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The Gospel of St. Luke
GA 114

16 September 1909, Basel

Lecture Two

[ 1 ] Throughout the Christian era the Gospel of St. John was the text that made the strongest impression upon those who were trying to deepen their understanding of the cosmic mysteries of Christianity. This was the Gospel used by all the Christian mystics who were striving to mould their lives in accordance with its presentation of the personality and nature of Christ Jesus.

[ 2 ] In the course of the centuries a somewhat different attitude was adopted by Christian humanity to the Gospel of St. Luke—an attitude altogether in keeping with the indications given in the last lecture, from another point of view, regarding the contrast between these two Gospels. Whereas the Gospel of St. John was in a certain sense a text for mystics, the Gospel of St. Luke was always a devotional book for humble folk, for those whose simplicity and innocence of heart enabled them to rise into the sphere of truly Christian feeling. The Gospel of St. Luke has been a book of devotion throughout the centuries. For all those who were bowed down with sorrow or suffering it was a fount of consolation, speaking with such tenderness of the great Comforter, the great Benefactor of mankind, the Saviour of the heavy-laden and oppressed. It was a book to which especially those who longed to be filled with Christian love turned their hearts and minds, because the power of love is revealed more clearly in this Gospel than in any other Christian document. Those who were in any way conscious—and strictly speaking this applies to everyone—of having the burden of some guilt upon their hearts, at all times found consolation and edification when they turned to the Gospel of St. Luke and understood its message. They could say to themselves: Christ Jesus came not only for the righteous but also for sinners; He sat with publicans and transgressors. Whereas much preparation is necessary before the full power of St. John's Gospel can be realized, it may be said of St. Luke's Gospel that no nature is too immature to be aware of the warmth streaming from it. [ 3 ] From the earliest times this Gospel was an inspiration to the most childlike of men. All that remains childlike in the human soul from tenderest youth to ripest age has always felt drawn to the Gospel of St. Luke. And as regards pictorial representations of Christian truths and what art has acquired from these truths, we find that although much is derived from the other Gospels, the indications for the most intimate messages conveyed to the human heart by forms of art, by paintings, are to be found precisely in the Gospel of St. Luke. The portrayals of the deep connection between Christ Jesus and John the Baptist have their source in this imperishable Gospel. [ 4 ] Anyone who allows it to work upon his soul will find that from beginning to end it gives expression to the principle of love, compassion and innocence—in a certain sense, childlike innocence. Where else do we find such a tender portrayal of the childlike nature as in what is said of the childhood of Jesus of Nazareth in the Gospel of St. Luke? The reason will become clear as we penetrate more deeply into the words of this wonderful text.

[ 5 ] It will be necessary now to say certain things that may seem paradoxical to those of you who have heard other lectures or courses of lectures given by me on the same subject. But if you will wait for the explanations to be given in the next lectures, you will realize that what I shall say is in harmony with what you have previously heard from me about Christ Jesus and Jesus of Nazareth. The whole complicated range of truth cannot be presented all at once, and today I shall have to indicate an aspect of the Christian truths that may seem not to tally exactly with what has been said on some previous occasion. Our procedure must be, first to show how the separate currents of truth have developed and then the mutual agreement and harmony that finally become apparent. The Gospel of St. John was deliberately our starting-point, and I was naturally unable to indicate more than part of the truth in the various courses of lectures. What was said still holds good, as we shall see, although our attention to-day must be turned to an unusual aspect of Christian truths.

[ 6 ] A wonderful passage in the Gospel of St. Luke describes how an Angel appeared to the shepherds in the fields and announced to them that the Saviour of the world was born. Then come the words: ‘And suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the heavenly host.’ Picture the scene to yourselves: as the shepherds look upwards the heavens open and the Beings of the spiritual world are revealed in sublime pictures.

[ 7 ] What was the proclamation to the shepherds? It was clothed in momentous words, words that resounded through the whole of evolution and have become the Christmas message. Rightly rendered, these words would be as follows: ‘The Divine Beings manifest themselves from on high, that peace may reign on the Earth below among men who are filled with good will!’ [ 8 ] The usual expression, ‘glory’ is entirely out of place here. The sentence is correct in the form I have now given, and the contrast should be clearly emphasized. What the shepherds saw was the manifestation of spiritual Beings from on high, and the revelation occurred when it did in order that peace might pour into human hearts that were filled with a good will. [ 9 ] As we shall see, many mysteries of Christianity are embodied in these words, provided only they are rightly understood. But certain preliminaries are necessary if light is to be thrown on this momentous proclamation. Above all we must endeavour to study the accounts available to clairvoyant faculties from the Akashic Chronicle. With opened eyes of spirit we must contemplate the epoch when Christ Jesus came to humanity, and ask ourselves: What was the historical background and the source of the spiritual impulse poured into Earth evolution at that time?

[ 10 ] Currents of spiritual life from many different sides converged and flowed into the evolution of humanity at that point. The very diverse world-conceptions that had arisen in various regions of the Earth in the course of the ages converged in Palestine as though into one central point and came to expression in the events there. We may therefore ask: What are the sources of these streams?

[ 11 ] It was indicated yesterday that in the Gospel of St. Luke we have the fruits of Imaginative Cognition, and that this knowledge is gained in the form of pictures. In the events just mentioned a picture is placed before us of the manifestation to the shepherds of spiritual Beings from on high: first, the picture is of a spiritual Being, an Angel, who is followed by a ‘heavenly host’. Here we must ask: What does a clairvoyant initiated into the mysteries of existence see in this picture—which he can always evoke again at will—when he gazes into the Akashic Chronicle? What was it that was revealed to the shepherds? What was this angelic host, and whence did it come?

[ 12 ] This picture portrays one of the great spiritual streams that flowed through the process of evolution, gradually rising higher and higher, until at the time of the events in Palestine its light could shine down upon the Earth only from spiritual heights. From the angelic host revealed to the shepherds, we are led back, in deciphering the Akashic Chronicle, to one of the greatest streams of spiritual life in the evolution of humanity, a stream which, several centuries before the coming of Christ, spread far and wide in the form of Buddhism. An investigator of the Akashic Chronicle who traces back into previous ages the origin of the revelation to the shepherds, is led, strange as it will seem to you, to the ‘Enlightenment’ of the great Buddha. The light that shone out in India, setting men's hearts and minds astir as the religion of love and compassion, as a great world-conception, and even to-day is spiritual nourishment for a very large section of humanity—that light appeared again in the revelation to the shepherds! For it too was to stream into the revelation in Palestine. The account given at the beginning of St. Luke's Gospel cannot be understood unless we consider (again from the vantage-point of spiritual-scientific research) the significance of Buddha and what his revelation actually brought about in the course of human evolution.

[ 13 ] When Buddha was born in the East, five to six centuries before our era, there appeared in him an Individuality who had lived many times on Earth and in the course of his previous incarnations had already reached the very lofty stage of human development designated by an Oriental expression as that of a ‘Bodhisattva’. Some of you have heard lectures on different aspects of the nature of the Bodhisattvas. In the lecture-course Spiritual Hierarchies and their Reflection in the physical World, given in Düsseldorf some months ago, I spoke of how the Bodhisattvas are related to the whole of cosmic evolution; in Munich, in the lecture-course The East in the Light of the West1These lectures-courses were given in April 1909, and August 1909, respectively. Both have been translated into English. they were referred to from a different point of view. To-day we shall consider the nature of the Bodhisattvas from still another side and you will gradually perceive the harmony between the single truths.

[ 14 ] He who became a Buddha had first to be a Bodhisattva; individual development to the rank of Buddhahood is preceded by the stage of ‘Bodhisattva’. We will now think of the nature of the Bodhisattvas in relation to the evolution of humanity considered from the viewpoint of spiritual science.

[ 15 ] The capacities and faculties possessed and developed by human beings in any particular epoch were not always in existence. To believe that the same faculties possessed by man to-day were also present in primeval times is due to incapacity and unwillingness to see beyond the present. Man's faculties, everything he is able to accomplish and know, vary from epoch to epoch. His faculties to-day are developed to the point where with his own power of reasoning he is justified in saying: ‘I recognize this or that truth by means of my intelligence and my reason; I can recognize what is moral or immoral, logical or illogical in a certain respect. But it would be a mistake to believe that these capacities for distinguishing the logical from the illogical or the moral from the immoral, were always to be found in human nature. They came into existence and developed gradually. What man can accomplish to-day by means of his own capacities, he had at one time to be taught—as a child is taught by its parents or teachers—by Beings who though incarnated among men were more highly developed by virtue of their spiritual faculties and could hold converse in the Mysteries with divine-spiritual Beings even loftier than themselves. [ 16 ] Individualities who, though themselves incarnated in physical bodies, could have intercourse with still higher, non-incarnated Individualities, existed at all times. For example, before men acquired the faculty of logical thinking by means of which they themselves are able to think logically to-day, they were obliged to learn from certain teachers. These teachers themselves were not able to think logically through faculties developed in the physical body itself, but only through their intercourse in the Mysteries with divine-spiritual Beings in higher realms. Such teachers proclaimed the principles of logic and morality from revelations they received from higher worlds in times before men themselves were able, out of their own earthly nature, to think logically or discover the principles of morality. The Bodhisattvas are one category of Beings who, though incarnated in physical bodies, have inter-course with divine-spiritual Beings in order to bring down and impart to men what they themselves learn from their divine Teachers. The Bodhisattva is a Being incarnated in a human body, whose faculties enable him to commune with divine-spiritual Beings.

[ 17 ] Before Gautama Buddha became a ‘Buddha’, he was a Bodhisattva, that is to say, an Individuality who, in the Mysteries, was able to commune with higher, divine-spiritual Beings. In remote, primeval ages of Earth evolution, a Being such as the Bodhisattva was entrusted in the higher world with a definite task, a definite mission, which he continues to discharge.

[ 18 ] When the Earth was still in early stages of development, even before the Atlantean and Lemurian epochs, the Bodhisattva who was incarnated and became Buddha six hundred years before our era, was assigned a task which he never abandoned. From epoch to epoch, through every age, his work was to impart to Earth evolution as much as the beings concerned enabled it to receive. For each Bodhisattva there comes a time when, with the mission entrusted to him in the primeval past, he reaches a definite point—the point when what he has been able to let flow into humanity ‘from above’ can become a faculty of man's own. A human faculty to-day was once a faculty of divine-spiritual Beings brought down to man from spiritual heights by the Bodhisattvas. Hence there comes a time when a spiritual emissary such as a Bodhisattva can say; ‘I have accomplished my mission. Humanity has now received that for which it has been prepared through many, many epochs.’ Having reached this point, the Bodhisattva can become ‘Buddha’. That is to say, the time has come when he, as a Being with the particular mission to which I have referred, need no longer incarnate in a human physical body; he has incarnated for the last time in such a body and need not incarnate again as a spiritual emissary in the above sense.

This point of time arrived for Gautama Buddha. The task assigned to him had led him again and again down to the Earth; but he appeared in his final incarnation as Bodhisattva when, after his Enlightenment, he became Buddha. He incarnated in a human body that had developed to the highest possible stage those faculties which hitherto had had to be bestowed from above, but were now gradually to become human faculties in the fullest sense. When a Bodhisattva has succeeded through his foregoing development in making a human body so perfect that it can itself evolve the faculties connected with his particular mission, he need not incarnate again. He then hovers in spiritual realms, sending his influence into humanity, furthering and guiding human affairs. Henceforth it is the task of men to develop the gifts formerly bestowed upon them from heavenly heights, saying to themselves: ‘We must now ourselves develop in a way that will further elaborate the faculties acquired in full measure for the first time in the incarnation when the Bodhisattva became Buddha.’

[ 19 ] When the Being who works through successive epochs as Bodhisattva appears as one into whose human nature every faculty that previously flowed down from heavenly heights has been integrated and can now be expressed through him as an individual—that Being is a ‘Buddha’. All this is revealed by Gautama Buddha. Had he, as Bodhisattva, withdrawn earlier from his mission, men could no longer have been blessed by the bestowal of these faculties from on high. But when evolution had progressed so far that these faculties could be present in a single human being on Earth, the seed was laid that would enable men in the future to develop them in their own natures. Thus the Individuality who, as long as he was a Bodhisattva, did not enter fully into the human form but towered upwards into heavenly heights—this Individuality now for the first time drew completely into human nature and was fully embodied in that one incarnation. But then he again withdrew. For with this incarnation as Buddha a certain quotum of revelations had been given to humanity, thereafter to be developed further in men themselves. Hence the Bodhisattva, having become Buddha, might withdraw from the Earth to spiritual heights, might abide there and guide the affairs of humanity from regions where only a certain power of clairvoyance is able to behold him.

[ 20 ] What, then, was the task of that supremely great Individuality usually called the ‘Buddha’?

If we want to understand the task and mission of this Buddha in the sense of true esoteriscism, we must realize the following. The cognitive faculty of mankind has developed gradually. Attention has repeatedly been drawn to the fact that in the Atlantean epoch a large proportion of humanity was clairvoyant and able to gaze into the spiritual worlds, and that certain remnants of this old clairvoyance were still present in post-Atlantean times. After the Atlantean epoch, in the periods of the civilizations of ancient India, Persia, Egypt and Chaldea—even as late as the Graeco-Latin age—there were numbers of human beings, many more than modern man would ever imagine, who possessed the heritage of this old clairvoyance; the astral plane was open to them and they could see into the hidden depths of existence. Perception of man's etheric body was quite usual in the Graeco-Latin age; numbers of people were able to see the human head surrounded by an etheric cloud that has gradually become entirely concealed within the head. [ 21 ] But humanity was to advance to a form of knowledge acquired through the outer senses and through the spiritual faculties connected with the senses. Man was gradually to emerge altogether from the spiritual world and to engage in pure sense-observation, in intellectual, logical thinking. By degrees he was to make his way to non-clairvoyant cognition, because he must pass through this stage in order to regain clairvoyant knowledge in the future. But such knowledge will then be united with the fruits of cognition based upon the senses and the intellect.

[ 22 ] At the present time we are living in an intermediate period. We look back to a past when man was clairvoyant, and to a future when this will again be the case. In our present age the majority of human beings are dependent upon what they perceive with their senses and grasp with their intellect. There are, of course, certain heights even in sensory perception and in knowledge yielded by the intellect and reasoning mind; everywhere there are ‘degrees of knowledge’. One person in a certain incarnation passes through his existence on Earth with little insight into what is moral, and little compassion for his fellow-men. We say of him that he is at a low stage of morality. Another passes through life with very slightly developed intellectual capacities; we call him a person of low intelligence. But these powers of intellectual cognition are capable of rising to a very lofty level. A man whom, in Fichte's sense, we call a ‘moral genius’ reaches the highest level of moral Imagination but there are many intermediate stages. Without possessing clairvoyant faculties we can reach this height only by ennobling powers that are at the disposal of ordinary humanity. These stages had to be attained by man in the course of Earth evolution. What man knows to-day to a certain extent through his own intelligence and also what he attains through his own moral strength, namely the consciousness that he must have compassion with the sufferings and sorrows of others—this consciousness could not have been acquired by a human being in primeval times through his own efforts. It can be said to-day that such insight is unfolded by a healthy moral sense, even without clairvoyance, and to an increasing extent men will come to realize not only that compassion is the very highest virtue but that without love humanity can make no progress.

