind
really prepared for the blazing up of the Christ-Impulse? How did this
preparation really occur?
If we want to make quite clear to ourselves the difference between the
spiritual conditions of mankind in the third epoch of humanity —
the Chaldean-Egyptian — and the following epochs, we must say: In
this third age in all these countries, in Egypt as well as in Chaldea,
and also in India, there still was in humanity the remains of the old
clairvoyant power: that is to say, man not only saw the worlds around
him with the assistance of his senses and of the understanding
connected with the brain, but he could also still see the surrounding
world with the organs of his etheric body, at any rate, under certain
conditions, between sleeping and waking. If we wish to picture to
ourselves a man of that epoch, we can only do so by saying: To those
men a perception of nature and of the world such as we have through
our senses and the understanding bound up with the brain was only one
of the conditions which they experienced. In those conditions they
gained as yet no knowledge, but merely, as it were, gazed at things
and let them work, side by side in space and one after another in
time. If these men wanted to acquire knowledge they had to enter a
condition, not artificially produced as in our time, but occurring
naturally, as if of itself, in which their deeper-lying forces, the
forces of their etheric bodies, operated for producing knowledge. Out
of knowledge such as this came forth all that appears as the wonderful
knowledge of the Sankhya philosophy; from such a contemplation also
went forth all that has come down to us in the Vedas — although
that belongs to a still earlier age. Thus the man of that time
acquired knowledge by putting himself or allowing himself to be put
into another condition. He had so to say his everyday condition, in
which he saw with his eyes, heard with his ears, and followed things
with his ordinary understanding; but this seeing, hearing and
understanding he only made use of when occupied in external practical
business. It would never have occurred to him to make use of these
capacities for the acquiring of knowledge. In order to acquire
knowledge and perception he made use of what came to him in that other
condition in which he brought into activity the deepest forces of his
being.
We can therefore think of man in those old times as having, so to say,
an everyday body, and within that everyday body his finer spiritual
body, his Sunday body, if I may use such a comparison. With his
everyday body he did his everyday work, and with his Sunday body
— which was woven of the etheric body alone — he perceived
and perfected his science. One would be justified in saying that a man
of that olden time would be astonished that we in our day hew out our
knowledge by means of our everyday body, and never put on our Sunday
body when we wish to learn something about the world. Well, how did
such a man experience all these conditions? The experiencing of these
was such that when a man perceived by means of his deeper forces, when
he was in that state of perception in which, for instance, he studied
Sankhya philosophy, he did not then feel as does the man of today,
who, when he wishes to acquire knowledge must exert his reason and
think with his head. He, when he acquired knowledge, felt himself to
be in his etheric body, which was certainly least developed in what
today is the physical head, but was more pronounced in the other
parts; man thought much more by means of the other parts of his
etheric body. The etheric body of the head is the least perfect part
of it. A man felt, so to say, that he thought with his etheric body;
he felt himself when thinking, lifted out of his physical body; but at
such moments of learning, of creative knowledge, he felt something
more besides; he felt that he was in reality one with the earth. When
he took off his everyday body and put on his Sunday body, he felt as
though forces passed through his whole being; as though forces passed
through his legs and feet and united him to the earth, just as the
forces which pass through our hands and arms unite them with our body.
He began to feel himself a member of the earth. On the one hand, he
felt that he thought and knew in his etheric body, and on the other he
felt himself no longer a separate man, but a member of the earth. He
felt his being growing into the earth. Thus the whole inner manner of
experiencing altered when a man drew on his Sunday body and prepared
himself for knowledge. What, then, had to happen in order that this
old old age — the third — should so completely cease, and
the new age — the fourth — should come in? If we wish to
understand what had to happen then, it would be well to try to feel
our way a little into the old method of description.
