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The Fifth Gospel
GA 148

1 October 1913, Christiania

Lecture I

The theme on which I propose to speak in these lectures seems to me of peculiar importance in view of present conditions. At the very beginning let me emphasise that there is no element of sensationalism or anything of that kind in the choice of the title: The Fifth Gospel. For I hope to show that in a definite sense and one that is of particular importance to us in the present age, it is possible to speak of such a Fifth Gospel and that in fact no title is more suitable for what is intended.

Although, as you will hear, this Fifth Gospel has never yet been written down, in future times of humanity it will certainly be put into definite form. In a certain sense, however, it would be true to say that it is as ancient as the other four Gospels.

In order that I may be able to speak about this Fifth Gospel, we shall have, by way of introduction, to study certain matters which are essential to any real understanding of it. Let me say, to begin with, that the time is certainly not very far distant when even in the lowest grade schools and in the most elementary education, the branch of knowledge commonly called History will be presented quite differently. It is certain—and these lectures should be a kind of confirmation of it—that in times to come the concept or idea of Christ will play quite a different and much more important part in the study of history, even the most elementary, than has been the case before. I know that such a statement seems highly paradoxical, but let us remember that there were times by no means very far distant, when countless human hearts turned to Christ with feelings of immeasurably greater fervour than is to be found to-day, even among the most learned Christians in the West. In earlier times these feelings of devotion were incomparably more intense. Anyone who studies modern writings and reflects on the main interests of people to-day will have the impression that enthusiasm and warmth of feeling for the Christ Idea are on the wane, especially so in those who claim an up-to-date education. In spite of this, I have just said that as this age of ours advances, the Christ Idea will play a much more important part than hitherto in the study of human history. Does this not seem to be a complete contradiction?

And now we will approach the subject from another side. I have already been able to speak on several occasions in this very town about the significance and the content of the Christ Idea; and in books and lecture-courses which are available here, many deep teachings of Spiritual Science concerning the secrets of the Christ Being and of the Christ Idea are to be found. Anyone who assimilates w hat has been said in lectures, lecture-courses and indeed in all our literature, will realise that any real understanding of the Christ Being needs extensive preparation, that the very deepest concepts and thoughts must be summoned to his aid if he desires to reach some comprehension of Christ and of the Christ Impulse working through the centuries. If nothing else indicated the contrary, it might possibly be thought that a knowledge of the whole of Theosophy or Anthroposophy is necessary before there can be any true conception of Christ. But if we turn aside from this and look at the development of the spiritual life of the last centuries, we are met from century to century by the existence of much profound and detailed knowledge aiming at a comprehension of the Christ and His revelation. For centuries and centuries men have applied their noblest, most profound thought in attempts to reach an understanding of Christ. Here too, it might seem as if only the most highly intellectual achievements of men would suffice for such understanding. But is this, in fact, the case? Quite simple reflection will show that it is not.

Let us, as it were, lay on one scale of a spiritual balance, everything contributed hitherto by erudition, science and even by theosophical conceptions towards an understanding of Christ. On the other scale let us lay all the deep feelings, all the impulses within men which through the centuries have caused their souls to turn to the Being called Christ. It will be found that the scale upon which have been laid all the science, all the learning, even all the theosophy that can be applied to explain the figure of Christ, will rapidly rise, and the scale upon which have been laid all the deep feelings and impulses which have turned men towards the Christ will sink. It is no exaggeration to say that a force of untold strength and greatness has gone forth from Christ and that erudite scholarship concerning Him has contributed least of all to this impulse. Truly it would have boded ill for Christianity if, in order to cleave to Christ, men had had to resort to all the learned dissertations of the Middle Ages, of the Schoolmen, of the Church Fathers, or even to what Theosophy contributes to-day towards an understanding of Christ. This whole body of knowledge would be of very little help. I hardly think that anyone who studies the march of Christianity through the centuries with an unprejudiced mind can raise any serious argument against this line of thought; but the subject can be approached from still another side.

Let us turn our thought to the times before Christianity had come into existence. I need only mention something of which those sitting here are certainly aware. I need only remind you of the ancient Greek dramas, especially in their earlier forms. When portraying a god in combat or a human being in whose soul a god was working, these dramas make the sovereignty and activity of the gods concretely and perceptibly real. Think of Homer and of how his great Epic is all inwoven with the workings of the Spiritual; think of the great figures of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle. These names bring before our mind's eye a spiritual life that in a certain domain is supreme. If we leave all else aside and look only at the single figure of Aristotle who lived centuries before the founding of Christianity, we find there an achievement which, in a certain respect, has remained unsurpassed to this very day. The scientific exactitude of Aristotle's thinking is something so phenomenal, even when judged by present-day standards, that it is said: human thinking was raised by him to an eminence unsurpassed to this day.

And now for a moment we will take a strange hypothesis, but one that will help us to understand what will be said in these lectures. We will imagine that there were no Gospels at all to tell us anything about the figure of Christ, that the earliest records presented to man to-day in the form of the New Testament were simply not in existence. Leaving on one side all that has been said about the founding of Christianity, let us study its progress as historical fact, observing what has happened among men through the centuries of the Christian era ... In other words, without the Gospels, without the story of the Acts of the Apostles, without the Epistles of St. Paul, we will consider what has actually come to pass. This, of course, is pure hypothesis, but what is it that has really happened?

Turning our attention first of all to the South of Europe in a certain period of history, we find a very highly developed spiritual culture, as represented in Aristotle; it was a sublime spiritual life, developing along particular channels through the subsequent centuries. At the time when Christianity began to make its way through the world, large numbers of men who had assimilated the spiritual culture of Greece were living in the South of Europe. If we follow the evolution of Christianity to the time of Celsus—that strange individual who was such a violent opponent of Christianity—and even on into the second and third centuries after Christ, we find in Greece and Italy numbers of highly cultured men who had absorbed the sublime Ideas of Plato, men whose subtlety of thought seems like a continuation of that of Aristotle. Here were minds of refinement and power, versed in Greek learning; here were Romans who added to the delicate spirituality of Greek thought the element of aggressive personality characteristic of Roman civilisation. Such was the world into which the Christian impulse made its way. Truly, in respect of intellectuality and knowledge of the world the representatives of this Christian impulse seem to be uncivilised and uneducated in comparison with the numbers and numbers of learned Romans and Greeks. Men lacking in culture make their way into a world of mellowed intellectuality. And now we witness a remarkable spectacle. Through these simple, primitive people who were its first bearers, Christianity spreads comparatively quickly through the South of Europe. And if with an understanding of the nature of Christianity acquired, let us say, from Theosophy, we think of these simple, primitive natures who spread Christianity abroad in those times, we shall realise that they knew nothing of these things. We need not think here of any conception of Christ in His great cosmic setting, but of much simpler conceptions of Christ. Those first bearers of the Christian impulse who found their way into the world of highly developed Greek learning, had nothing to bring into this arena of Greco-Roman life save their own inwardness, their personal connection with the Christ Whom they so deeply loved; for this connection was as dear to them as that with their own kith and kin. Those who brought into the Greco-Roman world in those days the Christianity that has continued to our own time, were not well-informed theosophists, were by no means highly educated people. The Gnostics who were the learned theosophists of those times had, it is true, risen to sublime ideas concerning Christ, but even they contributed only what must be placed in the rising scale of the balance. If everything had depended upon the Gnostics, Christianity would certainly not have made its victorious headway through the world. It was no highly developed intellectuality that came over from the East, causing the comparatively rapid decline of the old Hellenic and Roman culture. There we have one side of the picture.

We see the other side when we consider men of intellectual distinction, beginning with Celsus—the opponent of Christianity who even then brought forward all the arguments that are still valid to-day—down to Marcus Aurelius, the philosopher on the throne. We think of the Neo-Platonists with their subtle scholarship, whose ideas make those of philosophy to-day seem mere child's play, so greatly do they surpass them in loftiness and breadth of vision. Thinking of all the arguments against Christianity brought from the standpoint of Greek philosophy by these men of high intellectual eminence in the world of Greco-Roman culture, the impression we get is that they did not understand the Christ Impulse. Christianity was spread by men who understood nothing of its real nature; it was opposed by a highly developed culture incapable of grasping its significance. Truly, Christianity makes a strange entry into the world—with adherents and opponents alike understanding nothing of its real nature. And yet ... men bore within their souls the power to secure for the Christ Impulse its victorious march through the world.

And now let us think of men like Tertullian who with a certain greatness and power entered the lists on behalf of Christianity. Tertullian was a Roman who, so far as his language is concerned, may almost be said to have re-created the Latin tongue; the very certainty of aim with which he restored to words a living meaning lets us recognise him as a personality of real significance. But if we ask about his ideas, there is a very different story to tell. In his ideas and thoughts he gives very little evidence of intellectual or spiritual eminence. Supporters of Christianity even of the calibre of Tertullian do not accomplish anything very considerable. And yet as personalities they are potent—these men like Tertullian, to whose arguments no highly educated Greek could attach much weight. There is something about Tertullian that attracts one's attention—but what exactly is it? That is the point of importance.