Man's moral sense will grow steadily stronger. [ 23 ] But there were epochs in the past when he would never have understood by himself that compassion and love belong to a very high stage of development. It was therefore necessary for spiritual Beings such as the Bodhisattvas to incarnate in human forms. Revelations of the power of compassion and love came to such Beings from the higher worlds and they were able to teach men how to act accordingly. What men have come to recognize to-day through their own powers as the lofty virtues of compassion and love—this had to be taught, through epoch after epoch, from heavenly heights.

The Teacher of love and compassion in times when men themselves did not yet realize the nature of those virtues was the Bodhisattva who incarnated for the last time as Gautama Buddha. [ 24 ] Buddha was formerly the Bodhisattva, the Teacher of love and compassion. He was the Teacher throughout the epochs just referred to, when men still possessed a certain natural clairvoyance. As Bodhisattva he incarnated in bodies endowed with powers of clairvoyance. Then, when he became Buddha and looked back into these previous incarnations, he could describe the experiences of his inmost soul when it gazed into the depths of existence hidden behind sense-phenomena. He possessed this faculty in previous embodiments and was born with it into the family of Sakya from which his father, Suddhodana, descended. When Gautama was born he was still a Bodhisattva, that is to say he came at the stage of development reached in his previous incarnations. He who is usually called the ‘Buddha’ was born to his father Suddhodana and his mother Mayadevi as a Bodhisattva and possessed the faculty of clairvoyance in a high degree even as a child. He was always able to gaze into the depths of existence.

[ 25 ] Let us realize that in the course of human evolution this capacity to gaze into the depths of existence has assumed very definite forms. It was the mission of humanity in earthly evolution to allow the old, dim clairvoyance gradually to die away; vestiges that persisted did not, therefore, retain the best elements of that ancient faculty. The best elements were the first to be lost. What remained was often a lower form of vision of the astral world, a vision of those demonic forces which drag man's instincts and passions to a lower level. Through Initiation we can look into the spiritual world and perceive forces and beings that are connected with the finest thoughts and sentiments of men, but we also perceive the spiritual powers behind unbridled passions, sensuality, consuming egoism. The vestiges of clairvoyance in the majority of human beings—it was different, of course, in the Initiates—led to vision of these wild, demonic powers behind the lower human passions. Whoever is able to see into the spiritual world can of course perceive all this himself; true vision depends upon the development of human faculties. But the one vision cannot be attained without the other.

[ 26 ] As a Bodhisattva the Buddha had been obliged to incarnate in a body constituted as other human bodies were at that time. The body in which he incarnated provided him with the power to look deeply into the astral substrata of existence and even as a child he was able to perceive all the astral forces underlying the unbridled passions of men, their consuming lusts and sensuality. He had been protected from witnessing physical depravity in the outer world, with its accompanying sufferings and sorrows. Confined to his father's palace, shielded from every unpleasant experience, he was indulged and pampered in a way considered fitting for his rank. But this seclusion only enhanced his power of vision, and while he was carefully protected and everything indicative of pain and sickness hidden from him, his eyes of spirit were able to gaze at the astral pictures hovering around him of all the wild, degrading passions of men. Whoever can read the external biography of Buddha with genuine esoteric insight will surmise this. It must be emphasized that in exoteric accounts there is often a great deal that cannot be understood without knowledge of the esoteric foundations—and this applies very particularly to the life of Buddha.

[ 27 ] It must seem strange to Orientalists and others who study the life of Buddha to read that he was surrounded in the palace by ‘forty thousand dancing-girls and eighty-four thousand women’. That statement is to be found in books sold to-day for a few shillings and the writers are obviously not particularly astonished at the existence of such a harem! What is the explanation? It is not realized that this points to the intensity of the experiences that arose in Buddha through his astral visions. Guarded from childhood against all knowledge of sorrow and suffering in the world of physical humanity, he perceived everything as spiritual forces in the spiritual world. He saw all this because he was born into a body such as could be produced at that time; but from the outset he was proof against the delusive pictures around him, having in his previous incarnations risen to the height of a Bodhisattva. Because in this incarnation he was living as the Bodhisattva he felt impelled to go out into the world in order to see the things indicated by the pictures appearing in the astral world around him in the palace. Every picture kindled within him an urge to go out and see the world, to leave his prison. That was the impelling urge in his soul, for as Bodhisattva there was in him the lofty spiritual power connected with the mission of imparting to mankind the teaching of compassion and love, with all its implications. Hence it was necessary for him to become acquainted with humanity in the world in which man can assimilate this teaching through moral insight. Buddha was to acquire knowledge of the life of humanity in the physical world. From Bodhisattva he was to become Buddha—as a man among men. The only possibility of achieving this was to abandon all the faculties that had remained to him from his former incarnations and to turn outwards to the physical plane in order to live there among men as a model, an ideal, an example to humanity of the development of these qualities.

[ 28 ] Naturally, many intermediate stages are necessary before an advance from the stage of Bodhisattva to that of Buddha can be accomplished in this sense. Such an advance does not take place from one day to the next.

Buddha felt impelled to leave the palace. The story is that on one occasion he escaped from his royal prison and came across an aged man. Hitherto he had been surrounded only by the spectacle of exuberant youth, in order to induce him to believe that nothing else existed. Now, in the old man, he encountered the phenomenon of advanced age on the physical plane. Then he came across a sick man; then he saw a corpse—the manifestation of death on the physical plane. All this came before him. [ 29 ] The legend—here once again truer than any external account—goes on to relate something very indicative of Buddha's essential nature: that when he left the palace, the horse by which he was drawn was so saddened by his decision to forsake everything that had surrounded him since his birth that it died of grief and was transported as a spiritual being into the spiritual world.2See Buddhism in Translation, by Henry Clarke Warren (Harvard Oriental Series, Vol. III, second issue). This legend is given in great detail in the chapter entitled The Great Retirement, pp. 56–67. Difficult passages referring to "Kanthaka the king of horses" become intelligible in the light of what Dr. Steiner says here. According to the legend, Kanthaka came into existence “at the very time that the future Buddha was born” and died of a broken heart at the final parting from his master, thereupon to be reborn in heaven as the "God Kanthaka".—A profound truth is expressed here. It would lead too far for me to explain why a horse is taken as a symbol for a spiritual power of man. I will only remind you of Plato, who speaks of a horse led by a bridle when he is using a symbol for certain human capacities that are still bestowed from above and have not been developed by man from his own inmost self. When Buddha departed from the palace he relinquished these faculties, left them in the spiritual world whence they had always guided him. This is indicated in the picture of the horse which dies of grief and is transported into the spiritual world. [ 30 ] But it was only gradually that Buddha could attain the rank he was destined to reach in his final incarnation on the Earth. He had first to learn on the physical plane everything that as Bodhisattva he had known only through spiritual vision.

To begin with he encountered two teachers, the one an exponent of the ancient Indian world-conception known as the Sankhya philosophy, the other an exponent of the Yoga philosophy. Buddha steeped himself in what they expounded to him. No matter how exalted a being may be, he has to become acquainted with the external achievements of humanity and although a Bodhisattva may learn more quickly, he must learn none the less. If the Bodhisattva who lived six hundred years before our era were born to-day, he would still, like a child at school, first have to learn about happenings on Earth while he was still in spiritual heights. It was essential that Buddha too, should have knowledge of what had been accomplished since his previous incarnation.

[ 31 ] He learnt the principles of the Sankhya philosophy from the one teacher and of the Yoga philosophy from the other, thereby acquiring a certain insight into world-conceptions which solved the riddles of life for many in those days, and into their effect upon the souls of men. [ 32 ] In the Sankhya philosophy he was able to assimilate an intricate system of logical thought, but the more he familiarized himself with it, the less did it satisfy him, until finally it seemed to him to be utterly devoid of life. He realized that he must seek elsewhere than in the traditional Sankhya philosophy for the sources of what it was his task to achieve in this incarnation.

[ 33 ] The second system was the Yoga philosophy of Patanjali, which sought to establish connection with the Divine through certain processes in the life of the soul. Buddha devoted deep study to the Yoga philosophy as well; he assimilated it, made it part of his very being. But it too left him unsatisfied, for he perceived that it was something that had simply been handed down from ancient time. Human beings were meant, however, to acquire different faculties, to achieve moral development themselves. Having put the Yoga philosophy to the test in his own soul, Buddha realized that it could not satisfy the needs of his mission.

[ 34 ] He then came into the neighbourhood of five ascetics who had striven to approach the mysteries of existence by the path of severest self-discipline, mortification and privation. Having tested this path too, Buddha was again obliged to admit that it would not satisfy the needs of his mission at that time. For a certain period he underwent all the privations and mortifications practised by the monks. He starved as they did, in order to eliminate greed and thereby evoke deeper forces which come into action when the body is weakened and then, rising up from the depths of the bodily nature, can lead a man rapidly into the spiritual world. But the stage of development he had reached enabled Buddha to perceive the futility of this mortification, fasting and starvation. Because he was a Bodhisattva, his development in previous incarnations had enabled him to bring the physical body to the highest pitch of perfection possible in that age. Hence he could experience what any man must experience when he takes this particular path into the spiritual world. [ 35 ] Whoever pursues the Sankhya or Yoga philosophy to a certain point without having developed in himself what Buddha had previously acquired, whoever aspires to scale the pure heights of Divine Spirit through logical thinking without having first gained the requisite moral strength, will be subjected to temptation by the demon Mara. This ordeal was undergone by Buddha as a test. At this point the human being is beset by all the devils of pride, vanity and ambition, as was Buddha when Mara stood before him. But having previously reached the lofty stage of Bodhisattva, he recognized the demon and was proof against him. Buddha could say to himself: If men continue to develop along the old path, without the new impulse contained in the teaching of compassion and love, they are bound, not being Bodhisattvas, to fall prey to the demon Mara, who pours all the forces of pride and vanity into their souls.

This was what Buddha experienced when he had worked through the Sankhya and Yoga philosophies, following them to their final conclusions. [ 36 ] While he was with the monks, however, he had had an experience in which the demon assumed a different form, one in which he arrays before the human being an abundance of external, physical possessions—‘the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them’—in order to divert him from the spiritual world. Buddha found that this temptation comes precisely on the path of mortification, for the demon Mara approached him, saying: ‘Be not misled into abandoning everything that was yours as a king's son; return to the royal palace!’ Another man would have yielded to what was then presented to him, but Buddha's development was such that he could see through the tempter and his aim, could perceive what would befall humanity if men lived on as hitherto and chose the path of hunger and mortification as the only means of ascent into the spiritual world. Being himself proof against this temptation he could disclose to men the great danger that would threaten them if they chose to penetrate into the spiritual world simply by means of fasting and external measures of the kind, without the foundation of an active moral sense.

[ 37 ] Thus while still a Bodhisattva, Buddha had advanced to those two boundary-points in development which a man who is not a Bodhisattva had better avoid altogether. Translating this into words of ordinary parlance, we may say: ‘The highest knowledge is full of glory and of beauty. But see that you approach this knowledge with a clean heart, noble purpose and purified soul—otherwise the devil of pride, vanity and ambition will seize you!’ The second teaching is this: ‘Strive not to enter the spiritual world by any external path, through mortification or fasting, until you have purified your moral sense—otherwise the tempter will approach you from the other side!’—These are the two teachings whose light shines from Buddha into our own age. While still a Bodhisattva he revealed the essential purpose of his mission—which was to impart the moral sense to humanity in an age when men were not yet capable of unfolding it out of their own hearts. Thus when he realized the dangers of asceticism for mankind he left the five monks and went to a place where, by an intense deepening of those faculties of human nature which can be developed without the old clairvoyance, without any capacity inherited from earlier times, he achieved the highest perfection that it will ever be possible for mankind to achieve by means of these faculties.

[ 38 ] In the twenty-ninth year of his life, after having abandoned the path of asceticism, there dawned upon Buddha during his seven days of meditation under the ‘Bodhi-tree’ the great Truths that can flash up in a man when, in deep contemplation, he strives to discover what his own faculties can impart to him. There dawned upon Buddha the great teachings he then proclaimed as the Four Truths and the doctrine of compassion and love presented as the Eightfold Path. We shall be considering these teachings of Buddha later on. At the moment it will be sufficient to say that they are a kind of portrayal of the moral sense and of the purest doctrine of compassion and love. They arose when, under the ‘Bodhi-tree’, the Bodhisattva of India became Buddha. The teaching of compassion and love came into existence then for the first time in the history of mankind in the form of human faculties which man has since been able to develop from his own very self. That is the essential point. Therefore shortly before his death Buddha said to his disciples: ‘Grieve not that the Master is departing. I am leaving with you the Law of Wisdom and the Law of Discipline. For the future they will serve as substitutes for the Master.’ These words mean simply: Hitherto the Bodhisattva has taught you what is expressed in the Law; now, having fulfilled his incarnation on Earth, he may withdraw. For men will absorb into their own hearts the teaching of the Bodhisattva and from their own hearts will be able to develop this teaching as the religion of compassion and love. That was what came to pass in India when, after seven days of inner contemplation, the Bodhisattva became Buddha; and that was what he taught in diverse forms to the pupils who were around him. The actual forms in which he gave his teaching will still have to be considered.

[ 39 ] It was necessary for us to-day to look back to what happened six hundred years before our era because we shall neither understand the path of Christianity nor what is indicated about that path, above all by the writer of the Gospel of St. Luke, unless we follow evolution backwards from the events in Palestine to the Sermon at Benares. Since Buddha attained that rank there was no need for him to return to the Earth; since then he has been a spiritual Being, living in the spiritual world and participating in everything that has transpired on Earth. When the greatest of all happenings on the Earth was about to come to pass, there appeared to the shepherds in the fields a Being from spiritual heights who made the proclamation recorded in the Gospel of St. Luke. Then, together with the Angel, there suddenly appeared a ‘heavenly host’. The ‘heavenly host’ was the picture of the glorified Buddha, seen by the shepherds in vision; he was the Bodhisattva of ancient times, the Being in his spiritual form who for thousands and thousands of years had brought to men the message of compassion and love. Now, after his last incarnation on the Earth, he soared in spiritual heights and appeared to the shepherds together with the Angel who had announced to them the Event of Palestine.

[ 41 ] These are the findings of spiritual investigation. It was the Bodhisattva of old who now, in the glory of Buddhahood, appeared to the shepherds. From the Akashic Chronicle we learn that in Palestine, in the ‘City of David’, a child was born to parents descended from the priestly line of the House of David. This child—I say it with emphasis—born of parents of whom the father at any rate was descended from the priestly line of the House of David, was to be shone upon from the very day of birth by the power radiating from Buddha in the spiritual world. [ 42 ] We look with the shepherds into the manger where ‘Jesus of Nazareth’, as he is usually called, was born, and see the radiance above the little child; we know that in this picture is expressed the power of the Bodhisattva who became Buddha—the power that had formerly streamed to men and, working now upon humanity from the spiritual world, accomplished its greatest deed by shedding its lustre upon the child born at Bethlehem.

