Christ and the World Teachers
By E. C. Merry
The modern man may have an aesthetic appreciation of the
transcendental elaborations of ancient cosmologies, but by virtue of his
matter-of-fact intellectuality he is unable to ascend the supreme heights of
real imaginative conception which gave rise to such ancient models as, for
instance, the Gnosis. As a background to what we shall have to say in this
article let us sketch an outline of this magnificent world-picture.
Above the sense-perceptible limits of the physical world, an immense spiritual perspective lies extended before the eye of the soul. Not one or two superphysical regions are there, but height reveals itself. Thirty-one worlds—Time-worlds, Being-worlds—form the approach that the seer must travel and absorb into himself till he reaches the realm of Absolute Silence, and beyond the Absolute Silence is the Divine Father, the ‘Ground’ of all worlds and beings. Their name was AEON. Thirty AEons led back to the Beginnings of all creation. Infinitely great, infinitely noble was this ancient world-conception with all its intricacies and splendours! . . . The lowest of the Aeons was Sophia, the Divine Wisdom. All the Aeons were sustainers and bearers of Sophia. But with the final creation of the physical world, Sophia knew she could not retain her clear vision of the heights above her unless she could cleanse herself from the ‘desire’ inherent in her for the Light. So the part of her being which was ‘desire of wisdom’ fell to the Earth. In falling it was illuminated by a ray from the Heights; and this lives on in the soul of humanity as the longing for the pure lifht of divine-spiritual knowledge.
When the Gnosis was cultivated, it was known that no mere intellectual activity,
no ordinary earthly brain could possibly suffice to understand the mystery of
the Christ. But the Christ is Saviour of the fallen Sophia. His power descends
and works through all the Aeons. Wisdom is redeemed by power and again brings
forth power. The redeeming Aeon is the I AM. “I am the Gnosis of the Universe,”
are words spoken by the Christ of the Gnostic books. The raising of ‘Sophia’ is
the raising of earthly intelligence up to the divine origins of wisdom, where
the Christ-Mystery can be known.
There is a passage in the Pistis Sophia which runs as follows:--(Christ
is speaking to His disciples after His resurrection) . . . “And the soul which
receiveth the Mystery of the Ineffable, will soar into the Height, being a great
light-stream . . . and no power is able to hold it down at all, nor will they be
able to come nigh it at all. . . . He is a man in the world, but he is a King
in the Light. He is a man in the world, but he is not one of the world. And
amen, I say unto you: That man is I, and I AM that man.”
This passage points in a beautiful manner to one of the great mysteries of the
spiritual guidance of humanity. It is indeed the background for all those terms,
so loosely used, and applied with so little discrimination, which are familiar
to those who have a slight knowledge of oriental mysticism, or other esoteric
teachings: the Bodhisattvas, the Avatars—incorporations or incarnations of
higher Beings—overshadowings, and so forth; and on the other hand
‘Initiation’—the development of the purely human being on the path of true
occultism to the spheres of higher knowledge. But—and this is said not in
reference to this passage alone but in reference to countless passages in the
Bible—it was only the Christ-Being who could finally provide the key for the
future evolution of humanity up to the Kingdoms of the Light, by revealing His
identity with the spiritual centre of every man—the I AM: “That man is I and I
AM that man.”
Throughout the ages it has always been recognised that true wisdom can be found
only at its source, where, “in the wood of wonder, her fountain sings.” Wonder,
veneration—these led the seeking human soul to the source of origin of creation,
to knowledge of the ‘Beginnings.’
If we first consider what is really the fundamental content of Initiation, we
must come to the conclusion that it includes two things: to be introduced into
the knowledge of something, to begin to know, or, to know the
‘Beginning.’ And, secondly, to be the first to practice something or
introduce something in an age or a people. Knowledge or action of this kind
presupposes that one must know the nature or origin of the thing known or
introduced. But the knowledge which is limited to what may be perceived by the
senses can never reach back to the true Beginnings. This requires an incentive
to leap beyond the visible, external things. It requires Wonder; it requires
Imagination in the sense of an artistic creative faculty of the soul. There is
no merely intellectual activity which can grasp what is the ‘beginning’ of the
red of the rose or the scent of the lily. When an individual stands before us,
we surmise that behind what we know of him are far-reaching mysteries which have
made him what he is. The work of generations of Gods has been expanded upon him.