Let us realise that a real problem lies here. What power is responsible for the achievements of these bearers of the Christ Impulse who themselves do not really understand it? What power is responsible for the influence exercised by the Church Fathers, including even Origen, in spite of all their manifest ineptitude? Why is Greco-Roman scholarship itself unable to comprehend the essential nature of the Christ Impulse? What is the reason of all this?

But let us go further. The same spectacle stands out in still stronger relief when we study the course of history. As the centuries go by, Christianity spread over Europe, among peoples like the Germanic, with quite different ideas of religion and worship, who are, or at least appear to be, inseparable from these ideas and who nevertheless accepted the Christ Impulse with open hearts, as if it were part and parcel of their own life. And when we think of those who were the most influential missionaries among the Germanic peoples, were these men schooled theologians? No indeed! Comparatively speaking, they were simple, primitive souls who went out among the people, talking to them in the most homely, everyday language but moving their very hearts. They knew how to put the words in such a way as to touch the deepest heart-strings of those to whom they spoke. Simple men went out into regions far and wide and it was their work that produced the most significant results. Thus we see Christianity spreading through the centuries. But then we are astonished to find this same Christianity becoming the motive force of profound scholarship, science and philosophy. We do not undervalue this philosophy but we will focus our attention to-day upon the remarkable fact that up to the Middle Ages the peoples among whom Christianity spread in such a way that it soon became part of their very souls, had lived hitherto with quite different forms of thought and belief. And in no very distant future, many other features will be stressed in connection with the spread of Christianity. So far as the effect produced by this spread of Christianity is concerned, it will not be difficult to agree with the statement that there was a period when these Christian teachings were the source of fervent enthusiasm. But in modern times the fervour which in the Middle Ages accompanied the spread of Christianity seems to have died away.

And now think of Copernicus, of the whole development of natural science on into the nineteenth century. This natural science which since the time of Copernicus has become an integral part of Western culture, might appear to run counter to Christianity. The facts of history may seem, outwardly, to substantiate this. For example, until the 'twenties of the nineteenth century the writings of Copernicus were on the so-called Index of the Roman Catholic Church. That is an external detail, but the fact remains that Copernicus was a dignitary of the Church. Giordano Bruno was burnt at the stake by the Roman Church but he was, for all that, a member of the Dominican Order. The ideas of both these thinkers sprang from the soil of Christianity and their work was an outcome of the Christian impulse. To maintain that these teachings were not the fruits of Christianity would denote very poor understanding on the part of those who claim to hold fast by the Church. These facts only go to prove that the Church did not understand the fruits of Christianity. Those who see more deeply into the roots of these things will recognise that what the peoples have achieved, even in the more recent centuries, is a result of Christianity, that through Christianity, as also through the laws of Copernicus, the gaze of the human mind was turned from the earth out into the heavenly expanse. Such a change was possible only within Christian culture and through the Christian impulse. Those who observe the depths and not merely the surface of spiritual life will understand something which although it will seem highly paradoxical when I say it now, is nevertheless correct. To this deeper observation, a Haeckel, for all his opposition to Christianity, could only have sprung from the soil of this same Christianity. Ernst Haeckel is inconceivable without the base of Christian culture. And however hard modern natural science may try to promote opposition to Christianity, this natural science is itself an offspring of Christianity, a direct development of the Christian impulse. When modern natural science has got over the ailments of childhood, men will perceive quite clearly that if followed to its logical conclusions, it leads to Spiritual Science, that there is an entirely consistent path from Haeckel to Spiritual Science. When that is grasped it will also be realised that Haeckel is Christian through and through, although he himself has no notion of it. The Christian impulses have given birth not only to what claims to be Christian but also to what appears on the surface to run counter to Christianity. This will soon be realised if we study the underlying reality, not merely the concepts and ideas that are put into words. As can be seen from my little essay on “Reincarnation and Karma,” a direct line leads from the Darwinian theory of evolution to the teaching of repeated earthly lives.

But in order to understand these things correctly we must be able to perceive the influence of the Christian impulses with entirely unprejudiced eyes. Anyone who understands the doctrines of Darwin and Haeckel and is himself convinced that only as a Christian movement was the Darwinian movement possible (although Haeckel had no notion of this, Darwin was aware of many things)—anyone who realises this is led by an absolutely consistent path to the idea of reincarnation. And if he can call upon a certain power of clairvoyance, this same path will lead him to knowledge of the spiritual origin of the human race. True, it is a detour, but with the help of clairvoyance an uninterrupted path from Haeckel's thought to the conception of a spiritual origin of the Earth. It is conceivable, of course, that someone may accept Darwinism in the form in which it is presented to-day, without grasping the life-principles which in reality are contained in it. In other words, if Darwinian thought becomes an impulse in someone who lacks any deep understanding of Christianity—which nevertheless lies in Darwinism—he may end by understanding no more of Darwinism than he does of Christianity. The good spirit of Christianity and the good spirit of Darwinism may alike forsake him. But if he has a grasp of the good spirit of Darwinism, then—however much of a materialist he may be—his thought will carry him back over the earth's history to the point where he recognises that man has not evolved from lower animal forms but must have a spiritual origin. He is led to the point where man is perceived as a spiritual being, hovering as it were over the earthly world. Darwinism, if developed to its logical conclusion, leads to this recognition. But if someone has been forsaken by the good spirit of Darwinism and happens to believe in the idea of reincarnation, he may imagine that he himself once lived as an ape in some incarnation of the planet Earth. [The reference here is to certain assertions made by the theosophists Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater.] Anyone who can believe this lacks all real understanding of Darwinism and of Christianity and must have been forsaken by the good spirits of both! For Darwinism, consistently elaborated, could lead to no such belief. In such a case the idea of reincarnation has been grafted into the soil of materialism. It is possible, of course, for modern Darwinism to be stripped of its Christian elements. If this does not happen, we shall find that on into our own times the impulses of Darwinism have been born out of the Christ Impulse, that the impulses of Christianity work even where they are repudiated. Thus we find that in the early centuries, Christianity spreads quite independently of scholarship or erudition in its adherents; in the Middle Ages it spreads in such a way that the Schoolmen, with all their learning, can contribute very little to it; and finally we have the paradox of Christianity appearing in Darwinism as in an inverted picture. Everything that is great in the Darwinian conception derives its motive power from the Christian impulses. The Christian impulses within it will lead this science of itself out of and beyond materialism.

The Christian impulses have spread by strange channels—in the absence, so it appears, of intellectuality, learning, erudition. Christianity has spread irrespectively of the views of its adherents or opponents—even appearing in an inverted form in the domain of modern materialism. But what exactly is it that spreads? It is not the ideas nor is it the science of Christianity; nor can we say that it is the morality instilled by Christianity. Think only of the moral life of men in those times and we shall find much justification for the fury levelled by men who represented Christianity against those who were its real or alleged enemies. Even the moral power that might have been possessed by souls without much intellectual education will not greatly impress us. What, then, is this mysterious impulse which makes its victorious way through the world? Let us turn here to Spiritual Science, to clairvoyant consciousness. What power is at work in those unlearned men who, coming over from the East, infiltrated the world of Greco-Roman culture? What power is at work in the men who bring Christianity into the foreign world of the Germanic tribes? What is really at work in the materialistic natural science of modern times—the doctrines of which disguise its real nature? What is this power?—It is Christ Himself Who, through the centuries, wends His way from soul to soul, from heart to heart, no matter whether souls understand Him or not. It behoves us to leave aside the concepts that have become ingrained in us, to leave aside all scientific notions and point to the reality, showing how mysteriously Christ Himself is present in multitudinous impulses, taking form in the souls of thousands and tens of thousands of human beings, filling them with His power. It is Christ Himself, working in simple men, Who sweeps over the world of Greco-Roman culture; it is Christ Himself Who stands at the side of those who in later times bring Christianity to the Germanic peoples; it is He—Christ Himself in all His reality—Who makes His way from place to place, from soul to soul, penetrating these souls quite irrespectively of the ideas they hold concerning Him.

Let me here make a trivial comparison. How many people are there who understand nothing at all about the composition of foodstuffs and who are none the less well and properly nourished? It would certainly mean starvation if scientific knowledge of foodstuffs were essential to nourishment. Nourishment has nothing whatever to do with understanding the nature of foodstuffs. Similarly, the spread of Christianity over the earth had nothing to do with men's understanding of it. That is the strange fact. There is a mystery here, only to be explained when the answer can be found to the question: How does Christ Himself wield dominion in the minds and hearts of men?

When Spiritual Science, clairvoyant investigation, puts this question to itself, it is led, first of all, to an event from which the veils can really only be lifted by clairvoyant vision—an event that is entirely consistent with what I have been saying to-day. This above all will be clear to us: the time when Christ worked in the way I have described, is past and gone, and the time has come when men must understand Christ, must have real knowledge of Christ.

It is therefore also necessary to answer the question as to why our age was preceded by that other age when it was possible for the Christ Impulse to spread independently of men's understanding. The event to which clairvoyant consciousness points is that of Pentecost, the sending of the Holy Spirit. Clairvoyant vision, quickened by the power of the Christ Impulse, was therefore directed, in the first place, to this event of Pentecost, the sending of the Holy Spirit. It is this event that presents itself first and foremost to clairvoyant investigation carried out from a certain standpoint.