[ 42 ] When the Individuality whose power now rayed down from spiritual heights upon the child of parents belonging to David's line was born in India long ago—when the Buddha to be was born as Bodhisattva—the whole momentous significance of the events described to-day was revealed to a sage living at that time, and what he beheld in the spiritual world caused that sage—Asita was his name—to go to the royal palace to look for the little Bodhisattva-child. When he saw the babe he foretold his mighty mission as Buddha, predicting, to the father's dismay, that the child would not rule over his kingdom, but would become a Buddha. Then Asita began to weep, and when asked whether misfortune threatened the child, he answered: ‘No, I am weeping because I am so old that I shall not live to see the day when this Saviour, the Bodhisattva, will walk the Earth as Buddha!’ Asita did not live to see the Bodhisattva become Buddha and there was good reason for his grief at that time. But the same Asita who had seen the Bodhisattva as a babe in the palace of King Suddhodana, was born again as the personality who, in the Gospel of St. Luke, is referred to as Simeon in the scene of the presentation in the temple. We are told that Simeon was inspired by the Spirit to go into the temple where the child was brought to him (Luke II, 25–32). Simeon was the same being who, as Asita, had wept because in that incarnation he would not be able to see the Bodhisattva attaining Buddhahood. But it was granted to him to witness the further stage in the development of this Individuality, and having ‘the Holy Spirit upon him’ he was able to perceive, at the presentation in the temple, the radiance of the glorified Bodhisattva above the head of the Jesus-child of the House of David. Then he could say to himself: ‘Now you need no longer grieve, for what you did not live to see at that earlier time, you now behold: the glory of the Saviour shining above this babe. Lord, now let thy servant die in peace!’

Zweiter Vortrag

[ 1 ] Das Johannes-Evangelium war durch die verschiedenen Zeiten der Entwickelung des Christentums hindurch diejenige Urkunde, welche stets den tiefsten Eindruck auf alle diejenigen gemacht hat, welche eine besondere Vertiefung, eine innere Versenkung in die christlichen Weltenströmungen suchten. Daher war dieses Johannes-Evangelium die Urkunde aller christlichen Mystiker, die nachzuleben versuchten, was im Johannes-Evangelium in der Persönlichkeit und Wesenheit des Christus Jesus dargestellt wird.

[ 2 ] In einer etwas anderen Weise hat sich die christliche Menschheit durch die verschiedenen Jahrhunderte hindurch zu dem Lukas-Evangelium gestellt. Das entspricht, von einem anderen Gesichtspunkt aus gesehen, im Grunde genommen durchaus dem; was wir gestern schon über den Unterschied des Johannes-Evangeliums und des Lukas-Evangeliums andeuten konnten. War das Johannes-Evangelium in gewisser Beziehung eine Urkunde für Mystiker, so war das Lukas-Evangelium immer eine Art Erbauungsbuch für die Allgemeinheit, für solche, die sich, man könnte in einer gewissen Weise sagen, aus der Einfalt und der Einfachheit ihres Herzens heraus in die Sphäre des christlichen Empfindens erheben konnten. Als ein Erbauungsbuch geht das LukasEvangelium durch der Zeiten Wende. Für alle die, welche bedrückt waren mit Leiden und Schmerzen, war es immer ein Quell inneren Trostes. Denn in diesem Evangelium wird ja so viel verkündet von dem großen Tröster, von dem großen Wohltäter der Menschheit, von dem Heiland der Beladenen und der Bedrückten. Ein Buch, zu dem insbesondere diejenigen den Sinn hinwendeten, welche sich durchdringen wollten mit der christlichen Liebe, war das Lukas-Evangelium, denn mehr als in irgendeiner anderen christlichen Urkunde wird die Gewalt und das Eindringliche der Liebe in diesem Lukas-Evangelium entfaltet. Und die, welche in irgendeiner Weise sich bewußt waren — und im Grunde genommen kann das ja für alle Menschen gelten -, irgendwelche Fehler auf ihr Herz geladen zu haben, sie fanden von jeher Erbauung und Trost und Erhebung der beladenen Seele, wenn sie zum Lukas-Evangelium und seiner Verkündigung hinblickten und sich sagen konnten: Der Christus Jesus ist nicht bloß erschienen für die Gerechten, sondern auch für die Sünder; mit Sündern und Zöllnern hat er bei Tisch gesessen. - Gehört zum Johannes-Evangelium eine hohe Vorbereitung, um es auf sich wirken zu lassen, so darf man vom LukasEvangelium sagen, daß kein Gemüt so niedrig, so unreif ist, daß es nicht all die Wärme, die aus dem Lukas-Evangelium herausströmt, in vollem Maße auf sich wirken lassen könnte.

[ 3 ] So war dasLukas-Evangelium von jeher ein Buch für die Allgemeinheit, an dem sich auch das kindlichste Gemüt erbauen konnte. Alles, was an der menschlichen Seele von der frühesten Lebenszeit an bis in die höchsten Altersstufen hinauf kindlich bleibt, das hat sich immer hingezogen gefühlt zu dem Lukas-Evangelium. Und vor allem, was von den christlichen Wahrheiten bildhaft dargestellt worden ist, was die Kunst von den christlichen Wahrheiten zu ihrem Vorwurf genommen hat - es ist zwar vieles auch aus den anderen Evangelien erflossen -, was aber aus der Kunst, aus der Malerei von jeher am eindringlichsten zu den menschlichen Herzen gesprochen hat, das finden wir im LukasEvangelium angegeben und von da aus in die Kunst fließend. Alle die tiefen Beziehungen zwischen dem Christus Jesus und Johannes dem Täufer, die so vielfach bildnerische Darstellung gefunden haben, haben ihren Quell in diesem unvergänglichen Buche, in dem Lukas-Evangelium.

[ 4 ] Wer von diesem Gesichtspunkte aus diese Urkunde auf sich wirken läßt, der wird finden, daß sie von Anfang bis zu Ende gleichsam hineingetaucht ist in das Prinzip der Liebe, des Mitleides, der Einfalt, ja bis zu einem gewissen Grade.der Kindlichkeit. Und wo kommt diese Kindlichkeit denn noch in einer so warmen Weise zum Ausdruck als gerade in der Kindheitsgeschichte des Jesus von Nazareth, die uns der Schreiber des Lukas-Evangeliums gibt! Warum das so war, das wird uns auch klar werden können, wenn wir allmählich immer tiefer in dieses merkwürdige Buch eindringen.

[ 5 ] Es wird heute notwendig sein, daß mancherlei gesagt wird, was vielleicht denen, die andere Vorträge von mir über diesen Gegenstand oder andere Zyklen gehört haben, zunächst als ein Widerspruch erscheinen wird. Aber warten Sie nur auf die Ausführungen der nächsten Tage, dann wird Ihnen das schon im Einklange erscheinen mit dem, was Sie bisher über den Christus Jesus und über Jesus von Nazareth von mir gehört haben. Man kann nicht auf einmal den ganzen komplizierten Umfang der Wahrheit geben, und es wird heute notwendig sein, auf eine Seite der christlichen Wahrheiten hinzuweisen, welche im scheinbaren Widerspruche stehen wird mit demjenigen Teile der Wahrheit, den ich bisher da oder dort vor Ihnen aussprechen konnte. — Es soll der Weg so gewählt werden, daß die einzelnen Wahrheitsströme entwickelt werden und daß dann gezeigt wird, wie sie vollständig in Harmonie und im Einklange sind. Natürlich konnte ich in den verschiedenen Zyklen, namentlich, da bisher der Ausgangspunkt - und zwar absichtlich - vom Johannes-Evangelium aus genommen wurde, nur auf einen Teil der Wahrheit hinweisen. Dieser Teil bleibt darum doch Wahrheit; das werden wir in den nächsten Tagen noch sehen. Heute obliegt es uns, einen den meisten von Ihnen ungewohnten Teil der christlichen Wahrheiten zu betrachten.

[ 6 ] Im Lukas-Evangelium besagt uns eine wunderbare Stelle, daß den Hirten auf dem Felde verkündet wird durch einen Engel, der ihnen sichtbar wird, daß ihnen der «Heiland der Welt» geboren worden ist. Und dann wird erwähnt, daß zu diesem Engel, nachdem er die Verkündigung gesagt hat, hinzutreten «himmlische Heerscharen» (Lukas 2,13). Stellen Sie sich also das Bild vor, daß diese Hirten hinaufblicken und ihnen so etwas erscheint wie «der Himmel offen» und die Wesenheiten der geistigen Welt in mächtigen Bildern sich vor ihnen ausbreitend. Was wird den Hirten verkündet?

[ 7 ] Was ihnen verkündet wird, das wird in monumentale Worte gekleidet, in Worte, die durch die ganze Menschheitsentwickelung gesprochen wurden und die zum Weihnachtsspruche der christlichen Entwickelung geworden sind. Die Worte tönen den Hirten entgegen, die, richtig übersetzt, etwa so lauten würden:

«Es offenbaren sich die göttlichen Wesenheiten aus den Höhen, aufdaß Friede herrsche unten auf der Erde bei den Menschen, die durch drungen sind von einem guten Willen.» (Lukas 2, 14.)

[ 8 ] «Ehre», wie es gewöhnlich wiedergegeben wird, ist eine ganz falsche Übersetzung. Wie ich es jetzt gesagt habe, sollte es heißen. Und der Gegensatz sollte scharf betont werden, daß dasjenige, was die Hirten sehen, dieOffenbarung der geistigen Wesenheiten aus den Höhen ist und daß sie in diesem Augenblicke geschieht, damit einziehe Friede in die menschlichen Herzen, die durchdrungen sind von einem guten Willen.

[ 9 ] Im Grunde genommen liegt, wie wir sehen werden, vieles von den Geheimnissen des Christentums in diesen Worten, wenn man sie richtig versteht. Aber es wird einiges dazu gehören, um Licht in diese paradigmatischen Worte zu bringen. Was vor allem hinzugehört, ist, daß wir versuchen, jene Berichte zu betrachten, die des Menschen hellsichtiger Sinn aus der Akasha-Chronik empfängt. Darauf kommt es an, zunächst hinzuschauen mit dem geöffneten Auge des Geistes auf dasjenige Zeitalter, in dem der Christus Jesus für die Menschheit auftritt, und uns nun zu fragen: Wie stellt sich das dar, was damals geistig in die Erdenentwickelung eingetreten ist, wenn wir es verfolgen in seinem ganzen geschichtlichen Werden, wenn wir fragen: Woher ist es gekommen?

[ 10 ] Damals floß in die Menschheitsentwickelung etwas ein, was wie ein Zusammenströmen geistiger Ströme von den verschiedensten Richtungen her sich darstellte. In den mannigfaltigsten Gegenden der Erde sind die verschiedensten Weltanschauungen im Laufe der Zeiten aufgetaucht. Alles, was aufgetaucht ist in den verschiedenen Gegenden der Erde, strömte damals in Palästina zusammen und drückte sich aus in irgendeiner Weise in diesen Ereignissen von Palästina, so daß wir uns fragen können: Wohin gehen die Strömungen, die wir wie in einen Mittelpunkt zusammenfließen sehen in den palästinensischen Ereignissen?

[ 11 ] Wir haben gestern schon darauf hingedeutet, daß durch das LukasEvangelium dasjenige gegeben wird, was wir imaginative Erkenntnis nennen, und daß diese imaginative Erkenntnis in Bildern gewonnen wird. Ein Bild wird vor uns hingestellt in dem soeben Angegebenen, ein Bild, wie über den Hirten erscheint die Offenbarung der geistigen Wesenheiten aus der Höhe, das Bild eines geistigen Wesens, eines Engels, und dann einer Schar von Engeln. Da müssen wir die Frage aufwerfen: Wie sieht der hellsichtige und zugleich in die Geheimnisse des Daseins eingeweihte Mensch dieses Bild an, das er sich jederzeit wieder herstellen kann, wenn er in die Akasha-Chronik zurückschaut? Was ist das, was sich da den Hirten darstellte? Was ist enthalten in dieser Engelschar, und woher kommt sie?

[ 12 ] Eine der großen geistigen Strömungen, die durch die Menschheitsentwickelung geflossen sind, jeneStrömung, die allmählich immer höher und höher gestiegen ist, so daß sie zur Zeit der palästinensischen Ereignisse nur mehr aus den geistigen Höhen herunterscheinen konnte auf die Erde, die ist es, die sich in diesem Bilde zeigt. Wenn wir ausgehen — und zwar jetzt durch die Entzifferung der Akasha-Chronik — von dieser Engelschar, welche den Hirten erschien, so werden wir zurückgeführt zu einer der größten geistigen Strömungen der Menschheitsentwickelung, die sich, man könnte sagen, zuletzt vor der Erscheinung des Christus Jesus auf der Erde, mehrere Jahrhunderte vorher, als Buddhismus ausgebreitet hat. Zu dem, was die «Erleuchtung» des großen Buddha war, so sonderbar es Ihnen klingen wird, wird derjenige geführt, welcher von jener Offenbarung, die den Hirten wird, durch die Akasha-Chronik den Weg zurückverfolgt in die vorhergehenden Zeiten der Menschheit. Was in Indien den Menschen aufgeleuchtet hat, was dort als die Religion des Mitleides und der Liebe, als eine große Weltanschauung einstmals Geister und Herzen bewegt hat und was noch heute für einen großen Teil der Menschheit geistige Nahrung ist, das erschien wieder in der Offenbarung der Hirten. Denn auch das sollte einströmen in die palästinensische Offenbarung. Was uns im Lukas-Evangelium zuerst erzählt wird, das können wir nur verstehen, wenn wir — wiederum vom Gesichtspunkte der geisteswissenschaftlichen Forschung aus - einen Blick auf das werfen, was der Buddha der Menschheit war und was die Buddha-Offenbarung eigentlich im Verlaufe der Menschheitsentwickelung bewirkte. Da müssen wir uns folgendes klarmachen.

[ 13 ] Als fünf bis sechs Jahrhunderte vor unserer Zeitrechnung der Buddha im Fernen Osten erstand, da erschien in ihm eine Individualität, die oft und oft wiederverkörpert erschienen war und die durch ihre vielen Verkörperungen hindurch bis zu einer hohen menschlichen Entwickelungsstufe hinaufgeschritten ist. Der Buddha konnte derjenige, der er war, nur deshalb werden, weil er in seinen früheren Inkarnationen im höchsten Sinne des Wortes schon eine hohe, hohe Entwickelungsstufe erlangt hatte. Jene Entwickelungsstufe einer Wesenheit im Weltenall, die der Buddha erlangt hatte, bezeichnet man mit einem orientalischen Ausdruck als einen «Bodhisattva». Es ist — wenigstens vor einem Teile von Ihnen —- das Wesen der Bodhisattvas von verschiedenen Seiten her schon erörtert worden. In dem Zyklus «Geistige Hierarchien und ihre Widerspiegelung in der physischen Welt», Düsseldorf, April 1909, zeigte ich, wie sich die Bodhisattvas zu der ganzen kosmischen Entwickelung verhalten; in München in dem Zyklus «Der Orient im Lichte des Okzidents», August 1909, konnte ich von einem anderen Gesichtspunkte aus darauf hinweisen. Heute soll wiederum von einer anderen Seite her das Wesen der Bodhisattvas betrachtet werden. Sie werden schon nach und nach den Einklang zwischen diesen einzelnen Wahrheiten finden.

