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The Gospel of St. Mark
GA 139

22 September 1912, Basel

Lecture VIII

In the Gospel of St. Mark directly after the great world-historical monologue which I have described there follows, as you know, the scene known as the Transfiguration or Transformation. I have often pointed out before that for the three disciples who had been taken to the “mountain” on which the Transfiguration took place, this was a kind of higher initiation. At this moment they were to be initiated, as it were, more profoundly into the secrets that were to be entrusted to them, one by one, to enable them to become leaders and guides of mankind. From what we have said before on several occasions we know that this scene contains a series of secrets. Both in the Gospels and other occult writings whenever the “mountain” is spoken of, then we have to do with something occult. In an occult connection it always means when the mountain is spoken of that those who are led to the mountain are led into certain secrets of existence. In the case of the Mark Gospel we feel this especially strongly for a reason that will become apparent if the Gospel is read rightly. But it must be read rightly.

Take, for example, the third chapter of Mark from the 7th to the 23rd or 24th verse. Actually we need not go further than the 22nd verse, but it is necessary to read it with perceptive understanding. Then something will be noticed. It has often been stressed that the expressions “accompany to the mountain” and “leading to the mountain” have an occult meaning. But in this particular chapter we find a threefold activity, and not only an “accompanying to the mountain.” If we examine carefully the three passages indicated by Mark, we notice first in verse 7, “And Jesus withdrew with his disciples to the lake,” etc. Then, in the 13th verse it is said, “And he went up to the mountain and called to him those who were acceptable to him.” Then in verses 20 and 21 we read, “And then he went to his home. And the crowd gathered again so that they could not so much as eat bread. And when his family heard of it they went out to seize him, for they said ‘he is out of his mind.’ ” Thus we are referred to three separate localities, the lake, the mountain and the house. Just as in an occult sense the mountain signifies that something important takes place, so is this also true in the other two cases. In occult writings if such expressions as “being led to the mountain,” or “being led to a house,” occur, this invariably means that they have an occult significance. When this is the meaning intended in the Gospels some specific circumstance is connected with it. You should remember that it is not only in the Mark Gospel but also in the others that a special revelation or special manifestation is connected especially with the “lake,” as when the disciples cross the lake and Christ appears to them. They at first take Him for a ghost, but then become aware that it is He in reality that is approaching them (Mark 6:45-52). And elsewhere you can also find a similar mention in the Gospels of some event that takes place because of the lake, or by the lake. On the mountain he first appoints the Twelve, that is, he confers their occult mission on them. That was an act of occult education. It is again on the mountain that the occult Transfiguration takes place. When he was “at his home,” he is declared by his family to be “out of his mind.” This was the third thing, and all three are of the greatest and most comprehensive significance.

If we wish to understand what “by the lake” means in this connection we must call to mind something that we have often explained. We have pictured to you how the so-called Atlantean age preceded our post-Atlantean earth period, and that in that age the air was still permeated by dense masses of mist. In the same way that in the Atlantean age human beings possessed the ancient clairvoyance, their way of perceiving and their soul life were quite different because they lived in quite different physical conditions. This was linked to the fact that the physical body was entirely different, since it was embedded in the masses of mist. From this epoch something like an ancient heritage has remained with mankind. If someone in the post-Atlantean age is initiated by some means into occult matters, or comes near to them as was the case with Jesus' disciples, he becomes much more sensitive, more intensely sensitive to his environment and to the natural world around him. As man is today, we might say that, with his robust relationship with the natural world, it is more or less immaterial whether he crosses the sea or stays by the lake, or whether he climbs a mountain—we shall soon see what that means—or whether he is in his own home. How his eyes see and his mind functions do not depend very much on where he happens to be. But when a man acquires a subtler vision and ascends into spiritual cosmic conditions, then it becomes evident how crudely organized his ordinary being is.

If a man, in the time when the old clairvoyance was active, crossed the sea where circumstances were quite different, even if he lived by the coast, his clairvoyant consciousness would be quite differently attuned than if he were on the plain. The greatest exertion, one might say, is necessary to bring forth any clairvoyant forces at all. The lake allows them to be brought forth more easily, but only those forces which are related to something entirely specific, not to everything. For there is again a difference whether clairvoyant consciousness is active on the plain, or whether it is active on the mountaintop. On the heights the sensitive clairvoyant consciousness is again attuned to things quite different from those on the plain. And the results of clairvoyant consciousness are again different if one is by the lake from what they are on the mountain. In each case the distinction must be made.

Of course it is also possible to arouse clairvoyance in a town, but this needs exceptional forces, whereas what we are talking about at present is valid especially for clairvoyance that comes more or less of its own accord. By the lake, by the water, and in masses of mist, the clairvoyant consciousness is especially disposed to perceive imaginations, all kinds of things through imagination, and to make use of what has already been acquired. On the mountain, in the rarified air where the proportion of nitrogen and oxygen is differently distributed, clairvoyant consciousness is more attuned to receiving inspirations, allowing something new to arise through clairvoyance. Hence the expression “to ascend the mountain” is not meant only symbolically but is used because the conditions obtaining on the mountain favor the possibility of developing new occult powers in oneself. Likewise the expression “to go to the lake” is not meant symbolically, but was chosen because coming in contact with the lake favors imaginative vision and the use of occult powers.

If one is at home, in one's own house, whether one is alone or with relatives, it is most difficult to make use of occult forces. For while it is comparatively easy for a person who has lived for a long time by a lake to believe—as long as conditions are favorable—that he experiences imaginations through the veil of his corporeality, and easier still for a person who lives in the mountains to believe that he is ascending higher, in the case of a person who is at home, one can feel only that he is outside his body, “out of his mind.” This is not to say that he could not develop occult powers, but only that this does not seem to be in harmony with his surroundings. It is less natural than it would be if he were by a lake, or on the mountain.

For this reason it has an immensely deep meaning that the Gospel is entirely in accord with what we have just described, and that this is drawn from the occult understanding of the conditions of nature. The Gospel brings this out clearly and it is factually correct in an occult sense. Hence we shall always see the following. When it is said that something took place by the lake, when being by the lake is referred to, definite forces are being applied and healing powers or powers of vision are unfolded. Thus Christ Jesus appears to His disciples by the lake in imagination only since He Himself is involved in the entire episode because of His capacity to exteriorize Himself. Although they do not have Him there in the physical body, the disciples see Him. In such an experience separation in space has no importance. He was together “with them” by the lake. For the same reason when reference is made to the soul forces of the apostles, the “mountain” is spoken of, as it was when the Twelve were appointed and their souls were enjoined to take into themselves the group soul of Elijah. And when the Christ wished to appear in the whole grandeur of His world-historical and cosmic manifestation, again the mountain is spoken of. The Transfiguration therefore takes place on the mountain.

It is indeed from this point of view that we must picture the scene of the Transfiguration. The three disciples Peter, James, and John prove themselves to be capable of being initiated into the deeper secrets of the Mystery of Golgotha. To the clairvoyant eyes of these three which were now opened there appeared, transfigured, that is in their spiritual nature, Elijah on the one side and Moses1Moses was discussed by Steiner in two of the earlier Gospel cycles, The Gospel of Luke (1909) and The Gospel of Matthew (1910). An important lecture was devoted to him on March 9, 1911. This appeared in Turning Points in Spiritual History (London, 1934). on the other, with Christ Jesus Himself in the middle. And it is imaginatively indicated in the Gospel that Christ was now in the form in which in His spiritual nature He could be recognized. This is shown with sufficient clarity in the Mark Gospel:

And He was transfigured before them.

And His garments became gleaming bright, brighter than any fuller on earth could bleach them.

And there appeared to them Elijah with Moses, and they conversed with Jesus. (Mark 9:2-4.)

After the great monologue of God comes a conversation among these three. What a wonderful dramatic crescendo! Everywhere the Gospels are full of such artistic sequences. Indeed they are wonderfully composed. After hearing the monologue of God we now have a conversation among these three, and what a conversation! First we see Elijah and Moses, one on each side of Christ Jesus. What is the significance of Elijah and Moses?

The figure of Moses has long been familiar to you; even from the occult standpoint it has often been illuminated. We know that world-historical wisdom chose to bridge the span between primeval ages and the Mystery of Golgotha indirectly through Moses. We know from our studies on the Luke Gospel that in the Jesus boy of whom Matthew especially speaks the reincarnated Zarathustra is to be seen. We know also that this Zarathustra through all that belonged to him and was in him made preparations for his later appearance on earth. I have often mentioned how through special occult processes Zarathustra gave away his etheric body, which then passed over into Moses so that Zarathustra's etheric body was active in him. Thus when Elijah and Moses are pictured next to Christ Jesus we have, so to speak, in Moses those forces destined to lead over from primitive forms of culture to what mankind was later to be given in Christ Jesus and the Mystery of Golgotha.

But from another point of view we also have a transitional figure in Moses. We know that he not only had within him the etheric body of Zarathustra, which enabled him to bear within himself the wisdom of Zarathustra which could then become active in him, but we know also that Moses was in a certain way initiated into the secrets of other peoples. In the meeting with the Midianite priest Jethro we have to see a special scene of initiation, as we have discussed before. This is to be found in the Old Testament (Exodus 2:16-21). Here it is clearly pointed out how Moses visits this lonely priest and not only learns from him the secrets of the initiation of Judaism but also those of other peoples. He bears all these within his inner being which has already experienced the special strengthening that came from the etheric body of Zarathustra. So there entered into the Jewish people through Moses the secrets of initiation of the whole surrounding world, thus enabling him to prepare, on a lower stage, as it were, what was to come about through Christ Jesus. This then was one of the streams that was to lead to the Mystery of Golgotha.

The other stream, as I have also indicated before, derived from what by this time was living in a natural way in the Jewish people, as a people. Moses was the individuality who as far as was possible in his time allowed the other stream that was in the world to pour into that stream that flowed through the generations from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. But at the same time we should always keep in mind what was especially connected with the nature of the Hebrew people. Why had this people been chosen? Their task was to prepare for that era that we tried to call before our souls when, for example, we referred to Hellenism, and then when yesterday we spoke of Empedocles. We were referring in this way to that time when the ancient clairvoyant capacities were disappearing from men, when they lost their ability to see into the spiritual world, when the power of judgment took its place; and judgment is the special characteristic of the ego, when the ego emerges as an independent entity.