A man who in that olden time experienced what I have just described,
would say: “The serpent has become active within me.” His
being lengthened out into the earth; he no longer felt his physical
body as the really active part of him; he felt as though he stretched
out a serpent-like continuation of himself into the earth and the head
was that which projected out of the earth. And he felt this serpent
being to be the thinker. We might draw the man's being thus: his
etheric body passing into the earth, elongated into a serpent-body
and, whilst outside the earth as physical man, he was stretched down
into the earth during the time of perceiving and knowing, and thought
with his etheric body.
“The serpent is active within me,” said he. To perceive was therefore in the olden time something like this: “I rouse the serpent within me to a state of activity; I feel my serpent-nature.” What had to happen, so that the new age should come in, that the new method of
perceiving should come about? It had to be no longer possible for
those moments to occur in which man felt his being extended down into
the earth through his legs and feet; besides which perception had to
die out in his etheric body and pass over to the physical head. If you
can rightly picture this passing over of the old perception into the
new, you will say: a good expression for this transition would be:
“I am wounded in the feet, but with my own body I tread under
foot the head of the serpent,” that is to say, the serpent with
its head ceases to be the instrument of thought. The physical body and
especially the physical brain, kills the serpent, and the serpent
revenges itself by taking away from one the feeling of belonging to
the earth. It bites one in the heel.
At such times of transition from one form of human experience into
another, that which comes, as it were, from the old epoch, comes into
conflict with that which is coming in the new epoch; for these things
are still really contemporaneous. The father is still in existence
long after the son's life has begun; although the son is descended
from the father. The attributes of the fourth epoch, the Graeco-Latin
were there, but those of the third, the Egyptian-Chaldean epoch, still
stirred and moved in men and in nations. These attributes naturally
became intermingled in the course of evolution, but that which thus
appears as the newly-arisen, and that which comes, as it were, out of
the olden times, continue to live contemporaneously, but can no longer
understand each other properly. The old does not understand the new.
The new must protect itself against the old, must defend its life
against it; that is to say, the new is there, but the ancestors with
their attributes belonging to the old epoch, still work in their
descendants, the ancestors who have taken no part in the new. Thus we
may describe the transition from the third epoch of humanity to the
fourth. There had therefore to be a hero, as we might say — a
leader of humanity who, in a significant manner, first represents this
process of the killing of the serpent, of being wounded by it; while
he had at the same time to struggle against that which was certainly
related to him, but which with its attributes still shone into the new
age from the old. In the advance of mankind, one person must first
experience the whole greatness of that which later all generations
experience. Who was the hero who crushed the head of the serpent, who
struggled against that which was important in the third epoch? Who was
he who guided mankind out of the old Sattva-time into the new
Tamas-time? That was Krishna-and how could this be more clearly shown
than by the Eastern legend in which Krishna is represented as being a
son of the Gods, a son of Mahadeva and Devaki, who entered the world
surrounded by miracles (that betokens that he brings in something
new), and who, if I may carry my example further, leads men to look
for wisdom in their everyday body, and who crushes their Sunday body
— the serpent; who has to defend himself against that which
projects into the new age from his kindred. Such a one is something
new, something miraculous. Hence the legend relates how the child
Krishna, even at his birth, was surrounded by miracles, and that
Kansa, the brother of his mother, wished to take the life of the
child. In the uncle of the child Krishna we see the continuance of the
old, and Krishna has to defend himself against him; for Krishna had to
bring in the new, that which kills the third epoch and does away with
the old conditions for the external evolution of mankind. He had to
defend himself against Kansa, the inhabitant of the old Sattva age;
and amongst the most remarkable of the miracles with which Krishna is
surrounded, the legend relates that the mighty serpent Kali twined
round him, but that he was able to tread the head of the serpent under
foot, though it wounded his heel. Here we have something of which we
may say the legend directly reproduces an occult fact. That is what
legends do; only we ought not to seek an external explanation, but
should grasp the legend aright, in the true light of knowledge, in
order to understand it.
Krishna is the hero of the setting third Post-Atlantean epoch of
humanity. The legend relates further that Krishna appeared at the end
of the third cosmic epoch. It all corresponds when rightly understood.