[ 14 ] Derjenige, der ein Buddha wurde, mußte zuerst ein Bodhisattva sein. Bodhisattva ist also die vorhergehende Stufe der individuellen Entwickelung zum Buddha hin. Nun wollen wir einmal vom Standpunkte der Menschheitsentwickelung aus uns das Wesen der Bodhisattvas vor Augen führen. Wir verstehen es nur, wenn wir, vom Gesichtspunkte der Geisteswissenschaft aus sie durchdringend, die'Menschheitsentwickelung betrachten.

[ 15 ] Was die Menschen zu irgendeiner Zeit können, was sie an Fähigkeiten entwickeln, das war nicht immer da. Es ist nur eine kurzsichtige Betrachtungsweise, die nicht über ihre eigene Epoche hinausschauen kann, welche da glaubt, daß dieselben Fähigkeiten, welche die Menschen heute haben, schon in Urzeiten vorhanden waren. Die menschlichen Fähigkeiten, das, was die Menschen verrichten, wissen, tun können, das ändert sich von Epoche zu Epoche. Heute sind die menschlichen Fähigkeiten so entwickelt, daß der Mensch gewissermaßen durch seine eigene Vernunft dieses oder jenes erkennen kann, daß er mit Recht sagt: Diese oder jene Wahrheit sehe ich ein durch meinen Verstand, durch meine Vernunft; ich kann erkennen, was sittlich und unsittlich ist, was in einer gewissen Beziehung logisch oder unlogisch ist. Aber man würde fehlgehen, wenn man glauben würde, daß diese Fähigkeiten, das Logische vom Unlogischen oder das Sittliche vom Unsittlichen zu unterscheiden, immer an der menschlichen Natur gehaftet haben. Sie sind erst gekommen, haben sich nach und nach entwickelt. Was der Mensch heute durch seine eigenen Fähigkeiten vermag, das mußte er wie ein Kind von Vater und Mutter oder vom Lehrer - sich einmal sagen lassen von Wesenheiten, welche zwar auch verkörpert unter den Menschen waren, welche aber durch ihre geistigen Fähigkeiten höher entwickelt waren und in den Mysterien Umgang pflegen konnten mit geistigen Wesenheiten, die über ihnen sind, mit göttlich-geistigen Wesenheiten.

[ 16 ] Solche Individualitäten, die zwar im physischen Leibe verkörpert waren, die aber Umgang pflegen konnten mit höheren Individualitäten, die nicht physisch verkörpert sind, gab es immer. Bevor die Menschen zum Beispiel die Gabe des logischen Denkens erlangt haben, wodurch sie selbst heute logisch denken können, mußten sie hinhorchen auf gewisse Lehrer. Diese Lehrer konnten auch nicht durch gewisse Fähigkeiten, die man im physischen Leibe entwickelt, logisch denken, sondern nur dadurch, daß sie in den Mysterien Umgang hatten mit göttlichgeistigen Wesenheiten, die in höheren Regionen sind. Solche Lehrer, die das Logische, das Sittliche lehrten aus ihren Offenbarungen, die sie aus höheren Welten heraus empfingen, gab es, bevor die Menschen selber durch ihre Natur auf der Erde imstande waren, logisch zu denken oder das Sittliche zu finden. Eine gewisse Kategorie solcher Wesen, die zwar im physischen Leibe verkörpert sind, aber Umgang haben mit göttlichgeistigen Wesenheiten, damit sie das heruntertragen, was sie von jenen lernen, und es dem Menschen mitteilen können, das sind die Bodhisattvas, Sie sind also in einem Menschenleib verkörperte Wesenheiten, die heranreichen mit ihren Fähigkeiten bis zu einem Verkehr mit den göttlich-geistigen Wesenheiten.

[ 17 ] Und bevor der Buddha ein «Buddha» wurde, war er eben ein Bodhisattva, das heißt eine Individualität, die in den Mysterien Umgang haben konnte mit den höheren, göttlich-geistigen Wesenheiten. Eine solche Wesenheit, wie es der Bodhisattva ist, hat in fernen Urzeiten der Erdenentwickelung einmal eine bestimmte Mission, eine bestimmte Aufgabe in der höheren Welt erhalten, und sie bleibt dann bei dieser Mission.

[ 18 ] Wenn wir das auf den Buddha anwenden, so müssen wir sagen: Er hatte als Bodhisattva eine bestimmte Aufgabe. Als die Erde noch in früheren Entwickelungszuständen war, noch vor der atlantischen und lemurischen Zeit, da hatte dasjenige Wesen, das im sechsten Jahrhundert vor unserer Zeitrechnung als Buddha verkörpert war, eine bestimmte Aufgabe erhalten. Bei dieser Aufgabe ist es geblieben. Durch alle Zeiten hindurch hatte es von Epoche zu Epoche zu wirken und immer so viel der Erdenentwickelung mitzuteilen, als dieselbe vermöge ihrer Wesenheit aufnehmen konnte. Für eine jede solche Wesenheit — also für jeden Bodhisattva - gibt es daher eine Zeit, wo er sozusagen mit seiner in Urzeiten empfangenen Mission an einen bestimmten Punkt kommt, wo das, was er von oben in die Menschheit hat einfließen lassen können, zu der eigenen menschlichen Fähigkeit hat werden können. Denn was heute menschliche Fähigkeit ist, das war früher Fähigkeit göttlichgeistiger Wesenheiten, und die Bodhisattvas trugen sie aus den geistigen Höhen herunter zu den Menschen. Ein solcher geistiger Missionar kommt also an einen Punkt, wo er sich sagen kann: Ich habe meine Mission vollbracht; der Menschheit ist jetzt gegeben, wozu sie vorbereitet worden ist durch viele, viele Zeiten hindurch. An einem solchen Punkt angelangt, kann der Bodhisattva zum Buddha werden. Das heißt, es kommt für ihn ein Zeitpunkt, da er als die Wesenheit mit der Mission, die wir eben charakterisiert haben, sich nicht mehr in einem x physischen Menschenleibe zu verkörpern braucht, wo er sich zum letzten Male in einem solchen physischen Menschenleib noch verkörpert und dann nicht mehr als ein solcher Missionar sich zu verkörpern braucht. Ein solcher Zeitpunkt war für den Buddha gekommen. Was er früher zu tun hatte, führte ihn immer wieder und wieder auf die Erde herunter. Aber in der Zeit, als er zum Buddha erleuchtet worden war, trat für ihn als Bodhisattva eine letzte Verkörperung ein. Er gelangte in einen Menschenleib hinein, der die Fähigkeiten in einem höchsten Maße ausgebildet hatte, die früher von oben gelehrt werden mußten und die nun nach und nach eigene menschliche Fähigkeiten werden sollten.

[ 19 ] Wenn ein solcher Bodhisattva es durch seine frühere Entwickelung dahin gebracht hat, einen Menschenleib so vollkommen zu machen, daß er Fähigkeiten entwickeln kann für die Eigenschaften, die mit der Mission des Bodhisattva zusammenhängen, dann braucht er sich nicht mehr zu verkörpern. Dann schwebt er, die Angelegenheiten der Menschen fördernd und leitend, in geistigen Regionen und wirkt von dort in die Menschheit hinein. Und die Menschen haben dann die Aufgabe, das, was ihnen früher von Himmelshöhen heruntergeströmt ist, weiter auszubilden und sich zu sagen: Wir müssen uns jetzt so entwickeln, daß wir jene Fähigkeiten ausbilden, welche wir zum ersten Male in vollstem Maß erreicht sehen in derjenigen Inkarnation, die durch die Fähigkeiten des Bodhisattva erreicht worden ist und die im Buddha aufgetreten ist. Und wie die Wesenheit, die durch Epochen hindurch als Bodhisattva gewirkt hat, sich ausnimmt als Mensch, auch als voller einzelner Mensch, wo alles in die menschliche Natur hineingenommen ist, was früher aus Himmelshöhen hineinströmte, das noch an einem einzelnen Menschen zu zeigen, was der Bodhisattva vermag, das heißt «Buddha» sein. Das hat der Buddha noch gezeigt. Hätte der Bodhisattva sich früher von seiner Mission zurückgezogen, dann hätten die Menschen nicht mehr der Wohltat teilhaftig werden können, daß ihnen diese Fähigkeiten zufließen aus den Höhen. Nachdem aber die Entwickelung so weit fortgeschritten war, daß diese Fähigkeiten in einem einzelnen menschlichen Exemplar auf der Erde vorhanden sein konnten, da war auch die Keimanlage dazu geschaffen, daß die Menschen sie in der Zukunft bei sich selbst ausbilden konnten. So zieht sich die Individualität, die sich vorher als Bodhisattva entwickelt hat und die, solange sie Bodhisattva war, nicht ganz in die menschliche Gestalt hineingegangen ist, sondern hineinragte in die Himmelshöhen, so zieht sich die Individualität des Bodhisattva einmal völlig in einen Menschen hinein, so daß sie voll erfaßt wird von dieser Inkarnation. Dann aber zieht sie sich auch wieder zurück. Denn jetzt ist — mit dieser Inkarnation als Buddha - der Menschheit ein gewisses Quantum von Offenbarungen gegeben, die sich innerhalb der Menschheit selber nun weiter ausbilden sollen. Daher darf sich das Bodhisattva-Wesen, nachdem es Buddha geworden ist, von der Erde zurückziehen in gewisse geistige Höhen, darf dort verweilen und die Angelegenheiten der Menschheit von dort aus weiterlenken, wo es nur noch einem gewissen hellseherischen Vermögen möglich ist, es zu sehen.

[ 20 ] Welche Aufgabe hatte denn jene wunderbare, jene gewaltige, große Individualität, die man im gewöhnlichen Leben den Buddha nennt? Wenn wir die Aufgabe, die Mission dieses Buddha wirklich einsehen wollen im Sinne der wahren Esoterik, so müssen wir uns folgendes sagen. Das ganze Erkenntnisvermögen der Menschheit hat sich nach und nach entwickelt. Wir haben immer wieder darauf aufmerksam gemacht, wie in der atlantischen Zeit ein großer Teil der Menschheit hellseherisch hineinblicken konnte in die geistigen Welten, und wir haben gesagt, daß gewisse Reste des alten Hellsehens noch in der nachatlantischen Zeit vorhanden waren. Würden wir von der atlantischen Zeit hinabsteigen in die altindische, in die urpersische, in die ägyptischchaldäische Zeit, ja bis in die griechisch-lateinische Zeit noch hinein, so würden wir zahlreiche Menschen finden, viel mehr als die heutige Menschheit sich träumen läßt, die Erbstücke dieses alten Hellsehens hatten, denen der astralische Plan offen war, die hineinsahen in die verborgenen Tiefen des Daseins. Den ätherischen Leib des Menschen zu sehen, war selbst noch in der griechisch-lateinischen Zeit für einen großen Teil der Menschen etwas ganz Gewöhnliches, namentlich aber den Kopfteil des Menschen umgeben von jener ätherischen Wolke, die sich freilich nach und nach ganz in dem Innern des Kopfteiles verborgen hat. |

[ 21 ] Aber die Menschheit mußte zu jener Erkenntnis aufsteigen, welche nach und nach die vollkommene Sinneserkenntnis wurde, zu jener Erkenntnis, die durch die äußeren Sinne und durch diejenigen geistigen Fähigkeiten erworben wird, welche auf die äußeren Sinne gerichtet sind. Der Mensch mußte allmählich sozusagen völlig heraussteigen aus der geistigen Welt und eintreten in die bloße Sinnesbetrachtung, in das vernünftige, logische Denken. Allmählich mußte sich der Mensch zu dieser nichthellseherischen Erkenntnis aufschwingen, weil er durch sie hindurchgehen mußte, um in der Zukunft wiederum die hellsichtige Erkenntnis zu erlangen, aber dann vereinigt mit dem, was er sich als Sinnes- und Verstandeserkenntnis erworben hat.

[ 22 ] In dieser Zeit leben wir in der Gegenwart. Wir blicken auf eine Vergangenheit hin, in welcher die Menschheit hellsichtig war, und wir blicken in eine Zukunft hinein, wo die Menschen wiederum hellsichtig sein werden. In unserer Zwischenzeit aber sind die Menschen in der Mehrzahl auf das angewiesen, was sie mit den Sinnen wahrnehmen und mit dem Verstande und der Vernunft begreifen. Zwar gibt es auch eine gewisse Höhe der Sinnesanschauung und der Verstandes- und Vernunfterkenntnis. Überall aber gibt esGrade in der Erkenntnis. Der eine wandelt in der betreffenden Inkarnation seines Erdendaseins so, daß er nur weniges einsieht von dem, was Moral ist, daß er nur wenig Mitleid entfaltet zu den Mitmenschen: wir nennen ihn einen Menschen auf einer niederen moralischen Stufe. Oder ein anderer wandelt so durch das Leben, daß seine intellektuellen Kräfte wenig ausgebildet sind: wir nennen ihn einen Menschen auf einer niederen intellektuellen Stufe. Wir wissen aber, daß diese intellektuellen Erkenntniskräfte hinaufgehen können bis zu einer hohen Stufe. Von dem Menschen, der wenig moralisch und intellektuell ist, bis zu dem Menschen, den wir im Sinne Fichtes ein «moralisches Genie» nennen und der sich bis zur höchsten moralischen Phantasie entwickelt, haben wir alle möglichen Zwischenstufen; und wir wissen, daß wir uns zu dieser Höhe der menschlichen Vollkommenheit für die Gegenwart hinaufentwickeln können, ohne hellseherische Kräfte zu haben, nur durch die Veredelung derjenigen Kräfte, welche dem gewöhnlichen Menschen zur Verfügung stehen. Diese Stufen mußten von der Menschheit erst erreicht werden im Laufe der Erdenentwickelung. Was heute der Mensch schon bis zu einem gewissen Grade durch die eigene Intelligenz erkennt, und auch, was er durch die eigene moralische Kraft erreicht, nämlich daß man mit den Leiden und Schmerzen des anderen Menschen Mitleid haben soll, das hätte der Mensch der Urzeit nicht durch sich selbst erringen können. Man kann heute sagen, daß sich der gesunde moralische Sinn des Menschen schon zu dieser Einsicht auch ohne Hellsichtigkeit erhebt, und die Menschen werden sich immer mehr zu der Einsicht erheben können, daß Mitleid die höchste Tugend ist und daß die Menschheit ohne Liebe nicht weiter vorwärtskommen könnte. Man kann sagen: Dies kann heute der menschliche moralische Sinn erkennen, und er wird sich noch immer mehr und mehr steigern. Aber man muß zurückblicken in Zeiten, in welchen der moralische Sinn so war, daß er das nicht hat selbst einsehen können.