It was for the purpose of bringing to the ego all that could be given to the natural being of man through the organization of the blood that the Hebrew people were chosen. Absolutely everything that can be fully experienced through the physical organization of the human being had to be experienced fully by this people. Man's intellectuality is certainly bound to his physical organization; and from the physical organization of the ancient Hebrew people was to be taken that which truly could nourish those human capacities that are dependent on the intellect. By contrast other peoples had to allow what comes from without, from initiation, to shine into their earthly organization, whereas what was able to rise up in man's own being through the blood relationship was to rise up through this relationship in the ancient Hebrew people. For this reason it was insisted on that this blood connection be a continuous one, and that every Hebrew carried within himself those capacities that have been flowing through the blood since the time of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The ego, bound to the blood, had to be conveyed to the physical organization through the blood of the ancient Hebrew people, and this could come about only through the medium of heredity.

I have already pointed out that the Old Testament story of the sacrifice of Isaac by Abraham and the manner in which it was prevented indicates how this people was specially chosen by the Godhead to be a gift to humanity, so that the outer physical vessel for egohood could be given to mankind. That this physical vessel, the ancient Jewish people, was a gift of God to humanity is indicated by Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son. If he had sacrificed Isaac, Abraham would at the same time have sacrificed that physical organization that was to give mankind the physical basis for the intellect, and thus for egohood. In receiving back his son Abraham received back the whole God-given organization. This is the great significance of the restoration of Isaac (Genesis 22:1-19). At the same time it is also indicated that on the one side there is the spiritual stream pictured for us in the Transfiguration scene in the person of Moses, and this is now to flow onward precisely through the instrument of the Jewish people as far as the deed of the Mystery of Golgotha. What then is pictured for us in the person of Elijah?

Through him the totality of the divine revelation living in the Jewish people unites with what happens through the Mystery of Golgotha. In the book of Numbers it is shown in the 25th chapter how Israel is led astray into idolatry, but is rescued through the agency of one man. Through the decisiveness of one man the Israelites, the ancient Hebrew people, were not totally given over to idolatry at that time. Who is this man? It is he of whom we are told in the book of Numbers that he had the strength to come before the ancient Hebrew people who were in danger of lapsing into the idolatry of the surrounding peoples, and to intercede with the God who had been revealed through Moses. This was truly a strong soul. This intercession with God is usually translated into the German language as “eifern,” and in English as “be zealous.” This zeal is not to be thought of in any bad sense; it simply means to intercede strongly. Thus we read in Numbers 25:10-12:

And the Lord spoke with Moses and said: “Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the priest, has turned away my anger from the children of Israel through his zeal concerning me. So in my zeal I have not destroyed the children of Israel. Therefore say: See, I give him my covenant of peace.”

Yahweh said this to Moses. And in this particular passage we must also see something that according to ancient Hebrew esoteric teaching is exceptionally significant. This is confirmed by occult research. We know that those representing the high priesthood of ancient Israel are direct descendants of Aaron, and that in them the essence of what was given to mankind by the Jewish people lives on. At that moment of world history, according to Hebrew esoteric teaching and confirmed by more recent occult research, the significant truth was indicated that Yahweh imparts the knowledge to Moses that in Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the grandson of Aaron, he was bestowing on the Hebrew people a very special priest who represents him and is closely connected with him. And the esoteric teaching and occult research reveal that the same soul lives in the body of Phinehas that was later present in Elijah. Thus we have a continuous line of descent which in several points we have already described. In Aaron's grandson we have one soul that is of concern to us, the soul that lives in Phinehas. The same soul appears again in Elijah-Naboth and then in John the Baptist, and we know how it continues throughout the evolution of mankind. So there is pictured for us this soul on the one side of the Christ, and on the other the soul of Moses himself.

So in the Transfiguration, in the Transformation on the mountain, we have before us a streaming together of the entire spirituality of earth evolution, the essence of which flowed through the Jewish blood into the Levitical line. Thus the soul of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron stands before us; Moses stands before us; and there stands before us also He who fulfilled the Mystery of Golgotha. And the three disciples who were to be initiated, Peter, James and John, were to perceive in imaginative knowledge how these forces, these spiritual streams, flowed together. When yesterday I tried to picture for you how something like a call sounds over from Greece to Palestine and the call that answered it, this was something more than a mere pictorial description of the facts. It was indeed a preparation for that great world-historical discourse that now actually took place. The disciples Peter, James, and John were to be initiated into what these three souls had to discuss together; one soul who belonged to the people of the Old Testament, one who carried within himself much of what we know about the Moses soul, while the third, as cosmic deity, is uniting Himself with the earth. This the disciples were to see.

We know that it could not immediately enter into their hearts, nor could they understand immediately what was revealed to them. But this is customary with much that is experienced in the realm of the occult. It is experienced imaginatively. One does not understand it, and often learns to understand it only in the following incarnation. But then our understanding is better able to adapt itself to what had previously been seen. We can feel how on the mountain there were the three cosmic powers, while down below were the three who were to be initiated into these great cosmic secrets. And from all these things the feeling can arise in our souls that the Gospel, if we understand it correctly, and especially if we allow the dramatic intensification and the artistic composition which is itself an expression everywhere of cosmic facts, does truly point to the great revolution that really happened at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha.

When the Gospel is explained through occult research it speaks a very clear language indeed. In the future it will become important that people should recognize ever more clearly what is the issue at stake, and what is particularly significant in one or the other passage in the Gospel; and only then will we be able to grasp the point that is of special importance in a particular parable, or in one story or another. It is strange how ordinary theologians or philosophers when they try to explain the most important things in the Gospels actually always take their point of departure as if they were not putting the horse before the cart in the usual way but the other way round—or, as we say in common parlance, they “put the cart before the horse.” This indeed happens with so many interpreters and commentators; they miss the main point.

We wish to draw your attention now to a passage that you will find in the fourteenth chapter of the Mark Gospel. We do this because it is of great significance for the progress of our studies.

And while he was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, a woman came in as he sat at table with an alabaster flask of genuine costly ointment of nard, and she broke the flask open and poured the ointment over his head.

But some of those present disputed among themselves and said, “Why this waste of ointment?” It could have been sold for more than three hundred denarii that could have been given to the poor. And they were indignant with her.

But Jesus said, “Let her alone, why do you trouble her? She has accomplished a good work in me. For you have the poor with you all the time and you can do good to them whenever you wish. But you do not have me with you forever. She has done what she could; she has anointed my body in advance for burial.

I say truly to you, wherever in the whole world this Gospel is proclaimed, her deed will be spoken of in her memory.” (Mark 14:3-9.)

It would surely be a good thing if we were to admit that this passage contains something striking in it. Most people, if they are honest, ought to confess that they are forced to sympathize with those who complained that the ointment was wasted, and that in any event it was unnecessary to pour it over someone's head. Most people will indeed believe it would have been better to sell the ointment for three hundred denarii and give the money to the poor. And if you are honest perhaps you will find that Christ was being callous when He said that it was better to let her do what she wished to do instead of giving the three hundred denarii to the poor, a sum that the ointment would have realized if it had been sold. At this point, if we are not to be shocked by the whole story, we must say to ourselves that there must be something else behind this. Indeed, the Gospel goes further, and in this passage it is not at all polite. For it seems to imply that if you can find a number of people who admit that it would have been better to give to the poor the three hundred denarii that could have been obtained for the ointment, then these people are thinking like a certain other person. For it continues:

“Wherever in the whole world this Gospel is proclaimed, her deed will also be spoken of in her memory.”

And Judas Iscariot, one of the Twelve, went to the chief Priests to deliver him up to them. And they were glad when they heard it, and promised to give him money. And he sought how he could find a good opportunity to deliver him up. (Mark 14:9-12.)

That is to say, because Judas Iscariot was specially offended by the spilling of the ointment—and the others who took offense at the spilling of the ointment are thereby associated with the example of Judas—so the Gospel is by no means even polite, for it points out with the utmost clarity that those who took offense at the spilling of the ointment are exactly like Judas Iscariot, who later sold the Lord for thirty silver pieces. What the Gospel is saying is that Judas is too fond of money, and so are the people who wish to sell the ointment for three hundred denarii. We should never gloss over the Gospel, for glossing over such passages prevents an objective, correct interpretation. What we must do is find out what is the real issue. And we shall find many more examples to show us how the Gospel sometimes even persists in giving incidental details in a rather offensive manner if the purpose is to cast an especially clear light on a particular point.

What is the real question at issue in this passage? The Gospel wishes to tell us that it is man's task not to look only at sense existence, nor to suppose that only those things are important that have value and meaning in sense existence. Beyond everything else man should take the super-sensible world into himself, and it is important to pay attention also to things that no longer have any meaning for sense existence. The body of Christ Jesus, which was anointed in advance by the woman before its burial, has no meaning if it is dead; but we should also do something for what has value and meaning beyond sense existence. This had to be especially strongly emphasized. For this reason something was made use of, to which even the natural human consciousness in the life of the senses attaches great value. The Gospel here chooses a special example to show how sometimes something must be withdrawn from sense life and offered to the spirit, to the ego after its liberation from the body. Just at this moment the Gospel chooses what is apparently an irreverent example; something is taken away from the poor that is given to the spirit, given to the ego when it has been freed from the body. It does not look at what gives value to earth existence but at what can come into the ego and can radiate forth from it. This is pictured here in a very powerful manner, by bringing it into relation with Judas Iscariot, who commits a treacherous deed because he feels himself at heart especially impelled toward sense existence, and associates with those who are described in far from courteous terms as the real Philistines, not too strong a word for those who are clearly indicated in this passage. Judas is concerned only with what has meaning in sense existence, in the same way as those who believe that what can be bought for three hundred denarii has more importance than that which transcends the life of sense.

Everywhere in the Gospels attention is directed to the main point and not to side issues; and the Gospel will be recognized wherever the spiritual is recognized. This example will be recognized as pertinent wherever the spiritual is truly recognized. Wherever one wishes to exalt the value of the super-sensible for the ego, it will always be said that the wasting of the ointment was a matter of no importance. There is another remarkable passage where it is again possible to perceive the methodically artistic manner in which the Gospel veils the occult facts concerned with the evolution of mankind. This passage is again a difficult puzzle for the commentators.

And the next day, as they were leaving Bethany he was hungry.

And from afar he saw a fig tree, which had leaves. So he went to see if he might find something on it. And when he came to it he found nothing but leaves, for it was not the season for figs.

And he began to speak to it, “Never to all eternity shall anyone eat fruit from you!” And his disciples heard it. (Mark 11:12-14.)

Now we should all ask ourselves honestly, “Is it not truly extraordinary that, according to the Gospel, a God should go straight up to a fig tree, look for figs and find none, and then the reason is explicitly given why He did not find any—it was not the time for figs—so at a time when there are no figs He goes up to the fig tree, looks for figs and finding none, says, “Never to all eternity shall anyone eat fruit from you?”

