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The Fifth Gospel
GA 148

5 October 1913, Oslo

Lecture IV

What is written at the end of the Gospel of John is a relief for me when I speak about the Fifth Gospel today. We remember at the end it states that in no way is everything that Christ Jesus did told, for if one wanted to tell of all the events there wouldn't be enough books in the world to contain them. So it cannot be doubted that in addition to what is described in books, much more can have occurred.

I would like to tell you about Jesus of Nazareth from the time he was twelve years old. As you know, it was the time when the I of Zarathustra, which was incarnated in one of the two Jesus children transferred, be means of a mystical act, into the other Jesus child, into the Jesus child described at the beginning of the Gospel of Luke. [See Note 1] So we will begin with the year in Jesus of Nazareth's life when the Jesus of the Luke Gospel received Zarathustra´s I. We know that the Gospel of Luke describes the moment when Jesus is said to have been lost and he is found again sitting with the scribes and how all were so astonished by the powerful answers he gave. We know, however, that these meaningful, powerful answers came from the fact that the spiritually veiled memory of the I of Zarathustra acted in a way to enable Jesus to give such surprising answers. We also know that due to the mother's death in one of the families and the father's death in the other, both families joined together and the Jesus boy who bore Zarathustra's I grew up in that unified family.

According to the Fifth Gospel it was a very special growing up period. At first his immediate neighbors had a most favorable opinion of him because of the surprising answers he gave in the temple. They saw the potential scholar (scribe) in him, one who could reach a high level of scholarship. They had great hopes for him and hung on his words. Nevertheless, he became ever more silent – so much so that they became ill-disposed to him. He, however, was engaged in an inner struggle, a mighty struggle in himself between his twelfth and eighteenth years. In his soul there was something like a rising up of the treasures of wisdom, as if the sum of the former Zarathustra-knowledge was rising in the form of Jewish scholarship.

At first the boy listened attentively to everything the many scribes/scholars said who came to his home in Nazareth, and was able to give exceptional answers. In the beginning he astonished those scribes who looked upon him as a wunderkind. But then he became more and more silent and listened without speaking to what the others said. At the same time great ideas, meaningful moral impulses arose in his soul. What he heard from the scribes at that time made an impression on him, but it was an impression which often left a trace of bitterness in his soul, because he had the feeling – already in those young years, mind you – that there was much uncertainty, things that could lead to error in what the scribes spoke based on the old tradition, from the old scriptures which are collected in the Old Testament. It was always depressing when he heard that in ancient times the spirit came over the prophets, that God himself had spoken to the old prophets and that now inspiration had abandoned the succeeding generations. But he paid special attention to one thing, because he felt that it would happen to him.

“Yes, that great spirit, that powerful spirit which came to Elias, for example, no longer speaks.” What did still speak, however, which many believed to be an inspiration from the spiritual heights, what still spoke was a weaker voice which some believed to hear as coming from the spirit of Jahveh himself. “Bath Kol” was the name given to that inspiring voice, although a weaker, lesser voice than that which inspired the ancient prophets, but nevertheless something similar. Some in Jesus' surroundings spoke thus of Bath Kol. Later Jewish scriptures also tell of this Bath-Kol. [See Note 2]

Now I will insert something into this Fifth Gospel which doesn't really belong, but will help to explain Bath Kol. Later on there was a conflict in two rabbinical schools, because the famous Rabbi Elieser ben Hirkano formulated a teaching and as proof of the teaching – the Talmud also describes this – he claimed that he could work miracles. He had a Carob tree rise from the earth and replant itself a couple of hundred feet away; he made a stream flow backwards, and as the third miracle he invoked a “voice from heaven” that his teaching would be made manifest. But this was not believed in the opposing rabbinical school of Rabbi Josia, who replied: “However much Rabbi Elieser has carob trees transplant themselves from one place to another, however much he makes streams flow upwards, or invoke Bath Kol – it is written in the Law that the eternal laws of being must be lain in the mouths of men and in the hearts of men. And if he wants to convince us, this Rabbi Elieser, he should not invoke Bath Kol, but he should invoke what human hearts can apprehend.”

I tell this story because we can see from it that soon after the introduction of Christianity Bath Kol was still held in a somewhat lesser esteem in certain rabbinical schools. But she [Bath=daughter; Kol=voice – ed.] had bloomed as an inspiring voice amongst rabbis and scribes.

While the young Jesus heard and felt all that, he was receiving inspiration through Bath Kol. What was remarkable was that by means of fecundation of his soul with the I of Zarathustra, Jesus was in fact capable of assimilating what the others around him knew. Not only that he could give the scribes such strong answers in his twelfth year, but he could also hear the Bath Kol in his own heart. But it was just the fact of this inspiration through Bath Kol that caused him to experience bitter inner struggles when he was sixteen, seventeen years old. For the Bath Kol revealed to him – and he believed it to be true – that in the continuation of the stream of the Old Testament, the same spirit which had spoken to the Jewish teachers of long ago would no longer do so. One day – and it was terrible for his soul – he believed that Bath Kol revealed to him the following: I no longer reach to the heights where the spirit can reveal to me the truth about the future of the Jewish people. It was a terrible moment when the Bath Kol seemed to reveal that she could not continue the old revelations, that she was incapable of continuing to inspire the old Judaism. Jesus of Nazareth felt the ground under his feet swept away, and many times he said to himself: All the soul powers with which I thought myself to possess only allow me to understand that in the evolutionary substance of Judaism no capacity remains to ascend to the revelations of the spirit of God.

Imagine ourselves for a moment in the soul of Jesus of Nazareth when such he experienced this. It was at the same time – in his sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth years – when he traveled, partly because of his trade, partly for other reasons. On those travels he got to know various regions of Palestine, and probably various places outside Palestine. At that time an Asiatic cult was propagated over the Middle East, and even in Europe, an Asiatic cult which was a mixture of many other cults, but which was mainly the Mithras cult – one can see this clearly when one clairvoyantly absorbs the Akasha Record. In many places in various regions temples for the Mithras rituals existed. In many places it was similar to the Attis ritual, but it was essentially the Mithras ritual. In a certain sense it was ancient paganism, but penetrated by the Mithan or Attis ceremonies. An example of the extent to which it spread is the fact that St. Peter's Cathedral in Rome stands on the same spot where a Mithras cult was previously celebrated. Yes, one must say what for many Roman Catholics will seem blasphemous: that the rituals of St. Peter's cathedral and everything which derives from them is in its outer form not unlike the old Attis ritual, on whose site St. Peter's stands.

Jesus of Nazareth learned about what was done in those sites when he began traveling around during his sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth years. And he continued doing so later. He learned to know the souls of the pagans through physical, outer observation. Because of the incorporation of the I of Zarathustra into his soul the capacity to do this developed in a natural way, something that others could only attain with great effort: clairvoyant power. He experienced in those pagan religious rituals something which others did not – shocking things. It may sound fantastic, but I must emphasize that when Jesus was present at certain pagan rituals as the priests carried out the ceremonies at the altars, he saw that demonic beings were attracted to them. He also discovered that many idols which they prayed to were not images of good spiritual beings, but of demonic powers. Yes, he also discovered that the demonic powers often merged with the faithful who were attending the services. It is not difficult to understand why these things are not described in the other gospels. And it is only now possible to speak about them in the confines of our spiritual movement, for human souls can only now, in our times, understand the enormously profound experiences which played out in the young Jesus of Nazareth.

His wandering continued into his twentieth, twenty-second, twenty-fourth years. He always felt bitterness in his soul when he saw the force of demons spawned by Lucifer and Ahriman and how paganism had gone so far as to take the demons for gods, even to depict wild demonic powers in idols, and the powers were attracted by these images and rituals and merged with the praying people, possessed them. They were bitter experiences, and they came to a climax when he was about twenty-four years old.

It was a new, difficult experience added to the Bath Kol disappointment. I must say that at this time I am not able to indicate at which place in his travels this experience took place, although it was possible for me to decipher the scene correctly to a large extent. Only the place is still unknown to me. It seems to me that the scene took place outside Palestine. Although I cannot say that with certainty, I must describe the scene.