[ 23 ] Es gab Zeiten, in welchen die Menschen nimmermehr hätten selbst einsehen können, daß Mitleid und Liebe zu der höchsten Entwickelung der menschlichen Seele gehören könnten. Daher mußten sich verkörpern in Menschengestalten solche geistige Wesenheiten, zu denen auch zum Beispiel die Bodhisattvas gehören, die aus höheren Welten herunter die Offenbarungen empfingen von der wirkenden Kraft des Mitleides, von der wirkenden Kraft der Liebe, und welche den Menschen zu sagen vermochten, wie sie sich zu verhalten hatten in Mitleid und Liebe, weil die Menschen noch nicht reif waren, um aus ihren eigenen Kräften heraus das einzusehen. Was die Menschen heute aus eigener Kraft heraus als die hohe Tugend des Mitleides und der Liebe erkennen, wozu der moralische Sinn sich erhebt, das mußte durch Epochen und Epochen aus Himmelshöhen gelehrt werden. Und der Lehrer der Liebe und des Mitleides in jenen Zeiten, als die Menschen selber noch nicht die Einsicht in die Natur des Mitleides und der Liebe hatten, war derjenige Bodhisattva, der sich dann in dem Gautama Buddha zum letzten Male verkörperte. Ä

[ 24 ] So war der Buddha vorher der Bodhisattva, welcher der Lehrer von Liebe und Mitleid und von alledem war, was damit zusammenhängt. Er war es durch jene charakterisierten Epochen hindurch, in denen die Menschen von Natur aus noch in einer gewissen Weise heilsichtig waren. Er verkörperte sich als Bodhisattva in solchen hellsichtigen Menschenleibern. Und als er sich dann als der Buddha verkörperte und in diese früheren Verkörperungen hellsichtig hineinblickte - von Inkarnation zu Inkarnation —, da konnte er sagen, wie sich das Innere der Seele fühlte, wenn sie hineinschaute in die Tiefen des Daseins, die hinter dem Sinnenschein verborgen sind. Diese Fähigkeit hatte er in den früheren Verkörperungen, und mit dieser Fähigkeit wurde er geboren innerhalb des Geschlechtes der Sakya, aus dem der Vater des Gautama, Suddhodana, stammte. Damals, als Gautama Buddha geboren wurde, war er noch der Bodhisattva. Das heißt, er erschien als das Wesen, zu dem er sich in seinen vorhergehenden Inkarnationen hinaufentwickelt hatte. Derjenige also, den man gewöhnlich den Buddha nennt, wurde geboren durch seinen Vater Suddhodana und seine Mutter Mayadevi als der Bodhisattva. Aber da er eben als Bodhisattva geboren wurde, hatte er als Kind in hohem Grade die Fähigkeit der Hellsichtigkeit. Hineinzuschauen vermochte er in die Tiefen des Daseins.

[ 25 ] Seien wir uns klar, daß das Hineinschauen in die Tiefen des Daseins im Verlaufe der Menschheitsentwickelung allmählich ganz besondere Formen angenommen hat. Die Mission der Menschheitsentwickelung auf der Erde war es, allmählich die Gabe des alten dumpfen Hellsehens zurücktreten zu lassen; und was als Erbstück des alten Hellsehens zurückgeblieben war, das waren daher nicht die besten Teile dieses alten Hellsehens. Diese besten Teile sind zuerst verlorengegangen. Was zurückgeblieben war, das war vielfach ein niederes Hineinschauen in die astraleWelt, das war gerade ein Erblicken jener dämonischen Gewalten, die den Menschen in seinen Trieben und Leidenschaften hinunterziehen in eine niedere Sphäre. Wir können ja durch die Einweihung hineinblicken in die geistige Welt und die Kräfte und Wesenheiten sehen, die mit den schönsten Gedanken und Empfindungen der Menschheit zusammenhängen; aber wir sehen auch diejenigen geistigen Mächte, welche hinter der wüsten Leidenschaft, hinter der wilden Sinnlichkeit und dem verzehrenden Egoismus stehen. Was im weiten Umkreise für die Menschen erhalten geblieben war - nicht bei den Eingeweihten, sondern bei der großen Mehrzahl der Menschen -, das war gerade das Schauen dieser wilden dämonischen Gewalten, die hinter den niederen menschlichen Leidenschaften stehen. Wer überhaupt hineinsieht in die geistige Welt, der kann das alles natürlich selbst auch schauen. Das hängt von der Entwickelung der menschlichen Fähigkeiten ab. Der Mensch kann nicht das eine ohne das andere erreichen.

[ 26 ] Der Buddha mußte sich als Bodhisattva natürlich in einem menschlichen Leibe verkörpern, der so organisiert war, wie menschliche Leiber damals organisiert waren, in einem Leibe, der ihm die Fähigkeit gab, tief hineinzuschauen in die astralen Untergründe des Daseins. Als Kind schon war er fähig, alles das an astralen Gewalten zu schauen, was der wilden, stürmischen Leidenschaft, was der verzehrenden, gierigen Sinnlichkeit zugrunde liegt. Man hatte ihn davor bewahrt, die Außenwelt in ihrer physischen Verderbtheit und in ihren Qualen und Schmerzen zu schauen. Im Palaste abgeschlossen, vor allem behütet, wurde er verzogen und verzärtelt, weil man aus den herrschenden Vorurteilen heraus ihm das seinem Stande gemäß schuldig zu sein glaubte. Aber durch dieses Abgeschlossensein kam um so mehr die innere Schaukraft bei ihm zum Vorschein. Und während er sorgfältig behütet wurde und alles von ihm ferngehalten wurde, was an Krankheit und Schmerzen erinnert, hatte er in seiner Abgeschlossenheit sein geistiges Auge offen für die astralischen Bilder. Ihn umgaukelten da die astralischen Bilder alles dessen, was den Menschen an wilden Leidenschaften niederziehen kann.

[ 27 ] Wer mit dem geistigen Auge, wer mit wirklicher Esoterik die, wenn auch exoterisch, aufbewahrt gebliebene Biographie des Buddha zu lesen vermag, der wird das selbst ahnen, wenn ihm mitgeteilt wird, was jetzt gesagt worden ist. Denn das muß betont werden: Man kann vieles aus den exoterischen Berichten nicht verstehen, wenn man nicht in die esoterischen Untergründe eindringen kann. Und was man am wenigsten aus den exoterischen Berichten verstehen kann, das ist das BuddhaLeben. Es muß einem eigentlich sonderbar erscheinen, wenn die Orientalisten und andere, die sich mit dem Buddha-Leben befassen, darin beschrieben finden, daß der Buddha in seinem Palaste umgeben war mit «vierzigtausend Tänzerinnen und vierundachtzigtausend Frauen». Das verzeichnen heute schon die Bücher, die man für ein paar Pfennige kaufen kann; aber man merkt, daß die Schreiber nicht sonderlich erstaunt sind über einen Harem von vierzigtausend Tänzerinnen und vierundachtzigtausend Frauen. Was heißt das? Die Leute wissen nicht, daß damit auf etwas hingewiesen wird, was der Buddha in vollem Maße, wie es nur auf ein menschliches Herz ausgeschüttet werden kann, durch das astralische Schauen erlebte: wie er von Kindheit an zwar nicht erlebte, was draußen an Leiden und Schmerzen in der physischen Menschenwelt vorging, denn davor war er zunächst behütet, wie er aber das alles als geistige Wirksamkeiten in der geistigen Welt schaute. Er schaute es, weil er hineingeboren war in einen Leib, wie er aus der damaligen Zeit geboren werden konnte, und er war von Anfang an gefeit und gekräftigt und erhoben über alles, was da an den furchtbarsten Gaukelbildern ihn umgab, weil er in seinen früheren Inkarnationen sich bis zur Höhe des Bodhisattva erhoben hatte. Weil er aber als die Individualität des Bodhisattva in dieser menschlichen Inkarnation lebte, drängte es ihn hinaus, um dasjenige zu sehen, worauf ihn jedes einzelne Bild dieser astralischen Welt, wie sie ihn im Palaste umgab, hinwies. Jedes einzelne Bild drängte ihn gleichsam hinaus, die Welt zu sehen, sozusagen sein Gefängnis zu verlassen. Das war die treibende Kraft in seiner Seele. Denn in ihm lebte als Bodhisattva eine hohe Geisteskraft. Gerade diejenige Geisteskraft lebte in ihm, welche mit der Mission zusammenhängt, der Menschheit zu lehren die ganze Kraft von Mitleid und Liebe und alledem, was damit zusammenhängt. Dazu mußte er selbst diese Menschheit in der Welt kennenlernen, er mußte sie in der Welt sehen, in welcher sie eben aus dem moralischen Sinn heraus die Lehre von Mitleid und von der Liebe erleben kann. Er mußte die Menschheit in der physischen Welt kennenlernen. Er mußte hinaufsteigen vom Bodhisattva zum Buddha, ein Mensch unter Menschen. Das konnte er nur, wenn er sich von alledem abwendete, was ihm an Fähigkeiten aus den früheren Inkarnationen geblieben war, wenn er hinausging auf den physischen Plan, um dort mit den Menschen so zu leben, daß er innerhalb dieser Menschheit ein Musterbeispiel, ein Ideal, ein Vorbild eben darstellte für die Entwickelung dieser charakterisierten besonderen Eigenschaften.

[ 28 ] Um in diesem Sinne von einem Bodhisattva zu einem Buddha zu werden, sind natürlich mancherlei Entwickelungs-Zwischenstufen nötig. Das macht sich nicht von heute auf morgen. Heraus drängte es ihn aus dem Königspalast. Und der Bericht sagt uns, daß er draußen, als er einmal gleichsam «ausbrach» aus seinem Palastgefängnis, einen alten Mann fand, einen Greis. Er war bisher nur umgeben worden von den Bildern der Jugend, er hatte glauben sollen, daß es nur die strotzende Kraft der Jugend gibt. Nun hatte er das, was sich auf dem physischen Plan als Alter darstellt, in dem Greise kennengelernt. Und weiter lernte er jetzt einen kranken Menschen kennen, und dann lernte er einen Leichnam kennen, das heißt also den Tod auf dem physischen Plan. Das alles trat jetzt, wo er den physischen Plan wirklich ins Auge fassen konnte, vor seiner Seele auf.

[ 29 ] Sehr bezeichnend für das, was der Buddha eigentlich ist, wird jetzt in dieser Legende, die hier wiederum wahrer ist als irgendeine äußere Wissenschaft, gesagt: Als er hinausfuhr aus dem königlichen Palast, da wurde er von einem Pferde gefahren, das sich so darüber grämte, daß er jetzt alles verlassen wollte, in das er hineingeboren war, daß es aus Gram darüber starb und daß es dann versetzt wurde als eine geistige Wesenheit in die geistige Welt hinauf. — In diesem Bilde drückt sich eine tiefe Wahrheit aus. Es würde heute zu weit führen, wenn ich ausführlich auseinandersetzen wollte, warum gerade das Pferd verwendet wird für eine menschliche Geisteskraft. Ich erinnere nur an Plato, der von einem Pferde spricht, das er an einem Zügel hält, als er ein Bild gebrauchen will für gewisse menschliche Fähigkeiten, die noch von oben gegeben sind, die nicht aus dem eigenen Innern des Menschen entwickelt worden sind. Als der Buddha aus dem Königspalast heraustritt, da läßt er die Fähigkeiten, die sich nicht aus dem Innern der Seele selber entwickelt haben, hinter sich. Sie läßt er in den geistigen Welten, aus denen heraus sie ihn immer geleitet haben. Das wird in dem Pferd angedeutet, das aus Gram stirbt, als er es verläßt, und das dann in die geistige Welt versetzt wird.

[ 30 ] Aber nach und nach nur kann der Buddha das werden, was er in seiner letzten Inkarnation auf der Erde werden sollte. Er muß ja erst auf dem physischen Plan kennenlernen, was er als Bodhisattva nur aus der geistigen Anschauung kennengelernt hat. Da lernt er zuerst zwei Lehrer kennen. Der eine ist ein Vertreter jener altindischen Weltanschauung, die man als die Sankhya-Philosophie bezeichnet, und der andere ist ein Vertreter der Yoga-Philosophie. Diese beiden lernt der Buddha kennen und vertieft sich in das, was sie ihm darzubieten vermögen. Er lebt darinnen. Denn wenn man selbst ein noch so hohes Wesen ist, so muß man sich doch in das Äußere, was die Menschheit sich erobert hat, erst hineinfinden. Wenn es ein Bodhisattva auch schneller lernen kann, er muß es doch erst lernen. Der Bodhisattva, der etwa fünf oder sechs Jahrhunderte vor unserer Zeitrechnung gelebt hat, müßte doch, wenn er heute geboren würde - so, wie die Kinder in der Schule lernen -, erst das nachholen, was sich mittlerweile auf der Erde zugetragen hat, während er in Himmelshöhen gelebt hat. So mußte der Buddha auch dasjenige, was sich seit seiner letzten Inkarnation zugetragen hatte, kennenlernen.

[ 31 ] Und er lernte die Sankhya-Philosophie von dem einen der Lehrer, die Yoga-Philosophie von dem anderen der Lehrer kennen. Da konnte er zuerst einen Blick gewinnen in die Weltanschauungen, die für viele damals die Lebensrätsel lösten, und konnte lernen, wie es einer Seele war, wenn sie diese Weltanschauungen auf sich wirken ließ.

[ 32 ] In der Sankhya-Philosophie hatte er eine fein-logische philosophische Anschauung über die Welt aufnehmen können. Aber je mehr er sich in sie hineinlebte, desto weniger genügte sie ihm. Sie war zuletzt wie ein Gespinst, entbehrte des lebendigen Lebens. Er spürte, daß er die Quellen für das, was er in dieser Inkarnation zu tun hatte, anderswo her nehmen mußte als aus dieser traditionellen Sankhya-Philosophie.

[ 33 ] Das andere war die Yoga-Philosophie des Patanjali, die durch gewisse innere Seelenvorgänge die Verbindung mit dem Göttlichen suchte. So vertiefte er sich auch in die Yoga-Philosophie, nahm sie auf, machte sie zu einem Teil seines Wesens. Aber auch sie ließ ihn unbefriedigt, denn er sah ein, sie ist etwas, was sich von alten Zeiten her fortgepflanzt hat; aber die Menschen mußten zu anderen Fähigkeiten kommen, sie mußten in sich zu einer moralischen Entwickelung kommen. Nachdem Buddha die Yoga-Philosophie in der eigenen Seele geprüft hatte, sah er, daß sie nicht die Quelle für seine Mission damals sein konnte,

[ 34 ] Darauf kam er in dieUUmgebung von fünf Einsiedlern. Sie hatten auf dem Wege strengster Selbstzucht unter Kasteiungen und Entbehrungen zu den Geheimnissen des Daseins vorzudringen gesucht. Auch diesen Weg versuchte der Buddha, aber auch von ihm sagte er sich, daß er ihm die Quelle für seine Mission in dieser Zeit nicht sein konnte. Er machte eine Zeitlang alle die Entbehrungen und Kasteiungen durch, wie es die Mönche taten. Er hungerte wie sie, um die Gier vom menschlichen Leben zu entfernen und dadurch tiefere Kräfte heraufzurufen, die gerade dann heraufdringen, wenn der Leib durch Fasten geschwächt ist, und die dann aus den Tiefen des menschlichen Leiblichen rasch hineinführen können in die geistige Welt. Aber gerade weil der Buddha seine Entwickelungsstufe erlangt hatte, sah er das Vergebliche dieses Kasteiens, des Fastens und des Hungerns ein. Er hatte ja, weil er der Bodhisattva war, durch seine Entwickelung in den früheren Inkarnationen diesen menschlichen Leib der damaligen Zeit bis zu der höchsten Höhe der Entwickelung bringen können, bis zu der ein Mensch damals kommen konnte. Daher konnte auch der Buddha das erleben, was ein Mensch erleben muß, wenn er gerade diesen Weg in die geistigen Höhen durchmacht.