Now consider the usual explanations given of this story—although the Gospel gives nothing but the dry and prosaic fact that for some strange reason Christ Jesus feels hunger, and goes up to a fig tree at a time when no figs grow. He finds no figs, and then curses the tree telling it that to all eternity no figs will grow any more on it. What, then is the fig tree, and why is the entire story told here? Anyone who can read occult works first of all will recognize in the fig tree (its connection with the Gospel will be shown later) the same picture as was spoken of in relation to the Buddha, who sat under the Bodhi tree and received enlightenment for his sermon at Benares. “Under the Bodhi tree” means the same as “under the fig tree.” From a world-historical point of view it was still the “time of figs” in respect to human clairvoyance, that is to say it was possible to receive enlightenment as the Buddha did, under the Bodhi tree, under the fig tree. But this was no longer true, and that is what the disciples had to learn. From the point of view of world history it was a fact that there was no longer any fruit on the tree under which the Buddha had received his enlightenment.

And what was happening in all of mankind was mirrored at that time in the soul of Christ. We may see in Empedocles of Sicily a representative of humanity, a representative of many people who were similarly hungry because their souls could no longer discover the revelation that had been given earlier and had to be satisfied with the abstractions of the ego. In the same way that we can speak of the starving Empedocles, we can speak of the hunger for the spirit that all men felt in the times that were then beginning. And the entire hunger of mankind discharged itself into the soul of Christ Jesus as the Mystery of Golgotha approached. The disciples were to participate in this secret and know of it.

Christ led them to the fig tree and told them the secret of the Bodhi tree, omitting to tell them, because it had no significance for them, that the Buddha was still able to find fruit on it. Now it was no longer the “time of figs,” figs that the Buddha had received from the Bodhi tree when he gave his sermon at Benares. Now Christ had to tell them that for all eternity the fruit of knowledge would never again ripen on the tree from which the light of Benares had shown down, but that hereafter the light would shine from the Mystery of Golgotha.

What is the truth that is presented to us here? The truth that Christ Jesus went with His disciples from Bethany to Jerusalem, and that a specially strong feeling, a specially strong force was called forth in the disciples, awakening clairvoyant forces in their souls, so that they were predisposed toward imagination. Clairvoyant imaginative powers were awakened in the disciples. In clairvoyance they see the Bodhi tree, the fig tree, and Christ Jesus inspires in them the knowledge that the fruit of knowledge can no longer come from the Bodhi tree, for it is no longer the “time of figs,” that is of the ancient knowledge. For all eternity the tree will be withered, but a new tree must grow forth, a tree consisting of the dead wood of the cross; a tree on which the fruit of ancient knowledge will not ripen, but the fruit that can ripen for mankind from the Mystery of Golgotha, which is linked as by a new symbol to the cross on Golgotha. In the place of that scene of world history when the Buddha sat under the Bodhi tree stands the picture of Golgotha where another tree, the tree of the cross, is raised, on which hung the living fruit of the God-man revealing himself, so that from Him may radiate the new knowledge of the fruit of the ever growing tree that will bear fruit to all eternity.

Achter Vortrag

Wir wissen, daß im Markus-Evangelium nach dem charakterisierten großen welthistorischen Monologe die sogenannte Verklärung, die Verwandlungsszene folgt. Es ist schon öfter von mir angedeutet worden, daß für die drei Jünger, welche mitgenommen werden nach dem «Berge», auf welchem diese Verwandlungsszene stattfindet, dies eine Art höherer Einweihung ist. Sie sollen gleichsam in diesem Augenblicke noch tiefer hineingeführt werden in die Geheimnisse, die ihnen aufeinanderfolgend übergeben werden zur Leitung und zur Führung der Menschheit. Wir wissen, daß diese Szene - das geht schon aus verschiedenen früheren Darstellungen hervor - eine Reihe von Geheimnissen enthält. Schon das eine deutet in den Evangelien und in den sonstigen okkulten Schriften darauf hin, daß man es mit etwas Geheimnisvollem zu tun hat: wenn von dem «Berge» gesprochen wird. Der Berg als solcher bedeutet immer, wenn es sich um eine okkulte Sache handelt, daß diejenigen, die den Berg hinaufgeführt werden, zu gewissen Geheimnissen des Daseins hingeführt werden. Im MarkusEvangelium empfinden wir das ganz besonders stark aus einem gewissen Grunde, der beim richtigen Lesen des Evangeliums schon auffallen kann. Man muß nur eben das Evangelium richtig lesen.

Da muß verwiesen werden auf das dritte Kapitel des Markus vom 7. bis 23., 24. Vers, ja, man braucht eigentlich nur bis zum 22. Verse, streng genommen, zu gehen, und man braucht nur mit empfindendem Verständnis zu lesen, so wird einem dabei etwas auffallen. Das ist öfter hervorgehoben worden, daß der Ausdruck «zum Berge geleiten », «zum Berge führen» eine okkulte Bedeutung hat. Aber in dem genannten Kapitel finden wir ein Dreifaches, nicht nur ein Zum-BergeGeleiten, sondern, wenn wir die drei Absätze, die Markus anführt, näher ansehen, so hören wir zuerst in Vers 7: «Und Jesus zog sich mit seinen Jüngern zurück an den See» und so weiter. Wir werden also zuerst zu einer Szene am See geführt. Dann hören wir im 13. Vers: «Und er steigt auf den Berg und ruft zu sich, welche ihm gefielen.» Und als Drittes hören wir in Vers 20/21: «Und er kommt nach Hause. Und wiederum versammelt sich eine Menge, so daß sie nicht einmal Brot essen konnten. Und da es die Seinigen hörten, gingen sie aus, ihn zu greifen; denn, sagten sie, er ist von Sinnen.»

An drei Orte werden wir verwiesen, an den See, an den Berg und an das Haus. So, wie man beim «Berge » meint, daß immer etwas Wichtiges in okkulter Beziehung geschieht, so ist das auch bei den anderen beiden Dingen der Fall. Wenn in okkulten Schriften die Rede ist von «zum See geführt werden» und von «nach Hause geführt werden », ist immer damit auch eine okkulte Bedeutung verknüpft. Daß dies in den Evangelien gemeint ist, können Sie aus einem bestimmten Umstand entnehmen. Erinnern Sie sich, daß nicht nur im Markus-Evangelium, sondern überhaupt in den Evangelien eine besondere Offenbarung, eine besondere Manifestation, gerade mit dem «See» verbunden wird, so, wenn die Jünger über den See hinfahren und der Christus ihnen erscheint, sie ihn zuerst für ein Gespenst halten, dann aber gewahr werden, daß er in Realität an sie herantritt (6, 45-52). Und auch sonst können Sie verfolgen, daß in den Evangelien öfter die Rede ist von einem Ereignis, das am See oder durch den See stattfindet. Auf dem «Berge» ernennt er zuerst die Zwölf, das heißt, er erteilt ihnen die okkulte Sendung. Wir haben es da mit einer okkulten Erziehung zu tun. Auf dem Berge ist es wieder, wo die okkulte Verklärung stattfindet. «Zu Hause», da erklären ihn die Seinigen «von Sinnen», da haben wir das Dritte. Alle drei Dinge von der größten, von der umfänglichsten Bedeutung.

Wenn wir verstehen wollen, was in einem solchen Zusammenhange «am See» bedeutet, so müssen wir uns an etwas erinnern, was wir oft klargelegt haben. Wir haben dargestellt, wie unserer nachatlantischen Erdenperiode die sogenannte atlantische Zeit vorangegangen ist, daß in derselben die Luft noch durchzogen war von dichten Nebelmassen, so daß durch das Anschauen der Menschen, weil sie unter veränderten physischen Verhältnissen lebten, auch das Seelenleben ganz anders war, wie sie ja auch das alte Hellsehen in der atlantischen Zeit hatten. Aber das war gebunden an das ganz andersartige Sein des physischen Leibes, an das Eingebettetsein in die Nebelmassen. Von alledem ist etwas wie ein altes Erbstück bei der Menschheit zurückgeblieben. Wenn durch irgend etwas in der nachatlantischen Zeit jemand in okkulte Verhältnisse eingeführt wird, an okkulte Verhältnisse herankommt, wie es bei den Jüngern Jesu der Fall war, so wird er viel empfindender, viel intensiver empfindend für die Umgebung, für die Naturverhältnisse. Man möchte sagen, bei der robusten Art des Naturverhältnisses, wie es heute beim Menschen in der nachatlantischen Zeit ist, kommt es nicht so sehr in Betracht, ob er über das Meer fährt, ob er am See sich aufhält, ob er den Berg hinaufsteigt — wir werden gleich nachher sehen, was das bedeutet - oder ob er bei sich zu Hause ist. Wie die Augen sehen, wie der Verstand denkt, das hängt nicht so sehr davon ab, wo man ist. Aber wenn das feinere Schauen beginnt, wenn man in die spirituellen Weltenverhältnisse hinaufsteigt, dann erweist sich das gewöhnliche Menschenwesen als grob organisiert.

Wenn der Mensch in Zeiten, in welchen das hellseherische Bewußtsein beginnt, über das Meer fährt, wo die Verhältnisse ganz andere sind, auch wenn er an der Küste lebt, so ist das hellsichtige Bewußtsein für etwas ganz anderes gestimmt als in der Ebene. In der Ebene ist sozusagen die größte Anstrengung notwendig, um überhaupt die hellsichtigen Kräfte herauszubringen. Die See läßt leichter die hellsichtigen Kräfte herausbringen, aber nur jene Kräfte, die sich auf etwas ganz Bestimmtes beziehen, nicht auf alles. Denn es ist wieder ein Unterschied, ob das hellseherische Bewußtsein sich in der Ebene betätigt oder ob es den Berg hinansteigt. Auf den Höhen ist das hellseherische sensitive Bewußtsein wieder für etwas anderes gestimmt als in der Ebene. Und was sich ergibt in bezug auf das, wofür das hellseherische Bewußtsein gestimmt ist am See oder oben am Berg, das ist etwas sehr voneinander Verschiedenes.

An dem See - es kann das natürlich ersetzt werden auch in der Stadt, aber nur mit großen Kräften; was jetzt gesagt wird, ist besonders für das gültig, was mehr oder weniger von selbst kommt -, am Wasser, in den Nebelmassen ist das hellsichtige Bewußtsein besonders gestimmt, Imaginationen, alles Imaginative zu empfinden und das anzuwenden, was es schon erreicht hat.

Auf dem Berge, bei der verdünnten Luft, bei dem andersartigen Verhältnis der Verteilung von Sauerstoff und Stickstoff ist das hellsichtige Bewußtsein mehr dafür gestimmt, Inspirationen durchzumachen, Neues an hellseherischen Kräften entstehen zu lassen. Daher ist der Ausdruck «den Berg hinansteigen» nicht bloß symbolisch gemeint, sondern die Bergverhältnisse begünstigen die Möglichkeit, neue okkulte Kräfte in sich auszubilden. Und der Ausdruck «an den See gehen » ist auch nicht bloß symbolisch gemeint, sondern er ist gerade deshalb gewählt, weil das Mit-dem-See-in-Berührung-Kommen das imaginative Schauen, das Anwenden der okkulten Kräfte begünstigt.