In his twenty-fourth year Jesus of Nazareth came to a place where sacrifices were being made to a certain god at a pagan place of worship. Around it, however, were sad people affected by all kinds of terrible mental and physical illnesses. The place of worship had long since been abandoned by the priests. And Jesus heard the people wailing: “The priests have abandoned us and the blessings of the sacrifice do not come to us and we are leprous and sick because the priests have abandoned us.” Those people cried out to Jesus. Infinite love for these aggrieved people flared up in his soul. The people must have noticed something of this infinite love; it must have made a profound impression on those lamenting people who had been abandoned by their priests and, as they believed, by their gods. And then arose, instantaneously, in the hearts of most of them who saw the expression of infinite love on Jesus' face, the need to say: “You are the new priest sent to us.” They pushed him to the altar, they placed him at the pagan altar. He stood there and they demanded of him that he perform the offering in order that they receive the gods' blessings. While that happened, while they were pushing him to the altar, he fell down like dead, his soul left him and the people around him who thought their god was to come back saw that the one they took to be the new priest sent from heaven fell down as if dead. But Jesus of Nazareth's soul felt itself carried up to a spiritual height, to the realm of the sun. And now he heard, as if coming from the realm of the sun, words which he had previously often heard through Bath Kol. But now Bath Kol was transformed, had become something completely different. The voice also came from a different direction, and what Jesus of Nazareth heard, translated into our language, may be summarized by the words I was first able to pronounce when we recently laid the foundation stone of our building in Dornach. [See Note 3]

Occult obligations exist! And following one such occult obligation I disclosed what Jesus of Nazareth heard from the transformed voice of Bath Kol. He heard the words:

AUM, Amen!
Evil rules,
Witness of the severing I,
Selfhood's guilt by others owed,
In daily bread now felt,
In which heaven's will be not done,
For man deserted your kingdom,
And forgot your names,
You fathers in the heavens.

I cannot otherwise translate these words which Jesus of Nazareth heard from the transformed voice of Bath Kol. [See Note 4] Not otherwise! It was what the soul of Jesus of Nazareth brought back when he awoke again. And when he looked for the crowd of troubled and burdened people who had carried him to the altar, they had fled. And when he directed his clairvoyant gaze to the distance he could only see a horde of demonic beings united with those people.

That was the second meaningful event, the second meaningful climax of the various periods which Jesus of Nazareth lived through since his twelfth year. No, my dear friends, the events which made the strongest impression on the maturing Jesus of Nazareth were not of the pleasant kind which could have a happy effect on his soul. He had to encounter the depths of human nature before the baptism in the Jordan took place.

Jesus of Nazareth returned home from his travels. It was when his father, who had remained at home, died – when Jesus was about twenty-four years old. When Jesus came home his soul contained the powerful impression of the demonic forces which deeply influenced the pagan religions. But it is the case that one only reaches certain stages of higher knowledge by encountering the depths of life, and it was also so for Jesus of Nazareth that he – in a place that I don't know – when he was around twenty-four years old, saw so deeply into human souls, in souls in which were concentrated all the human sorrows of that time; he had also delved deeply into wisdom, which is like a red hot iron penetrating the soul. But it makes the soul so clairvoyant that it can see into the spiritual reaches of space. Thus was the relatively young soul of Jesus equipped with a calm, vivid ability to read the spirit. Jesus of Nazareth had become a person who could look more deeply into the secrets of life than any other earthly being, because no one previously had been able to observe how profound human misery can be. He had seen concentrated misery – how through religious ceremonies one can conjure all the demonic powers. Surely no other person on the earth had so deeply observed this human misery as Jesus of Nazareth had, none had such an infinitely deep feeling in his soul as he had when he saw those people possessed by demons. Surely no other was so prepared for the question: How, how can the spreading of this misery be prevented?

Thus Jesus of Nazareth became an initiate not only through the ability to see, and through wisdom, but also through life itself. That became known to people who at that time had come together in a certain order, which is known the world over as the Essene Order. The Essenes were people who cultivated a kind of secret rite and teachings at certain places in Palestine. It was a strict order. Whoever wanted to enter it had to first pass through a strict probation year, mostly longer. He had to show by his conduct, his culture, by his dedication to the highest spiritual powers, by his sense of justice and human equality, by his disregard for earthly possessions and so forth, that he was worthy to be initiated. Then there were various degrees which one passed through to reach a life determined by separation from normal humanity in a strict monastic discipline and by certain purification exercises through which all that was physically and spiritually unworthy was meant to be eliminated in order to approach the spiritual world. This was expressed in various symbolic laws of the Essene Order. Deciphering the Akasha Record shows that the word Essene derives from, or is at least related to the Hebrew word “essin” or “assin”, which means “shovel” or “trowel”, because the Essenes always carried a small trowel as an insignia, something that in many of today's orders has been retained. The Essenes' objectives were also expressed in certain symbolic practices – that they never carried coins, that they could not pass through gates which had been painted or were even close to graven images. As the Essene Order at that time enjoyed a certain degree of recognition, unpainted gates were made in Jerusalem so they could enter the city. If an Essene came to a painted gate he would have to turn back. The Order possessed ancient manuscripts and traditions, about whose contents the members were obliged to maintain strict silence. They could teach, but only what they had learned in the Order. All who entered the Order had to give all their possessions to the Order. The number of Essenes was four to five thousand. People came from all over the known world and observed the strict rules. Even if it was far away, in Asia Minor, or even farther, all property, a house for example, had to be given to the Order. So the Order possessed small properties from many places – houses, gardens, acres of land. None was admitted to membership who did not contribute everything he owned to the Essene community. Everything belonged to all, there was no personal ownership. A very strict rule for our present day mentality – but what was understandable was that the Essene could care for the needy with the goods belonging to the Order, except those who belonged to his own family.

There was an Essene community in Nazareth, made possible by a donation, so the Order was known to Jesus. At the Order's center they were aware of the wisdom which Jesus' soul possessed – especially among the most important members. They had what we can call a prophetic view that a Messiah must come to the world. Therefore they were on the lookout for especially gifted people. They were deeply impressed when they learned about Jesus of Nazareth. It is no surprise, then, that they accepted Jesus of Nazareth in their community – not as a member of the Order proper – more as a guest, without him having to pass the trials of the lower degrees. And the wisest Essenes were, in a certain sense trusting, open-hearted towards this wise young man in respect to their secrets. In fact Jesus of Nazareth heard more profound things about the secrets which were kept in that Order than from the scribes and scholars. He also heard much that he had previously learned through Bath Kol as an enlightenment which shone in his soul. In short, a lively exchange of ideas took place between Jesus of Nazareth and the Essenes. And Jesus of Nazareth learned almost everything that the Essenes were able to give during his 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th years, and beyond. For what was not communicated to him by words was expressed by all sorts of clairvoyant impressions. Jesus of Nazareth received important clairvoyant impressions either within the Essene community or a short time later at home in Nazareth, where a more contemplative life was possible; they penetrated his soul from powers which had come to him and which the Essenes had no idea, but which were experienced in his soul.

One of these experiences, these inner impressions, must be particularly emphasized, because it can cast light on the whole spiritual course of human evolution. It was a meaningful vision manifested by a kind of separation from his body in which the Buddha appeared to him directly. Yes, the Buddha appeared to Jesus of Nazareth as a consequence of the exchange of ideas with the Essenes. One can say that a spiritual conversation took place between Jesus and Buddha. We may and must touch upon this meaningful secret of human evolution today. In this meaningful spiritual conversation Jesus heard that the Buddha said something like this: "If my teaching, as it is, is completely fulfilled, then all men on earth must be like the Essenes. But that cannot be. That was the error in my teaching. The Essenes can only progress if they separate themselves from the rest of humanity; other human souls must be there for them. The fulfillment of my teaching would mean nothing but Essenes. But that cannot be." That was a meaningful experience, which Jesus of Nazareth had through his association with the Essenes.

Another experience was that Jesus of Nazareth made the acquaintance of a slightly younger man who had joined the Essene Order, but in an entirely different way than Jesus had, but who nevertheless did not completely become an Essene. He was John the Baptist, who lived as a lay brother within the Essene community. He dressed like the Essenes, who used clothing of camel's hair in winter, but he never completely exchanged Jewish teaching for Essene teaching. But the teachings and life of the Essenes made a great impression on him, so he lived the Essene life as a lay brother. He was stimulated and inspired and by and by became the John the Baptist described in the Gospels. Jesus of Nazareth and John the Baptist conversed often. One day – I know what it means to simply tell these things, but nothing can stop me; I also know that these things must be told – One day when Jesus of Nazareth was talking with John the Baptist, the physical body of the Baptist seemed to disappear and Jesus had a vision of Elias. That was the second meaningful experience in the Essene community.