What was it that happened at the moment in the earth's evolution described to us, somewhat unintelligibly to begin with, as the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles? When with clairvoyant vision one investigates what actually happened then, an answer is forthcoming from Spiritual Science as to what is meant when it is said that simple men—for the Apostles themselves were simple men—began to utter in different tongues, truths which came to them from the depths of spiritual life and which none could have thought them capable of uttering. It was then that the Christian impulses began to spread, independently of the understanding of those human beings to whom they made their way. From the event of Pentecost pours the stream that has been described. What, then, was this event of Pentecost? This question presented itself to Spiritual Science and with the spiritual-scientific answer to it begins—the Fifth Gospel.

Erster Vortrag

Das Thema, über das ich in diesen Tagen zu sprechen gedenke, erscheint mir in bezug auf die heutige Zeit und auf die heutigen Verhältnisse als ein ganz besonders wichtiges. Ich möchte von vornherein betonen, daß es nicht etwa irgendeiner Sensationslust oder ähnlichen Dingen entspringt, daß das Thema gerade den Inhalt hat: Das Fünfte Evangelium. Denn ich hoffe zeigen zu können, daß in der 'Tat von einem solchen Fünften Evangelium in einem gewissen Sinne, und zwar in einem solchen Sinne, der uns besonders wichtig sein muß in unserer Gegenwart, gesprochen werden kann, und daß sich für dasjenige, was damit gemeint ist, in der Tat kein anderer Name besser eignet als der Name «Das Fünfte Evangelium». Dieses Fünfte Evangelium ist ja, wie Sie hören werden, in einer Niederschrift heute noch nicht vorhanden. Aber es wird gewiß in Zukunftstagen der Menschheit auch in ganz bestimmter Niederschrift vorhanden sein. In einem gewissen Sinne aber könnte man sagen, es ist dieses Fünfte Evangelium so alt wie die vier anderen Evangelien.

Damit ich aber von diesem Fünften Evangelium sprechen kann, ist . es notwendig, daß wir uns heute in einer Art Einleitung verständigen über einige wichtige Punkte, die zum völligen Begreifen dessen, was wir nunmehr nennen wollen das Fünfte Evangelium, notwendig sind. Und zwar möchte ich ausgehen davon, daß ganz gewiß die Zeit nicht mehr fernliegen wird, in welcher schon in den niedrigsten Schulen, schon im primitivsten Unterricht die Wissenschaft, die man gewöhnlich die Geschichte nennt, sich etwas anders anhören wird, als sie sich bisher angehört hat. Es wird nämlich ganz gewiß - und die nächsten Tage sollen es uns gewissermaßen beweisen -, es wird ganz gewiß der Christus-Begriff, die Christus-Vorstellung, in der Geschichtsbetrachtung der Zukunft eine ganz andere, wichtigere Rolle spielen, auch schon in der elementarsten Geschichtsbetrachtung, als sie bisher gespielt hat. Ich weiß, daß ich mit diesem Satze eigentlich etwas ungeheuer Paradoxes ausspreche. Bedenken wir doch, daß wir ja zurückgehen können auf gar nicht so weit zurückliegende Zeiten, in denen unzählige Herzen in einer viel intensiveren Weise ihre Gefühle und Empfindungen zu dem Christus hinrichteten unter den einfachsten wie unter den gebildetsten Bewohnern der westlichen Länder Europas, mehr als dies heute der Fall ist. In einem ungeheuer erheblicheren Maße war das in früherer Zeit der Fall. Wer Umschau hält im Schrifttum der Gegenwart, wer nachdenkt über das, was den gegenwärtigen Menschen hauptsächlich interessiert, woran er sein Herz hängt, der wird den Eindruck haben, daß der Enthusiasmus, die Ergriffenheit der Empfindung für die Christus-Vorstellung im Abnehmen ist, insbesondere im Abnehmen da, wo man auf eine gewisse, aus der Zeit heraus folgende Bildung Anspruch macht. Da erscheint es wohl paradox, wenn, wie ich eben betont habe, diese unsere Zeit darauf hinarbeitet, daß die Christus-Vorstellung in der Betrachtung der Geschichte der Menschheit in einer nicht fernen Zukunft eine viel bedeutendere Rolle spielt, als es bisher der Fall war. Scheint das nicht ein vollkommener Widerspruch zu sein?

Nun wollen wir uns einmal von einer anderen Seite diesem Gedanken nähern. Ich habe auch hier in dieser Stadt schon öfter über die Bedeutung und den Inhalt der Christus-Vorstellung sprechen dürfen. Und in Büchern und Zyklen, die hier aufliegen, finden Sie mannigfache Ausführungen aus den Tiefen der Geisteswissenschaft heraus über die Geheimnisse der Christus-Wesenheit und der Christus-Vorstellung. Jeder muß da die Meinung bekommen, wenn er das, was in Vorträgen, Zyklen und in unserem Schrifttum überhaupt gesagt worden ist, in sich aufnimmt, daß zu dem völligen Verstehen der ChristusWesenheit ein starkes, großes Rüstzeug gehört, daß man die tiefsten Begriffe, Vorstellungen und Ideen zu Rate ziehen muß, wenn man sich hinaufschwingen will zum völligen Verständnis dessen, was der Christus ist und was der Impuls ist, der als Christus-Impuls durch die Jahrhunderte gegangen ist. Man könnte vielleicht sogar, wenn nicht anderes dagegen spräche, zu der Vorstellung kommen, daß man erst die ganze 'Theosophie oder Anthroposophie kennen muß, um sich aufzuschwingen zu einer richtigen Vorstellung von dem Christus. Wenn wir aber absehen von dem und auf die Geistesentwickelung der verflossenen Jahrhunderte blicken, da tritt uns entgegen von Jahrhundert zu Jahrhundert dasjenige, was vorhanden ist an ausführlicher, tiefgründiger Wissenschaft, die bestimmt sein sollte, den Christus und seine Erscheinung zu begreifen. Durch Jahrhunderte hindurch haben die Menschen ihre höchsten und bedeutsamsten Ideen aufgewendet, um den Christus zu begreifen. Auch hier könnte es daraus nun scheinen, als ob nur die bedeutsarmmnsten intellektuellen Tätigkeiten des Menschen hinreichend sein würden, um den Christus zu verstehen. Ist das in der Tat so? Daß es nicht so ist, davon kann uns eine ganz einfache Erwägung den Beweis liefern.

Legen wir einmal gleichsam auf eine geistige Waage alles dasjenige, was bisher an Gelehrsamkeit, Wissenschaft, auch an anthroposophischem Verständnis des Christus-Begriffes dazu beigetragen hat, den Christus zu begreifen. Legen wir das alles auf die eine Waagschale einer geistigen Waage und legen wir auf die andere Schale in unseren Gedanken alle die tiefen Gefühle, alle die Innigkeit in den Seelen der Menschen, die durch die Jahrhunderte zu dem sich gelenkt haben, was man den Christus nennt, und man wird finden, daß all die Wissenschaft, alle Gelehrsamkeit, selbst alle Anthroposophie, die wir aufbringen können zur Erklärung des Christus, in der Waagschale überraschend aufschnellt, und alle die tiefen Gefühle und Empfindungen, welche die Menschen hingelenkt haben zur Christus-Wesenheit, zur Erscheinung des Christus, die andere Waagschale tief, tief hinunterdrücken. Man sagt nicht zuviel, wenn man behauptet, daß eine ungeheure Wirkung von dem Christus ausgegangen ist, und daß das Allergeringste zu dieser Wirkung das Wissen von dem Christus beigetragen hat. Es hätte um das Christentum wahrhaftig recht schlecht gestanden, wenn die Menschen, um an dem Christus zu hängen, alle gelehrten Auseinandersetzungen des Mittelalters, der Scholastik und der Kirchenväter gebraucht hätten, oder wenn die Menschen nur bedürftig gewesen wären auch alles dessen, was wir heute durch die Anthroposophie aufbringen können zum Begreifen der Christus-Idee. Was man damit vermöchte, wäre wahrhaftig recht wenig. Ich glaube nicht, daß irgend jemand, der unbefangen den Gang des Christentums durch die Jahrhunderte hindurch betrachtet, gegen diese Gedanken etwas Ernstes einwenden könnte. Aber wir können uns diesem Gedanken noch von einer anderen Seite genauer nähern.

Lassen wir den Blick zurückschweifen auf die Zeiten, in denen es noch kein Christentum gegeben hat. Ich brauche nur zu erinnern an dasjenige, was gewiß den meisten der hier befindlichen Seelen voll gegenwärtig ist. Ich brauche nur zu erinnern, wie im alten Griechenland die griechische Tragödie, insbesondere in ihren älteren Formen, wenn sie den kämpfenden Gott oder den Menschen, in dessen Seele der kämpfende Gott wirkte, darstellte, gleichsam wie von der Bühne herunter das göttliche Walten und Weben unmittelbar anschaulich machte. Ich brauche nur hinzuweisen, wie PTomer seine bedeutsame Dichtung ganz durchwoben hat mit dem Wirken des Geistigen, ich brauche nur hinzuweisen auf die großen Gestalten des So&rates, des Plato, des Aristoteles. Mit diesen Namen tritt vor unsere Seelen ein geistiges Leben höchster Art auf einem gewissen Gebiete. Wenn wir von allem übrigen absehen und nur zu der einen Gestalt des Aristoteles hinsehen, der Jahrhunderte vor der Begründung des Christentums gewirkt hat, so tritt uns entgegen, was in gewisser Weise keine Steigerung, keine Fortbildung bis in unsere Zeit erfahren hat. Das Denken, die Ausbildung der menschlichen Logik durch Aristoteles ist etwas so ungeheuer Vollkommenes auch heute noch, daß man sagen kann, es war etwas Höchstes erreicht im menschlichen Denken, so daß eine Steigerung bisher nicht geschehen ist.