Und am schwersten haben es die okkulten Kräfte, wenn man bei sich ist, in seinem eigenen Hause, gleichgültig, ob man schließlich allein zu Hause ist oder ob die Angehörigen dabei sind. Denn während es bei einem Menschen, der längere Zeit am See gelebt hat, verhältnismäßig leicht ist - wenn alles dabei stimmt — zu glauben, daß er durch den Schleier der Körperlichkeit Imaginationen hat, und während es leichter ist bei einem Menschen, der in den Bergen lebt, daran zu glauben, daß er höher hinaufsteigt, so hat man bei einem Menschen, der zu Hause ist, bloß das Gefühl, daß er außer seinem Leibe ist, daß er «von Sinnen » ist. Nicht daß er die okkulten Kräfte nicht entwickeln könnte, aber es stimmt nicht so zu der Umgebung, es scheint in bezug auf die Umgebung nicht so natürlich wie in den entsprechenden anderen Fällen, am See oder auf dem Berge.

Daher hat es einen ungeheuer tiefen Sinn und ist ganz von den okkulten Naturverhältnissen hergenommen, daß das Evangelium genau einhält, was jetzt beschrieben worden ist. Ganz sachgemäß okkultistisch hält das Evangelium das ein. So werden wir immer das Folgende sehen. Es werden schon bestimmte Kräfte angewendet, so, wenn Heilkräfte oder Schaukräfte entfaltet werden, wenn gesprochen wird vom «am See sein», wenn davon die Rede ist, daß ein Ereignis an den See verlegt wird. Daher erscheint der Christus Jesus den Seinigen an dem See in der Imagination, nur daß er real in dem ganzen Ereignis darin steckt, weil er sich exteriorisieren kann. Die Jünger sehen ihn, dennoch aber haben sie ihn nicht im physischen Leibe vor sich. Aber weil der Ortsunterschied bei einem solchen Erlebnis nichts bedeutet, deshalb ist er zugleich «bei ihnen», am See. - Und aus diesem Grunde wird da, wo von einem Fortentwickeln der Seelenkräfte der Apostel die Rede ist, vom Berge gesprochen. Deshalb wird auch bei der Ernennung der Zwölf, wo er sozusagen ihre Seelen dazu bestimmt, den Gruppengeist des Elias aufzunehmen, vom Berge gesprochen. Und wo sich der Christus in seiner ganzen welthistorischen und kosmischen Erscheinung zeigen will, wird wieder vom Berge gesprochen. Die Verklärung findet also wieder auf dem Berge statt.

Nun müssen wir gerade von diesem Gesichtspunkte aus jetzt die Verklärungsszene ins Auge fassen. Es erweisen sich als fähig, in die tieferen Geheimnisse des Mysteriums von Golgatha eingeführt zu werden, die drei Jünger Petrus, Jakobus und Johannes. Und es erscheinen den hellseherischen Augen, die diesen Dreien geöffnet werden, verklärt, das heißt in ihrer spirituellen Wesenheit, Elias auf der einen Seite, Moses auf der anderen Seite, der Christus Jesus selber in der Mitte, aber jetzt in der Gestalt - das wird im Evangelium imaginativ angedeutet -, durch die er erkannt werden kann in seiner spirituellen Wesenheit. Das wird hinlänglich auch im Markus-Evangelium angedeutet.

«Und er ward vor ihnen verwandelt.

Und seine Kleider wurden glänzend weiß, so hell, wie kein Walker auf Erden bleichen kann.

Und es erschien ihnen Elias mit Moses, und sie unterredeten sich mit Jesus.» (9, 2-4.)

Nach dem großen Monologe des Gottes eine Unterredung, eine Unterredung zu dreien. Welch wunderbarer dramatischer Fortgang! Die Evangelien sind überall voll von solchen künstlerischen Kompositionen. Komponiert sind diese Evangelien schon großartig. Nachdem wir zuvor den Monolog des Gottes vernommen haben, nachher eine Unterredung zu dritt. Und welche Unterredung! Zunächst sehen wir Elias und Moses zu beiden Seiten des Christus Jesus. Was wird uns mit Elias und Moses angedeutet?

Die Gestalt des Moses ist Ihnen ja hinlänglich bekannt, auch von jener okkulten Seite her, von der sie öfter beleuchtet worden ist. Wir wissen, daß von der weltgeschichtlichen Weisheit der Übergang gewählt worden ist aus uralten Zeiten zu der Zeit des Mysteriums von Golgatha hin auf dem Umwege durch Moses. Wir wissen aus den Betrachtungen über das Lukas-Evangelium, daß in derjenigen Jesusgestalt, von welcher das Matthäus-Evangelium besonders spricht, eigentlich zunächst in dem Knaben Jesus der wiederinkarnierte Zarathustra zu sehen ist. Wir wissen aber auch, daß dieser Zarathustra in bezug auf das, was an ihm und in ihm war, dafür sorgte, daß dieses sein späteres Erscheinen vorbereitet wurde. Ich habe öfter erwähnt, wie der Ätherleib des Zarathustra durch besondere okkulte Vorgänge von ihm abgegeben worden ist und dann übergegangen ist an Moses, so daß in Moses die Kräfte des Ätherleibes des Zarathustra gewirkt haben. So haben wir gleichsam, indem Elias und Moses hingestellt werden neben den Christus Jesus, in Moses die Kräfte, die überleiten von den Urformen der Kultur zu dem, was in dem Christus Jesus und in dem Mysterium von Golgatha der Menschheit gegeben werden sollte.

Aber auch in anderer Form haben wir in Moses eine Übergangsgestalt. Wir wissen, daß Moses nicht nur den Ätherleib des Zarathustra in sich hatte, durch den er in sich trägt auch die Zarathustra-Weisheit, die dann in ihm zum Vorschein kommen kann, sondern wir wissen, daß Moses in einer gewissen Weise auch in die Geheimnisse der anderen Völker eingeweiht wird. Eine besondere Einweihungsszene haben wir zu sehen in der Begegnung mit dem midianitischen Priester Jethro. Wir haben sie auch besprochen. Sie findet sich im Alten Testament (2. Mose 2, 16-21). Deutlich ist darin angedeutet, wie Moses zu diesem einsamen Priester kommt und nicht nur die Initiationsgeheimnisse des Judentums kennenlernt, sondern auch der anderen Völker, und sie hereinträgt in seine Wesenheit, die noch die besondere Stärkung erfahren hat, daß sie den Ätherleib des Zarathustra in sich trägt. So sind durch Moses in das jüdische Volk die Initiationsgeheimnisse der ganzen umliegenden Welt hineingekommen, so daß er gleichsam auf einer untergeordneten Stufe vorbereitet hat, was durch den Christus Jesus geschehen sollte. Das war die eine Strömung, die hinleiten sollte zu dem Mysterium von Golgatha.

Die andere Strömung war die, welche herkam von dem, was auch schon angedeutet ist, von dem, was nunmehr auf naturgemäße Weise, auf natürliche Weise, in dem jüdischen Volke als Volk selber lebte. Moses war der, welcher zu dem Strom, der hinunterfloß durch die Generationen von Abraham, Isaak und Jakob, das andere schon hat hinzuströmen lassen, was in der Welt war, so weit es zu seiner Zeitmöglich war. Aber es sollte dabei immer gewahrt bleiben, was so eng verbunden war mit der Natur des althebräischen Volkes. Wozu war dieses Volk ausersehen? Dazu, die Vorbereitung zu bilden für jene Zeit, die wir versuchten, in der Anschauung vor unsere Seele treten zu lassen, indem wir zum Beispiel auf das Griechentum und gestern noch einmal auf Empedokles hingewiesen haben. Wir haben dadurch hingewiesen auf jene Zeit, wo den Menschen die alten hellseherischen Fähigkeiten entschwinden, wo ihnen verlorengeht das Hineinschauen in die spirituelle Welt und wo herauskommt die Urteilskraft, die dem Ich eigen ist, wo herauskommt das auf sich selber angewiesene Ich.

Diesem Ich das zuzuführen, was aus der natürlichen Wesenheit des Menschen durch die Blutsorganisation des Menschen dem Ich zugeführt werden kann, dazu war das althebräische Volk ausersehen. Es sollte sich in diesem Volke einfach alles das ausleben, was durch die physische Organisation des Menschenwesens sich ausleben kann. An die physische Organisation des Menschen ist ja gebunden die Intellektualität. Entnommen werden sollte der physischen Organisation des althebräischen Volkes dasjenige, was eben die Fähigkeiten des Menschen, die an die Intellektualität gebunden sind, speisen konnte. Die anderen Völker hatten sozusagen hereinleuchten zu lassen in die irdische Organisation das, was durch die Initiation, also von außen, hereinkommen konnte. Was aufsteigen konnte durch die eigene menschliche Natur aus dem Blutszusammenhange, das sollte aufsteigen aus dem Zusammenhange des althebräischen Volkes. Daher wird so streng darauf gehalten, daß der Blutszusammenhang ein kontinuierlicher ist und daß jeder in sich trägt die Fähigkeiten, die seit Abraham, Isaak und Jakob durch das Blut hindurchflossen. Das Ich ist an das Blut gebunden und sollte durch das Blut des althebräischen Volkes seiner Organisation zugeführt werden, und das konnte nur durch die Vererbung geschehen.