To know this would be ‘supersensible’ knowledge.
If to know the Beginnings of things—and this is but a crude way of expressing
it—is Initiation, who then is the Initiator? Who is the one who already knows
not only the Beginnings but the Endings? It is the I AM who is the Alpha and
Omega and knows the ‘mysteries of death and of hell.’ In other words, the
immortal Indweller (of whom the Divine Archetype is the Christ) who has had to
descend from the kingdoms of the Light as the Champion of Sophia and pass
through the realms of matter, to ‘die and become.’ Knowledge of the Beginnings,
of the first nature or true Names of things is also to know the whole relation
of man to spirit and matter. So it is a question, if we come to consider the
word Initiate, of a person who possesses—in the true sense of the words—Wisdom
and Power, who ‘sees’ the Beginnings and the Endings with the varying light that
is thrown upon them by the different ages of evolution and civilisation, and can
be the first to introduce the ever-renewed wisdom in any age and to
translate it into activity. If we divide—as we must do—the whole evolution of
the earth’s destiny into two great parts, then from the time of the Event of
Palestine we must recognise the Christ as the ‘first-born among many brethren’
who are united in that sphere of consciousness to which the I AM or ‘Alpha and
Omega’ belongs.
This indicates the difference between Christ and the World Teachers. Christ was
the Redeemer of the pure eternal wisdom of the Aeons. The other Teachers are
first preparers and then amplifiers of this impulse. The redemption of wisdom,
of the ‘Virgin Sophia’ is an act of power which converts the wisdom into love.
Love is the ‘fruit of wisdom reborn in the Ego.’
* * *
We may now sketch in upon this background three types of those who have been
among the preparers for the impulse of Christ But we must at the same time bear
in mind that these preparers were aware of the future advent of the
Christ Being, even though they called Him by other names. And further, we must
bear in mind that before the Mystery of Golgotha the process of the evolution of
consciousness was actually a ‘descending’ one, from a condition of conscious
intercourse with the spiritual world down to an earthly individualised
brain-thinking.
Before Christ, therefore, Initiation was, broadly speaking, directed towards a
bringing of the spiritual content of existence down into the material substance
of existence, where it seems to be extinguished. But since the beginning of
our era, Initiation provides for the transubstantiation, by man, of
the material world through the power of its inherent spirit.
During the downward process, two paths of Initiation are to be
distinguished:--one which was concerned with the outer universe and one which
was concerned with the inner life of the soul. At the same time, three types of
World Teachers will be spoken of here: the one that is the bearer of a Spiritual
Being and not, strictly speaking, an ‘Initiate’ in the sense of a human being
who has arrived at illumination; the other, the type of human being who has
climbed upward to supreme Initiation through many incarnations. While the third
may be said to be an Initiate through the partial incorporation of a higher
Being.
Of the first type we point to the great Zarathustra; of the second, to Buddha;
and of the third, to Moses. The first teaches of the power and wisdom of the
Universe; the second of the mysteries of the wisdom of the soul; the third has a
somewhat different task. Each ‘initiated’ or ‘began’ something for the human
race. Whatever has to become a general human attribute must first be exemplified
in all its completeness in a single human being. Gazing at such a human being
with physical understanding only we cannot grasp how one can act for all;
but supersensible knowledge reveals the universality of what is contained in the
one. It is hidden in the one; it is ‘occult.’ One of the fruits of Initiation is
that man comes to real knowledge concerning the nature of the World Teachers. He
no longer needs to ‘speculate’ about them.