Und nun wollen wir für einen Augenblick eine merkwürdige Hypothese aufstellen, die notwendig ist für die nächsten Tage. Wir wollen uns einmal vorstellen, daß es gar keine Evangelien gäbe, aus denen wir irgend etwas erfahren könnten über die Gestalt Christi. Wir wollen einmal annehmen, daß die ersten Urkunden, die der Mensch heute als Neues Testament in die Hand nimmt, gar nicht vorhanden wären, wollen uns denken, es gäbe gar keine Evangelien. Wir wollen gewisserrnaßen absehen von dem, was über die Gründung des Christentums gesagt ist, wollen nur den Gang des Christentums als eine geschichtliche Tatsache betrachten, wollen sehen, was geschehen ist unter den ‚Menschen durch die nachchristlichen Jahrhunderte hindurch; also ohne die Evangelien, Apostelgeschichte, Paulusbriefe und so weiter wollen wir nur betrachten, was tatsächlich geschehen ist. Das ist natürlich nur eine Hypothese, aber sie wird uns helfen zu dem, was wir erreichen wollen. Was ist nun geschehen in den Zeiten, die verflossen sind vor und seit der Begründung des Christentums?

Wenn wir zunächst den Blick auf den Süden Europas werfen, so haben wir in einem gewissen Zeitpunkte höchste menschliche Geistesbildung, wie wir sie eben in ihrem Repräsentanten Aristoteles vor die Seele gerufen haben, hochentwickeltes geistiges Leben, das in den nachfolgenden Jahrhunderten noch eine besondere Ausbildung erfahren hatte. Ja, es gab in der Zeit, in der das Christentum seinen Weg durch die Welt zu machen begann, im Süden Europas. zahlreiche griechisch gebildete Menschen, Menschen, die das griechische Geistesleben aufgenommen hatten. Wenn man bis zu jenem merkwürdigen Manne, der ein so heftiger Gegner des Christentums war, Ce/sas, und später noch die Entwickelung des Christentums verfolgt, so findet man im Süden Europas auf der griechischen und italienischen Halbinsel bis ins 2,, 3. nachchristliche Jahrhundert Menschen mit höchster Geistesbildung, zahlreiche Menschen, die sich angeeignet haben die hohen Ideen, die wir bei Plato finden, deren Scharfsinn wirklich sich ausnimmt wie eine Fortsetzung des Scharfsinnes des Aristoteles, feine und starke Geister mit griechischer Bildung, Römer mit griechischer Bildung, die zu einer Feingeistigkeit des Griechentums das Aggressive, Persönliche des Römertums hinzufügten.

In diese Welt hinein stößt der christliche Impuls. Dazumal lebte der christliche Impuls so, daß wir sagen können, die Vertreter dieses christlichen Impulses nehmen sich wahrhaftig wie ungebildete Leute aus in bezug auf die Intellektualität, in bezug auf Wissen von der Welt, gegenüber demjenigen, was zahlreiche gebildete römisch-griechische Menschen in sich trugen. Mitten in eine Welt reifster Intellektualität schieben sich Menschen ohne Bildung hinein. Und nun erleben wir ein merkwürdiges Schauspiel: Es breiten diese einfachen, primitiven Naturen, welche die Träger des ersten Christentums sind, dieses Christentum mit einer verhältnismäßig großen Schnelligkeit im Süden Europas aus. Und wenn wir heute mit dem, was wir, sagen wir durch die Anthroposophie, über das Wesen des Christentums verstehen können, herantreten an diese einfachen, primitiven Naturen, die dazumal das Christentum ausbreiteten, so dürfen wir uns sagen: Diese primitiven Naturen verstanden von dem Wesen des Christus — wir brauchen gar nicht einmal zu denken an den großen kosmischen ChristusGedanken, der heute durch die Anthroposophie aufgehen soll, wir können an viel einfachere Christus-Gedanken denken -, die damaligen Träger des christlichen Impulses, die sich hineinschieben in die griechische hochentwickelte Bildung, verstanden von alldem nichts. Sie hatten nichts auf den Markt des griechisch-römischen Lebens zu tragen als ihre persönliche Innerlichkeit, die sie sich als ihr persönliches Verhältnis zu dem geliebten Christus herausgebildet hatten; denn sie liebten wie ein Glied einer geliebten Familie eben dieses Verhältnis. Diejenigen, die hereintrugen in das damalige Griechen- und Römertum das Christentum, das sich bis in unsere Zeit fortgebildet hat, das waren nicht gebildete Theologen oder Theosophen, das waren nicht Gebildete. Die gebildeten Theosophen der damaligen Zeit, die Gnostiker, haben zwar zu hohen Ideen über den Christus sich erhoben, aber sie haben auch nur geben können, was wir auf die emporschnellende Waagschale legen müssen. Wäre es auf die Gnostiker angekommen, das Christentum hätte gewiß nicht seinen Siegeszug durch die Welt genommen. Es war keine besonders ausgebildete Intellektualität, die sich vom Osten hereinschob und in verhältnismäßiger Schnelligkeit das alte Griechentum und Römertum zum Sinken brachte. Das ist die Sache von der einen Seite betrachtet.

Von der anderen Seite betrachtet, sehen wir uns die intellektuell hochstehenden Menschen an, von Celsus, dem Feinde des Christentums, der damals schon alles das aufgebracht hat, was man heute noch dagegen sagen kann, bis zu dem Philosophen auf dem Throne, Mark Aurel, Sehen wir uns die feingebildeten Neuplatoniker an, die damals Ideen aufbrachten, gegen die heute die Philosophie ein Kinderspiel ist, und die unsere heutigen Ideen weit übertrafen an Höhe, an Weite des Gesichtskreises. Und sehen wir alles, was diese Geister gegen das Christentum vorzubringen hatten, und durchdringen wir uns mit dem, was diese intellektuell Hochstehenden im griechischen und römischen Geist gegen das Christentum vorzubringen hatten von dem Standpunkte der griechischen Philosophie aus, so bekommen wir den Eindruck: die alle haben den Christus-Impuls nicht verstanden. Wir sehen, das Christentum breitet sich aus durch 'Träger, die von dem Wesen des Christentums nichts verstehen; es wird bekämpft von einer hohen Kultur, die nichts begreifen kann von dem, was der Christus-Impuls bedeutet. Merkwürdig tritt das Christentum in die Welt, so, daß Anhänger und Gegner von seinem eigentlichen Geiste nichts verstehen. Und doch: die Kraft haben Menschen in der Seele getragen, diesen Christus-Impuls zum Siegeszuge durch die Welt zu bringen.

Und sehen wir uns diejenigen an, die selbst mit einer gewissen Größe für das Christentum eintreten, wie der berühmte Kirchenvater Tertullian. Wir sehen in ihm einen Römer, der in der 'Tat, wenn wir seine Sprache ins Auge fassen, fast ein Neuschöpfer der römischen Sprache ist, der mit einer Treffsicherheit neue Worte prägte, die uns eine bedeutende Persönlichkeit erkennen lassen. Wenn wir uns aber fragen: Wie steht es mit der Christus-Idee des Tertullian? — da wird die Sache anders. Da finden wir, daß er eigentlich recht wenig Intellektualität, geistige Höhe zeigt. Auch die Verteidiger des Christentums bringen nicht viel zustande. Und dennoch, sie sind wirksam, als Persönlichkeiten wirksam, solche Geister wie Tertullian, auf dessen Gründe gebildete Griechen wirklich nicht viel geben konnten. Trotzdem wirkt er hinreißend; aber durch was? Das ist es, worauf es ankommt! Fühlen wir, daß hier sich wirklich eine Frage vor die Seele stellt! Durch was wirken die Träger des Christus-Impulses denn, die selbst von dem, was der Christus-Impuls eigentlich ist, nicht viel verstehen? Durch was wirken die christlichen Kirchenväter, selbst bis auf Origenes, denen man die Ungeschicklichkeit in bezug auf das Verständnis des Christus-Impulses ansieht? Was ist es, was selbst die bis zu einer solchen Höhe gestiegene griechisch-römische Bildung nicht verstehen konnte an dem Wesen des Christus-Impulses? Was ist das alles?