Ich habe schon darauf hingedeutet - was in dem Alten Testament mit der Opferung und mit der Verhinderung der Opferung des Isaak durch Abraham angedeutet ist -, daß dieses Volk gerade von der Gottheit ausersehen war, der Menschheit gegeben zu werden, und daß damit das äußere physische Gefäß für die Ichheit der Menschheit gegeben wird. Daß dieses physische Gefäß mit dem alten jüdischen Volke der Menschheit von dem Gotte gegeben ist, das wird dadurch angedeutet, daß Abraham seinen Sohn opfern will. Mit Isaak hätte aber Abraham jene Organisation hingeopfert, welche der Menschheit die physische Grundlage für die Intellektualität und damit für die Ichheit geben sollte. Er bekommt ihn zurück - und damit die ganze Organisation, von dem Gotte geschenkt, zurück. Das ist das Grandiose in dieser Rückgabe des Isaak. (1.Mose 22, 1-19.) Damit ist aber auch angedeutet, daß auf der einen Seite die spirituelle Strömung liegt, die uns in der Verklärungsszene in Moses imaginiert wird, alles das, was nun gerade durch das Instrument des jüdischen Volkes heranströmen soll zu der Tat des Mysteriums von Golgatha. Was wird uns in Elias imaginiert? Es wird da getreulich in Zusammenhang gebracht, wie die Gesamtheit der Gottesoffenbarung, die im jüdischen Volke lebt, sich vereint mit dem, was durch das Mysterium von Golgatha geschieht. Es wird im 4. Buch Mose im 25. Kapitel dargestellt, wie Israel zum Götzendienst verführt wird, aber durch einen Mann gerettet wird. Durch die Entschlossenheit eines Mannes geschieht es, daß die Israeliten, das althebräische Volk, nicht völlig damalszum Götzendienstgetrieben werden. Weristdieser Mann ?Er ist derjenige, vondemunsin diesem 4.Buch Mose erzählt wird, daß er die Kraft hatte, hinzutreten vor das althebräische Volk, das dem Götzendienst der umliegenden Völker zu verfallen drohte, und einzutreten für den Gott, der durch Moses geoffenbart worden ist; eine starke Seele. Dieses Eintreten für den Gott wird gewöhnlich in der deutschen Sprache übersetzt mit «eifern»; es ist aber dieses Eifern nicht im schlimmen Sinne gedacht, sondern es heißt einfach «sich kraftvoll einsetzen». Da lesen wir 4. Mose 25, 10-12:

«Und der Herr redete mit Moses und sprach: Pinehas, der Sohn Eleasars, des Sohnes Aarons, des Priesters, hat meinen Grimm von den Kindern Israel gewendet durch seinen Eifer um mich, daß ich nicht in meinem Eifer die Kinder Israel vertilgte.

Darum sage: Siehe, ich gebe ihm meinen Bund des Friedens.»

Das sprach Jahve zu Moses. Wir haben auch nach der althebräischen Geheimlehre gerade in dieser Stelle etwas außerordentlich Bedeutsames zu sehen. Und die neuere okkulte Forschung bestätigt das. Wir wissen, daß von Aaron heruntergeht die Reihenfolge derjenigen, welche das Hohepriestertum des alten Israel darstellen, in denen also fortlebt die Essenz dessen, was durch das jüdische Volk der Menschheit gegeben war. An der Stelle der Weltgeschichte, auf die dort hingedeutet wurde, wird auch nach der althebräischen Geheimlehre und nach der neueren okkulten Forschung auf nichts Geringeres hingedeutet, als daß Jahve dem Moses mitteilte, daß er in Pinchas, dem Sohn des Eleasar, dem Sohn des Aaron, also in dem Enkel des Aaron, einen besonderen Priester, der für ihn eintritt, der mit ihm verbunden ist, dem althebräischen Volke übergibt. Und diese Geheimlehre und die neuere okkulte Forschung sagen da, daß in des Pinehas Leibe dieselbe Seele lebte, die später in Elias vorhanden war. Damit haben wir eine fortlaufende Linie, die wir ja für gewisse Punkte schon bezeichnet haben. In dem Enkel des Aaron haben wir die Seele, auf die es uns ankommt; da wirkt sie, in Pinehas. Wir haben sie dann wieder in Elias-Naboth, dann in Johannes dem Täufer, und wir wissen ja, wie sie darnach ihren weiteren Weg durch die Menschheitsevolution macht. - Diese Seele wird uns imaginiert auf der einen Seite, auf der anderen Seite die Seele des Moses selber.

So haben wir bei der Verklärung, beider Verwandlung auf dem Berge wahrhaftig das vor uns, was da zusammenströmt. Es strömt die Spiritualität der ganzen Erdenentwickelung zusammen, das, was durch das jüdische Blut heraufströmt in seiner Essenz im Levitentum. Denn cs steht die Seele des Pinchas, des Sohnes Eleasars, des Sohnes Aarons vor uns, es steht Moses vor uns, und es steht der Vollbringer des Mysteriums von Golgatha vor uns. Wie die Kräfte, wie die spirituellen Strömungen zusammenflossen, das sollte in imaginativer Erkenntnis vor die drei einzuweihenden Jünger Petrus, Jakobus und Johannes treten. Und wenn gestern von mir versucht worden ist, etwas darzustellen wie einen Ruf, der gleichsam von Griechenland hinübertönt nach Palästina, und den Ruf, der als Antwort zurücktönt, so ist das doch etwas mehr noch gewesen wie eine bloße, eine bildliche Ausmalung der Tatsachen. Es sollte vorbereiten auf das große welthistorische Gespräch, das nun wirklich stattgefunden hat. Die Jünger Petrus, Jakobus und Johannes sollten eingeweiht werden in dasjenige, was diese drei Seelen, von denen die eine dem alttestamentlichen Volke angehört, die andere vieles in sich trägt, wie wir dies von der Moses-Seele wissen, während die dritte als kosmische Gottheit sich mit der Erde verbindet, zusammen zu konferieren hatten. Das sollten die Jünger schauen. Wir wissen, daß es nicht sogleich in ihr Herz einziehen konnte, daß sie nicht sogleich die Sätze verstanden. Aber so geht es mit vielem, was man auf okkultem Felde erlebt. Man erlebt es imaginativ, versteht es nicht und lernt es oft erst in den folgenden Inkarnationen verstehen, versteht es dann aber um so besser, je mehr sich unser eigenes Verständnis demjenigen anpaßt, was man zuerst geschaut hat. Aber fühlen können wir: oben die drei Weltenmächte auf dem Berge, unten die Drei, die eingeweiht werden sollen in diese großen kosmischen Geheimnisse. Aus all diesen Dingen darf sich für unsere Seele die Empfindung ergeben, wie das Evangelium, wenn wir es richtig verstehen, wenn wir namentlich auch die dramatischen Steigerungen, die künstlerische Komposition, die überall ein Ausdruck von okkulten Tatsachen ist, richtig auf uns wirken lassen, doch hinweist auf den großen Umschwung, der zur Zeit des Mysteriums von Golgatha eingetreten ist. Das Evangelium spricht, wenn es durch die okkulte Forschung erklärt werden kann, eine recht, recht deutliche Sprache. Und es wird sich darum handeln, daß die Menschen immer mehr und mehr verstehen lernen, daß man bei den einzelnen Punkten des Evangeliums wirklich immer wissen muß, worauf es ankommt, was gerade besonders an der einen oder anderen Stelle wichtig ist; dann trifft man erst den Punkt, der für das eine oder andere Gleichnis, für die eine oder andere Erzählung der besonders wichtige ist. Es ist kurios, daß gegenüber den wichtigsten Dingen der Evangelien die gebräuchlichen theologischen oder philosophischen Erklärungen immer eigentlich von dem merkwürdigen Gesichtspunkte ausgehen, von dem ein Mensch ausgehen würde, der das Pferd nicht so vor den Wagen stellt, wie man gewöhnlich die Pferde vor den Wagen stellt, sondern umgekehrt, was man in der trivialen Sprache nennt «das Pferd beim Schwanz aufzäumen ». Das findet in der Tat bei vielen Erklärern und Kommentatoren statt; man merkt nicht, worauf es ankommt.

Weil es in dem Fortgange unserer Betrachtungen sehr bedeutsam ist, sei jetzt gleich auf eine Stelle aufmerksam gemacht, welche Sie im vierzehnten Kapitel des Markus-Evangeliums finden.

«Und da er in Bethanien war, im Hause Simons des Aussätzigen, kam eine Frau, wie er zu Tische saß, mit einer Alabasterflasche echter kostbarer Nardensalbe, schlug die Flasche auf und goß es ihm über das Haupt.

Es waren aber etliche da, die unter sich zankten und sprachen: Wozu das, diese Salbe zu vergeuden?

Hätte man doch diese Salbe verkaufen können um mehr als dreihundert Denare und es den Armen geben. Und sie fuhren sie an.

Jesus aber sagte: Lasset sie! Was beschwert ihr sie? Sie hat ein gutes Werk an mir getan.

Denn die Armen habt ihr allezeit bei euch und könnet ihnen allezeit Gutes tun, wann ihr wollt; mich aber habt ihr nicht allezeit.

Sie hat getan, was sie vermochte; sie hat meinen Leib zum voraus gesalbt zum Begräbnis.

Wahrlich aber, ich sage euch: Wo in aller Welt das Evangelium verkündigt wird, wird auch von ihrer Tat geredet werden zu ihrem Gedächtnis.» (14, 3-9.)

Es wäre nur richtig, wenn man immer gestehen würde, daß eine solche Stelle etwas recht Auffallendes hat. Und die meisten Menschen sollten sich, wenn sie ehrlich sind, gestehen, daß sie sympathisieren müßten mit denen, die da zanken, daß die Salbe vertrödelt worden ist, daß es doch recht unnötig ist, sie jemandem über den Kopf zu gießen. Die meisten werden wirklich glauben, daß es besser gewesen wäre, die Salbe für dreihundert Denare zu verkaufen und das Geld den Armen zu geben. Und wenn sie ehrlich sind, werden sie es vielleicht hart finden von dem Christus, daß er sagt: Gescheiter ist es, sie gewähren zu lassen, als die dreihundert Denare, die man bekommt, wenn man die Salbe verkaufen würde, den Armen zu geben. - Da muß man sich sagen: Es müssen doch gewisse Dinge dahinterstecken, wenn man nicht eigentlich durch die ganze Erzählung abgeschreckt werden soll. Das Evangelium tut noch etwas mehr; es ist gar nicht einmal höflich an dieser Stelle. Denn wenn sich eine Anzahl Menschen finden, die sich gestehen, daß es besser gewesen wäre, die dreihundert Denare, die man für die Salbe bekommen könnte, den Armen zu geben, so will das Evangelium sagen, daß die, welche das meinen, ähnlich denken wie ein gewisser anderer. Denn es fährt fort:

«Wo in aller Welt das Evangelium verkündet wird, wird auch von ihrer Tat geredet werden zu ihrem Gedächtnis.

Und Judas Iskarioth, einer von den Zwölfen, ging hin zu den Hohenpriestern, ihn an dieselben auszuliefern.

Sie aber freuten sich, wie sie es hörten, und versprachen ihm Geld zu geben. Und er suchte, wie er ihn bei guter Gelegenheit ausliefern möge.» (14, 9-11.)

Weil nämlich Judas Iskarioth besonderen Anstoß nahm an dem Vergießen der Salbe! Es werden die, welche Anstoß nahmen an dem Vergießen der Salbe, dem Beispiele des Judas Iskarioth beigesellt. Das Evangelium ist also gar nicht einmal höflich, denn es läßt ganz deutlich merken, daß die, welche an dem Vergießen der Salbe Anstoß nahmen, ebenso sind wie der Judas Iskarioth, der nachher den Herrn für dreißig Silberlinge verkaufte, indem es sagen will: Seht ihr, sosinddieMenschen, welche die Salbe für dreihundert Denare verkaufen wollen; denn der Judas hängt am Geld. Das Evangelium sollte gar nicht in irgendeiner Weise beschönigt werden, denn das Beschönigen verhindert die objektive, richtige Erklärung. Man muß den Punkt finden, worauf es ankommt. Und wir werden noch mehr Beispiele finden, die uns zeigen, daß das Evangelium sich sogar daran hält, Nebenpunkte auch zuweilen in etwas anstößiger Weise zu geben, wenn der Hauptpunkt in besonders klares Licht gerückt werden soll.