Krishna is therefore he who kills out the old perception, who drives
it into the darkness. This he does in his external phenomena; he
reduces to a state of darkness that which as Sattva-knowledge, was
formerly possessed by mankind. Now, how is he represented in the
Bhagavad Gita? He is there represented as giving to a single
individual, as if in compensation for what he has taken away from him,
guidance as to how through Yoga he can rise to that which was then
lost to normal mankind. Thus to the world Krishna appears as the
killer of the old Sattva-knowledge, while at the same time we see him
at the end of the Gita as the Lord of Yoga, who is again to lead us up
to the knowledge which had been abandoned; the knowledge belonging to
the old ages, which we can only attain when we have overcome and
conquered that which we now put on externally as an everyday dress;
when we return once more to the old spiritual condition. That was the
twofold deed of Krishna, He acted as a world-historical hero, in that
he crushed the head of the serpent of the old knowledge and compelled
man to re-enter the physical body, in which alone the ego could be won
as free and independent ego, whereas formerly all that made man an ego
streamed in from outside. Thus he was a world-wide historical Hero.
Then to the individual he was the one who for the times of devotion,
of meditation, of inner finding, gave back that which had at one time
been lost. That it is which we meet with in such a grand form in the
Gita, which at the end of our last lecture we allowed to work upon our
souls, and which Arjuna meets as his own being seen externally; seen
without beginning and without end — outspread over all space.
If we observe this condition more clearly we come to a place in the
Gita which, if we have already been amazed at the great and mighty
contents of the Gita, must infinitely extend our admiration. We come
to a passage which, to the man of the present day, must certainly
appear incomprehensible; wherein Krishna reveals to Arjuna the nature
of the Avayata-tree, of the Fig-tree, by telling him that in this tree
the roots grow upwards and the branches downwards; where Krishna
further says that the single leaves of this tree are the leaves of the
Veda book, which, put together, yield the Veda knowledge. That is a
singular passage in the Gita. What does it signify, this pointing to
the great tree of Life, whose roots have an upward direction, and the
branches a downward direction, and whose leaves give the contents of
the Veda? We must just transport ourselves back into the old
knowledge, and try and understand how it worked. The man of today only
has, so to say, his present knowledge, communicated to him through his
physical organs. The old knowledge was acquired as we have just
described, in the body which was still etheric, not that the whole man
was etheric, but knowledge was acquired through the part of the
etheric body which was within the physical body. Through this
organism, through the organisation of the etheric body, the old
knowledge was acquired. Just imagine vividly that you, when in the
etheric body, could perceive by means of the serpent. There was
something then present in the world, which to the man of the present
day is no longer there. Certainly the man of today can realise much of
what surrounds him when he puts himself into relation with nature; but
just think of him when he is observing the world: there is one thing
he does not perceive, and that is his brain. No man can see his own
brain when he is observing; neither can any man see his own spine.
This impossibility ceases as soon as one observes with the etheric
body. A new object then appears which one does not otherwise see
— one perceives one's own nervous system. Certainly it does not
appear as the present-day anatomist sees it. It does not appear as it
does to such a man, it appears in such a way that one feels:
“Yes! There thou art, in thy etheric nature.” One then looks
upwards and sees how the nerves, which go through all the organs, are
collected together up there in the brain. That produces the feeling:
“That is a tree of which the roots go upwards, and the branches
stretch down into all the members.” That in reality is not felt
as being of the same small size as we are inside our skin: it is felt
as being a mighty cosmic tree. The roots stretch far out into the
distances of space and the branches extend downwards. One feels
oneself to be a serpent, and one sees one's nervous system
objectified, one feels that it is like a tree which sends its roots
far out into the distance of space and the branches of which go
downwards. Remember what I have said in former lectures, that man is,
in a sense, an inverted plant. All that you have learnt must be
recalled and put together, in order to understand such a thing as this
wonderful passage in the Bhagavad Gita. We are then astonished at the
old wisdom which must today, by means of new methods, be called forth
from the depths of occultism. We then experience what this tree brings
to light. We experience in its leaves that which grows upon it; the
Veda knowledge, which streams in on us from without.