[ 35 ] Wer bis zu einem gewissen Grade der Sankhya- oder der YogaPhilosophie hinaufdringt, ohne das entwickelt zu haben, was der Buddha vorher durchgemacht hatte, wer hinaufdringen will in die reinen Höhen des göttlichen Geistes durch das logische Denken, ohne zuerst den moralischen Sinn im Sinne des Buddha erlangt zu haben, der steht dann vor jener Versuchung, die der Buddha in einer probeweisen Versuchung durchgemacht hat und die uns als die Versuchung durch den Dämon Mara angedeutet wird. Da kommt der Mensch dahin, wo alle Teufel des Hochmutes, der Eitelkeit, des Ehrgeizes ihn durchsetzen. Das lernte der Buddha kennen. Die Gestalt des Mara, der Eitelkeit und des Ehrgeizes, stand vor ihm. Aber weil er auf dieser hohen Stufe eines Bodhisattva war, so erkannte er ihn und war gefeit gegen ihn. Und er wußte sich zu sagen: Wenn sich die Menschen auf dem alten Wege weiterentwickeln, ohne den neuen Einschlag in der Lehre der Liebe und des Mitleides, ohne diesen selbsttätigen moralischen Sinn zu erhalten, dann müssen sie, da sie nicht alle Bodhisattvas sind, diesem Dämon Mara verfallen, der alle Kräfte des Hochmutes und der Eitelkeit in die Seelen senkt. Das ist das, was der Buddha in sich selber erlebte, als er bis in die letzten Konsequenzen dieSankhya- und die Yoga-Philosophie durchmachte.

[ 36 ] Dann aber, als er bei den Mönchen war, hatte er ein anderes Erlebnis. Da erlebte er, daß der Dämon eine andere Gestalt annahm, die dadurch charakterisiert ist, daß er dem Menschen allen äußeren physischen Besitz, sozusagen die «Reiche der Welt und ihre Herrlichkeiten» zeigt, um den Menschen abzulenken von dem, was die geistige Welt ist. Gerade daß man auf dem Wege der Kasteiung dieser Versuchung verfällt, das erlebte der Buddha, als ihm der Dämon Mara entgegentrat und ihm sagte: «Lasse dich nicht verführen, alles zu verlassen, was du als Königssohn gehabt hast, gehe zurück in den Königspalast!» Ein anderer wäre dem unterlegen, was sich ihm da zeigte, aber der Buddha war so weit,daß er den Versucher durchschauen konnte. Erleben konnte er, was über die Menschheit kommen würde, wenn sie so weiterleben würde wie bisher und nur auf dem Wege des Fastens und Hungerns den Weg zum Geistigen hinauf durchmachen wollte. Er selbst war dagegen gefeit und konnte daher auch jetzt die große Gefahr vor die Menschen hinstellen, die kommen würde, wenn die Menschen ohne die große Grundlage des selbsttätigen moralischen Sinnes nur durch Fasten und äußere Mittel in die geistige Welt eindringen wollten.

[ 37 ] So war der Buddha als Bodhisattva noch vorgedrungen bis zu jenen zwei Grenzpunkten der menschlichen Entwickelung, die der Mensch eben, weil er nicht ein Bodhisattva ist, am besten ganz vermeiden soll, Übersetzen wir uns das in eine gewöhnliche Menschensprache, so können wir sagen: Das höchste Wissen ist herrlich, das höchste Wissen ist schön, aber nähere dich diesem Wissen mit reinem Herzen, mit edlem Sinn, mit einem geläuterten Gemüt, sonst wird der Teufel des Hochmutes, der Eitelkeit und des Ehrgeizes über dich kommen. — Und die andere Lehre ist: Suche nicht auf irgendeinem äußeren Wege, durch Kasteiungen oder Fasten in die geistige Welt hineinzukommen, bevor du deinen sittlichen Sinn in der entsprechenden Weise gereinigt hast, sonst wird der Versucher von der andern Seite an dich herantreten. — Das sind die beiden Lehren, die uns von dem Buddha in unsere Zeit hereinleuchten. So sagt uns der Buddha, als er noch Bodhisattva war, dasjenige, was im eminenten Sinne zu seiner Mission gehört. Denn diesen moralischen Sinn der Menschheit zu bringen, als die Menschen noch nicht fähig waren, ihn aus ihrem Herzen heraus zu entwickeln, das war immer seine Mission. Daher verließ er, als er die Gefahr des Asketentums für die Menschheit kennengelernt hatte, die fünf Einsiedler und ging dahin, wo er in einem für unsere heutige Zeit gemäßen inneren Versenken in diejenigen Fähigkeiten der menschlichen Natur, die ausgebildet werden können ohne die alte Hellsichtigkeit, ohne das, was als ein Erbstück von früher überkommen ist, das Höchste leisten konnte, was die Menschheit gerade durch diese Fähigkeiten jemals wird leisten können.

[ 38 ] Unter dem Bodhibaume, im neunundzwanzigsten Jahre seines Lebens, nachdem der Buddha den Weg einseitiger Askese verlassen hatte, gingen ihm dann in siebentägiger Betrachtung die großen Wahrheiten auf, die dem Menschen aufgehen, wenn er in stiller, innerer Versenkung dasjenige zu finden sucht, was ihm die jetzigen menschlichen Fähigkeiten geben können. Da gingen ihm auf die großen Lehren, die er gelehrt hat in den sogenannten vier Wahrheiten, und jene große Lehre des Mitleides und der Liebe, die er gelehrt hat in dem achtgliedrigen Pfade. Diese Lehren des Buddha werden uns noch zu beschäftigen haben. Wir wollen uns heute damit begnügen, daß diese Lehren eine Umschreibung des moralischen Sinnes der reinsten Lehre vom Mitleid und von der Liebe sind. Damals sind sie aufgetreten, als unter dem Bodhibaume der Bodhisattva Indiens vom Bodhisattva zum Buddha wurde. Damals sind die Lehren vom Mitleid und der Liebe zum ersten Male in der Menschheit als eigene menschliche Fähigkeit aufgegangen, und seit jener Zeit sind die Menschen imstande, aus sich selbst heraus die Lehre vom Mitleid und der Liebe zu entwickeln. Das ist das Wesentliche. Deshalb sagte der Buddha zu seinen intimen Schülern noch kurze Zeit vor seinem Tode: Trauert nicht darum, daß der Meister euch verläßt. Ich lasse euch etwas zurück. Ich lasse euch zurück das Gesetz der Weisheit und das Gesetz der Disziplin; die sollen euch künftig den Meister ersetzen. — Das heißt nichts anderes als: Bisher hat euch der Bodhisattva gelehrt, was darinnen ausgedrückt ist; jetzt darf er, nachdem er seine Inkarnation auf der Erde erreicht hat, sich zurückziehen. Denn die Menschheit wird das, was ihr früher von einem Bodhisattva gelehrt worden ist, in das eigene Herz gesenkt haben und wird es aus dem eigenen Herzen heraus entwickeln können als die Religion vom Mitleid und der Liebe. — Das hat sich zugetragen, als in siebentägiger innerer Betrachtung der Bodhisattva zu dem Buddha wurde im alten Indien. Das war es auch, was er in den verschiedensten Formen seinen Zöglingen, die um ihn herum waren, lehren konnte. In welche Formen er das gegossen hat, das wird uns noch beschäftigen.

[ 39 ] Wir mußten heute zurückschauen auf das, was sechs Jahrhunderte vor unserer Zeitrechnung sich zugetragen hat, weil wir, wenn wir nicht an der Hand der Akasha-Chronik die Entwickelung von den Ereignissen in Palästina bis zu der Predigt von Benares zurückverfolgen würden, den Weg des Christentums nicht verstehen würden, vor allem nicht denjenigen verstehen würden, der diesen Weg so eminent geschildert hat: den Schreiber des Lukas-Evangeliums. Seitdem der Bodhisattva zum Buddha geworden ist, brauchte er nicht mehr auf die Erde zurückzukehren; seitdem war er eine geistige Wesenheit, die in den geistigen Welten schwebt und von dort aus in alles einzugreifen hatte, was auf der Erde geschah. Und als das wichtigste Ereignis auf der Erde vorbereitet wurde und die Hirten auf dem Felde waren, da erschien ihnen eine Individualität aus den geistigen Höhen und verkündete ihnen das, was eben im Lukas-Evangelium geschildert wird: Und hinzu traten zu dem Engel «himmlische Heerscharen». Wer war das?

[ 40 ] Was hier den Hirten im Bilde entgegentrat, das war der verklärte Buddha, der Bodhisattva der alten Zeiten, dasjenige Wesen in seiner geistigen Gestalt, das durch Jahrtausende und Jahrtausende den Menschen die Botschaft der Liebe und des Mitleides gebracht hatte. Jetzt, nachdem es seine letzte Inkarnation auf der Erde hinter sich hatte, schwebte es in geistigen Höhen und erschien in Himmelshöhen den Hirten neben dem Engel, der ihnen das Ereignis von Palästina vorherverkündete.

[ 41 ] So lehrt uns die geistige Forschung. Sie zeigt uns schwebend über den Hirten den verklärten Bodhisattva aus den alten Zeiten. Ja, es war so gekommen — das lehrt uns die Akasha-Forschung -, daß in Palästina in der «Stadt Davids» von einem Elternpaare, das aus der priesterlichen Linie des Hauses David stammte, ein Kind geboren wurde. Dieses Kind - ich erwähne das ausdrücklich —, das da von einem Elternpaar geboren wurde, das, wenigstens dem Vater nach, aus der priesterlichen Linie des Hauses David stammte, dieses Kind war dazu ausersehen, daß es überleuchtet und durchkraftet wurde von seiner Geburt an von dem, was von dem Buddha ausstrahlen konnte, nachdem er in Geisteshöhen erhoben worden war. So blicken wir mit den Hirten hin auf dieKrippe, wo der Jesus von Nazareth, wie man ihn gewöhnlich nennt, geboren worden ist; wir blicken hin und sehen über dem Kindlein den Glorienschein von Anfang an und wissen, daß in diesem Bilde sich ausdrückt die Kraft des Bodhisattva, der der Buddha geworden ist, die Kraft, welche vordem den Menschen zugeströmt ist und welche jetzt von den geistigen Höhen aus auf die Menschheit wirkte und die größte Tat entfaltete, als sie das bethlehemitische Kindlein überstrahlte, damit es sich in der entsprechenden Weise einreihen konnte in die Menschheitsentwickelung.

[ 42 ] Damals, als diese Individualität, die jetzt aus geistigen Höhen ihre Kraft herunterstrahlte auf dieses Kind des davidischen Elternpaares, im alten Indien geboren wurde, das heißt, als der Buddha als Bodhisattva geboren wurde, erschaute ein Weiser die ganze Gewalt dessen, was wir heute geschildert haben. Und was er zuerst in den geistigen Welten erschaut hatte, das veranlaßte den Weisen — Asita hieß er -, in den Palast des Königs hineinzugehen und das Bodhisattva-Kindlein aufzusuchen. Als er das Kindlein sah, sagte er seine gewaltige Mission als Buddha voraus. Asita sagte damals zur Bestürzung des Vaters voraus, daß das Kindlein nicht regieren werde über das Reich seines Vaters, sondern daß es ein Buddha werden würde. Dann aber fing er an zu weinen; und als er gefragt wurde, ob denn dem Kindlein ein Unglück bevorstünde, antwortete Asita: «Nein! Ich weine, weil ich so alt bin, daß ich den Tag nicht mehr erleben kann, da dieser Heiland, der Bodhisattva, als Buddha auf der Erde wandeln wird!» Asita hat das BuddhaWerden des Bodhisattva damals nicht mehr erlebt, sein Weinen war also von seinem damaligen Standpunkte aus nur zu berechtigt. — Jener Asita, der damals den Bodhisattva nur als Kindlein im Palaste des Suddhodana gesehen hatte, er wurde wiedergeboren als jene Persönlichkeit, die uns im Lukas-Evangelium bei der «Darstellung im Tempel» als der Simeon geschildert wird (Lukas 2,25-35). Simeon, so heißt es im Lukas-Evangelium, war «vom Geiste beseelt», als ihm das Kindlein gebracht wurde. Das war derselbe, der als Asita einst geweint hatte, weil er in seiner damaligen Inkarnation nicht mehr das Buddha-Werden des Bodhisattva erleben konnte. Jetzt war es ihm beschieden, die weitere Entwickelungsstufe dieser Individualität zu erleben. Und nachdem er dazumal «mit dem Geiste begabt» war, konnte er bei der Darstellung des Kindleins im Tempel den Glorienschein des verklärten Bodhisattva sehen über dem Jesuskindlein aus dem davidischen Geschlecht. Da sagte er sich: Jetzt brauchst du nicht mehr zu weinen; was du damals nicht gesehen hast, jetzt siehst du es, jetzt siehst du deinen Heiland verklärt über diesem Kindlein: «Herr, laß deinen Diener in Frieden sterben.»

Second Lecture

[ 1 ] Throughout the various periods of the development of Christianity, the Gospel of John was the document that always made the deepest impression on all those who sought a special deepening, an inner immersion in the Christian world currents. Therefore, this Gospel of John was the charter of all Christian mystics who tried to live according to what is presented in the Gospel of John in the personality and being of Christ Jesus.

[ 2 ] In a somewhat different way, Christian humanity has related to the Gospel of Luke throughout the centuries. Seen from a different point of view, this is basically in line with what we were able to hint at yesterday regarding the difference between the Gospels of John and Luke. If the Gospel of John was in some respects a document for mystics, the Gospel of Luke was always a kind of devotional book for the general public, for those who, one could say in a certain way, out of the simplicity and simplicity of their hearts, could rise to the sphere of Christian feeling. The Gospel of Luke is a book of edification that has stood the test of time. For all those who were burdened with suffering and pain, it was always a source of inner comfort. For in this Gospel so much is proclaimed about the great Comforter, the great benefactor of mankind, the Savior of the burdened and the oppressed. The Gospel of Luke was a book to which those who wanted to imbue themselves with Christian love turned in particular, for more than in any other Christian document, the power and urgency of love is unfolded in this Gospel of Luke. And those who in some way were aware – and basically this can apply to all people – that they had loaded any kind of error onto their hearts, they have always found edification and consolation and upliftment of the burdened soul when they looked to the Gospel of Luke and his proclamation and were able to say to themselves: Christ Jesus did not appear only for the righteous, but also for sinners; he sat at table with sinners and tax collectors. If a high level of preparation is needed to fully appreciate the Gospel of John, it can be said of the Gospel of Luke that no mind is so low, so immature, that it cannot fully absorb all the warmth that flows from it.

[ 3 ] Thus the Gospel of Luke has always been a book for the general public, in which even the most childlike mind could find edification. Everything in the human soul that remains childlike from the earliest age to the highest old age has always been drawn to the Gospel of Luke. And above all, the pictorial representation of Christian truths, the way in which art has taken these truths and made them its own – much of this has also been taken from the other Gospels – but what has most powerfully spoken to human hearts from the world of art and painting since time immemorial is found in the Gospel of Luke, and from there it flows into art. All the profound relationships between Christ Jesus and John the Baptist, which have found artistic expression in so many ways, have their source in this immortal book, in the Gospel of Luke.