When anyone is born to be a saviour or teacher of humanity in the domain of
power and wisdom on the ‘outer path’—as was the case with Zarathustra—he meets
at first with innumerable obstacles. Hatred and persecution surround his
earliest years. Zarathustra had the task, to to speak, of opening the way for
human knowledge to grasp the importance of the Earth as its place of
development. Previously, mankind had not realised this. Zarathustra was, as the
Sun is for the plant-kingdom, a fruit-bearing force for the earthly
civilisations. He embodied, in the conflicts which raged about his childhood,
the battle between Light and Darkness, between the Sun-wisdom of the Heights and
the opposition perceived by matter and ‘chaos.’ He was cast out by his parents
and given to the ‘wild beasts,’ and legends tell us that he was nourished by
‘heavenly cows.’ He became the founder of the earliest great Persian
civilisation which was the first in which spiritual human destiny was linked in
consciousness to the destiny of the Earth. Hence we find him teaching of the
antagonism between Ormuzd (the spirit of the Sun, or Christ), and Ahriman, the
Spirit of materialism. He revealed that this battle between Light and Darkness
is a necessity of progress. Zarathustra was the bearer of an ‘Aeon.’ He was the
human vehicle for a Cosmic Being. This Being’s influence has continued
throughout all the ages of earthly civilisation since that time in such a way as
continually to point to the ultimate triumph of the Spirit of the Sun, not as a
triumph taking place outside the Earth but within it. He points to the
future. He is one who has always ‘gone in front’ of the Sun—an Announcer of the
Christ Mystery, a heralding star. He establishes the connection between the
spiritual and the material by descending from above and inhabiting a human body.
The opposite is the case with Buddha. Mankind cannot reach what is the ultimate
goal of the Earth if, in addition to knowledge and power, the possibility of
compassion—the ground of love—is not developed within the soul. Thus a Teacher
had also to appear before the coming of Christ who could experience in full
consciousness the ascent of the human element through the ages of time as
something linking all human beings together in a common aim. Illumination had
also to come by a leading of the consciousness down into the secrets of the soul
as it lives in a physical body and learns purification through suffering and
fellow-suffering. This bestows a different kind of power—a power associated with
the cosmic memory indwelling the soul which then, through experience, rises
again to divinity. But with the great Buddha, this experience of suffering was
rather a means to emancipate the soul from the necessity of suffering. It was a
turning away from the Earth. Not however in a selfish manner, but as pointing
out a way by which others could also be liberated. Nevertheless, the path
by which this liberation could be attained was at the same time a path to the ‘I
AM.’ By plunging deeply and ever more deeply into the recesses of the soul it is
possible through temptation and catharsis, to come out on the other side and
discover the relation of the self to all other human selves in the bosom of the
Divine.
What kind of wisdom is this? It is the wisdom not of power but of innocence. One
might say it is the creation of a pure field within the soul-element of humanity
wherein the Divine Ego could find a suitable ‘atmosphere’ for incarnation and
for the work of power which is represented by the Zarathustra stream. To
establish this ‘innocence’ one must return on the flood of cosmic memory and
experience to the pre-earthly. Reincarnation (not only of the Self but of the
whole planetary system) arises as the key that unlocks the doors of the past.
Cessation of reincarnation is the goal to be achieved through compassion and
love. Every higher incarnation is a resurrection. Ascension is the ultimate
goal. Crucifixion in matter is the test of love.
Buddha initiated compassion in the world. He wept for the disharmony between
man, as spirit, and the world, as maya. But he pointed back rather than
forward—back to the glorious Krishna in his fiery Sun-aura:--“Before me
was One Who is mightier than I.” On this path it is not the wild powers of Chaos
that have to be tamed (as is represented by the ferocious beasts around
Zarathustra), but the demons that through ages of impurity have soiled the human
soul.
For a moment let us return to Zarathustra. The mighty power of this Being
manifested in the processes that ripen human and earthly culture in the growth
of all the arts and sciences of civilisation—of ‘taming’ the world—had to
advance to a point where the consciousness of ‘I am I’ could begin to flash up
within the souls and bodies of men.