Aber gehen wir weiter. Dieselbe Erscheinung tritt uns bald in einer noch schärferen Weise entgegen, wenn wir das geschichtliche Leben betrachten. Wir sehen, wie die Jahrhunderte kommen, in denen das Christentum sich ausbreitet innerhalb der europäischen Welt unter Völkern, die wie die germanischen von ganz anderen Religionsvorstellungen herkommen, welche als Völker eins sind oder wenigstens eins zu sein scheinen mit ihren religiösen Vorstellungen, und die dennoch mit voller Kraft diesen Christus-Impuls aufnahmen, wie wenn er ihr eigentliches Leben wäre. Und wenn wir uns die wirksamsten Glaubensboten in den germanischen Völkern betrachten, waren das scholastisch-theologisch gebildete Leute? Ganz und gar nicht! Es waren diejenigen, die mit verhältnismäßig primitiver Seele unter den Leuten einherzogen und in primitiver Weise, mit den allernächsten, alltäglichsten Vorstellungen zu den Leuten sprachen, aber unmittelbar ihre Herzen ergriffen. Sie verstanden die Worte so zu setzen, daß sie die tiefsten Saiten derjenigen berühren konnten, zu denen sie sprachen. Einfache Leute zogen hinaus in alle Gegenden, und gerade die wirkten am bedeutsamsten.

So sehen wir die Verbreitung des Christentums durch die Jahrhunderte hindurch. Dann aber bewundern wir, wie eben dasselbe Christentum zum Anlaß wird bedeutsamer Gelehrsamkeit, Wissenschaft und Philosophie. Wir unterschätzen nicht diese Philosophie, aber heute wollen wir einmal den Blick hinwenden auf jene eigentümliche Erscheinung, daß das Christentum bis in das Mittelalter unter Völkern sich ausbreitet, die bis dahin ganz andere Vorstellungsformen in ihrem Gemüte getragen haben, so daß es bald zu ihrer Seele gehörte. Und in nicht allzu ferner Zukunft wird man noch manches andere betonen, wenn man von der Ausbreitung des Christentums spricht. Wenn man von der Wirkung des christlichen Impulses spricht, kann man leicht verstanden werden dann, wenn man davon spricht, daß in einer bestimmten Zeit gleichsam die Früchte der Ausbreitung des Christentums sich so gezeigt haben, daß man sagen kann: es ging Begeisterung aus dieser Verbreitung des Christus-Impulses hervor. Aber wenn wir in die neueren Zeiten heraufkommen, da scheint abgedämpft zu werden, was wir durch das Mittelalter hindurch als sich ausbreitendes Christentum betrachten können.

Betrachten wir die Zeit des Kopernikus, die Zeit der aufkeimenden Naturwissenschaft bis in das 19. Jahrhundert hinein. Es könnte so scheinen, als ob diese Naturwissenschaft, dasjenige was seit Kopernikus in das abendländische Geistesleben sich hineingearbeitet hat, dem Christentum entgegengearbeitet hätte. Äußere Tatsachen könnten das erhärten. Die katholische Kirche zum Beispiel hatte Kopernikus bis in die zwanziger Jahre des 19, Jahrhunderts hinein auf dem sogenannten Index stehen. Sie hat Kopernikus als ihren Feind angesehen. Aber das sind äußere Dinge. Das hinderte doch nicht, daß Kopernikus ein Domherr war. Und wenn die katholische Kirche Giordano Bruno auch verbrannt hat, so hinderte das nicht, daß er ein Dominikaner war. Sie beide sind eben aus dem Christentum heraus zu ihren Ideen gekommen. Sie haben aus dem christlichen Impulse heraus gehandelt. Derjenige versteht die Sache schlecht, der sich auf dem Boden der Kirche halten und glauben wollte, daß das nicht Früchte des Christentums gewesen wären. Es wird durch die angeführten Tatsachen nur bewiesen, daß die Kirche die Früchte des Christentums sehr schlecht verstanden hat; sie brauchte bis ins 19. Jahrhundert hinein Zeit, um einzusehen, daß man die Ideen des Kopernikus nicht durch den Index unterdrücken kann. Derjenige, der die Dinge tiefer sieht, wird doch anerkennen müssen, daß alles, was die Völker getan haben auch in den neueren Jahrhunderten, ein Resultat, ein Ergebnis des Christentums ist, daß sich durch das Christentum der Blick der Menschen hinausgewendet hat von der Erde in die Himmelsweiten, wie es durch Kopernikus und Giordano Bruno geschehen ist. Das war nur innerhalb der christlichen Kultur und durch den christlichen Impuls möglich.

Und für denjenigen, der das geistige Leben nicht an der Oberfläche, sondern in den Tiefen betrachtet, für den ergibt sich etwas, das, wenn ich es jetzt ausspreche, recht paradox erscheinen wird, aber dennoch richtig ist. Für eine solche tiefere Betrachtung erscheint es nämlich unmöglich, daß ein Flaecke/ entstanden wäre so, wie er dasteht in aller seiner Christus-Gegnerschaft, ohne daß er entstanden wäre aus dem Christentum heraus. Ernst Haeckel ist ohne die Voraussetzung der christlichen Kultur gar nicht möglich. Und die ganze neuere naturwissenschaftliche Entwickelung, wenn sie sich auch noch so sehr bemüht, Gegnerschaft des Christentums zu entwickeln, alle diese neuere Naturwissenschaft ist ein Kind des Christentums, eine direkte Fortsetzung des christlichen Impulses. Die Menschheit wird, wenn erst die Kinderkrankheiten der neueren Naturwissenschaft ganz abgestreift sind, schon einsehen, was das bedeutet, daß der Ausgangspunkt der neueren Naturwissenschaft, konsequent verfolgt, wirklich in die Geisteswissenschaft hineinführt, daß es einen ganz konsequenten Weg gibt von Haeckel in die Geisteswissenschaft hinein. Wenn man das begreifen wird, wird man auch einsehen, daß Haeckel ein durch und durch christlicher Kopf ist, wenn er auch selber nichts davon weiß. Die christlichen Impulse haben nicht nur hervorgebracht, was sich christlich nennt und nannte, sondern auch dasjenige, was wie eine Gegnerschaft gegen das Christentum sich geriert. Man muß die Dinge nicht nur auf ihre Begriffe hin untersuchen, sondern auf ihre Realität hin, dann kommt man schon zu dieser Erkenntnis. Aus der darwinistischen Entwickelungslehre führt, wie Sie in dem kleinen Schriftchen von mir über «Reinkarnation und Karma» sehen können, ein gerader Weg zu der Lehre der wiederholten Erdenleben.

Um aber auf dem richtigen Boden zu stehen in bezug auf diese Dinge, muß man in einer gewissen Weise das Walten der christlichen Impulse unbefangen beobachten können. Derjenige, der den Darwinismus, den Haeckelismus versteht, und der selber ein wenig durchdrungen ist von dem, wovon Haeckel noch gar nichts weiß - Darwin aber wußte noch manches -, daß diese beiden Bewegungen nur als christliche Bewegungen möglich waren, wer das versteht, kommt ganz konsequent zu der Reinkarnationsidee. Und wer zu Hilfe ziehen kann eine gewisse hellseherische Kraft, der kommt auf diesem Wege ganz konsequent zu dem geistigen Ursprung des Menschengeschlechts. Es ist zwar ein Umweg, aber, wenn Hellsichtigkeit hinzukommt, ein richtiger Weg von dem Haeckelismus zu der geistigen Auffassung des Erdenursprungs. Aber auch der Fall ist denkbar, daß man den Darwinismus nimmt, wie er heute sich darbietet, ohne aber durchdrungen zu sein von den Lebensprinzipien des Darwinismus selbst; mit anderen Worten: wenn man den Darwinismus aufnimmt als einen Impuls und nichts in sich fühlt von einem tieferen Verständnis des Christentums, das doch im Darwinismus liegt, dann kommt man zu etwas sehr Eigentümlichem. Dazu kann man kommen, daß man durch solche geistige Beschaffenheit der Seele gleich wenig vom Christentum und vom Darwinismus versteht. Man kann dann von dem guten Geiste des Christentums ebenso verlassen sein wie von dem guten Geiste des Darwinismus. Hat man aber den guten Geist des Darwinismus, dann mag man noch so materialistisch sein, dann kommt man immer weiter zurück in der Erdengeschichte bis auf den Punkt, wo man erkennt, daß der Mensch niemals aus niederen Tierformen sich herausentwickelt hat, daß er einen geistigen Ursprung haben muß. Man kommt zurück auf den Punkt, wo man den Menschen als geistiges Wesen gleichsam schwebend über der Erdenwelt schaut. Der konsequente Darwinismus wird dazu führen. Ist man aber von seinem guten Geiste verlassen, dann kann man glauben, wenn man zurückgeht und ein Anhänger der Reinkarnationsidee ist, man habe einmal selber als Affe gelebt auf irgendeiner Inkarnation der Erde selbst. Wenn man das glauben kann, dann muß man sowohl von dem guten Geiste des Darwinismus als auch des Christentums verlassen sein, dann muß man von beiden nichts verstehen. Denn niemals könnte einem konsequenten Darwinismus passieren, das zu glauben. Das heißt, man muß in ganz äußerlicher Weise die Reinkarnationsidee übertragen auf diese materialistische Kultur. Denn man kann den modernen Darwinismus gewiß seiner Christlichkeit entkleiden. Tut man das nicht, so wird man finden, daß bis in unsere Zeit hinein die darwinistischen Impulse aus dem Christus-Impuls geboren worden sind, daß die christlichen Impulse auch da wirken, wo man sie verleugnet. So haben wir nicht nur die Erscheinung, daß das Christentum sich in den ersten Jahrhunderten abgesehen von der Gelehrsamkeit und dem Wissen der Anhänger und Bekenner ausbreitet, daß es sich ausbreitet im Mittelalter so, daß höchst wenig dazu beitragen können die gelehrten Kirchenväter und die Scholastiker, sondern wir haben in unserer Zeit die noch paradoxere Erscheinung, daß das Christentum wie in seinem Gegenbilde im Materialismus unserer heutigen Naturwissenschaft erscheint, und alle Größe, alle ihre Tatkraft doch aus den christlichen Impulsen hat. Die christlichen Impulse, die in ihr liegen, werden diese Wissenschaft von selbst über den Materialismus hinausführen.