The wonderful picture of the Gita stands out clearly before us: the
tree with its roots going upwards, and its branches going downwards,
with its leaves full of knowledge, and man himself as the serpent
round the tree. You may perhaps have seen this picture, or have come
across the picture of the Tree of Life with the serpent; everything is
of significance when one considers these old things. Here we have the
tree with the upward growing roots, and the downward-turning branches;
one feels that it goes in an opposite direction to the Paradise-tree.
That has its deep meaning: for the tree of Paradise is placed at the
beginning of the other evolution, that which through the old Hebrew
antiquity passes on into Christianity. Thus in this place we are given
an indication of the whole nature of that old knowledge, and when
Krishna distinctly says to his pupil Arjuna “Renunciation is the
power which makes this tree visible to mankind,” we are shown how
man returns to that old knowledge when he renounces everything
acquired by him in the further course of evolution, which we described
yesterday. That it is which is given as something grand and glorious
by Krishna to his only individual pupil Arjuna as a payment on
account, whilst he has to take it from the whole of humanity for the
everyday use of civilisation. That is the being of Krishna. What then
must that become which Krishna gives to his single individual pupil?
It must become Sattva wisdom; and the better he is able to give him
this Sattva wisdom, the wiser, clearer, calmer and more passionless
will it be, but it will be an old revealed wisdom, something which
approaches mankind from without in such a wonderful way in the words
which the Sublime One, that is to say, Krishna Himself, speaks, and in
those in which the single individual pupil makes reply. Thus Krishna
becomes the Lord of Yoga, who leads us back to the ancient wisdom of
mankind, and who always endeavours to overcome that, which even in the
age of the Sattva, concealed the spirit from the soul, who wishes to
bring before his pupil the spirit in its ancient purity, as it was
before it descended into substance. Thus in the spirit only does
Krishna appear to us in that mutual conversation between Krishna and
his pupil to which we referred yesterday.
Thus we have brought before our souls the end of that epoch, which was
the last one of the ages of the old spirituality; that spirituality
that we can so follow that we see its full and complete spiritual
light at its beginning, and then its descent into matter in order that
man should find his ego, his independence. And when the spiritual
light had descended as far as the fourth Post-Atlantean epoch, there
was then a sort of reciprocal relationship, a Rajas relationship
between the spirit and the more external soul-part. In this epoch
occurred the Mystery of Golgotha. Could we describe this epoch as
belonging to the Sattva-condition? No! For then we should not be
describing just what belonged to that epoch! If anyone describes it
correctly, as belonging to the Rajas-age — making use of that
expression of Sankhya philosophy — he must describe it according
to Rajas, not in terms of purity and clearness, but in a personal
sense, as aroused to anger about this, or that, and so on. Thus would
one have to describe it, and thus did St. Paul portray it, in the
sense of its relation to Rajas. If you feel the throbbing of many a
saying in the Epistles to the Thessalonians, to the Corinthians, or to
the Romans, you will become aware of something akin to rage, something
often like a personal characteristic pulsating in the Epistles of St.
Paul, wrenching itself away from the Rajas-condition — that is
the style and character of these Epistles. They had to appear thus;
whereas the Bhagavad Gita had to come forth clear and free from the
personal because it was the finest blossom of the dying epoch, which,
however, gave one individual a compensation for that which was going
under, and led him back into the heights of spiritual life. Krishna
had to give the finest spiritual blossoms to his own pupil, because he
was to kill out the old knowledge of mankind, to crush the head of the
serpent. This Sattva-condition went under of itself, it was no longer
there; and anyone, in the Rajas age who spoke of the Sattva-condition
spoke only of that which was old. He who placed himself at the
beginning of the newer age had to speak in accordance with what was
decisive for that time. Personality had drawn into human nature
because human nature had found the way to seek knowledge through the
organs and instruments of the physical body. In the Pauline Epistles
the personal element speaks; that is why a personality thunders
against all that draws in as the darkness of the material; with words
of wrath he thunders forth, for words of wrath often thunder forth in
the Epistles of St. Paul. That is why the Epistles of St. Paul cannot
be given in the strictly limited lines, in the sharply-defined, wise
clearness of the Bhagavad Gita.