But there were still other experiences. For a long time Jesus of Nazareth had observed something noteworthy. When he came to a place where imageless Essene gates were, Jesus of Nazareth couldn't pass through those gates without again having a bitter experience. He saw those imageless gates, but for him there were spiritual figures on the gates. To him appeared on both sides of those gates what we have learned to know from many spiritual scientific explanations under the names Ahriman and Lucifer. And gradually he became convinced that the Essenes' aversion to images on the gates had to have something to do with the attraction of such spiritual beings to them, that images on the gates were images of Lucifer and Ahriman. Jesus of Nazareth noticed this often.

When one experiences such things he doesn't dwell on them overmuch, for they are too shocking. One also soon feels that human thoughts are insufficient to understand them. One considers thoughts incapable of penetrating these things. But the impressions not only engrave themselves deeply on the soul, but become a part of the soul's life. One feels himself united to the part of his soul in which such experiences have been stored and carries them through life.

Thus Jesus of Nazareth carried through life the images of Lucifer and Ahriman which he had seen on the Essene gates. He also became aware that a secret existed between those beings and the Essenes. Since that experience, Jesus and the Essenes could no longer understand themselves well. For something lived in Jesus' soul about which he couldn't speak to the Essenes. What he had seen on the gates always injected itself into the conversations.

One day after an important conversation in which many sublime spiritual themes were discussed, as Jesus of Nazareth was leaving through the gates of the Essenes' main building he encountered the figures who he knew were Lucifer and Ahriman. He saw them fleeing from the gates of the Essene monastery ... and a question entered his soul, not as though he asked it himself, but a strong elemental force instilled in his soul the question: Where are Lucifer and Ahriman fleeing to? For he knew that the sanctity of the Essene monastery had caused them to flee. But the question remained: Where to?

The question burned like fire in his soul and he lived with it continuously during the following weeks. After that spiritual conversation when he left through the gates of the Essenes' main building, the question burned in his soul: Where did Lucifer and Ahriman flee to?

What he did under the influence of this question in his soul and having fallen on the pagan altar and heard Bath Kol's changed voice, and what it means – we'll speak of all that tomorrow.


[Note 1]—
These lectures were given to members of the Anthroposophical Society, who were familiar with Steiner's previous lectures and writings about the two Jesus children. Essentially, he maintained that the Gospels of Luke and of Matthew relate the birth and infancy of two different Jesus children, one descendent from the royal Jewish line – the Matthew Jesus; and the other descended from the priestly line – the Luke Jesus. (See the differing genealogies in these Gospels.) When they were 12 years old the Matthew Jesus died, but his “I” incorporated into the body of the other Jesus. See: From Jesus to Christ

[Note 2]—Bath Kol
bath'-kol, bath kol (bath qol, "the daughter of the voice"): Originally signifying no more than "sound," "tone," "call" (e.g. water in pouring gives forth a "sound," bath qol, while oil does not), sometimes also "echo." The expression acquired among the rabbis a special use, signifying the Divine voice, audible to man and unaccompanied by a visible Divine manifestation. Thus conceived, bath qol is to be distinguished from God's speaking to Moses and the prophets; for at Sinai the voice of God was part of a larger theophany, while for the prophets it was the resultant inward demonstration of the Divine will, by whatever means effected, given to them to declare (see VOICE). It is further to be distinguished from all natural sounds and voices, even where these were interpreted as conveying Divine instruction. The conception appears for the first time in Daniel 4:28) (English Versions 31)—it is in the Aramaic portion—where, however, qal = qol, "voice" stands without berath = bath, "daughter": "A voice fell from heaven." Josephus (Ant., XIII, x, 3) relates that John Hyrcanus (135–104 BC) heard a voice while offering a burnt sacrifice in the temple, which Josephus expressly interprets as the voice of God (compare Babylonian SoTah 33a and Jerusalem SoTah 24b, where it is called bath qol). In the New Testament mention of "a voice from heaven" occurs in the following passages: Matt. 3:17; Mark 1:11; Luke 3:22 (at the baptism of Jesus); Matt. 17:5; Mark 9:7; Luke 9:35 (at His transfiguration); John 12:28 (shortly before His passion); Acts 9:4; 22:7; 26:14; (conversion of Paul), and 10:13,15; (instruction of Peter concerning clean and unclean). In the period of the Tannaim (circa 100 BC–200 AD) the term bath qol was in very frequent use and was understood to signify not the direct voice of God, which was held to be super-sensible, but the echo of the voice (the bath being somewhat arbitrarily taken to express the distinction). The rabbis held that bath qol had been an occasional means of Divine communication throughout the whole history of Israel and that since the cessation of the prophetic gift it was the sole means of Divine revelation. It is noteworthy that the rabbinical conception of bath qol sprang up in the period of the decline of Old Testament prophecy and flourished in the period of extreme traditionalism. Where the gift of prophecy was clearly lacking—perhaps even because of this lack—there grew up an inordinate desire for special Divine manifestations. Often a voice from heaven was looked for to clear up matters of doubt and even to decide between conflicting interpretations of the law. So strong had this tendency become that Rabbi Joshua (circa 100 AD) felt it to be necessary to oppose it and to insist upon the supremacy and the sufficiency of the written law. It is clear that we have here to do with a conception of the nature and means of Divine revelation that is distinctly inferior to the Biblical view. For even in the Biblical passages where mention is made of the voice from heaven, all that is really essential to the revelation is already present, at least in principle, without the audible voice.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia—
(https://www.bible-history.com/isbe/B/BATH+KOL)

[Note 3]—
This refers to the first Goetheanum, for which the foundation stone was laid in 1913.

[Note 4]—
This English translation (from German) is tentative because, for me at least, the German is enigmatic. (trans.)

AUM, Amen!
Es walten die Übel,
Zeugen sich lösender Ichheit,
Von andern erschuldete Selbsheitschuld,
Erlebet im täglichen Brote,
In dem nicht waltet der Himmel Wille,
Da der Mensch sich schied von Eurem Reich
Und vergass Euren Namen,
Ihr Väter in den Himmeln.

Vierter Vortrag

Eine Art Beruhigung, wenn ich überhaupt darangehe, von demjenigen zu sprechen, wovon als zum Fünften Evangelium gehörig heute gesprochen werden soll, gibt gewissermaßen der Schluß des JohannesEvangeliums. Wir erinnern uns dieses Schlusses, wo da steht, daß ja in den Evangelien keineswegs aufgezeichnet sind alle Ereignisse, die geschehen sind um den Christus Jesus herum. Denn hätte man damals, so steht es da, alles aufzeichnen wollen, so hätte die Welt nicht genug Bücher aufweisen können, um alles das zu fassen. So also wird das eine nicht bezweifelt werden können: daß außer dem, was aufgezeichnet worden ist in den vier Evangelien, noch mancherlei anderes geschehen sein kann. Um mich verständlich zu machen in bezug auf alles dasjenige, was ich gerade in diesem Vortragszyklus aus dem Fünften Evangelium geben will, möchte ich heute beginnen mit Erzählungen aus dem Leben des Jesus von Nazareth, und zwar ungefähr von jenem Zeitpunkte an, auf den wir ja schon hingewiesen haben bei anderen Anlässen, wo kleine Teile aus dem Fünften Evangelium schon mitgeteilt worden sind.