Sonderbar ist es mit den christlichen Impulsen! Intellektualität, Wissen, Gelehrsamkeit, Erkenntnis scheinen gar nicht dabei zu sein bei der Ausbreitung dieser Impulse. Ganz etwas anderes scheint ihre Ausbreitung in der Welt zu bedingen. Man möchte sagen, das Christentum breitet sich aus, was auch die Menschen für oder dagegen denken, ja sogar so, daß es wie in ein Gegenteil verkehrt im modernen Materialismus erscheint. Was breitet sich denn da aus? Die christlichen Ideen sind es nicht, die christliche Wissenschaft ist es nicht. Man könnte noch sagen, das moralische Gefühl breitet sich aus, das durch das Christentum eingepflanzt worden ist. Aber man sehe nur an das Walten der Moral in diesen Zeiten, und man wird mancherlei berechtigt finden von dem, was aufgezählt werden kann an Wut der Vertreter des Christentums gegen wirkliche oder vermeintliche Gegner des Christentums. Auch die Moral, die walten konnte in den Seelen, die intellektuell nicht hoch gebildet sind, wird uns nicht sehr imponieren können, wenn wir sie ins Auge fassen auch da, wo sie wirklich am christlichsten denkt. Was breitet sich denn da aus? Was ist dieses Sonderbare? Was ist es, was im Siegeszuge durch die Welt geht? Fragen wir darüber nun die Geisteswissenschaft, das hellsichtige Bewußtsein! Was waltete in den ungebildeten Menschen, die sich von Osten nach Westen hineinschieben in das hochgebildete Griechen- und Römertum? Was waltet in den Menschen, die in die germanische, in die fremde Welt das Christentum hineingetragen haben? Was waltet in der modernen materialistischen Naturwissenschaft, wo die Lehre ihr Angesicht gleichsam noch verhüllt? Was waltet in all diesen Seelen, wenn es nicht intellektuelle, nicht einmal moralische Impulse sind? Was ist es denn? — Es ist der Christus selbst, der von Herz zu Herz, von Seele zu Seele zieht, der durch die Welt ziehen und wirken kann, gleichgültig, ob die Seelen ihn verstehen oder nicht durch diese Entwickelung im Laufe der Jahrhunderte!

Wir sind gezwungen, von unseren Begriffen, von aller Wissenschaft abzusehen und auf die Realität hinzuweisen, zu zeigen, wie geheimnisvoll der Christus selber wandelt in vielen tausenden Impulsen, Gestalt annehmend in den Seelen, in viele Tausende und aber Tausende untertauchend und die Menschen erfüllend durch die Jahrhunderte. In den einfachen Menschen ist es der Christus selbst, der über die griechische und italische Welt schreitet, der nach Westen und nach Norden hin immer mehr Menschenseelen ergreift. Bei den späteren Lehrern, die den germanischen Völkern das Christentum bringen, ist es der Christus selbst, der ihnen zur Seite wandelt. Er ist es, der wirkliche, wahrhaftige Christus, der auf der Erde waltet wie die Seele der Erde selber, der von Ort zu Ort, von Seele zu Seele zieht und, ganz gleichgültig was die Seelen über den Christus denken, in diese Seelen einzieht. Einen trivialen Vergleich möchte ich gebrauchen: Wie viele Menschen gibt es, die gar nichts verstehen von der Zusammensetzung der Nahrungsmittel und die sich doch nähren nach allen Regeln der Kunst. Es wäre doch eigentlich zum Verhungern, wenn man die Nahrungsmittel kennen müßte, bevor man sich nähren könnte. Das Sich-nähren-Können hat nichts zu tun mit dem Verständnis der Nahrungsmittel. So hatte die Ausbreitung des Christentums über die Erde hin nichts zu tun mit dem Verständnis, das man dem Christentum entgegenbrachte. Das ist das Eigentümliche. Da waltet ein Geheimnis, das nur dadurch aufgeklärt werden kann, daß man die Antwort gibt auf die Frage: Wie waltet der Christus selber in den menschlichen Gemütern? Und wenn nun die Geisteswissenschaft, die hellseherische Betrachtung, sich diese Frage stellt, dann wird sie zunächst auf ein Ereignis gelenkt, das im Grunde nur durch die hellseherische Betrachtung wirklich enthüllt werden kann, das äußerlich in der Tat in vollem Einklange steht mit allem, was ich heute gesprochen habe. Eines werden wir sehen, was in der Zukunft immer mehr wird verstanden werden müssen: Die Zeit ist vorüber, in welcher der Christus so gewirkt hat, wie ich eben charakterisiert habe, und die Zeit ist gekommen, wo die Menschen den Christus werden verstehen müssen, erkennen müssen.

Deshalb ist es notwendig, auch die Frage sich zu beantworten, warum unserer Zeit die andere vorausgegangen ist, in der sich der Christus-Impuls ausbreiten konnte, ohne daß das Verständnis dazu notwendig war, ohne daß die Menschen mit ihrem Bewußtsein dabei waren. Ein Ereignis war es, wodurch dieses möglich war! Und das Ereignis, zu dem das hellseherische Bewußtsein weist, ist das sogenannte Pfingstereignis, die Aussendung des Heiligen Geistes. Daher war es, daß zuerst der hellseherische Blick, der angeregt worden ist durch den wirklichen Christus-Impuls im anthroposophischen Sinne, hingelenkt wurde auf dieses Pfingstereignis, die Aussendung des Heiligen Geistes. Hellseherisch betrachtet ist es das Pfingstereignis, was sich zuerst der Untersuchung darbietet, die von einem gewissen Gesichtspunkte aus geführt wird.

Was geschah in jenem Augenblick der Weltentwickelung auf der Erde, der uns ziemlich unverständlich zunächst als das Herabkommen des Heiligen Geistes auf die Apostel dargestellt wird? Wenn man den hellseherischen Blick darauf hinwendet, untersucht, was da eigentlich geschehen ist, dann bekommt man eine geisteswissenschaftliche Antwort darauf, was gemeint ist damit, daß gesagt wird: Einfache Leute, wie ja auch die Apostel waren, fingen plötzlich an, in verschiedenen Zungen zu sprechen, was sie aus den Tiefen des geistigen Lebens heraus zu sagen hatten, und was man ihnen nicht zumutete. Ja, dazumal fingen das Christentum, die christlichen Impulse an, sich so auszubreiten, daß sie unabhängig wurden von dem Verständnis der Menschen, in deren Gemütern sie sich ausbreiteten.

Von dem Pfingstereignis aus ergießt sich dann der Strom der Christus-Kraft über die Erde hin, der charakterisiert worden ist. Was ist denn das Pfingstereignis gewesen? Diese Frage trat an die Geisteswissenschaft heran, und mit der Antwort auf diese Frage, mit der geisteswissenschaftlichen Antwort auf die Frage: Was war das Pfingstereignis? — beginnt das Fünfte Evangelium, und damit wollen wir morgen unsere Betrachtungen fortsetzen.

First Lecture

The topic I intend to discuss these days seems to me to be particularly important in relation to the present time and circumstances. I would like to emphasize from the outset that the choice of this topic, The Fifth Gospel, is not motivated by any desire for sensationalism or anything of the sort. For I hope to be able to show that, in a certain sense, and indeed in a sense that must be particularly important to us in our present time, it is indeed possible to speak of such a Fifth Gospel, and that there is in fact no name more suitable for what is meant by it than the name “The Fifth Gospel.” This Fifth Gospel, as you will hear, does not yet exist in written form. But it will certainly exist in the future of humanity in a very specific written form. In a certain sense, however, one could say that this Fifth Gospel is as old as the other four Gospels.

However, in order for me to speak about this Fifth Gospel, it is necessary that we first agree on a few important points that are essential for a complete understanding of what we now wish to call the Fifth Gospel. I would like to start from the premise that the time is certainly not far off when, even in the lowest schools, even in the most primitive teaching, the science commonly called history will sound somewhat different from what it has sounded up to now. For it is quite certain – and the next few days will prove this to us, so to speak – that the concept of Christ, the idea of Christ, will play a completely different and more important role in the historical view of the future, even in the most elementary historical view, than it has played up to now. I know that I am actually expressing something tremendously paradoxical with this statement. Let us remember that we can go back to times not so long ago when countless hearts, among the simplest and most educated inhabitants of the western countries of Europe, directed their feelings and emotions toward Christ in a much more intense way than is the case today. This was true to an immensely greater extent in earlier times. Anyone who looks around in contemporary literature, who thinks about what interests people today, what they care about, will get the impression that the enthusiasm and emotion surrounding the idea of Christ is waning, especially among those who claim to have a certain education that comes with age. It therefore seems paradoxical that, as I have just emphasized, our age is working toward a situation in which the idea of Christ will play a much more significant role in the consideration of human history in the not too distant future than has been the case up to now. Does this not seem to be a complete contradiction?