The Bhagavad Gita can speak in words full of wisdom because it
describes how man may free himself from external activity, and raise
himself in triumph to the spirit, how he may become one with Krishna.
It could also describe in words full of wisdom the path of Yoga, which
leads to the greatest heights of the soul. But that which came into
the world as something new, the victory of the spirit over that which
merely pertains to the soul within, that could at first only be
described out of the Rajas-condition; and he who first described it in
a manner significant for the history of mankind, does so full of
enthusiasm; in such a way that one knows he took part in it himself,
that he himself trembled before the revelation of the Christ-Impulse.
The personal had then come to him, he was confronted for the first
time with that which was to work on for thousands of years into the
future, it came to him in such a way that all the forces of his soul
had to take a personal part in it. Therefore he does not describe in
philosophic concepts, full of wisdom, such as occur in the Bhagavad
Gita, but describes what he has to describe as the resurrection of
Christ as something in which man is directly and personally concerned.
Was it not to become personal experience? Was not Christianity to draw
into what is most intimately personal, warm it through and through,
and fill it with life? Truly he who described the Christ-Event for the
first time could only do so as a personal experience. We can see how
in the Gita the chief emphasis is laid upon the ascent through Yoga
into spiritual heights; the rest is only touched upon in passing. Why
is this? Because Krishna only gives his instructions to one particular
pupil and does not concern himself with what other people outside in
the world feel as to their connection with the spiritual. Therefore
Krishna describes what his pupil must become, that he must grow higher
and higher, and become more and more spiritual. That description leads
to riper and riper conditions of the soul, and hence to more and more
impressive pictures of beauty. Hence also it is the case that only at
the end do we meet with the antagonism between the demoniacal and the
spiritual, and it confirms the beauty of the ascent into the
soul-life; only at the conclusion do we see the contrast between those
who are demoniacal and those who are spiritual. All those people out
of whom only the material speaks, who live in the material, who
believe that all comes to an end with death, are demoniacal. But that
is only mentioned by way of enlightenment, it is nothing with which
the great teacher is really concerned: he is before all concerned with
the spiritualising of the human soul. Yoga may only speak of that
which is opposed to Yoga, as a side-issue. St. Paul is, above all,
concerned with the whole of humanity, that humanity which is in fact
in the oncoming age of darkness. He has to turn his attention to all
that this age of darkness brings about in human life; he must contrast
the dark life, common to all, with that which is the Christ-Impulse,
and which is first to spring up as a tiny plant in the human soul. We
can see it appearing in St. Paul as he points over and over again to
all sorts of vice, all sorts of materialism, which must be combated
through what he has to give. What he is able to give is at first a
mere flickering in the human soul, which can only acquire power
through the enthusiasm which lies behind his words, and which appears
in triumphant words as the manifestation of feeling through
personality. Thus the presentations of the Gita and of the Pauline
Epistles are far removed from each other; in the clearness of the Gita
the descriptions are impersonal, while St. Paul had to work the
personal into his words. It is that which on the one hand gives the
style, and tone to the Gita, and on the other to the Pauline Epistles;
we meet it in both works, almost, one might, say in every line.
Something can only attain artistic perfection when it has acquired the
necessary ripeness; at the beginning of its development it always
appears as more or less chaotic.