During the Egyptian epoch of civilisation the forces of the Zarathustra Being
worked in a certain way (described by Rudolf Steiner in various lectures)
through Moses and Hermes. In Moses, the external wisdom-power was implanted; in
Hermes, an inner wisdom of the cosmic mysteries—the kingly power and the
priestly power. The special gift of Moses was the gift of insight into the
working of cosmic laws into human race-building, so that a sense of individual
responsibility in respect of race and of self could develop. He was the
Lawgiver. For with a still undeveloped Ego, a man could not yet be a ‘law unto
himself.’ Moses’ inspiration enabled him to graft into humanity the capacity to
found a culture-epoch no longer dependent on the old clairvoyance still
possessed by the Egyptians but on an intellectual knowledge having its seat in
the Ego. He combined in himself the old clairvoyance plus reason
and intelligence, schooled as it were by that Ego-power of the soul which
enables all other soul-powers to operate as an unity. He prepared the soil for
the full appearance of the sense of ‘I am I’ in man. But since intellectual
consciousness is bound up with brain and blood and so has the physical organism
for its instrument, it was necessary to create laws to preserve the purity of
the race in which this should first develop.
What was the mission of this race? It was to produce the physical body for the
highest expression of the ‘I AM’—the Christ. In who Name should Moses announce
his mission? In the name of the ‘I AM!’ This new element of self-consciousness
in humanity was in the future to become something far more than a mere enhanced
feeling of the Ego. It was to become a power eventually leading to full
comprehension of the Mystery of Golgotha. It was to become as ‘Christ in me,’
the power in man which could act as his Initiator into the gnosis of the
universe. But to begin with, the full blaze of this light of the ‘I am’ could
not be borne. In a wonderful, figurative description this is expressed in the
words that the Lord would not show Moses His face. As the Moon reflects the
mystery of the Sun, so Jehovah revealed the mystery as a reflection. . . . Moses
stands near to out own souls today. We feel something of the continuity of his
impulse still about us.
In the event of the captivity of the Hebrews in Babylon we touch one of the many
profound mysteries of the spiritual guidance of the world. The leader of the
Chaldean-Babylonian civilisation was again the Zarathustra-Being! Thus do the
spiritual streams flowing from the great World Teachers work towards their
appointed end. For when the cosmic hour had struck the royal star of Zarathustra
shone again in the inspiration and intuitive perception that led the Wise Men of
the East to the cradle of Bethlehem. And in the heavens above the Angels
announced by their light the presence of the overshadowing soul of the
compassionate Buddha, while the crown of all Egohood, the Christ Being, prepared
for His descent. This is no mere artistic imagery. Rudolf Steiner gives with a
wealth of living and concrete detail every fact of occult and external history
which welds the various missions of the many great Avatars and Initiates of the
world into an organic whole.
* * *
Out of the preparation which was carried out through immense ages of time
emerges the possibility of a freedom for humanity far other than that which a
premature redemption of the human soul from the worlds of matter would have
given. Love had certainly existed in the world but it had hitherto not been a
love that could overcome not only the baser part of human nature but which could
also be so experienced in the Ego itself that it could recognise its own
immortality and its transforming power. Through the force of Christ the ‘I am’
could learn to rise to the comprehension that ‘Love is.’ This is the
experience of spiritual intuition. To attain to this, the highest point in the
evolution of consciousness, the power of love had to be initiated inhumanity by
the Son of God. This is clearly stated: “A new message I give unto you, that ye
love one another.”
A new relation to fate, to karma, is here made possible. Fate can be changed by
love alone. Love can live freely in the Ego; for in the Ego lies the rulership
over all those powers of the soul which are able, through the ‘Fall’ of man, to
militate against his freedom.