Worauf kommt es hier an dieser Stelle an? Darauf, daß das Evangelium sagen will: Nicht bloß das Sinnensein ist es, auf das der Mensch zu sehen hat, nicht bloß das ist es, was im Sinnensein Wert und Bedeutung haben kann, sondern die übersinnliche Welt ist es, die der Mensch vor allen Dingen in sich hereinnehmen soll; und wichtig ist es auch, auf dasjenige zu sehen, was im Sinnensein keine Bedeutung mehr hat. Der Leib des Christus Jesus, dessen Salbung vor dem Begräbnis hier von der Frau nur vorausgenommen wird, hat keine Bedeutung, wenn er entseelt ist; aber man soll für das etwas tun, was jenseits des Sinnenseins Wert und Bedeutung hat. Das soll besonders stark herausgehoben werden. Daher wird zu diesem Herausheben gerade etwas verwendet, worauf selbst das natürliche Menschenbewußtsein glaubt den allergrößten Wert legen zu müssen im Sinnensein.

Daß man dem Sinnensein zuweilen etwas entziehen muß, um es dem Geist zu geben, dem zu geben, wohinein das Ich einrückt, wenn es leibbefreit ist, dafür wählt hier das Evangelium ein besonderes Beispiel. Es wählt gerade hier ein recht pietätlos scheinendes: daß den Armen entzogen wird, was dem Geiste gegeben, was dem Ich gegeben wird, wenn es leibbefreit ist. Es sieht nicht auf das, was das irdische Dasein wert macht, sondern auf das, was in das Ich hineinkommen kann und von dem Ich ausstrahlen kann. Das wird hier in besonders kräftiger Weise hingestellt. Daher wird es in Verbindung gebracht mit dem Judas Iskarioth, der den Verrat begeht, weil er sein Herz besonders hingedrängt fühlt zu dem Sinnensein, weil er sich unter diejenigen mischt, welche das Evangelium hier in wenig höflicher Form als die rechten Banausen bezeichnet, trotzdem es stark ist, worauf hier hingedeutet wird. Dem Judas ist es nur um das zu tun, was im Sinnensein Bedeutung hat, wie diejenigen, welche glauben, daß das, was man für die dreihundert Denare bekommen kann, mehr Bedeutung hat als das, was über das Sinnensein hinausgeht.

Überall muß hingewiesen werden nicht auf das Nebensächliche, sondern auf die Hauptsache. Überall wird das Evangelium erkannt werden, wenn der Wert des Spirituellen erkannt werden wird. Wo man das Spirituelle richtig erkennt, da wird dieses Beispiel als zutreffend erkannt werden. Deshalb wird man überall reden vom Verschwenden der Salbe als von etwas, das seine Bedeutung hat, da, wo man den Wert des Übersinnlichen für das Ich hervorheben will. Eine besondere Stelle, wobei man wieder das Methodisch-Künstlerische kennenlernen kann, was das Evangelium an okkulten Tatsachen der Menschheitsevolution birgt, ist die folgende, die wieder eine Art von Crux für die Erklärer ist.

«Und am folgenden Tage, als sie von Bethanien ausgezogen, hungerte ihn.

Und er sah von weitem einen Feigenbaum, der Blätter hatte, und trat herzu, ob er etwas auf demselben finde. Und wie er hinkam, fand er nichts als Blätter; denn es war nicht die Zeit der Feigen.

Und er hob an und sprach zu ihm: Nie mehr in Ewigkeit soll jemand von dir Frucht essen! Und seine Jünger hörten es.» (11, 12-14.)

Nun sollte doch jeder ehrlicherweise fragen: Ist es denn nach dem Evangelium nicht doch sonderbar von einem Gotte, daß er auf einen Feigenbaum losgeht, Feigen sucht, aber keine findet, daß man noch dazu den Grund angibt, warum er keine gefunden hat — denn es heißt ausdrücklich «es war nicht die Zeit der Feigen», das heißt also, daß er zur Zeit, da es keine Feigen gibt, zum Feigenbaume hingeht, Feigen sucht und keine findet -, und nachher sagt: «Nie mehr in Ewigkeit soll jemand von dir Frucht essen!»? Nun nehmen Sie die Erklärungen, die zu dieser Geschichte gewöhnlich gegeben werden, während trocken und nüchtern nichts anderes dasteht, als daß in sonderbarer Weise der Christus Jesus Hunger verspürt, zu einem Feigenbaume geht in einer Zeit, in welcher keine Feigen wachsen, keine Feigen findet und den Baum dann verflucht, daß in alle Ewigkeit keine Feigen mehr auf ihm wachsen sollen. Ja, was ist denn dann der Feigenbaum, und warum wird das Ganze hier erzählt? Wer okkulte Schriften lesen kann, wird in dem «Feigenbaume » — wie der Zusammenhang im Evangelium ist, werden wir noch sehen - zunächst dasselbe erkennen, wovon bei dem Buddha gesprochen wird, der unter dem «Bodhibaume » saß und die Erleuchtung zu der Predigt von Benares empfing. Unter dem «Bodhibaume » — das heißt auch: unter dem «Feigenbaume». Weltgeschichtlich war zur Zeit des Buddha in bezug auf das menschliche Hellsehen noch die «Zeit der Feigen », das heißt, man bekam, wie es bei Buddha der Fall war, unter dem Bodhibaume - unter dem Feigenbaume - die Erleuchtung. Jetzt war das nicht mehr so. Das sollten die Jünger lernen. Jetzt war die weltgeschichtliche Tatsache eingetreten, daß nicht mehr an jenem Baume, unter dem der Buddha die Erleuchtung empfangen hat, die Früchte da waren.

Und was in der ganzen Menschheit geschah, das spiegelte sich dazumal in der Seele des Christus. Sehen wir einen Repräsentanten der Menschheit in Empedokles von Sizilien, einen Repräsentanten für viele Menschen, die ähnlich hungerten, weil ihre Seele nicht mehr fand die Offenbarung, die ihr früher gegeben war und sich jetzt mit den Abstraktionen des Ich begnügen mußte, so kann man von dem hungernden Empedokles sprechen, kann sprechen von dem Hunger nach dem Geist, den alle Menschen der heranrückenden Zeit fühlten. Und der ganze Hunger der Menschheit lud sich ab in der Seele des Christus Jesus, bevor heranrückte das Mysterium von Golgatha.

Und die Jünger sollten teilnehmen an diesem Geheimnis und davon wissen. Der Christus führt sie hin zu dem Feigenbaum und sagt ihnen das Geheimnis von dem Bodhibaum. Er ließ aus, weil es bedeutungslos war, daß noch der Buddha die Früchte dieses Feigenbaumes gefunden hat. Aber jetzt war nicht mehr die Zeit der « Feigen », die Buddha zur Zeit der Predigt von Benares von dem Bodhibaume gehabt hat; sondern konstatieren mußte der Christus, daß bis in alle Ewigkeit an dem Baume, von dem heruntergeflossen ist das Licht von Benares, nicht mehr die Erkenntnisfrüchte reifen werden, sondern daß sie jetzt kommen werden von dem Mysterium von Golgatha.

Welche Tatsache haben wir vor uns? Die Tatsache, daß der Christus Jesus mit seinen Jüngern von Bethanien nach Jerusalem geht und daß bei dieser Gelegenheit in den Jüngern eine besonders starke Empfindung, eine besonders starke Kraft hervorgerufen wird, welche in den Seelen der Jünger hellseherische Kräfte hervorruft, so daß sie besonders zur Imagination geneigt sind. In den Jüngern werden hellseherische, imaginative Kräfte erweckt. Sie sehen hellseherisch den Bodhibaum, den Feigenbaum, und der Christus Jesus bewirkt in ihnen die Erkenntnis, daß von dem Bodhibaume nicht mehr die Früchte der Erkenntnis kommen können; denn es ist nicht mehr die Zeit der Feigen, das heißt der alten Erkenntnis. In alle Ewigkeit wird dieser Baum verdorrt sein, und ein neuer Baum muß erwachsen, der Baum, der aus dem toten Holze des Kreuzes besteht, und an dem nicht die Früchte reifen der alten Erkenntnis, sondern die Früchte, die der Menschheit aus dem Mysterium von Golgatha reifen können, das mit dem Kreuze von Golgatha als einem neuen Sinnbild verbunden ist. Hingestellt hat sich an die Stelle jener Szene der Weltgeschichte, die wir sehen in dem Sitzen des Buddha unter dem Bodhibaum, das Bild von Golgatha, wo ein anderer Baum, der Baum des Kreuzes, erhöht ist, an dem die lebendige Frucht des sich offenbarenden Menschengottes hing, damit von ihm ausstrahle die neue Erkenntnis des sich nun weiter ausbildenden Baumes, der in alle Ewigkeit die Früchte tragen soll.

Eighth Lecture

We know that in the Gospel of Mark, after the great world-historical monologue described above, there follows the so-called Transfiguration, the scene of transformation. I have often hinted that for the three disciples who are taken to the “mountain” where this scene of transformation takes place, this is a kind of higher initiation. At this moment, they are to be led even deeper into the mysteries that are being handed down to them one after the other for the guidance and leadership of humanity. We know that this scene—as is already clear from various earlier descriptions—contains a series of mysteries. The very mention of the “mountain” in the Gospels and other occult writings indicates that we are dealing with something mysterious. The mountain as such always means, when it comes to occult matters, that those who are led up the mountain are being led to certain mysteries of existence. In the Gospel of Mark, we feel this particularly strongly for a certain reason, which can already be noticed when reading the Gospel correctly. One only has to read the Gospel correctly.

Reference must be made here to the third chapter of Mark, verses 7 to 23, 24; strictly speaking, one need only go as far as verse 22, and one need only read with a sensitive understanding, and something will strike one. It has often been pointed out that the expression “lead to the mountain” has an occult meaning. But in the chapter mentioned, we find a threefold meaning, not just a leading to the mountain, but if we look more closely at the three paragraphs that Mark quotes, we first hear in verse 7: “And Jesus withdrew with his disciples to the lake,” and so on. So we are first led to a scene at the lake. Then we hear in verse 13: “And he went up the mountain and called to him those whom he wanted.” And thirdly, we hear in verses 20/21: “And he came home. And again a crowd gathered, so that they could not even eat bread. And when his family heard of this, they went out to seize him, for they said, ‘He is out of his mind.’”