[ 4 ] Those who allow this document to take effect on them from this point of view will find that it is immersed from beginning to end, as it were, in the principle of love, compassion, simplicity, and even to a certain degree, childlikeness. And where else is this childlikeness expressed in such a warm way as in the childhood story of Jesus of Nazareth, which is given to us by the writer of the Gospel of Luke! Why this was so will also become clear to us as we gradually penetrate deeper and deeper into this remarkable book.

[ 5 ] It will be necessary today to say many things that may initially appear contradictory to those who have heard other lectures of mine on this subject or other cycles. But just wait for the remarks of the next few days, and it will all seem in harmony with what you have heard from me so far about the Christ Jesus and about Jesus of Nazareth. It is impossible to give the whole complicated scope of the truth at once, and today it will be necessary to point out one side of the Christian truths, which will seem to contradict that part of the truth which I have been able to express to you here and there so far. The way should be chosen so that the individual streams of truth are developed and then shown to be completely in harmony and agreement. Of course, in the various cycles, especially since the starting point was taken from the Gospel of John, and deliberately so, I could only point to part of the truth. That part remains truth, however; we will see that in the next few days. Today it falls to us to consider a part of Christian truths that is unfamiliar to most of you.

[ 6 ]In the Gospel of Luke, there is a wonderful passage that tells us that the shepherds in the field are told by an angel, who becomes visible to them, that the “Savior of the world” has been born to them. And then it is mentioned that after this angel has said the proclamation, “heavenly hosts” (Luke 2:13) approach him. Imagine the image that these shepherds look up and see something like “heaven open” and the entities of the spiritual world unfolding before them in powerful images. What is proclaimed to the shepherds?

[ 7 ] What is proclaimed to them is clothed in monumental words, in words that have been spoken throughout the development of humanity and that have become the Christmas saying of the Christian development. The words resound to the shepherds, who, translated correctly, would sound something like this:

“The Divine Entities reveal themselves from on high, so that peace may reign on earth among men who are imbued with goodwill.” (Luke 2:14.)

[ 8 ] “Honor”, as it is usually rendered, is a completely wrong translation. As I have now said it, it should be. And the contrast should be sharply emphasized, that what the shepherds see is the revelation of the spiritual beings from on high and that it happens in this moment, so that peace may enter into human hearts, which are imbued with goodwill.

[ 9 ] Basically, as we shall see, much of the secrets of Christianity lies in these words, if they are properly understood. But it will take some effort to shed light on these paradigmatic words. What is most important is that we try to consider those reports that man's clairvoyant sense receives from the Akashic Records. What matters is to look first with the open eye of the spirit at the age in which Christ Jesus appeared for humanity, and then to ask ourselves: How does that present itself, which then entered spiritually into the evolution of the earth, when we follow it in its entire historical development, when we ask: Where did it come from?

[ 10 ] At that time something flowed into the development of mankind that appeared to be a confluence of spiritual currents from the most diverse directions. In the most diverse regions of the earth, the most diverse world views have emerged over time. Everything that has emerged in different parts of the world converged in Palestine at that time and found expression in some way in these events in Palestine, so that we can ask ourselves: Where do the currents that we see flowing together as if into a center in the Palestinian events go?

[ 11] We already indicated yesterday that the Gospel of Luke provides what we call imaginative knowledge, and that this imaginative knowledge is gained in images. In the above, an image is presented to us, an image of how the revelation of spiritual beings from above appears to the shepherds, the image of a spiritual being, an angel, and then a host of angels. This raises the question: how does a clairvoyant person, who is also initiated into the secrets of existence, see this image, which he can recreate at any time by looking back into the Akashic Records? What is it that presented itself to the shepherds? What is contained in this host of angels, and where does it come from?

[ 12 ] One of the great spiritual currents that have flowed through the development of mankind, that current that has gradually risen higher and higher, so that at the time of the Palestinian events it could only shine down from the spiritual heights onto the earth, that is what is shown in this picture. If we start from this host of angels that appeared to the shepherds, and decipher the Akasha Chronicle, we are led back to one of the greatest spiritual currents in the development of mankind. This current, which one might say spread several centuries before the appearance of Christ Jesus on earth, as Buddhism, However strange it may sound to you, anyone who follows in the footsteps of that revelation, which becomes a shepherd, through the Akasha Chronicle back to the early days of humanity, will experience the same “enlightenment” as the great Buddha. What had flashed upon men in India, what there, as the religion of compassion and love, as a great world-view, had once stirred minds and hearts and what is still today spiritual nourishment for a great part of mankind, that appeared again in the shepherds' revelation. For this too was to flow into the Palestinian Revelation. We can only understand what we are first told in the Gospel of Luke if we take a look – again from the point of view of spiritual scientific research – at what the Buddha was to humanity and what the Buddha Revelation actually achieved in the course of human development. We must be clear about the following.

[ 13 ] When the Buddha arose in the Far East five or six centuries before the birth of Christ, there appeared in him an individuality that had often and often been re-embodied and that, through its many embodiments, had advanced to a high level of human development. The Buddha could only become who he was because in his previous incarnations he had already attained a high, high level of development in the highest sense of the word. The stage of development of an entity in the universe that the Buddha had attained is referred to by an oriental term as a “Bodhisattva”. The nature of the Bodhisattvas has already been discussed from various points of view, at least in front of some of you. In the cycle “Spiritual Hierarchies and their Reflection in the Physical World,” Düsseldorf, April 1909, I showed how the Bodhisattvas relate to the whole cosmic evolution; in Munich, in the cycle “The Orient in the Light of the Occident,” August 1909, I was able to point this out from a different point of view. Today, the nature of the bodhisattvas is to be considered from yet another side. You will gradually find the harmony between these individual truths.

[ 14 ] He who became a Buddha must first have been a bodhisattva. Bodhisattva is thus the preceding step in the individual development towards the Buddha. Now let us try to visualize the nature of the Bodhisattva from the standpoint of the evolution of humanity. We can only understand it if we look at the evolution of humanity from the penetrating standpoint of spiritual science.

[ 15 ] What people are able to do at any given time, what abilities they develop, was not always there. It is only a short-sighted way of looking at things that cannot see beyond its own epoch that believes that the same abilities that people have today were already present in primeval times. Human abilities, what people can do, know, and achieve, change from era to era. Today, human abilities are so highly developed that man can, as it were, recognize this or that through his own reason, that he can rightly say: I see this or that truth through my intellect, through my reason; I can recognize what is moral and immoral, what is logical or illogical in a certain respect. But it would be a mistake to believe that these abilities to distinguish the logical from the illogical or the moral from the immoral have always been part of human nature. They have only come into existence and developed gradually. What man is capable of doing today through his own abilities, he once had to learn like a child from father and mother or from teachers - from beings who were also embodied among men, but who were more highly developed through their spiritual abilities and who, in the mysteries, could associate with spiritual beings that are above them, with divine-spiritual beings.

[ 16 ] There have always been individuals who, although embodied in the physical body, were able to associate with higher individuals who are not physically embodied. Before people acquired the gift of logical thinking, for example, which enables them to think logically even today, they had to listen to certain teachers. These teachers were also unable to think logically through certain abilities developed in the physical body, but only because they had dealings in the mysteries with divine spiritual entities that are in higher regions. Such teachers, who taught the logical and the moral from their revelations, which they received from higher worlds, existed before men themselves were able, through their nature on earth, to think logically or to find the moral. A certain category of such beings, who are embodied in physical bodies but associate with divine spiritual entities so that they can take what they learn from them and communicate it to people, are the bodhisattvas. They are therefore entities embodied in a human body that, with their abilities, can communicate with divine spiritual entities.

[ 17 ] And before the Buddha became a “Buddha”, he was just a Bodhisattva, that is, an individuality who could deal with the higher, divine spiritual beings in the mysteries. Such an entity, as the bodhisattva is, once received a specific mission, a specific task in the higher world in distant primeval times of the earth's development, and it then remains with this mission.

[ 18 ] If we apply this to the Buddha, we have to say: He had a specific task as a bodhisattva. When the earth was still in earlier stages of development, even before the Atlantean and Lemurian periods, the being that was embodied as the Buddha in the sixth century BC had been given a specific task. It remained with this task. Throughout the ages, it had to work from epoch to epoch and always impart as much of the earth's development as it could absorb by virtue of its essence. For each such entity – that is, for each Bodhisattva – there comes a time when it has, so to speak, come to a certain point in its mission, which it received in primeval times, and when it has been able to incorporate into humanity from above what it has been able to become in its own human capacity. For what is human ability today was once the ability of divine spiritual beings, and the bodhisattvas brought it down from the spiritual heights to mankind. Such a spiritual missionary thus comes to a point where he can say to himself: I have accomplished my mission; mankind has now been given what it has been prepared for through many, many times. Having reached such a point, the bodhisattva can become a Buddha. That is, there comes a time when, as the being with the mission we have just characterized, he no longer needs to incarnate in a physical human body, where he incarnates for the last time in such a physical human body and then no longer needs to incarnate as a missionary. Such a point in time had come for the Buddha. What he had to do earlier and earlier led him down to earth again and again. But in the time when he was enlightened as Buddha, a final incarnation occurred for him as a bodhisattva. He entered a human body that had developed the abilities to a very high degree, which had previously had to be taught from above and which were now gradually to become the person's own abilities.

[ 19 ] When a bodhisattva has, through his previous development, brought about a human body so perfectly that he can develop abilities for the qualities associated with the bodhisattva's mission, then he no longer needs to embody himself. Then he will hover in spiritual regions, promoting and guiding human affairs, and from there he will work into humanity. And then it is the task of human beings to further develop that which previously flowed down to them from the heights of heaven and to say to themselves: We must now develop in such a way that we cultivate those abilities which we see in their fullest measure for the first time in the incarnation that was achieved through the abilities of the bodhisattva and which appeared in the Buddha. And just as the entity that has worked as a bodhisattva throughout the ages appears as a human being, and as a complete individual human being, where everything that used to flow in from the heights of heaven is now incorporated into human nature, to show in a single person what the bodhisattva is capable of, that is to be 'Buddha'. That the Buddha still showed. If the Bodhisattva had withdrawn from his mission earlier, then people would no longer have been able to benefit from the fact that these abilities flow to them from on high. But after evolution had progressed so far that these abilities could be present in a single human specimen on earth, the germinal disposition for them was also created so that people could develop them within themselves in the future. Thus the individuality that had previously developed as a bodhisattva, and that, as long as it was a bodhisattva, had not fully entered into the human form but extended into the heights of heaven, thus the individuality of the bodhisattva once fully enters into a human being, so that it is fully grasped by this incarnation. But then it also withdraws again. For now, with this incarnation as Buddha, a certain amount of revelation has been given to humanity, which is to develop further within humanity itself. Therefore, after becoming Buddha, the Bodhisattva being may withdraw from Earth to certain spiritual heights, may dwell there and continue to guide the affairs of humanity from there, where only a certain clairvoyant ability is able to see it.

[ 20 ] What then was the task of that wonderful, that mighty, great individuality, which in ordinary life is called Buddha? If we really want to understand the task, the mission of this Buddha in the sense of true esotericism, we must tell ourselves the following. The whole cognitive faculty of humanity has developed gradually. We have repeatedly pointed out that during the Atlantean period a large part of humanity was able to see into the spiritual worlds clairvoyantly, and we have said that certain remnants of ancient clairvoyance were still present in the post-Atlantean period. If we descend from the Atlantean period to the ancient Indian, to the ancient Persian, to the Egyptian-Chaldean period, and even further into the Greco-Latin period, we would find numerous people, many more than today's humanity dares to dream of, who had the inherited gifts of this ancient clairvoyance, who had access to the astral plane, who saw into the hidden depths of existence. Even in the Greco-Latin period, it was still quite usual for a large proportion of people to see the etheric body of the human being, but especially the head part of the human being surrounded by that etheric cloud, which, however, gradually disappeared completely into the interior of the head part. |

[ 21 ] But humanity had to ascend to that knowledge, which gradually became perfect sensory knowledge, to that knowledge that is acquired through the external senses and through those spiritual abilities that are directed towards the external senses. Man had gradually to emerge, so to speak, entirely from the spiritual world and enter into mere sense observation, into rational, logical thinking. Gradually man had to soar to this non-clairvoyant knowledge because he had to pass through it in order to attain in the future again clairvoyant knowledge, but then united with what he had acquired as sense and intellectual knowledge.

[ 22 ] In this time we live in the present. We look back on a past in which humanity was clairvoyant, and we look into a future in which people will be clairvoyant again. But in our interim time, the majority of people have to rely on what they perceive with their senses and comprehend with their mind and reason. There is, to be sure, a certain height of sensory perception and of intellectual and rational knowledge. But everywhere there are degrees of knowledge. One person, in the incarnation of his earthly existence, walks in such a way that he sees little of what morality is, that he develops little compassion for his fellow human beings: we call him a person at a lower moral level. Or another walks through life in such a way that his intellectual powers are little developed: we call him a person at a lower intellectual level. But we know that these intellectual powers of knowledge can rise to a high level. From the person who is less moral and intellectual to the person whom we call a “moral genius” in Fichte's sense and who develops to the highest moral imagination, we have all possible intermediate stages; and we know that we can develop ourselves to this height of human perfection for the present, without having clairvoyant powers, only by ennobling the powers that are available to the ordinary person. These stages had to be attained by humanity in the course of the evolution of the earth. What man of today, through his own intelligence, recognizes to a certain degree, and also what he achieves through his own moral strength, namely, that one should have compassion for the sufferings and pains of another human being, could not have been attained by man of primitive times through his own efforts. Today we can say that man's healthy moral sense can already rise to this insight even without clairvoyance, and people will be able to rise more and more to the insight that compassion is the highest virtue and that humanity could not progress without love. We can say: This can be recognized today by man's moral sense, and it will continue to increase more and more. But one must look back to times when the moral sense was such that it could not see this for itself.

[ 23 ] There were times when people could never have realized that compassion and love could belong to the highest development of the human soul. Therefore, such spiritual entities had to embody themselves in human forms, to which, for example, the Bodhisattvas also belong, who received revelations from the higher worlds about the working power of compassion, about the working power of love, and who were able to tell people how to behave in compassion and love, because people were not yet mature enough to understand this from their own powers. What people today recognize through their own efforts as the high virtue of compassion and love, to which the moral sense rises, had to be taught through epochs and epochs from the heights of heaven. And the teacher of love and compassion in those times, when people themselves did not yet have insight into the nature of compassion and love, was the Bodhisattva who then embodied himself for the last time in Gautama Buddha.

[ 24 ] So the Buddha was the Bodhisattva before, who was the teacher of love and compassion and all that is related to it. He was through those characterized epochs in which people were still naturally somewhat clairvoyant. He embodied himself as a Bodhisattva in such clairvoyant human bodies. And when he then embodied himself as the Buddha and looked clairvoyantly into these earlier embodiments – from incarnation to incarnation – he could say how the inside of the soul felt when it looked into the depths of existence hidden behind the appearance of meaning. He had this ability in his previous incarnations, and with this ability he was born within the Sakya family, from which the father of Gautama, Suddhodana, came. At the time Gautama Buddha was born, he was still the Bodhisattva. That is, he appeared as the being he had developed into in his previous incarnations. The one who is usually called the Buddha was born as the Bodhisattva through his father Suddhodana and his mother Mayadevi. But since he was born as a Bodhisattva, he had a highly developed ability for clairvoyance as a child. He was able to see into the depths of existence.