Ungefähr von dem zwölften Jahre an des Jesus von Nazareth möchte ich heute einiges erzählen. Es war, wie Sie wissen, dasjenige Jahr, in dem das Ich des Zarathustra, das verkörpert war in dem einen der beiden Jesusknaben, die in der damaligen Zeit geboren sind und dessen Herkunft Matthäus beschreibt, hinübergegangen ist durch einen mystischen Akt in den anderen Jesusknaben, in jenen Jesusknaben, der insbesondere im Anfang des Lukas-Evangeliums geschildert wird. So daß wir also beginnen mit unserer Erzählung von demjenigen Jahre im Leben des Jesus von Nazareth, in dem aufgenommen hatte dieser Jesus des Lukas-Evangeliums das Ich des Zarathustra. Wir wissen, daß angedeutet wird im Evangelium dieser Augenblick im Leben des Jesus von Nazareth durch die Erzählung, daß verlorengegangen war auf einer Reise nach Jerusalem zum Feste der Jesusknabe des Lukas-Evangeliums und, als er wieder gefunden wurde, es sich zeigte, daß er im Tempel zu Jerusalem mitten unter den Schriftgelehrten saß und bei diesen und den Eltern Staunen hervorrief durch die gewaltigen Antworten, die er gab. Wir wissen jedoch, diese bedeutsamen, gewaltigen Antworten kamen daher, daß das Ich des Zarathustra wirklich jetzt bei diesem Knaben auftauchte und aus der tiefen Überfülle der Erinnerung seine Weisheit aus dieser Seele heraus wirkte, so daß der Jesus von Nazareth dazumal jene alle überraschenden Antworten geben konnte. Wir wissen auch, daß die beiden Familien durch den Tod der nathanischen Mutter einerseits und des salomonischen Vaters anderseits zusammengekommen sind und fortan eine Familie gebildet haben, und daß der mit dem Ich des Zarathustra befruchtete Jesusknabe in der gemeinsam gewordenen Familie heranwuchs. |

Es war aber nun - so läßt es sich erkennen aus dem Inhalt des Fünften Evangeliums - ein ganz sonderbares, merkwürdiges Heranwachsen in den nächsten Jahren. Zuerst hatte ja die nächste Umgebung des jungen Jesus von Nazareth eine große, gewaltige Meinung bekommen von ihm, eben durch jenes Ereignis im Tempel, durch jene gewaltigen Antworten, die er den Schriftgelehrten gegeben hatte. Die nächste Umgebung sah sozusagen den kommenden Schriftgelehrten selber in ihm, sie sah heranwachsen in ihm denjenigen, der eine ganz hohe, besondere Stufe der Schriftgelehrsamkeit erreichen werde. Mit großen, ungeheueren Hoffnungen trug sich die Umgebung des Jesus von Nazareth. Man fing sozusagen an, jedes Wort von ihm aufzufangen. Dabei aber wurde er, trotzdem man förmlich danach jagte, jedes Wort aufzufangen, nach und nach immer schweigsamer und schweigsamer. Er wurde so schweigsam, daß es seiner Umgebung im höchsten Grade oftmals unsympathisch war. Er aber kämpfte in seinem Inneren, kämpfte einen gewaltigen Kampf, einen Kampf, der ungefähr in dieser seiner Innerlichkeit hineinfiel zwischen das zwölfte und achtzehnte Jahr seines Lebens. Es war wirklich etwas in seiner Seele wie ein Aufgehen innerlich liegender Weisheitsschätze, etwas, wie wenn aufgeleuchtet hätte in der Form der jüdischen Gelehrsamkeit die Sonne des einstigen Zarathustra-Weisheitslichtes.

Zunächst äußerte sich das so, als ob dieser Knabe in der feinsten Weise alles, was die zahlreichen Schriftgelehrten, die in das Haus kamen, sprachen, mit größter Aufmerksamkeit aufnehmen sollte und wie durch eine ganz besondere Geistesgabe überall Antwort zu geben wüßte. So überraschte er auch noch anfangs zu Hause in Nazareth diejenigen, die als Schriftgelehrte da erschienen und ihn wie ein Wunderkind anstaunten. Dann aber wurde er immer schweigsamer und schweigsamer und hörte nur noch schweigend dem zu, was die anderen sprachen. Dabei gingen ihm aber immer große Ideen, Sittensprüche, namentlich bedeutsame, moralische Impulse in jenen Jahren in der eigenen Seele auf. Während er so schweigsam zuhörte, machte doch einen gewissen Eindruck, was er von den im Hause sich versammelnden Schriftgelehrten hörte, aber einen Eindruck, der ihm oftmals in der Seele Bitterkeit verursachte, weil er das Gefühl hatte wohlgemerkt schon in jenen jungen Jahren -, daß vieles Unsichere, leicht zum Irrtum Neigende stecken müsse in dem, was da jene Schriftgelehrten sprachen von den alten Traditionen, von den alten Schriften, die in dem Alten 'Testamente vereinigt sind. Ganz besonders aber bedrückte es in einer gewissen Weise seine Seele, wenn er hörte, daß in alten Zeiten der Geist über die Propheten gekommen sei, daß Gott selber inspirierend gesprochen hätte zu den alten Propheten, und daß jetzt die Inspiration von dem nachgeborenen Geschlechte gewichen sei. Besonders aber bei einem horchte er immer tief auf, weil er fühlte, daß dies, wovon die Rede war, bei ihm selber kommen würde. Es sagten jene Schriftgelehrten oftmals: Ja, jener hohe Geist, jener gewaltige Geist, der zum Beispiel über den Elias gekommen ist, der spricht nicht mehr; aber wer doch noch immer spricht — was auch noch mancher von den Schriftgelehrten zu vernehmen glaubte als Inspiration aus den geistigen Höhen -, was doch noch immer spricht, das ist eine schwächere Stimme zwar, aber eine Stimme, die manche doch noch zu vernehmen glauben als etwas, was der Geist Jahves selber gibt. -— Die Bath-Kol nannte man jene eigentümliche, inspirierende Stimme, zwar eine schwächere Stimme der Eingebung, eine Stimme minderer Art als der Geist, der die alten Propheten inspirierte, aber doch noch etwas Ähnliches stellte diese Stimme dar. So sprach mancher in der Umgebung des Jesus von der Bath-Kol. Von dieser Bath-Kol wird uns in späteren jüdischen Schriften manches erzählt.

Ich schiebe nun etwas ein in dieses Fünfte Evangelium, was nicht eigentlich dazugehört, was nur zur Erklärung der Bath-Kol führen soll. Es war in etwas späterer Zeit, nach der Entstehung des Christentums, ein Streit ausgebrochen zwischen zwei Rabbinatschulen. Denn es behauptete der berühmte Rabbi Eheser ben Hirkano eine Lehre und führte zum Beweise dieser Lehre an — das erzählt auch der Talmud -, daß er Wunder wirken könne. Der Rabbi Elieser ben Hirkano ließ einen Karobbaum aus der Erde sich erheben - so erzählt der Talmud und hundert Ellen weiter sich an einem anderen Orte wieder einpflanzen, er ließ einen Fluß rückwärts laufen, und als drittes berief er sich auf die Stimme vom Himmel, als Offenbarung, die er von BathKol selber erhalte. Aber in der gegnerischen Rabbinatschule des Rabbi Josua glaubte man diese Lehre trotzdem nicht, und Rabbi Josua erwiderte: Mag auch Rabbi Elieser zur Bekräftigung seiner Lehre Karobbäume von einem Orte zum anderen sich verpflanzen lassen, mag er auch Flüsse nach aufwärts fließen lassen, mag er sich selbst berufen auf die große Bath-Kol - es steht geschrieben im Gesetz, daß die ewigen Gesetze des Daseins gelegt sein müssen in der Menschen Mund und in der Menschen Herz. Und wenn uns überzeugen will von seiner Lehre der Rabbi Elieser, so darf er sich nicht berufen auf die Bath-Kol, sondern er muß uns überzeugen von dem, was des Menschen Herz fassen kann. — Ich erzähle diese Geschichte aus dem Talmud, weil wir sehen, daß die Bath-Kol bald nach der Einführung des Christentums in gewissen Rabbinerschulen nur noch von einem geringeren Ansehen war. Aber sie hat in einer gewissen Weise geblüht als inspirierende Stimme unter den Rabbinern und Schriftgelehrten.