We are referred to three places: the lake, the mountain, and the house. Just as one thinks of the “mountain” as a place where something important in an occult sense always happens, so this is also the case with the other two places. When occult writings speak of “being led to the lake” and “being led home,” there is always an occult meaning associated with this. You can see from a certain circumstance that this is what is meant in the Gospels. Remember that not only in the Gospel of Mark, but in all the Gospels, a special revelation, a special manifestation, is associated with the “lake,” as when the disciples sail across the lake and Christ appears to them, and they first think he is a ghost, but then realize that he is really approaching them (6:45-52). And you can also see elsewhere that the Gospels often speak of an event that takes place at the lake or through the lake. On the “mountain” he first appoints the Twelve, that is, he gives them their occult mission. We are dealing here with an occult education. It is again on the mountain that the occult transfiguration takes place. “At home,” his own people declare him “out of his mind”; here we have the third element. All three things are of the greatest, most comprehensive significance.

If we want to understand what “by the lake” means in such a context, we must remember something we have often explained. We have described how our post-Atlantean earth period was preceded by the so-called Atlantean period, during which the air was still permeated by dense masses of fog, so that when people looked at each other, because they lived under changed physical conditions, their soul life was also completely different, as was the case with the ancient clairvoyance of the Atlantean period. But this was bound up with the completely different nature of the physical body, with its embedding in the fog masses. Something of all this has remained with humanity like an old heirloom. If, through something in the post-Atlantean era, someone is introduced to occult conditions, comes into contact with occult conditions, as was the case with the disciples of Jesus, they become much more sensitive, much more intensely sensitive to their surroundings, to natural conditions. One might say that with the robust nature of the relationship with nature that exists today in the post-Atlantean era, it does not matter so much whether one travels across the sea, stays by a lake, climbs a mountain — we will see what this means in a moment — or whether one is at home. How the eyes see, how the mind thinks, does not depend so much on where one is. But when finer seeing begins, when one ascends into the spiritual world conditions, then the ordinary human being proves to be coarsely organized.

When, in times when clairvoyant consciousness is beginning, a person travels across the sea, where conditions are completely different, even if he lives on the coast, his clairvoyant consciousness is attuned to something completely different than on the plain. On the plain, so to speak, the greatest effort is necessary to bring out the clairvoyant powers at all. The sea makes it easier to bring out the clairvoyant powers, but only those powers that relate to something very specific, not to everything. For there is again a difference between whether clairvoyant consciousness is active on the plain or whether it climbs up the mountain. On the heights, clairvoyant sensitive consciousness is attuned to something different than on the plain. And what emerges in relation to what clairvoyant consciousness is attuned to at the lake or up on the mountain is something very different from each other.

At the lake—this can of course be replaced by the city, but only with great effort; what is now being said is particularly valid for what comes more or less of its own accord—at the water's edge, in the mist, clairvoyant consciousness is particularly attuned to perceiving imaginings, everything imaginative, and to applying what it has already achieved.

On the mountain, in the thin air, with the different ratio of oxygen and nitrogen, the clairvoyant consciousness is more attuned to experiencing inspiration and allowing new clairvoyant powers to arise. Therefore, the expression “climbing the mountain” is not merely symbolic, but the mountain conditions favor the possibility of developing new occult powers within oneself. And the expression “going to the lake” is not merely symbolic, but has been chosen precisely because coming into contact with the lake promotes imaginative seeing and the application of occult powers.

And the occult powers have the hardest time when one is at home, regardless of whether one is alone or with family members. For while it is relatively easy for a person who has lived by a lake for a long time—if everything is right—to believe that they have imaginations through the veil of physicality, and while it is easier for a person who lives in the mountains to believe that they are climbing higher, a person who is at home merely has the feeling that they are outside their body, that they are “out of their mind.” Not that he cannot develop occult powers, but it does not fit in with the environment; it does not seem as natural in relation to the environment as in the other corresponding cases, by the lake or in the mountains.

Therefore, it has an enormously profound meaning and is entirely derived from occult natural conditions that the Gospel adheres precisely to what has now been described. The Gospel adheres to this in a completely appropriate occult manner. Thus, we will always see the following. Certain forces are already being used, such as when healing powers or powers of vision are unfolded, when there is talk of “being at the lake,” when there is mention of an event being transferred to the lake. Therefore, Christ Jesus appears to His own at the lake in the imagination, only that He is really present in the whole event because He can externalize Himself. The disciples see Him, yet they do not have Him before them in the physical body. But because the difference in location means nothing in such an experience, he is at the same time “with them” at the lake. And for this reason, when there is talk of the further development of the soul forces of the apostles, there is talk of the mountain. This is also why, when the Twelve are appointed, where he so to speak destines their souls to take on the group spirit of Elijah, there is talk of the mountain. And where Christ wants to show himself in his entire world-historical and cosmic appearance, there is again talk of the mountain. The Transfiguration therefore takes place again on the mountain.

Now we must consider the scene of the Transfiguration from this point of view. The three disciples, Peter, James, and John, prove themselves capable of being initiated into the deeper mysteries of the mystery of Golgotha. And to the clairvoyant eyes opened to these three, Elijah appears on one side, Moses on the other, and Christ Jesus himself in the middle, but now in the form—as is imaginatively hinted at in the Gospel—through which he can be recognized in his spiritual essence. This is also sufficiently indicated in the Gospel of Mark.

"And he was transfigured before them.

And his clothes became shining white, as white as no one on earth can bleach them.

And Elijah appeared to them with Moses, and they talked with Jesus.” (9:2-4)

After the great monologue of God, a conversation, a conversation between three. What a wonderful dramatic progression! The Gospels are full of such artistic compositions. These Gospels are already magnificently composed. After we have heard the monologue of God, we hear a conversation between three people. And what a conversation! First we see Elijah and Moses on either side of Christ Jesus. What is being implied to us with Elijah and Moses?

You are already familiar with the figure of Moses, even from the occult side, which has often been illuminated. We know that world history has chosen the transition from ancient times to the time of the mystery of Golgotha via the detour through Moses. We know from our reflections on the Gospel of Luke that in the figure of Jesus, of whom the Gospel of Matthew speaks in particular, we must first see the reincarnated Zarathustra in the boy Jesus. But we also know that this Zarathustra, in relation to what was in him and around him, ensured that his later appearance was prepared. I have often mentioned how the etheric body of Zarathustra was given up by him through special occult processes and then passed on to Moses, so that the forces of Zarathustra's etheric body worked in Moses. Thus, by placing Elijah and Moses alongside Christ Jesus, we have, as it were, the forces in Moses that lead from the archetypal forms of culture to what was to be given to humanity in Christ Jesus and in the Mystery of Golgotha.

But we also have a transitional figure in Moses in another form. We know that Moses not only had the etheric body of Zarathustra within him, through which he also carried the wisdom of Zarathustra, which could then come to the fore in him, but we also know that Moses was, in a certain sense, initiated into the secrets of other peoples. We see a special initiation scene in the encounter with the Midianite priest Jethro. We have also discussed this. It can be found in the Old Testament (Exodus 2:16-21). It clearly indicates how Moses comes to this lonely priest and learns not only the initiation secrets of Judaism, but also those of other peoples, and carries them into his being, which has undergone the special strengthening of carrying the etheric body of Zarathustra within itself. Thus, through Moses, the initiation secrets of the entire surrounding world entered the Jewish people, so that he prepared, as it were, on a subordinate level, what was to be accomplished through Christ Jesus. That was the one stream that was to lead to the mystery of Golgotha.

The other stream was that which came from what has already been indicated, from what now lived in a natural way, in the Jewish people as a people. Moses was the one who allowed what was already in the world to flow into the stream that flowed down through the generations of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, as far as was possible at that time. But what was so closely connected with the nature of the ancient Hebrew people was always to be preserved. What was this people chosen for? To prepare the way for that time which we have tried to bring before our souls by referring, for example, to Greek culture and, yesterday, once again to Empedocles. In doing so, we have pointed to the time when people's ancient clairvoyant abilities disappear, when they lose their insight into the spiritual world, and when the power of judgment that is inherent in the ego emerges, when the ego that is dependent on itself emerges.

The ancient Hebrew people were chosen to provide this ego with what can be provided to the ego from the natural essence of human beings through the blood organization of human beings. Everything that can be lived out through the physical organization of the human being was to be lived out in this people. Intellectuality is bound to the physical organization of the human being. That which could nourish the abilities of the human being that are bound to intellectuality was to be taken from the physical organization of the ancient Hebrew people. The other peoples had, so to speak, to allow that which could come in through initiation, that is, from outside, to shine into the earthly organization. What could rise up through one's own human nature from the blood connection should rise up from the connection of the ancient Hebrew people. That is why it is so strictly insisted that the blood connection is a continuous one and that everyone carries within themselves the abilities that have flowed through the blood since Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The ego is bound to the blood and should be fed into its organization through the blood of the ancient Hebrew people, and this could only happen through heredity.

I have already pointed out—what is indicated in the Old Testament with the sacrifice and the prevention of the sacrifice of Isaac by Abraham—that this people was chosen by the Godhead to be given to humanity, and that this provides the outer physical vessel for the I-ness of humanity. That this physical vessel was given to humanity by God in the form of the ancient Jewish people is indicated by Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son. But with Isaac, Abraham would have sacrificed the organization that was to give humanity the physical basis for intellectuality and thus for the ego. He gets him back—and with him the entire organization given by God. This is the grandiose aspect of Isaac's return (Genesis 22:1-19). But this also indicates that, on the one hand, there is the spiritual current that is imagined in the transfiguration scene in Moses, everything that is now to flow through the instrument of the Jewish people to the deed of the mystery of Golgotha. What is imagined in Elijah? There it is faithfully brought into connection with how the totality of God's revelation, which lives in the Jewish people, unites with what happens through the mystery of Golgotha. In the 4th book of Moses, chapter 25, it is described how Israel is led into idolatry but is saved by one man. Through the determination of one man, the Israelites, the ancient Hebrew people, were not completely driven to idolatry at that time. Who is this man? He is the one of whom we are told in the fourth book of Moses that he had the strength to stand before the ancient Hebrew people, who were in danger of falling into the idolatry of the surrounding peoples, and to stand up for the God who had been revealed through Moses; a strong soul. This standing up for God is usually translated in English as “zeal,” but this zeal is not meant in a bad sense; it simply means “to stand up powerfully.” We read in Numbers 25:10-12:

“And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, ‘Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the priest, has turned my wrath away from the children of Israel by his zeal for me, that I did not consume the children of Israel in my zeal.

Therefore say, ’Behold, I give him my covenant of peace.'”