Now let us approach this idea from another angle. I have often had the opportunity to speak here in this city about the meaning and content of the Christ concept. And in books and lecture cycles available here, you will find manifold explanations from the depths of spiritual science about the mysteries of the Christ being and the Christ concept. Everyone who takes in what has been said in lectures, cycles, and in our literature in general must come to the conclusion that a strong, broad foundation is necessary for a complete understanding of the Christ being, that one must consult the deepest concepts, ideas, and notions if one wants to rise to a complete understanding of what Christ is and what the impulse is that has passed through the centuries as the Christ impulse. One might even come to the conclusion, if nothing else spoke against it, that one must first know the whole of theosophy or anthroposophy in order to rise to a correct conception of the Christ. But if we disregard that and look at the spiritual development of past centuries, we see that from century to century there has been a wealth of detailed, profound knowledge that should have been sufficient to understand Christ and his appearance. Throughout the centuries, people have devoted their highest and most significant ideas to understanding Christ. Here, too, it might seem that only the most insignificant intellectual activities of human beings would be sufficient to understand Christ. Is this really the case? A very simple consideration can prove that this is not so.

Let us place on one side of a spiritual scale everything that scholarship, science, and even anthroposophical understanding of the concept of Christ have contributed to understanding Christ. Let us place all of this on one side of a spiritual scale and on the other side, in our minds, let us place all the deep feelings, all the sincerity in the souls of human beings that have been directed over the centuries toward what we call Christ. We will find that all the science, all the scholarship, even all the anthroposophy that we can muster to explain Christ will suddenly spring up in the balance, and all the deep feelings and sensations that have led people to the Christ being, to the appearance of Christ, will press the other side of the scales down deeply, deeply. It is no exaggeration to say that an enormous effect has gone out from Christ, and that the knowledge of Christ has contributed very little to this effect. Christianity would have been in a very bad state indeed if people had needed all the learned disputes of the Middle Ages, of scholasticism and the Church Fathers in order to cling to Christ, or if people had been in need of everything that we can bring to bear today through anthroposophy in order to understand the idea of Christ. What one could achieve with that would be very little indeed. I do not believe that anyone who looks impartially at the course of Christianity through the centuries could raise any serious objection to these thoughts. But we can approach this idea more precisely from another angle.

Let us cast our gaze back to the times when Christianity did not yet exist. I need only remind you of what is certainly very much present in the minds of most of you here. I need only remind you how, in ancient Greece, Greek tragedy, especially in its older forms, when it depicted the struggling god or the man in whose soul the struggling god was at work, made the divine workings and weavings immediately visible, as if from the stage. I need only point out how Plato's significant poetry is completely interwoven with the workings of the spiritual, I need only point to the great figures of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. With these names, a spiritual life of the highest order in a certain field appears before our souls. If we disregard everything else and look only at the figure of Aristotle, who worked centuries before the founding of Christianity, we are confronted with something that, in a certain sense, has not been enhanced or developed further in our time. Aristotle's thinking and his development of human logic are so incredibly perfect even today that one can say that the highest level of human thought had been reached, and that no improvement has been made since then.

And now let us for a moment put forward a curious hypothesis that is necessary for the next few days. Let us imagine that there were no Gospels from which we could learn anything about the figure of Christ. Let us assume that the first documents that man today takes up as the New Testament did not exist at all, let us imagine that there were no Gospels. Let us disregard what has been said about the founding of Christianity, let us consider only the course of Christianity as a historical fact, let us see what happened among people throughout the post-Christian centuries; in other words, without the Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, the letters of Paul, and so on, let us consider only what actually happened. This is, of course, only a hypothesis, but it will help us to achieve what we want. What happened in the times that passed before and since the founding of Christianity?

If we first look at southern Europe, we see that at a certain point in time there was the highest level of human intellectual development, as we have just seen in its representative Aristotle, a highly developed intellectual life that underwent further special development in the following centuries. Yes, at the time when Christianity began to make its way through the world, there were numerous Greek-educated people in southern Europe, people who had absorbed Greek intellectual life. If one traces the development of Christianity back to that remarkable man who was such a fierce opponent of Christianity, Caesar, and later still, one finds in southern Europe, on the Greek and Italian peninsulas, until the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, people of the highest intellectual development, numerous people who had appropriated the high ideas we find in Plato, whose acumen really stands out as a continuation of Aristotle's acumen, fine and strong minds with a Greek education, Romans with a Greek education, who added the aggressiveness and individuality of Romanism to the refinement of Hellenism.

The Christian impulse bursts into this world. At that time, the Christian impulse was such that we can say that the representatives of this Christian impulse truly appear to be uneducated people in terms of intellectuality, in terms of knowledge of the world, compared to what numerous educated Roman-Greek people carried within themselves. In the midst of a world of mature intellectualism, people without education pushed their way in. And now we witness a remarkable spectacle: these simple, primitive natures, who are the bearers of early Christianity, spread this Christianity with relative speed throughout southern Europe. And when we approach these simple, primitive natures who spread Christianity at that time with what we can understand today, say through anthroposophy, about the nature of Christianity, we can say to ourselves: These primitive natures understood the essence of Christ — we need not even think of the great cosmic Christ idea that is to dawn today through anthroposophy; we can think of much simpler ideas of Christ — the bearers of the Christian impulse at that time, who inserted themselves into the highly developed Greek culture, understood nothing of all this. They had nothing to offer the market of Greek-Roman life except their personal inner life, which they had developed as their personal relationship to the beloved Christ; for they loved this relationship as a member of a beloved family. Those who brought Christianity into the Greek and Roman world of that time, which has continued to develop up to our own time, were not educated theologians or theosophists; they were not educated people. The educated theosophists of that time, the Gnostics, did indeed raise themselves to high ideas about Christ, but they could only give what we must now place on the rapidly rising side of the scales. If it had depended on the Gnostics, Christianity would certainly not have triumphed throughout the world. It was not a particularly educated intelligentsia that pushed its way in from the East and brought down ancient Greek and Roman civilization with relative speed. That is one side of the coin.

Looking at it from the other side, we see the intellectually superior people, from Celsus, the enemy of Christianity, who even back then brought up everything that can still be said against it today, to the philosopher on the throne, Marcus Aurelius. Let us look at the highly educated Neoplatonists, who back then came up with ideas that make today's philosophy look like child's play and which far surpassed our current ideas in terms of height and breadth of vision. And when we look at everything these minds had to say against Christianity, and when we immerse ourselves in what these intellectually superior people in the Greek and Roman spirit had to say against Christianity from the standpoint of Greek philosophy, we get the impression that none of them understood the Christ impulse. We see that Christianity is spreading through carriers who understand nothing of the essence of Christianity; it is being fought by a high culture that cannot comprehend anything of what the Christ impulse means. Christianity enters the world in a strange way, so that both its followers and its opponents understand nothing of its true spirit. And yet, people have carried within their souls the power to bring this Christ impulse to victory throughout the world.

And let us look at those who themselves stand up for Christianity with a certain greatness, such as the famous Church Father Tertullian. We see in him a Roman who, if we consider his language, is almost a new creator of the Roman language, who coined new words with such accuracy that we recognize him as a significant personality. But when we ask ourselves: What about Tertullian's idea of Christ? — then things take a different turn. We find that he actually shows very little intellectuality or spiritual elevation. Even the defenders of Christianity do not achieve much. And yet they are effective, effective as personalities, spirits such as Tertullian, to whose arguments educated Greeks could really not give much credit. Nevertheless, he is captivating; but through what? That is what matters! We feel that this really is a question that confronts the soul! How do the bearers of the Christ impulse work, when they themselves do not understand much about what the Christ impulse actually is? How do the Christian Church Fathers work, even Origen, who is considered clumsy in his understanding of the Christ impulse? What is it that even Greek-Roman education, which had risen to such heights, could not understand about the nature of the Christ impulse? What is all this?

But let us go further. The same phenomenon soon confronts us in an even sharper form when we consider historical life. We see how the centuries pass in which Christianity spreads throughout the European world among peoples who, like the Germanic peoples, come from completely different religious conceptions, who as peoples are one or at least seem to be one with their religious conceptions, and who nevertheless take up this Christ impulse with full force, as if it were their very life. And when we look at the most effective messengers of faith among the Germanic peoples, were they people educated in scholastic theology? Not at all! They were people who went among the people with relatively primitive souls and spoke to them in a primitive way, using the most immediate, everyday ideas, but they immediately touched their hearts. They knew how to use words in such a way that they could touch the deepest chords of those to whom they spoke. Simple people went out into all regions, and it was precisely they who had the most significant impact.