Während in dem Hause des Jesus von Nazareth die dort versammelten Schriftgelehrten von dieser inspirierenden Stimme der BathKol sprachen, und der junge Jesus das alles hörte, fühlte und empfing er in sich selber die Inspiration durch die Bath-Kol. Das war das Merkwürdige, daß durch die Befruchtung dieser Seele mit dem Ich des Zarathustra in der Tat Jesus von Nazareth fähig war, rasch alles aufzunehmen, was die anderen um ihn herum wußten. Nicht nur, daß er den Schriftgelehrten in seinem zwölften Jahre die gewaltigen Antworten hatte geben können, sondern er konnte auch die Bath-Kol in der eigenen Brust vernehmen. Aber gerade dieser Umstand der Inspiration durch die Bath-Kol wirkte auf den Jesus von Nazareth, als er sechzehn, siebzehn Jahre alt war und er oftmals diese offenbarende Stimme der Bath-Kol fühlte, so daß er in bittere, schwere innere Seelenkämpfe dadurch geführt wurde. Denn ihm offenbarte die Bath-Kol — und das glaubte er alles sicher zu vernehmen -, daß nicht mehr fern wäre der Zeitpunkt, daß im Fortgang der alten Strömung des Alten Testamentes dieser Geist nicht mehr sprechen würde zu den alten jüdischen Lehrern, wie er früher zu ihnen gesprochen habe. Und eines Tages, und das war furchtbar für die Seele des Jesus, glaubte er, daß die Bath-Kol ihm offenbarte: Ich reiche jetzt nicht mehr hinauf zu den Höhen, wo mir wirklich der Geist offenbaren kann die Wahrheit über den Fortgang des jüdischen Volkes. — Das war ein furchtbarer Augenblick, ein furchtbarer Eindruck, den die Seele des jungen Jesus empfing, als die Bath-Kol ihm selber zu offenbaren schien, daß sie nicht Fortsetzer sein könne des alten Offenbarertums, daß sie sich selber sozusagen für unfähig erklärte, Fortsetzer der alten Offenbarungen des Judentums zu sein. So glaubte Jesus von Nazareth in seinem sechzehnten, siebzehnten Jahre, daß ihm aller Boden unter den Füßen entzogen wäre, und er hatte manche Tage, wo er sich sagen mußte: Alle Seelenkräfte, mit denen ich glaubte begnadet zu sein, sie bringen mich nur dazu, zu begreifen, wie in der Substanz der Evolution des Judentums kein Vermögen mehr besteht, heraufzureichen zu den Offenbarungen des Gottesgeistes.

Versetzen wir uns einen Augenblick in seinen Geist, in die Seele des jungen Jesus von Nazareth, der solche Erfahrungen in seiner Seele machte. Es war das in derselben Zeit, in der dann der junge Jesus von Nazareth im sechzehnten, siebzehnten, achtzehnten Jahre, teilweise veranlaßt durch sein Handwerk, teilweise durch andere Umstände, viele Reisen machte. Auf diesen Reisen lernte er mannigfache Gegenden Palästinas kennen, und auch wohl manche Orte außerhalb Palästinas. Nun verbreitete sich in jener Zeit — das kann man ganz genau sehen, wenn man die Akasha-Chronik hellseherisch durchdringt — über die Gegenden Vorderasiens, ja sogar auch des südlichen Europas, ein asiatischer Kultus, der aus mancherlei anderen Kulten zusammengemischt war, der aber namentlich den Mithraskultus darstellte. An vielen Orten der verschiedensten Gegenden waren Tempel für den Mithrasdienst. An manchen Orten hatte er mehr Ähnlichkeit mit dem Attisdienst, aber im wesentlichen war es Mithrasdienst, Tempel, Kultusstätten waren es, in denen man überall die Mithrasopfer und Attisopfer verrichtete. Es war gewissermaßen ein altes Heidentum, aber in einer gewissen Art durchdrungen von den Gebräuchen, Zeremonien des Mithras- oder Attisdienstes. Wie sehr sich das verbreitete auch über die italienische Halbinsel, geht zum Beispiel daraus hervor, daß die Peterskirche in Rom an derselben Stelle steht, wo einstmals eine solche Kultstätte war. Ja, man muß auch das für manche Katholiken lästerliche Wort aussprechen: Der Zeremoniendienst der Peterskirche und alles dessen, was sich davon ableitet, ist in bezug auf die äußere Form gar nicht unähnlich dem Kult des alten Attisdienstes, der verrichtet wurde in dem Tempel, der damals auf derselben Stelle stand, auf deren Stätte die Peterskirche steht. Und der Kultus der katholischen Kirche ist in vieler Beziehung nur eine Fortsetzung des alten Mithraskultus.

Was an solchen Kultstätten vorhanden war, das lernte Jesus von Nazareth kennen, als er jetzt in seinem sechzehnten, siebzehnten, achtzehnten Jahre begann herumzuwandern. Und er setzte das noch später fort. Er lernte, wenn wir so sagen dürfen, auf diese Weise durch äußere, physische Anschauung die Seele der Heiden kennen. Und es war dazumal in seiner Seele wie auf eine natürliche Weise durch den gewaltigen Vorgang des Überganges des Zarathustra-Ich in seine Seele dasjenige in einem hohen Grade ausgebildet, was andere sich nur mühsam aneignen konnten, was aber bei ihm naturgemäß ausgebildet war: eine hohe hellseherische Kraft. Daher erlebte er, wenn er bei solchen Kulten zuschaute, etwas ganz anderes als die anderen Zuschauer. Manches erschütternde Ereignis hat er dort erlebt. Und wenn es auch fabelhaft erscheint, so muß ich doch hervorheben, daß, wenn an manchen heidnischen Altären der Priester den Kult verrichtete und sich Jesus von Nazareth dann mit seinen hellseherischen Kräften das Opfer anschaute, er sah, wie durch die Opferhandlung mancherlei dämonische Wesen herangezogen wurden. Er machte auch die Entdeckung, daß manches Götzenbild, das da angebetet wurde, das Abbild war nicht von guten geistigen Wesenheiten der höheren Hierarchien, sondern von bösen, dämonischen Mächten. Ja, er machte weiter die Entdeckung, daß diese bösen, dämonischen Mächte vielfach übergingen in die Glaubenden, in die Bekenner, die an solchen Kultushandlungen teilnahmen. Aus leicht begreiflichen Gründen sind diese Dinge nicht in die anderen Evangelien übergegangen. Und es ist im Grunde erst im Schoße unserer geistigen Bewegung möglich, über solche Dinge zu sprechen, weil die Menschenseele erst in unserer Zeit ein wirkliches Verständnis haben kann für jene ungeheueren, tiefen, gewaltigen Erlebnisse, wie sie sich schon in diesem jungen Jesus von Nazareth abspielten lange vor der Johannestaufe.

Diese Wanderungen dauerten fort bis ins zwanzigste, zweiundzwanzigste, vierundzwanzigste Jahr hinein. Es waren immer Bitternisse, die er in seiner Seele empfand, wenn er also das Walten sah der Dämonen, der gleichsam von Luzifer und Ahriman hervorgebrachten Dämonen, und sah, wie das Heidentum es in vieler Beziehung sogar so weit gebracht hatte, die Dämonen für Götter hinzunehmen, ja sogar in den Götzenabbildungen Bilder zu haben wilder dämonischer Mächte, die angezogen wurden von diesen Bildern, von diesen Kultushandlungen, und in die betenden Menschen übergingen, die betenden Menschen, die in gutem Glauben daran teilnahmen, von sich besessen machten. Es waren bittere Erfahrungen, die Jesus von Nazareth so machen mußte. Und diese Erfahrungen kamen zu einem bestimmten Abschluß etwa im vierundzwanzigsten Lebensjahre. Da hatte Jesus von Nazareth dasjenige Erlebnis, welches sich anschloß als ein neues, unendlich schweres Erlebnis an das andere von der Enttäuschung durch die Bath-Kol. Ich muß, da ich ja dieses Erlebnis des Jesus von Nazareth auch zu erzählen habe, sagen, daß ich heute noch nicht in der Lage bin anzugeben, an welchem Orte seiner Reisen sich dieses Ereignis zugetragen hat. Die Szene selbst in einem hohen Grade richtig zu entziffern war mir möglich. Allein den Ort gerade für diese Szene ist mir heute nicht möglich anzugeben. Es scheint mir aber, daß diese Szene sich zugetragen hat bei einer Wanderung des Jesus von Nazareth außerhalb Palästinas. Aber ich kann das nicht mit Bestimmtheit sagen, muß aber die Szene mitteilen.