Thus said Yahweh to Moses. According to ancient Hebrew secret teachings, we see something extremely significant in this passage. And recent occult research confirms this. We know that the order of those who represent the high priesthood of ancient Israel descends from Aaron, in whom the essence of what was given to humanity through the Jewish people lives on. At the point in world history to which this refers, according to ancient Hebrew secret teachings and more recent occult research, nothing less is implied than that Yahweh told Moses that he was handing over to him in Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron, that is, in Aaron's grandson, a special priest who would stand in for him, who was connected to him, to the ancient Hebrew people. And this secret teaching and more recent occult research say that the same soul that was later present in Elijah lived in the body of Phinehas. This gives us a continuous line, which we have already indicated for certain points. In Aaron's grandson we have the soul that is important to us; there it works, in Phinehas. We then have it again in Elijah-Naboth, then in John the Baptist, and we know how it continues its path through human evolution. This soul is imagined on the one hand, and on the other hand the soul of Moses himself.

Thus, in the Transfiguration, in the transformation of both on the mountain, we truly have before us what is flowing together there. The spirituality of the entire evolution of the earth is flowing together, that which flows up through the Jewish blood in its essence in Leviticalism. For there stands before us the soul of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron; there stands Moses before us, and there stands the accomplisher of the mystery of Golgotha before us. How the forces, how the spiritual currents flowed together, this was to appear in imaginative knowledge before the three disciples to be initiated, Peter, James, and John. And when I attempted yesterday to depict something like a call echoing from Greece to Palestine, and the call echoing back in response, it was still something more than a mere pictorial illustration of the facts. It was intended to prepare us for the great world-historical conversation that has now actually taken place. The disciples Peter, James, and John were to be initiated into what these three souls, one of whom belonged to the Old Testament people, another of whom carried much within himself, as we know from the soul of Moses, and the third of whom, as a cosmic deity, was connected with the earth, had to confer together. The disciples were to see this. We know that it could not immediately enter their hearts, that they did not immediately understand the sentences. But this is how it is with much of what one experiences in the occult realm. One experiences it imaginatively, does not understand it, and often only learns to understand it in subsequent incarnations, but then understands it all the better the more one's own understanding adapts to what one has seen at first. But we can feel: above, the three world powers on the mountain; below, the three who are to be initiated into these great cosmic mysteries. From all these things, our soul can gain the feeling that the Gospel, when we understand it correctly, when we allow the dramatic intensifications and the artistic composition, which is everywhere an expression of occult facts, to have their proper effect on us, points to the great turning point that occurred at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha. When explained through occult research, the Gospel speaks a very clear language. And it will be a matter of people learning to understand more and more that, when it comes to the individual points of the Gospel, one must always know what is really important, what is particularly important at one point or another; only then will one hit upon the point that is particularly important for one parable or another, for one story or another. It is curious that, when it comes to the most important things in the Gospels, the usual theological or philosophical explanations always start from the strange point of view of someone who does not put the horse in front of the cart as one usually does, but the other way around, which in trivial language is called “putting the horse by the tail.” This is indeed the case with many explainers and commentators; one does not notice what is important.

Because it is very significant in the course of our considerations, let us now draw attention to a passage which you will find in the fourteenth chapter of the Gospel of Mark.

“And when he was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, a woman came, as he sat at the table, with an alabaster flask of very precious ointment of nard, and she broke the flask and poured it on his head.”

But there were some who were angry and said, “Why this waste of ointment?

It could have been sold for more than three hundred denarii and given to the poor.” And they rebuked her.

But Jesus said, “Leave her alone. Why do you trouble her? She has done a beautiful thing to me.

For you always have the poor with you, and whenever you wish you can do good to them; but you will not always have me.

She has done what she could; she has anointed my body beforehand for burial.

But truly, I say to you, wherever the gospel is preached in the world, what she has done will also be told in memory of her.” (14:3-9)

It would only be right to admit that there is something quite striking about this passage. And most people, if they are honest, should admit that they sympathize with those who quarrel that the ointment has been wasted, that it is quite unnecessary to pour it on someone's head. Most will truly believe that it would have been better to sell the ointment for three hundred denarii and give the money to the poor. And if they are honest, they will perhaps find it harsh of Christ to say that it is wiser to let them keep it than to give the three hundred denarii that would be obtained by selling the ointment to the poor. One must say to oneself: there must be something more to it than this, if one is not to be put off by the whole story. The Gospel does even more; it is not even polite at this point. For if a number of people admit that it would have been better to give the three hundred denarii that could be obtained for the ointment to the poor, the Gospel wants to say that those who think so think similarly to a certain other person. For it continues:

“Wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what he has done will also be told in memory of him.”

Then Judas, one of the Twelve, went to the chief priests to betray him to them.

But they were glad to hear it, and promised to give him money. And he sought how he might betray him at an opportune time.” (14:9-11)

For Judas Iscariot took special offense at the pouring out of the ointment! Those who took offense at the spilling of the ointment are associated with the example of Judas Iscariot. The Gospel is therefore not at all polite, for it makes it quite clear that those who took offense at the spilling of the ointment are just like Judas Iscariot, who later sold the Lord for thirty pieces of silver, by saying: See, this is how people are, who want to sell the ointment for three hundred denarii; for Judas is attached to money. The Gospel should not be embellished in any way, for embellishment prevents objective, correct explanation. One must find the point that matters. And we will find even more examples that show us that the Gospel even adheres to presenting secondary points in a somewhat offensive manner when the main point needs to be brought into particularly clear light.

What is important here at this point? The Gospel wants to say that it is not merely the sensory world that human beings must look to, not merely that which has value and meaning in the sensory world, but that it is the supersensible world that human beings must take in above all else; and it is also important to look at that which no longer has any meaning in the sensory world. The body of Christ Jesus, whose anointing before burial is only anticipated here by the woman, has no meaning when it is lifeless; but one should do something for that which has value and meaning beyond the sensory world. This should be emphasized particularly strongly. Therefore, something is used to emphasize this which even natural human consciousness believes it must attach the greatest value to in the sense life.

The Gospel chooses a special example here to show that something must sometimes be taken away from the sense life in order to give it to the spirit, to give it to that into which the I enters when it is freed from the body. It chooses something that seems quite irreverent: that what is given to the spirit, what is given to the ego when it is freed from the body, is taken away from the poor. It does not look at what makes earthly existence valuable, but at what can enter into the ego and radiate from it. This is presented here in a particularly powerful way. That is why it is associated with Judas Iscariot, who commits betrayal because he feels his heart particularly drawn to the sense life, because he mixes with those whom the Gospel here, in a less polite form, calls the right-hand Banaus, even though what is pointed to here is strong. Judas is only interested in doing what has meaning in the sense life, like those who believe that what can be obtained for three hundred denarii has more meaning than what goes beyond the sense life.

Everywhere attention must be drawn not to the incidental, but to the main point. The Gospel will be recognized everywhere when the value of the spiritual is recognized. Where the spiritual is correctly recognized, this example will be recognized as true. Therefore, everywhere people will speak of the waste of the ointment as something that has meaning, wherever they want to emphasize the value of the supersensible for the ego. A special passage, in which one can again learn about the methodical-artistic aspect of what the Gospel contains in terms of occult facts about human evolution, is the following, which is again a kind of crux for those who try to explain it.

"And the next day, when they came out of Bethany, he was hungry.

And he saw from afar a fig tree in leaf, and he came to it to see if he could find anything on it. And when he came to it, he found nothing but leaves, for it was not the season for figs.

And he began to say unto him, Never again shall anyone eat fruit from you! And his disciples heard it.” (11:12-14)

Now everyone should honestly ask themselves: According to the Gospel, isn't it strange for a god to go after a fig tree, looking for figs but finding none, and then to give the reason why he found none—for it is expressly stated, “it was not the season for figs,” which means that at the time when there were no figs, he went to the fig tree, looked for figs, and found none—and then to say, “No one shall ever eat fruit from you again!”? Now take the explanations that are usually given for this story, while dryly and soberly nothing else is stated except that in a strange way Christ Jesus feels hungry, goes to a fig tree at a time when no figs are growing, finds no figs, and then curses the tree that no figs shall ever grow on it again. Yes, what then is the fig tree, and why is the whole story told here? Those who can read occult writings will recognize in the “fig tree” — as we shall see in the context of the Gospel — the same thing that is spoken of in connection with the Buddha, who sat under the “Bodhi tree” and received enlightenment for his sermon at Benares. Under the “Bodhi tree” — that is also called the “fig tree.” In world history, at the time of Buddha, in relation to human clairvoyance, it was still the “time of figs,” that is, as was the case with Buddha, one received enlightenment under the Bodhi tree — under the fig tree. Now this was no longer the case. The disciples had to learn this. Now the world-historical fact had come to pass that the fruits were no longer there on the tree under which Buddha had attained enlightenment.

And what happened to the whole of humanity was reflected at that time in the soul of Christ. If we see in Empedocles of Sicily a representative of humanity, a representative of many people who were similarly hungry because their souls could no longer find the revelation that had been given to them earlier and now had to content themselves with the abstractions of the ego, then we can speak of the hungry Empedocles, we can speak of the hunger for the spirit that all people of the approaching time felt. And all the hunger of humanity was discharged into the soul of Christ Jesus before the mystery of Golgotha approached.

And the disciples were to participate in this mystery and know about it. Christ leads them to the fig tree and tells them the secret of the Bodhi tree. He omitted that the Buddha had also found the fruits of this fig tree, because it was meaningless. But now was no longer the time of the “figs” that Buddha had from the Bodhi tree at the time of his sermon in Benares; rather, Christ had to state that for all eternity, the fruits of knowledge would no longer ripen on the tree from which the light of Benares had flowed, but that they would now come from the mystery of Golgotha.

What fact do we have before us? The fact that Christ Jesus is going with his disciples from Bethany to Jerusalem and that on this occasion a particularly strong feeling, a particularly strong force is aroused in the disciples, which evokes clairvoyant powers in their souls, so that they are particularly inclined to imagination. Clairvoyant, imaginative powers are awakened in the disciples. They see clairvoyantly the Bodhi tree, the fig tree, and Christ Jesus brings about in them the realization that the fruits of knowledge can no longer come from the Bodhi tree, for it is no longer the time of figs, that is, of old knowledge. This tree will be withered for all eternity, and a new tree must grow, the tree that consists of the dead wood of the cross, on which do not ripen the fruits of the old knowledge, but the fruits that can ripen for humanity from the mystery of Golgotha, which is connected with the cross of Golgotha as a new symbol. In place of that scene in world history, which we see in the sitting of Buddha under the Bodhi tree, there now stands the image of Golgotha, where another tree, the tree of the cross, is raised, on which hung the living fruit of the revealing God-man, so that from him might radiate the new knowledge of the tree now continuing to develop, which is to bear fruit for all eternity.