Why is all this so? This question is answered if we turn to the
wonderful beginning of the Gita. We have already described it; we have
seen the hosts of the kindred facing each other in battle, one warrior
facing another, yet both conqueror and conquered are related to one
another by blood. The time we are considering is that of the
transition from the old blood-relationship, to which belongs the power
of clairvoyance-to that of the differentiation and mingling of blood
which is the characteristic of our modern times. We are confronted with
a transformation of the outer bodily nature of man and of the
perception which necessarily accompanies this. Another kind of
mingling of blood, a new significance of blood now enters into the
evolution of mankind. If we wish to study the transition from that old
epoch to the new — I would remind you of my little pamphlet,
The Occult Significance of Blood — we must say that the
clairvoyance of olden times depended upon the fact that the blood was,
so to say, kept in the tribe, whereas the new age proceeded from the
mixing of blood by which clairvoyance was killed, and the new
perception arose which is connected with the physical body. The
beginning of the Gita points to something external, to something
connected with man's bodily form. It is with these external changes of
form that Sankhya philosophy is mostly concerned; in a sense it leaves
in the background that which belongs to the soul, as we have pointed
out. The souls in their multiplicity are simply behind the forms. In
Sankhya philosophy we have found a kind of plurality; we have compared
it with the
Leibnitz
philosophy of more modern times.
If we can think ourselves into the soul of a Sankhya philosopher, we
can imagine his saying: “My soul expresses itself in the Sattva
or in the Rajas or in the Tamas condition with respect to the forms of
the external body.” But this philosopher studies the forms. These
forms alter, and one of the most remarkable changes is that which
expresses itself in the different use made of the etheric body, or
through the transition as regards blood-relationship we have just
described. We have then an external change of form. The soul itself is
not in the least affected by that with which Sankhya philosophy
concerns itself. The external changes of form are quite sufficient to
enable us to consider what takes place in the transition from the old
Sattva age to that of the new Rajas, on the borders of which stands
Krishna. It is the external changes of form which come into
consideration there.
Outer changes of form always come into consideration at the time of
the change of the ages. But the changes of form took place in a
different way during the transition from the Persian to the Egyptian
epoch from what they did in that from the Egyptian to the
Graeco-Latin; still an external change of form did take place. In yet
another manner took place the transition from the Ancient Indian to
the Persian, but there too there was an external change of form.
Indeed it was simply a change of form which occurred when the
passing-over from the old Atlantis itself into the Post-Atlantean ages
took place. A change of form: and we could follow this by holding fast
to the designations of the Sankhya philosophy, we can follow it simply
by saying: The soul goes through its experiences within these forms,
but the soul itself is not altered thereby, Purusha remains
undisturbed. Thus we have a particular sort of transformation which
can be described by Sankhya philosophy according to its own
conceptions. But behind this transforming there is Purusha, the
individual part of the soul of every man. The Sankhya philosophy only
says of this that there is an individual soul-part which is related
through the three Gunas-Sattva, Rajas and Tamas — with external
form. But this soul-part is not itself affected by the external forms;
Purusha is behind them all and we are directed to the soul itself; a
continual indication of the soul itself is what meets us in the
teaching of — Krishna, in what he as Lord of Yoga teaches. Yes,
certainly I but the nature of this soul is not given us in the way of
knowledge. Directions as to how to develop the soul is the highest we
are shown; alteration of the external forms; no change in the soul
itself, only an introductory note.
This first suggestion we discover in the following way if man is to
rise through Yoga from the ordinary stages of the soul to the higher,
he must free himself from external works, he must emancipate himself
more and more from outer works, from what he does and perceives
externally; he must become a “looker-on” at himself. His
soul then assumes an inner freedom and raises itself triumphantly over
what is external. That is the case with the ordinary man, but with one
who is initiated and becomes clairvoyant the case does not remain
thus; he is not confronted with external substance, for that in itself
is maya. It only becomes a reality to him who makes use of his own
inner instruments. What takes the place of substance? If we observe
the old initiation we meet with the following: Whereas man in everyday
life is confronted with substance, with Prakriti — the soul which
through Yoga has developed itself by initiation, has to fight against
the world of the Asuras, the world of the demoniacal. Substance is
what offers resistance; the Asuras, the powers of darkness become
enemies. But all that is as yet a mere suggestion, we perceive it as
something peeping out of the soul, so to say; we begin to feel that
which pertains to the soul. For the soul will only begin to realise
itself as spiritual when it begins to fight the battle against the
demons, the Asuras.