An einen Ort also kam Jesus von Nazareth, im vierundzwanzigsten Jahre seines Lebens, wo eine heidnische Kultstätte war, an der einer bestimmten Gottheit geopfert wurde. Ringsherum aber war nur trauriges, von allerlei furchtbaren seelischen und bis ins Körperliche gehenden Krankheiten behaftetes Volk. Von den Priestern war die Kultstätte längst verlassen worden. Und Jesus hörte das Volk jammern: Die Priester haben uns verlassen, die Segnungen des Opfers kommen nicht auf uns hernieder und wir sind aussätzig und krank, wir sind mühselig und beladen, weil uns die Priester verlassen haben. — Jesus sah mit tiefem Schmerze diese armen Menschen; es jammerte ihn dieses bedrückte Volk und eine unendliche Liebe zu diesen Bedrückten flammte in seiner Seele auf. Es muß von dieser unendlichen Liebe, die auflebte in seiner Seele, das Volk ringsherum etwas gemerkt haben; das muß einen tiefen Eindruck gemacht haben auf das jammernde Volk, welches von seinen Priestern und, wie es glaubte, auch von seinen Göttern verlassen worden war. Und nun entstand, man möchte sagen wie auf einen Schlag, in den Herzen der meisten dieses Volkes etwas, was darin zum Ausdruck kam, daß die Leute sagten, erkennend den Ausdruck der unendlichen Liebe auf dem Antlitz des Jesus: Du bist der neue uns gesandte Priester. — Sie drängten ihn zum Opferaltar hin, sie stellten ihn auf den heidnischen Altar. Und er stand auf dem heidnischen Altar, und sie erwarteten, ja sie verlangten von ihm, daß er die Opfer verrichte, damit der Segen ihres Gottes wieder über sie komme.

Und während das geschah, während ihn das Volk auf den Opferaltar erhob, da fiel er wie tot hin, seine Seele wurde wie entrückt, und das Volk, das ringsherum glaubte seinen Gott wiedergekommen, sah das Furchtbare, daß derselbe, den es für den neuen, vom Himmel gesandten Priester gehalten hatte, wie tot hingefallen war. Die entrückte Seele des Jesus von Nazareth aber, sie fühlte sich erhoben in die geistigen Reiche, sie fühlte sich wie hineinversetzt in den Bereich des Sonnendaseins. Und jetzt hörte sie, wie aus den Sphären des Sonnendaseins herausklingend, Worte, wie diese Seele sie früher durch die Bath-Kol oftmals vernommen hatte. Aber jetzt war die Bath-Kol verwandelt, zu etwas völlig anderem geworden. Die Stimme kam ihm auch von ganz anderer Richtung her, und dasjenige, was Jesus von Nazareth jetzt vernahm, das kann man, wenn man es in unsere Sprache übersetzt, zusammenfassen in die Worte, die ich zum ersten Male mitteilen durfte, als wir vor kurzer Zeit den Grundstein legten für unseren Dornacher Bau.

Es gibt ja okkulte Verpflichtungen! Und einer solchen okkulten Verpflichtung folgend hatte ich damals mitzuteilen, was durch die verwandelte Stimme der Bath-Kol Jesus von Nazareth vernahm dazumal, als dies geschah, was ich jetzt eben erzählt habe. Es vernahm Jesus von Nazareth die Worte: (Siehe unter Hinweise Seite 333.)

Amen
Es walten die Übel
Zeugen sich lösender Ichheit
Von andern erschuldete Selbstheitschuld
Erlebet im täglichen Brote
In dem nicht waltet der Himmel Wille
Da der Mensch sich schied von Eurem Reich
Und vergaß Euren Namen
Ihr Väter in den Himmeln.

Nicht anders als so kann ich in die deutsche Sprache übersetzen dasjenige, was wie die verwandelte Stimme der Bath-Kol dazumal von Jesus von Nazareth vernommen worden ist. Nicht anders als so! Es waren diese Worte, welche die Seele des Jesus von Nazareth zurückbrachte, als sie aus der Betäubung wieder erwachte, durch die sie sich entrückt fühlte bei jener eben geschilderten Begebenheit. Und als Jesus von Nazareth wieder zu sich gekommen war, und die Augen rings herum richtete auf die Menge der Mühseligen und Beladenen, die ihn auf den Altar erhoben hatten, da war diese entflohen. Und als er den hellsichtigen Blick in die Ferne schweifen ließ, konnte er ihn nur richten auf eine Schar von dämonischen Gestalten, von dämonischen Wesen, die alle mit diesen Leuten verbunden waren.

Das war das zweite bedeutsame Ereignis, der zweite bedeutsame Abschluß in den verschiedenen Perioden der Seelenentwickelung, die Jesus von Nazareth durchgemacht hat seit seinem zwölften Jahre. Ja, meine lieben Freunde, Ereignisse, die sozusagen durch ihr gemütliches Wesen die Seele nur in selige Stimmung versetzen, die waren es nicht, welche auf die Seele des heranwachsenden Jesus von Nazareth den größten Eindruck machten. Kennenlernen mußte diese Seele die Abgründe der Menschennatur schon in so jungen Jahren, bevor das Ereignis vom Jordan eingetreten war.

Und von dieser Reise kam Jesus von Nazareth nach Hause. Es war um jene Zeit, als der Vater, der zu Hause geblieben war, starb, etwa im vierundzwanzigsten Lebensjahre des Jesus von Nazareth. Als Jesus nach Hause kam, da hatte er in der Seele lebendig den gewaltigen Eindruck der dämonischen Wirkungen, die sich hineingesenkt hatten in manches, was in der alten Heidenreligion lebte. Wie es aber immer so ist, daß man gewisse Stufen der höheren Erkenntnis nur dadurch erreicht, indem man die Abgründe des Lebens kennenlernt, so war es in gewisser Weise auch bei Jesus von Nazareth, daß er - an einer Stelle, die ich nicht weiß - um sein vierundzwanzigstes Lebensjahr herum dadurch, daß er so unendlich tief in die menschlichen Seelen hineingeschaut, in Seelen, in die wie hineinkonzentriert war aller Seelenjammer der Menschheit der damaligen Zeit, auch besonders vertieft worden war in der Weisheit, die allerdings wie glühendes Eisen die Seele durchzieht, aber auch die Seele so hellsichtig macht, daß sie durchschauen kann die lichten Geistesweiten. Und dadurch, daß er die umgewandelte Stimme der Bath-Kol vernommen hatte, war er auch wie umgewandelt. So war er in verhältnismäßig jungen Jahren behaftet mit dem ruhigen, eindringlichen Geistesleseblick. Jesus von Nazareth war zu einem Menschen geworden, der tief in die Geheimnisse des Lebens hineinschaute, der so in die Geheimnisse des Lebens schauen konnte, wie bisher niemand auf der Erde, weil niemand vorher so wie er betrachten konnte, bis zu welchem Grade menschliches Elend sich steigern kann. Zuerst hatte er gesehen, wie man den Boden unter den Füßen verlieren kann durch bloße Gelehrsamkeit; dann hatte er erlebt, wie die alten Inspirationen verlorengingen; dann hatte er gesehen, wie die Kulte und Opferhandlungen, anstatt die Menschen in Verbindung zu bringen mit den Göttern, herbeizauberten allerlei dämonische Wesen, die die Menschen von sich besessen machten und sie dadurch in seelische und körperliche Krankheiten und Elend aller Art hineinbrachten. Gewiß hatte keiner auf der Erde all diesen menschlichen Jammer so tief geschaut als Jesus von Nazareth, keiner jene unendlich tiefe Empfindung in seiner Seele gehabt wie er, als er jenes von Dämonen besessene Volk geschaut hatte. Gewiß war keiner auf der Erde so vorbereitet auf die Frage: Wie, wie kann der Verbreitung dieses Jammers auf der Erde Einhalt getan werden?