This is how we see the spread of Christianity through the centuries. But then we admire how this same Christianity became the occasion for significant scholarship, science, and philosophy. We do not underestimate this philosophy, but today we want to turn our attention to the peculiar phenomenon that Christianity spread until the Middle Ages among peoples who until then had had completely different ideas in their minds, so that it soon became part of their soul. And in the not too distant future, many other things will be emphasized when speaking of the spread of Christianity. When we speak of the effect of the Christian impulse, we can easily understand this if we say that at a certain time the fruits of the spread of Christianity manifested themselves in such a way that we can say: enthusiasm arose from this spread of the Christ impulse. But when we come to more recent times, what we can regard as the spread of Christianity throughout the Middle Ages seems to be dampened.

Let us consider the time of Copernicus, the time of the burgeoning natural sciences up to the 19th century. It might seem as if this natural science, which had worked its way into Western intellectual life since Copernicus, had worked against Christianity. External facts could corroborate this. The Catholic Church, for example, had Copernicus on its so-called Index until the 1820s. It regarded Copernicus as its enemy. But these are external things. That did not prevent Copernicus from being a canon. And even if the Catholic Church burned Giordano Bruno, that did not prevent him from being a Dominican. Both of them arrived at their ideas from within Christianity. They acted out of Christian impulses. Those who want to remain within the Church and believe that these were not fruits of Christianity misunderstand the matter. The facts cited only prove that the Church understood the fruits of Christianity very poorly; it took until the 19th century for it to realize that Copernicus' ideas could not be suppressed by the Index. Those who see things more deeply will have to acknowledge that everything the peoples have done, even in recent centuries, is a result, an outcome of Christianity, that through Christianity, people's gaze has turned from the earth to the vastness of the heavens, as happened through Copernicus and Giordano Bruno. This was only possible within Christian culture and through the Christian impulse.

And for those who view spiritual life not on the surface but in its depths, something emerges which, when I express it now, will seem quite paradoxical, but is nevertheless true. For such a deeper consideration, it seems impossible that a Flaecke could have arisen as he stands there in all his opposition to Christ without having arisen out of Christianity. Ernst Haeckel is not possible without the prerequisite of Christian culture. And the whole of recent scientific development, however much it strives to develop opposition to Christianity, all this recent science is a child of Christianity, a direct continuation of the Christian impulse. Once the teething pains of modern natural science have been completely overcome, humanity will realize what it means that the starting point of modern natural science, when pursued consistently, really leads to spiritual science, that there is a completely consistent path from Haeckel to spiritual science. When this is understood, it will also be clear that Haeckel is a thoroughly Christian thinker, even if he himself is unaware of this. The Christian impulses have not only brought forth what is and was called Christian, but also that which presents itself as opposition to Christianity. One must examine things not only in terms of their concepts, but also in terms of their reality, and then one will come to this realization. As you can see in my little booklet on “Reincarnation and Karma,” Darwin's theory of evolution leads directly to the teaching of repeated lives on earth.

However, in order to stand on solid ground with regard to these matters, one must be able to observe the workings of Christian impulses in a certain unbiased manner. Those who understand Darwinism and Haeckelism, and who are themselves somewhat imbued with what Haeckel did not yet know—but Darwin knew quite a bit—namely, that these two movements were only possible as Christian movements, will quite consistently arrive at the idea of reincarnation. And anyone who can draw on a certain clairvoyant power will, in this way, arrive quite consistently at the spiritual origin of the human race. It is a detour, but with clairvoyance it is the right path from Haeckelism to a spiritual understanding of the origin of the earth. But it is also conceivable that one might accept Darwinism as it presents itself today without being imbued with the life principles of Darwinism itself; in other words, if one accepts Darwinism as an impulse and feels nothing of the deeper understanding of Christianity that lies within Darwinism, then one arrives at something very peculiar. One can arrive at a point where, due to such a spiritual constitution of the soul, one understands as little of Christianity as of Darwinism. One can then be just as far removed from the good spirit of Christianity as from the good spirit of Darwinism. But if one has the good spirit of Darwinism, then no matter how materialistic one may be, one will always go further back in the history of the earth until one recognizes that man never evolved from lower animal forms, that he must have a spiritual origin. One returns to the point where one sees man as a spiritual being, as it were, floating above the earthly world. Consistent Darwinism will lead to this. But if one has abandoned one's good spirit, then one can believe, if one goes back and is a believer in reincarnation, that one once lived as an ape on some incarnation of the earth itself. If one can believe that, then one must have abandoned both the good spirit of Darwinism and Christianity, and one must understand nothing of either. For a consistent Darwinist could never believe that. This means that one must transfer the idea of reincarnation to this materialistic culture in a completely external way. For one can certainly strip modern Darwinism of its Christianity. If you do not do this, you will find that even in our time, the Darwinian impulses were born out of the Christ impulse, that the Christian impulses are also at work where they are denied. Thus, we have not only the phenomenon that Christianity spread in the first centuries apart from the scholarship and knowledge of its followers and professed believers, that it spread in the Middle Ages in such a way that the learned Church Fathers and the scholastics contributed very little to it, but we have in our time the even more paradoxical phenomenon that Christianity appears as its opposite image in the materialism of our present-day natural science, and yet all its greatness, all its energy, comes from the Christian impulses. The Christian impulses that lie within it will lead this science beyond materialism of its own accord.

It is strange with Christian impulses! Intellectuality, knowledge, scholarship, and insight do not seem to play any part in the spread of these impulses. Something else entirely seems to determine their spread throughout the world. One might say that Christianity is spreading regardless of what people think for or against it, even to the point that it appears to be turned into its opposite in modern materialism. What is it that is spreading? It is not Christian ideas, nor is it Christian science. One could say that the moral sentiment implanted by Christianity is spreading. But just look at the state of morality in these times, and you will find much that is justified in the anger of the representatives of Christianity against real or supposed opponents of Christianity. Even the morality that prevailed in souls that were not highly educated intellectually cannot impress us very much when we consider it even in those areas where it is truly most Christian. What is spreading there? What is this peculiar thing? What is it that is triumphantly marching through the world? Let us now ask spiritual science, clairvoyant consciousness, about this! What was at work in the uneducated people who pushed their way from East to West into the highly educated Greek and Roman world? What is at work in the people who brought Christianity into the Germanic, into the foreign world? What is at work in modern materialistic science, where the teaching still veils its face, as it were? What is at work in all these souls, if it is not intellectual, not even moral impulses? What is it then? — It is Christ himself who moves from heart to heart, from soul to soul, who can move and work through the world, regardless of whether souls understand him or not through this development over the centuries!

We are compelled to abandon our concepts, all science, and point to reality, to show how mysteriously Christ Himself works in many thousands of impulses, taking shape in souls, submerging Himself in many thousands upon thousands and filling human beings throughout the centuries. In simple people, it is Christ himself who strides across the Greek and Italian worlds, capturing more and more human souls as he moves westward and northward. In the later teachers who bring Christianity to the Germanic peoples, it is Christ himself who walks beside them. It is he, the real, true Christ, who reigns on earth like the soul of the earth itself, moving from place to place, from soul to soul, and entering into these souls, regardless of what the souls think about Christ. Let me use a trivial comparison: how many people are there who know nothing about the composition of food and yet nourish themselves according to all the rules of the art? It would actually be necessary to starve to death if one had to know about food before one could nourish oneself. The ability to nourish oneself has nothing to do with understanding food. In the same way, the spread of Christianity across the earth had nothing to do with the understanding people had of Christianity. That is what is peculiar about it. There is a mystery at work here that can only be explained by answering the question: How does Christ himself work in human minds? And when spiritual science, clairvoyant observation, asks itself this question, it is first directed to an event that can really only be revealed through clairvoyant observation, an event that outwardly is indeed in complete harmony with everything I have said today. We will see one thing that will have to be understood more and more in the future: the time is past when Christ worked in the way I have just described, and the time has come when human beings will have to understand Christ, will have to recognize him.

Therefore, it is necessary to answer the question of why our time was preceded by another in which the Christ impulse could spread without the need for understanding, without people being aware of it. An event made this possible! And the event to which clairvoyant consciousness points is the so-called Pentecost event, the sending forth of the Holy Spirit. That is why the clairvoyant gaze, stimulated by the real Christ impulse in the anthroposophical sense, was first directed toward this Pentecost event, the sending forth of the Holy Spirit. From a clairvoyant point of view, it is the Pentecost event that first presents itself to investigation carried out from a certain point of view.

What happened at that moment in the world's development on earth, which is presented to us as the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the apostles, something quite incomprehensible at first? If we turn our clairvoyant gaze to this event and examine what actually happened, we obtain a spiritual scientific answer to what is meant by the statement: Simple people, as the apostles were, suddenly began to speak in different tongues, saying what they had to say from the depths of spiritual life, and what no one expected of them. Yes, at that time Christianity, the Christian impulses, began to spread in such a way that they became independent of the understanding of the people in whose minds they were spreading.

From the event of Pentecost, the stream of Christ's power pours out over the earth, which has been characterized. What then was the event of Pentecost? This question was posed to spiritual science, and with the answer to this question, with the spiritual scientific answer to the question: What was the event of Pentecost? — the Fifth Gospel begins, and with this we will continue our reflections tomorrow.