In our language we should describe this battle, which, however, we
only meet with in miniature, as something which becomes perceptible in
the form of spirits, when substance appears in spirituality. We thus
perceive in miniature that which we know as the battle of the soul
when it enters upon initiation, the battle with Ahriman. But when we
look upon it as a battle of this kind, we are then in the innermost
part of the soul, and what were formerly material spirits grow into
something gigantic; the soul is then confronted with the mighty foe.
Soul then stands up against Soul, the individual soul in universal
space is confronted with the realm of Ahriman. It is the lowest stage
of Ahriman's kingdom with which one fights in Yoga; but now when we
look at this as the battle of the soul with the powers of Ahriman,
with Ahriman's kingdom, he himself stands before us. Sankhya
philosophy recognises this relationship of the soul to external
substance, in which the latter has the upper hand, as the condition of
Tamas. The initiate who has entered initiation by means of Yoga is not
only in this Tamas state, but also in battle with certain demoniacal
powers, into which substance transforms itself before his sight. In
this same sense the soul, when it is in the condition not only of
being confronted with the spiritual in substance, but with the purely
spiritual, is face to face with Ahriman. According to Sankhya
philosophy, spirit and matter are in balance in the Rajas condition,
they sway to and fro, first matter is above, then spirit, at one time
matter weighs down the scales, then spirit. If this condition is to
lead to initiation, it must lead in the sense of the old Yoga to a
direct overcoming of Rajas, and lead into Sattva. To us it does not
yet lead into Sattva, but to the commencement of another battle-the
battle with what is Luciferic.
And now the course of our considerations leads us to Purusha, which is
only hinted at in Sankhya philosophy. Not only do we hint at it, we
place it right in the midst of the field of the battle against Ahriman
and Lucifer: one soul-nature wars against another. In Sankhya
philosophy Purusha is seen in immense perspective; but if we enter
more deeply into that which plays its part in the nature of the soul,
not as yet distinguished between Ahriman and Lucifer; then in Sattva,
Rajas and Tamas we only find the relation of the soul to material
substance. But considering the matter in our own sense, we have the
soul in its full activity, fighting and struggling between Ahriman and
Lucifer.
That is something which, in its full greatness can only be considered
through Christianity. According to the old Sankhya teaching Purusha
remains still undisturbed: it describes the condition which arises
when Purusha clothes itself in Prakriti. We enter the Christian age
and in that which underlies esoteric Christianity and we penetrate
into Purusha itself, and describe this by taking the trinity into
consideration: the soul, the Ahrimanic, and the Luciferic. We now
grasp the inner relationship of the soul itself in its struggles. That
which had to come was to be found in the transition in the fourth
epoch, that transition which is marked through the Mystery of
Golgotha. For what took place then? That which occurred in the
transition from the third to the fourth epoch was something which can
be described as a mere change of form; but now it is something which
can only be described by the transition from Prakriti into Purusha
itself, which must be so characterised that we say: “We feel how
completely Purusha has emancipated itself from Prakriti, we feel that
in our innermost being.”
Man is not only torn away from the ties of blood, but also from
Prakriti, from everything external, and must inwardly have done with
it. Then comes the Christ-Impulse. That is, however, the greatest
transition which could take place in the whole evolution of the earth.
It is then no longer merely a question of what might be the conditions
of the soul in relation to matter, in Sattva, Rajas and Tamas, for the
soul no longer has merely to overcome Tamas and Rajas to raise itself
above them in Yoga, but has to fight against Ahriman and Lucifer, for
it is now left to itself. Hence the necessity to confront that which
is presented to us in that mighty Poem — the Bhagavad Gita —
that which was necessary for the old times-with that which is
necessary for the new.