[ 25 ] Let us be clear about the fact that, in the course of human evolution, the ability to look into the depths of existence has gradually taken on very special forms. The mission of the evolution of man on earth was to gradually make the gift of the old dull clairvoyance recede; and what remained as an heirloom of the old clairvoyance was therefore not the best parts of this old clairvoyance. These best parts were lost first. What remained was often a lower looking into the astral world, it was just a glimpse of those demonic forces that draw man down into a lower sphere through his urges and passions. Through initiation we can indeed see into the spiritual world and see the forces and beings that are connected with the most beautiful thoughts and feelings of humanity; but we also see the spiritual powers that lie behind wild passion, behind wild sensuality and consuming selfishness. What had been preserved in the wide environment for people – not for the initiates, but for the great majority of people – was precisely the vision of these wild demonic forces that stand behind the lower human passions. Anyone who can see into the spiritual world at all can of course see all this for themselves. It depends on the development of human abilities. Man cannot achieve one without the other.

[ 26 ] Of course, as a Bodhisattva, Buddha had to incarnate in a human body organized in the way human bodies were organized at that time, a body that gave him the ability to look deeply into the astral depths of existence. Even as a child, he was able to see all the astral forces that underlie wild, stormy passion and consuming, greedy sensuality. He had been protected from seeing the outer world in its physical corruption and in its torments and pains. Locked up in the palace, protected above all, he was pampered and petted because, out of the prevailing prejudices, it was believed that he was owed this according to his station. But through this seclusion, his inner power of insight emerged all the more. And while he was carefully guarded and everything that reminded him of illness and pain was kept away from him, in his seclusion his spiritual eye was open to the astral images. He was surrounded by astral images of all the wild passions that can drag a person down.

[ 27 ] Those who, with the spiritual eye, are able to read the biography of Buddha, even if it is preserved in an esoteric form, will have a presentiment when they are told what has now been said. For it must be emphasized: Much of the exoteric accounts cannot be understood if one cannot penetrate the esoteric background. And what is least understood from the exoteric accounts is the Buddha's life. It must seem strange to us when orientalists and others who study the life of Buddha find it described that the Buddha was surrounded in his palace by “forty thousand dancing girls and eighty-four thousand women”. This is already recorded in the books that can be bought for a few pennies; but one notices that the writers are not particularly astonished at a harem of forty thousand dancers and eighty-four thousand women. What does that mean? People do not realize that this is a reference to something that the Buddha experienced to the full, as it can only be poured out on a human heart, through astral vision: how from childhood on, he did not experience what suffering and pain was going on in the physical world of men, because at first he was protected from it, but how he saw all this as spiritual activity in the spiritual world. He saw it because he was born into a body as he could be born at that time, and from the very beginning he was immune and strengthened and elevated above all the most terrible illusions that surrounded him because in his previous incarnations he had risen to the level of the Bodhisattva. But because he lived in this human incarnation as the individuality of the Bodhisattva, he was drawn outwards to see that which every single image of this astral world, as it surrounded him in the palace, pointed to. Every single image urged him, as it were, to see the world, to leave his prison, so to speak. That was the driving force in his soul. For a high spiritual power lived in him as a bodhisattva. It was precisely that spiritual power that lives in him that is connected with the mission to teach humanity the full power of compassion and love and all that is connected with it. To do that, he himself had to get to know this humanity in the world; he had to see it in the world in which it can experience the teaching of compassion and love from a moral point of view. He had to get to know humanity in the physical world. He had to ascend from Bodhisattva to Buddha, a human being among humans. He could only do that by turning away from all the abilities he had retained from his previous incarnations, by going out onto the physical plane and living there with people in such a way that he became a prime example, an ideal, a model for the development of these particular character traits within humanity.

[ 28 ] In order to become a Buddha from a Bodhisattva in this sense, various intermediate stages of development are of course necessary. This does not happen overnight. He was driven out of the royal palace. And the report tells us that outside, when he once “broke out” of his palace prison, as it were, he found an old man, an old man. Until now he had only been surrounded by images of youth; he had been made to believe that there is only the bursting power of youth. Now he had become acquainted with what on the physical plane is represented as old age, in the form of an old man. And further on he became acquainted with a sick person, and then with a corpse, that is, with death on the physical plane. All this now occurred to his soul, when he could really take it in.

[ 29 ] Very significant of what the Buddha actually is, is now said in this legend, which is again more true than any external science: When he left the royal palace, he was driven by a horse that was so distressed that he now wanted to leave everything he had been born into, that it died of grief over it and was then transferred as a spiritual being into the spiritual world. — This image expresses a profound truth. It would be going too far today if I wanted to explain in detail why the horse is used for a human spiritual power. I would only remind you of Plato, who speaks of a horse that he holds by the bridle when he wants to use an image for certain human abilities that are still given from above and that have not been developed from within the human being. When the Buddha leaves the royal palace, he leaves behind the abilities that have not developed from within the soul itself. He leaves them in the spiritual worlds from which they have always guided him. This is indicated by the horse, which dies of grief when he leaves it and is then transported to the spiritual world.

[ 30 ] But only little by little can the Buddha become what he was destined to become in his last incarnation on earth. He must first become acquainted on the physical plane with what he, as a Bodhisattva, has only become acquainted with from the spiritual point of view. There he first meets two teachers. One is a representative of that ancient Indian world-view known as the Sankhya philosophy, and the other is a representative of the Yoga philosophy. The Buddha gets to know these two and immerses himself in what they are able to offer him. He lives in it. Because no matter how high a being you are, you still have to find your way into the external world that humanity has conquered. Even if a bodhisattva can learn faster, he still has to learn it first. The Bodhisattva, who lived about five or six centuries before our era, would have to catch up on what has happened on earth since he lived in the heights of heaven, if he were born today and learned as children learn at school. So the Buddha also had to learn about what had happened since his last incarnation.

[ 31 ] And he studied the Sankhya philosophy with one of the teachers, and the Yoga philosophy with the other teacher. There he was able to gain an insight into the world views that solved the riddles of life for many at that time, and was able to learn what it was like for a soul to let these world views take effect on it.

[ 32 ] In the Sankhya philosophy, he had been able to absorb a subtle and logical philosophical view of the world. But the more he immersed himself in it, the less it satisfied him. In the end it was like a web, lacking in living life. He sensed that he would have to take the sources for what he had to do in this incarnation from somewhere other than the traditional Sankhya philosophy.

[ 33 ] The other was the yoga philosophy of Patanjali, which sought to connect with the divine through certain inner soul processes. So he also immersed himself in the yoga philosophy, absorbed it, made it part of his being. But this too left him unsatisfied, for he saw that it is something that has been handed down from ancient times; but people had to come to other abilities, they had to come to a moral development within themselves. After Buddha had examined the yoga philosophy in his own soul, he saw that it could not be the source for his mission at that time,

[ 34 ] Then he came to the surroundings of five hermits. They had sought to penetrate to the secrets of existence by the most rigorous self-discipline, by mortifications and privations. Buddha also tried this way, but he also said to himself that it could not be the source for his mission at this time. For a time he underwent all the privations and mortifications that the monks practiced. He starved as they did, in order to remove greed from human life and thereby evoke deeper forces that arise precisely when the body is weakened by fasting and that can then quickly lead from the depths of the human physical to the spiritual world. But precisely because Buddha had attained his level of development, he saw the futility of this self-torture, of fasting and starvation. Because he was the Bodhisattva, through his development in previous incarnations, he had been able to bring this human body of that time to the highest level of development that a human being could achieve at that time. Therefore, the Buddha was also able to experience what a person must experience when he goes through this path to spiritual heights.

[ 35 ] Those who have penetrated to a certain degree of the Sankhya or Yoga philosophy without having developed what the Buddha had gone through before, those who want to penetrate to the pure heights of the divine mind by logical thinking, without first having attained the moral sense in the sense of the Buddha, then he stands before that temptation which the Buddha has undergone in a trial temptation and which is indicated to us as the temptation by the demon Mara. There the human being comes to the point where all the devils of pride, vanity, and ambition take hold of him. That is what the Buddha learned. The figure of Mara, of vanity and ambition, stood before him. But because he was at this high level of a bodhisattva, he recognized him and was immune to him. And he knew how to say: If people continue to develop in the old way, without the new impact in the teaching of love and compassion, without this self-acting moral sense, then, since they are not all bodhisattvas, they must fall prey to this demon Mara, who lowers all the forces of pride and vanity into the souls. This is what the Buddha experienced in himself when he went through the Sankhya and Yoga philosophies to their ultimate consequences.

[ 36 ] But then, when he was with the monks, he had a different experience. There he experienced that the demon took on a different form, which is characterized by showing man all external physical possessions, so to speak, the “kingdoms of the world and their glories,” in order to distract man from what the spiritual world is. It is precisely by way of mortification that one falls prey to this temptation, as the Buddha experienced when the demon Mara confronted him and said: “Do not let yourself be tempted to leave everything you have had as a king's son, go back to the royal palace!” Another would have succumbed to what was presented to him, but the Buddha was so far advanced that he could see through the tempter. He could experience what would happen to humanity if it continued to live as before and only wanted to ascend to the spiritual through the path of fasting and starvation. He himself was immune to this and could therefore now also present the great danger that would come if people wanted to penetrate into the spiritual world only through fasting and external means, without the great foundation of the self-acting moral sense.

[ 37 ] Thus, as a Bodhisattva, the Buddha had penetrated as far as those two limits of human development, which, precisely because man is not a Bodhisattva, he had best avoid altogether. If we translate this into an everyday language, we can say: the highest knowledge is glorious, the highest knowledge is beautiful, but approach this knowledge with a pure heart, with a noble mind, with a purified soul, otherwise the devil of pride, vanity and ambition will take hold of you. And the other teaching is: Do not seek to enter the spiritual world by any external means, by mortifying the flesh or fasting, before you have purified your moral sense in the appropriate way, otherwise the tempter will approach you from the other side. These are the two teachings that shine for us from the Buddha into our time. Thus, the Buddha, when he was still the Bodhisattva, tells us that which belongs to his mission in the eminent sense. For to bring this moral sense to mankind, when people were not yet able to develop it from their hearts, that was always his mission. Therefore, when he realized the danger of asceticism for humanity, he left the five hermits and went to where, in an inner contemplation appropriate for our time, he was able to achieve the highest that humanity can ever achieve through these abilities, in those abilities of human nature that can be developed without the old clairvoyance, without what has been handed down as an heirloom from the past.

[ 38 ] Under the bodhi tree, in the twenty-ninth year of his life, after the Buddha had left the path of one-sided asceticism, the great truths opened up to him in seven-day contemplation, which open up to man when he seeks to find in quiet, inner contemplation that which the present human abilities can give him. Then the great teachings that he taught in the so-called four truths, and that great teaching of compassion and love that he taught in the eightfold path, became clear to him. We will have to deal with these teachings of Buddha again. Today, let us content ourselves with the fact that these teachings are a paraphrase of the moral sense of the purest teaching of compassion and love. They emerged at the time when, under the bodhi tree, the Bodhisattva of India was transformed from a Bodhisattva into a Buddha. At that time, the teachings of compassion and love were absorbed into humanity for the first time as a uniquely human capacity, and since that time, people have been able to develop the teaching of compassion and love from within themselves. That is the essential point. That is why the Buddha said to his intimate disciples shortly before his death: “Do not grieve that the master is leaving you. I am leaving you something behind. I am leaving you the law of wisdom and the law of discipline; they shall replace the master for you in the future. This means nothing other than: Up to now, the Bodhisattva has taught you what is expressed in it; now, having achieved his incarnation on earth, he may withdraw. For humanity will have absorbed what was previously taught to it by a Bodhisattva into its own heart and will be able to develop it from its own heart as the religion of compassion and love. This is what happened when, in seven days of inner contemplation, the bodhisattva became the Buddha in ancient India. This was also what he was able to teach in the most diverse forms to his disciples around him. We will deal with the forms into which he poured this later.

[ 39 ] Today we had to look back at what happened six centuries before our era because, if we did not follow the Akasha Chronicle's would not understand the path of Christianity, especially not the one who described this path so eminently: the writer of the Gospel of Luke. Since becoming a Buddha, the Bodhisattva no longer needed to return to Earth. From that time on, he was a spiritual being that floated in the spiritual worlds and from there had to intervene in everything that happened on Earth. And when the most important event on earth was being prepared and the shepherds were in the field, an individuality from the spiritual heights appeared to them and announced to them what is described in the Gospel of Luke: And “heavenly hosts” joined the angel. Who was that?

[ 40 ] What appeared to the shepherds in the picture was the glorified Buddha, the Bodhisattva of ancient times, the being in his spiritual form who had brought the message of love and compassion to people for thousands and thousands of years. Now, after his last incarnation on earth, he soared in spiritual heights and appeared to the shepherds in heavenly heights, alongside the angel who foretold them the event in Palestine.

[ 41 ] So spiritual research teaches us. It shows us hovering over the shepherds the glorified Bodhisattva from ancient times. Yes, it had come about – this is what Akasha research teaches us – that in Palestine, in the “City of David”, a child was born to a couple who came from the priestly line of the House of David. This child—I mention this explicitly—who was born of parents who, at least on the father's side, came from the priestly line of the House of David, this child was destined to be illuminated and empowered from his birth by whatever could radiate from the Buddha after he had been raised to spiritual heights. So we look with the shepherds at the manger where Jesus of Nazareth, as he is usually called, was born; we look and see the glory of the beginning above the child and know that this image expresses the power of the Bodhisattva, who has become the Buddha , the power that previously flowed to mankind and which now, from the spiritual heights, worked on humanity and unfolded the greatest deed when it radiated over the Betlehemite child, so that it could join the human evolution in an appropriate way.

[ 42 ] At the time when this individuality, who now radiated his power from spiritual heights down to this child of the Davidic parents, was born in ancient India, that is, when the Buddha was born as a bodhisattva, a wise man saw the full force of what we have described today. And what he first saw in the spiritual worlds caused the sage – his name was Asita – to enter the king's palace and seek out the Bodhisattva child. When he saw the child, he predicted his mighty mission as Buddha. At that time, to the dismay of the father, Asita predicted that the child would not rule over his father's kingdom, but that he would become a Buddha. But then he began to weep; and when he was asked whether the child was destined to suffer some misfortune, Asita replied: “No! I weep because I am so old that I shall not live to see the day when this Savior, the Bodhisattva, will walk the earth as a Buddha!” Asita did not live to see the Bodhisattva become a Buddha, so from his point of view his weeping was fully justified. That Asita, who had only seen the Bodhisattva as a child in the palace of Suddhodana, was reborn as the personality described in the Gospel of Luke as Simeon at the Presentation at the Temple (Luke 2:25-35). Luke's Gospel says that Simeon was “inspired by the Spirit” when the child was brought to him. He was the same one who, as Asita, had once wept because, in his former incarnation, he was no longer able to experience the bodhisattva's becoming a Buddha. Now it was his destiny to experience the further stage of development of this individuality. And since he had been 'gifted with spiritual insight' at the time, he was able to see the halo of the transfigured Bodhisattva above the Christ Child of Davidic descent during the presentation at the temple. He said to himself: “Now you no longer need to weep; what you did not see then, you now see, you now see your Savior transfigured above this Child: ‘Lord, let your servant die in peace’.”