So war Jesus von Nazareth nicht nur ausgestattet mit dem Blick, mit dem Wissen des Weisen, sondern in gewisser Weise durch das Leben ein Eingeweihter geworden. Das lernten kennen Leute, die in jener Zeit zusammengetreten waren in einen gewissen Orden, der ja der Welt bekannt ist als der Essäerorden. Essäer waren Leute, welche eine Art Geheimdienst und Geheimlehre pflegten an bestimmten Orten Palästinas. Es war ein strenger Orden. Derjenige, der dem Orden beitreten wollte, mußte mindestens ein Jahr, zumeist aber mehrere Jahre strenge Probe durchmachen. Er mußte zeigen durch seine Aufführung, durch seine Gesittung, durch seinen Dienst gegenüber den höchsten geistigen Mächten, durch seinen Sinn für Gerechtigkeit, Menschengleichheit, durch seinen Sinn des Nichtachtens äußerer menschlicher Güter und dergleichen, daß er würdig war, eingeweiht zu werden. Wenn er dann aufgenommen wurde in den Orden, dann gab es verschiedene Grade, durch die man aufstieg zu jenem Essäerleben, das bestimmt war, mit einer gewissen Aus- und Absonderung von der übrigen Menschheit, in einer strengen klösterlichen Zucht und durch gewisse Reinheitsbestrebungen, durch die man alles Unwürdige körperlicher und seelischer Art beseitigen wollte, sich der geistigen Welt zu nähern. Das drückt sich schon in mancherlei symbolischen Gesetzen des Essäerordens aus. Die Entzifferung der Akasha-Chronik hat gezeigt, daß der Name Essäer kommt von oder jedenfalls zusammenhängt mit dem jüdischen Wort «Essin» oder «Assin». Und das bedeutet so etwas wie Schaufel, Schäufelchen, weil die Essäer als einziges symbolisches Zeichen stets eine kleine Schaufel als Abzeichen trugen, was sich in manchen Ordensgemeinschaften bis heute erhalten hat. In gewissen symbolischen Gepflogenheiten drückte sich auch das aus, was die Essäer wollten: daß sie keine Münzen bei sich tragen durften, daß sie nicht durch ein Tor gehen durften, das bemalt war oder in dessen Nähe Bilder waren. Und weil der Essäerorden in der damaligen Zeit in einer gewissen Weise auch äußerlich anerkannt war, hatte man in Jerusalem besondere Tore, unbemalte Tore gemacht, so daß auch sie in die Stadt gehen konnten. Denn wenn der Essäer an ein bemaltes Tor kam, mußte er immer wieder umkehren. Im Orden selbst gab es alte Urkunden und Traditionen, über deren Inhalt die Mitglieder des Ordens streng schwiegen. Sie durften lehren, aber nur, was sie innerhalb des Ordens gelernt hatten. Jeder, der in den Orden eintrat, mußte sein Vermögen dem Orden abgeben. Die Zahl der Essäer war damals zur Zeit des Jesus von Nazareth eine sehr große, etwa vierbis fünftausend. Es waren von allen Orten der damaligen Welt Leute zusammengekommen, die sich den strengen Regeln widmeten. Sie schenkten jedesmal, wenn sie irgendwo weit weg, in Kleinasien oder noch weiter, ein Haus hatten, dasselbe dem Essäerorden, und der Orden bekam überall kleine Besitzungen, Häuser, Gärten, ja weite Äcker. Keiner wurde aufgenommen, der nicht alles schenkte, was den Essäern Gemeingut wurde. Alles gehörte allen, kein einzelner hatte Besitz. Ein für unsere heutigen Verhältnisse außerordentlich strenges Gesetz, das aber begreiflich ist, war dieses, daB ein Essäer unterstützen durfte mit dem Gute des Ordens alle bedürftigen und belasteten Leute, nur diejenigen nicht, die seiner eigenen Familie angehörten.

In Nazareth gab es durch Schenkung eine solche Niederlassung des Essäerordens, und dadurch war gerade in den Gesichtskreis des Jesus von Nazareth dasjenige gekommen, was der Essäerorden war. In dem Zentrum des Ordens bekam man Kunde von der tiefen Weisheit, die sich in der beschriebenen Art in die Seele des Jesus von Nazareth gesenkt hatte, und gerade unter den Bedeutendsten, Weisesten der Essäer entstand eine gewisse Stimmung. Es hatte unter ihnen sich herausgebildet eine gewisse prophetische Anschauung: Wenn die Welt ihren richtigen Fortgang nehmen sollte, dann müsse eine besonders weise Seele erstehen, die wie eine Art Messias wirken müsse. Deshalb hatten sie Umschau gehalten, wo besonders weise Seelen wären. Und sie waren tief berührt, als sie Kunde erhielten von jener tiefen Weisheit, die in der Seele des Jesus von Nazareth entstanden war. Daher war es kein Wunder, daß die Essäer, ohne daß Jesus von Nazareth die Erprobung der niederen Grade durchzumachen hatte, ihn aufnahmen wie einen Externisten in ihre Gemeinschaft - ich will nicht sagen in den Orden selber - und daß in einer gewissen Weise zutraulich, offenherzig wurden selbst die weisesten Essäer in bezug auf ihre Geheimnisse gegenüber diesem weisen, jungen Menschen. In der Tat hörte in diesem Essäerorden der junge Jesus von Nazareth viel, viel Tieferes über die Geheimnisse, die vom Hebräertum bewahrt worden waren, als von den Schriftgelehrten im Hause seines Vaters. Manches auch hörte er, was er schon selber früher durch die Bath-Kol wie durch eine Erleuchtung in seiner Seele aufglänzend vernommen hatte. Kurz, es entstand ein reger Ideenaustausch zwischen Jesus von Nazareth und den Essäern. Und Jesus von Nazareth lernte kennen in seinem Verkehr mit den Essäern, im fünfundzwanzigsten, sechsundzwanzigsten, siebenundzwanzigsten, achtundzwanzigsten Lebensjahr und noch darüber hinaus, fast alles, was der Essäerorden zu geben hatte. Denn was ihm nicht durch Worte mitgeteilt wurde, das stellte sich ihm dar durch allerlei hellsichtige Impressionen. Wichtige hellsichtige Impressionen hatte Jesus von Nazareth entweder innerhalb der Gemeinschaft der Essäer selber oder einige Zeit darauf in Nazareth zu Hause, wo er in einem mehr beschaulichen Leben auf sich wirken ließ, was in seine Seele sich hineindrängte aus Kräften, die ihm gekommen waren, von denen die Essäer nichts ahnten, die aber als Folge der mit den Essäern geführten bedeutsamen Gespräche in seiner Seele erlebt wurden.

Eines von diesen Erlebnissen, von diesen inneren Impressionen muß besonders hervorgehoben werden, weil es hineinleuchten kann in den ganzen geistigen Gang der Menschheitsentwickelung. Es war eine gewaltige, bedeutsame Vision, die wie in einer Art Entrückung Jesus von Nazareth hatte, in der ihm Buddha wie in unmittelbarer Gegenwatt erschien. Ja, der Buddha erschien dem Jesus von Nazareth als Folge des Ideenaustausches mit den Essäern. Und man kann sagen, daß in jener Zeit zwischen Jesus und Buddha ein Geistgespräch stattgefunden hat. Es gehört zu meiner okkulten Verpflichtung, Ihnen den Inhalt dieses Geistgespräches mitzuteilen, denn wir dürfen, ja wir müssen heute diese bedeutsamen Geheimnisse der Menschheitsevolution berühren. In diesem bedeutsamen Geistgespräch erfuhr Jesus von Nazareth von dem Buddha, daß dieser etwa sagte: Wenn meine Lehre so, wie ich sie gelehrt habe, völlig in Erfüllung gehen würde, dann müßten alle Menschen den Essäern gleich werden. Das aber kann nicht sein. Das war der Irrtum in meiner Lehre. Auch die Essäer können sich nur weiter fortbringen, indem sie sich aussondern von der übrigen Menschheit; für sie müssen übrige Menschenseelen da sein. Durch die Erfüllung meiner Lehre müßten lauter Essäer entstehen. Das aber kann nicht sein. - Das war ein bedeutsames Erlebnis, das durch die Gemeinschaft mit den Essäern Jesus von Nazareth hatte.