A mighty transformation takes place in man with the full entrance of the
consciousness of ‘I am I’ which became possible through the incarnation upon
earth—in the Christ Being—of the totality of the principle of Egohood.
But the turning-point is marked in yet another way. Self-consciousness is
the consciousness of reason, of the intellect, of independent thinking bound to
the physical body, and is no longer a ‘clairvoyant’ consciousness that is aware
of spiritual worlds and beings. The Gnostics, with their marvelous imaginative
perceptions clothed in the transcendental forms of thought that were still
possible in that age, tried to show that the Christ Event—namely the mystery of
the Christ in Jesus, could not be understood except by the light of the
redeemed ‘Sophia’ or wisdom, for it was a ‘Mystery of the Ineffable.’ And
this is true. It requires Initiation-knowledge to understand this.
Therefore Christ required other Initiate Teachers to follow Him, as they had
been needed to prepare for Him. But they would not have a different character.
They would have to be able to partake of Christ’s Nature. Christ-Jesus was both
God and Man. He combined in Himself the attributes of the Zarathustra type and
the Buddha type. By force of His Godhead He knew the mysteries of the whole
spiritual universe; by force of His Godhead dwelling in Manhood He knew
all mysteries of the human soul and physical body. He was ‘with the wold
beasts,’ the destructive cosmic powers, the He had to overcome the two tempters
of the human soul—Lucifer and Ahriman. In Him the two paths of Initiation were
united. He knew the ‘Beginning’ and the ‘End.’ His Death and Resurrection showed
forth in a single event what man attains when he rises from incarnation to
incarnation to ever higher degrees of perfection. The whole of mankind will
ultimately have had to meet the tests which are necessary before the
Christ-implanted love can come to its fruition. In the meantime the impulse of
Christ is made manifest from age to age in the special mission of those who are
His Initiates or who are in some way overshadowed or inspired for a particular
purpose in the evolution of humanity.
* * *
I have chosen the expression ‘World Teacher’ for a particular reason. It is an
expression that is only permissable when all the connections and intricacies of
the subject are taken into consideration (naturally what has been written here
only touches on the barest outlines) and today it is greatly misused.
Throughout the course of human history there have been innumerable inspired
Leaders of humanity. Every epoch of civilisation arises out of the fact that
something new has long been germinating from a single seed and comes to its full
blossom only in the course of centuries. The sowing of the seed of a new impulse
is an event that originates in the spiritual world, and the vessels for its
reception may be of many different kinds. But if we ask what distinguishes a
‘World Teacher’ from other inspired thinkers or workers, perhaps we may say that
such an one brings into being a new attribute of the soul, a new level of
consciousness which is to become in the course of time a part of the normal
condition of an age or epoch of evolution, on the upward arc of progress. There
are always ‘Initiates’ of varying degrees of development, working generally
entirely unknown, for the welfare of the human race. Every ‘World Teacher’ is an
Initiate, but by no means is every Initiate a World Teacher in the sense
described above. Nevertheless, every human being who can rise to Initiation in
the true sense of the word, is indeed one who is ‘lifted up’ and raises the
entire level of human existence by the very fact that he, or she, has thereby
become a link in the chain of understanding that binds more closely the human
with the Divine.
Our present age is an age of individualism and at the same time an age when
everything new—even the greatest and noblest innovation—is subjected to the test
of reason and guaged by its capacity to be of practical service to humanity.
Therefore the mission of a World Teacher today who, if he were truly a World
Teacher, would be bringing the means towards a higher spiritual development and
a higher level of consciousness, would also have to stand this test.
Anthroposophy—with all its branches of knowledge and of activity—appears among
us in this twentieth century with a clear challenge to the world to test all
that claims to be spiritual knowledge by proving its rightness for the age, and
its fulfilment of the demand of the Consciousness Soul that it shall be able to
create a new civilisation.
From ANTHROPOSOPHY A Quarterly Review of Spiritual Science, no. 2. Midsummer 1930. , Vol. 8. London: Anthroposophical Publishing Company.
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