That sublime Song, the Bhagavad Gita, shows us this conflict. There we
are shown the human soul. It dwells in its bodily part, in its
sheaths. These sheaths can be described. They are that which is in a
constant state of changing form. The soul in its ordinary life lives
in a state of entanglement, in Prakriti, In Yoga it frees itself from
that which envelopes it, it overcomes that in which it is enwrapped,
and enters the spiritual sphere, when it is quite free from its
coverings. Let us compare with this that which Christianity, the
Mystery of Golgotha, first brought. It is not here sufficient that the
soul should merely make itself free. For if the soul should free
itself through Yoga, it would attain to the vision of Krishna. He
would appear in all his might before it, but as he was before Ahriman
and Lucifer obtained their full power. Therefore a kind divinity still
conceals the fact that beside Krishna — who then becomes visible
in the sublime way described in our last lecture — on his left
and on his right there stand Ahriman and Lucifer. With the old
clairvoyance that was still possible, because man had not yet
descended into matter; but now it can no longer be the case. If the
soul were now only to go through Yoga it would meet Ahriman and
Lucifer and would have to enter into battle with them. It can only
take its place beside Krishna when it has that ally Who fights Ahriman
and Lucifer; Tamas and Rajas would not suffice. That ally, however, is
Christ. Thus we see how that which is of a bodily nature freed itself
from the body, or one might also say, that which is bodily darkened
itself within the body, at the time when Krishna, the Hero, appeared.
But, on the other hand, we see that which is still more stupendous;
the soul abandoned to itself and face to face with something which is
only visible in its own domain in the age in which the Mystery of
Golgotha occurred.
I can well imagine, my dear friends, someone saying: “Well, what
could be more wonderful than when the highest ideal of man, the
perfection of mankind, is placed before our eyes in the form of
Krishna! “There can be something higher — and that it is
which must stand by our side and permeate us when we have to gain this
humanity, not merely against Tamas and Rajas, but against the powers
of the spirit. That is the Christ. So it is the want of capacity to
see something greater still, if one is determined to see in Krishna
the highest of all. The preponderating force of the Christ-Impulse as
compared with the Krishna-Impulse is expressed in the fact that in the
latter we have incarnated in the whole human nature of Krishna, the
Being which was incarnated in him. Krishna was born, and grew up, as
the son of Visudeva; but in his whole manhood was incorporated,
incarnated, that highest human impulse which we recognise as Krishna.
That other Impulse, which must stand by our side when we have to
confront Lucifer and Ahriman (which confrontation is only now
beginning, for all such things, for instance, as are represented in
our Mystery Dramas, will be understood psychically by future
generations), that other Impulse must be one for which mankind as
such, is at first too small, an Impulse which cannot immediately dwell
even in a body such as one which Zarathustra can inhabit, but can only
dwell in it when that body itself has attained the height of its
development, when it has reached its thirtieth year. Thus the
Christ-Impulse does not fill a whole life, but only the ripest period
of a human life. That is why the Christ-Impulse lived only for three
years in the body of Jesus. The more exalted height of the
Christ-Impulse is expressed in the fact that it could not live
immediately in a human body, as did Krishna from his birth up. We
shall have to speak further of the overwhelming greatness of the
Christ-Impulse as compared with the Krishna. Impulse and how this is
to be seen. But from what has already been characterised you can both
see and feel that, as a matter of fact, the relation between the great
Gita and the Epistles of St. Paul could be none other; that the whole
presentation of the Gita being the ripe fruit of much, much earlier
times, may therefore be complete in itself; while the Epistles of St.
Paul, being the first seeds of a future-certainly more perfect, more
all-embracing world-epoch, must necessarily be far more incomplete.
Thus one who represents how the world runs its course must recognise,
it is true, the great imperfections of the Pauline Epistles as
compared with the Gita, the very, very significant imperfections
— they must not be disguised — but he must also understand
the reason those imperfections have to be there.
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