Ein anderes Erlebnis war dieses, daß Jesus von Nazareth die Bekanntschaft machte mit einem auch noch jüngeren Manne, mit einem fast gleichaltrigen Manne, der nahegetreten war, allerdings in einer ganz anderen Weise als Jesus von Nazareth, dem Essäerorden, der aber trotzdem auch nicht ganz Essäer geworden ist. Es war der, man möchte sagen, wie ein Laienbruder innerhalb der Essäergemeinschaft lebende Johannes der Täufer. Er trug sich wie die Essäer, denn diese trugen im Winter Kleider von Kamelhaar. Aber er hatte niemals die Lehre des Judentums vollständig in sich auswechseln können mit der Lehre der Essäer. Da aber die Lehre der Essäer, das ganze Leben der Essäer auf ihn einen großen Eindruck machte, lebte er als Laienbruder das Essäerleben, ließ sich anregen, ließ sich allmählich inspirieren und kam nach und nach zu dem, was ja von Johannes dem Täufer in den Evangelien erzählt ist. Viele Gespräche fanden statt zwischen Jesus von Nazareth und Johannes dem Täufer. - Da geschah es eines Tages - ich weiß, was es heißt, diese Dinge so einfach zu erzählen, aber nichts kann mich abhalten; ich weiß trotzdem, daß diese Dinge jener okkulten Verpflichtung zufolge jetzt erzählt werden müssen -, es geschah eines Tages, daß Jesus von Nazareth, während er mit Johannes dem 'Täufer sprach, wie verschwunden vor sich sah die physische Leiblichkeit des Täufers und die Vision des Elias hatte. Das war das zweite wichtige Seelenerlebnis innerhalb der Gemeinschaft des Essäerordens.

Da gab es aber noch andere Erlebnisse. Schon seit längerer Zeit hatte Jesus von Nazareth etwas Besonderes beobachten können: Wenn er an Orte kam, wo Essäertore waren, wo bildlose Tore waren, da konnte Jesus von Nazareth durch solche Tore nicht schreiten, ohne wiederum eine bittere Erfahrung zu machen. Er sah diese bildlosen Tore, aber für ihn waren geistige Bilder an diesen Toren; für ihn erschien zu beiden Seiten eines solchen 'Tores immer dasjenige, was wir jetzt kennengelernt haben in den verschiedenen geisteswissenschaftlichen Auseinandersetzungen unter dem Namen Ahriman und Luzifer. Und allmählich hatte sich ihm das Gefühl, der Eindruck in der Seele gefestigt, daß die Abneigung der Essäer gegen die Torbilder etwas zu tun haben müsse mit dem Herbeizaubern solcher geistiger Wesenheiten, wie er sie an diesen Toren erschaute, daß Bilder an den Toren Abbilder von Luzifer und Ahriman seien. Und öfter hatte Jesus von Nazareth dieses bemerkt, öfter waren solche Gefühle in seiner Seele aufgestiegen.

Wer solches erlebt, der findet nicht, daß man über diese Dinge gleich viel grübeln sollte; denn diese Dinge wirken zu erschütternd auf die Seele. Man fühlt auch sehr bald, daß menschliche Gedanken nicht hinreichen, um sie tief genug zu ergründen. Die Gedanken hält man dann nicht für fähig, an diese Dinge heranzudringen. Aber die Eindrücke graben sich nicht nur tief in die Seele ein, sondern werden zu einem Teil des Seelenlebens selber. Man fühlt sich wie verbunden mit dem Teil seiner Seele, in dem man solche Erlebnisse gesammelt hat, wie verbunden mit den Erlebnissen selber, man trägt diese Erlebnisse weiter durchs Leben.

So hatte Jesus von Nazareth durchs Leben getragen die beiden Bilder von Luzifer und Ahriman, die er oftmals gesehen hatte an den Toren der Essäer. Es hatte zunächst nichts anderes bewirkt, als daß ihm bewußt wurde, daß ein Geheimnis walte zwischen diesen geistigen Wesenheiten und den Essäern. Und die Wirkung, die das auf seine Seele ausübte, trug sich hinein in die Verständigung mit den Essäern; man konnte sich seit diesen Erlebnissen in der Seele des Jesus von Nazareth nicht mehr so gut gegenseitig verstehen. Denn es lebte in seiner Seele etwas, von dem er nicht sprechen konnte gegenüber den Essäern, weil sich jedesmal etwas wie in der Rede verschlug, denn immer stellte sich dazwischen, was er an den Essäertoren erlebt hatte.

Eines Tages, als nach einer besonders wichtigen, bedeutsamen Unterredung, in der vieles Höchste, Geistige zur Sprache gekommen war, Jesus von Nazareth das Tor des Hauptgebäudes der Essäer verließ, da traf er, indem er durch das Tor ging, auf die Gestalten, von denen er wußte, daß sie Luzifer und Ahriman waren. Und er sah fliehen Luzifer und Ahriman von dem Tore des Essäerklosters. Und es senkte sich in seine Seele eine Frage. Aber nicht als ob er selber, nicht als ob er durch den Verstand früge, sondern mit tiefer elementarer Gewalt drängte sich herauf in seine Seele die Frage: Wohin fliehen diese, wohin fliehen Luzifer und Ahriman? — Denn er wußte, die Heiligkeit des Klosters der Essäer hatte sie zum Fliehen gebracht. Aber die Frage lebte sich in seine Seele ein: Wohin fliehen diese? — Und diese Frage brachte er nicht mehr los aus seiner Seele, diese Frage brannte wie Feuer in seiner Seele; mit dieser Frage ging er stündlich, ja minütlich sie erlebend in den nächsten Wochen umher. Als er nach dem geistigen Gespräch, das er geführt hatte, die Tore des Hauptgebäudes der Essäer verlassen hatte, da brannte in seiner Seele die Frage: Wohin fliehen Luzifer und Ahriman?

Was er unter dem Eindruck dieser in seiner Seele lebenden Frage weiter tat, nachdem er durchlebt hatte, daß die alten Inspirationen verlorengegangen waren, die Religionen und Kulte von dämonischen Gewalten verdorben waren und als er hingefallen war an dem Altare des Heidenkultus, die umgewandelte Stimme der Bath-Kol vernommen hatte, und sich fragen mußte, was die Worte der Bath-Kol zu bedeuten haben, und was das eben von mir Erzählte zu bedeuten hatte, daß die Seele des Jesus von Nazareth sich jetzt fragte: Wohin fliehen Luzifer und Ahriman? — davon wollen wir morgen weiter sprechen.

Fourth Lecture

The conclusion of John's Gospel provides a kind of reassurance when I begin to speak about what is to be considered the Fifth Gospel today. We remember this conclusion, where it says that the Gospels by no means record all the events that happened around Christ Jesus. For if everything had been recorded at that time, it says, the world would not have had enough books to contain it all. So there can be no doubt that, apart from what has been recorded in the four Gospels, many other things may have happened. In order to make myself clear with regard to everything I intend to give from the Fifth Gospel in this series of lectures, I would like to begin today with stories from the life of Jesus of Nazareth, starting at about the point we have already indicated on other occasions, when small sections from the Fifth Gospel were already shared.

Today I would like to tell you something about the twelfth year of Jesus of Nazareth. As you know, it was the year in which the I of Zarathustra, who was embodied in one of the two Jesus boys born at that time and whose origins are described by Matthew, passed through a mystical act into the other Jesus boy, the Jesus boy who is described in particular at the beginning of the Gospel of Luke. So we begin our story of that year in the life of Jesus of Nazareth when this Jesus of Luke's Gospel took on the ego of Zarathustra. We know that this moment in the life of Jesus of Nazareth is hinted at in the Gospel through the story that the boy Jesus of Luke's Gospel was lost on a journey to Jerusalem for the feast and, when he was found again, it turned out that he was sitting in the temple in Jerusalem among the scribes and causing astonishment among them and his parents by the powerful answers he gave. We know, however, that these significant, powerful answers came from the fact that the ego of Zarathustra had now truly appeared in this boy and was working from the deep abundance of memory, so that Jesus of Nazareth was able to give all those surprising answers at that time. We also know that the two families came together through the death of the Nathanian mother on the one hand and the Solomonic father on the other, and from then on formed one family, and that the boy Jesus, fertilized with the I of Zarathustra, grew up in this family that had become one.

But now—as can be seen from the content of the Fifth Gospel—a very strange and remarkable development took place in the following years. At first, the immediate surroundings of the young Jesus of Nazareth had formed a great and powerful opinion of him, precisely because of that event in the temple, because of those powerful answers he had given to the scribes. His immediate surroundings saw in him, so to speak, the coming scribe himself; they saw growing up in him the one who would attain a very high, special level of scriptural learning. The surroundings of Jesus of Nazareth were filled with great, tremendous hopes. People began, so to speak, to catch every word he said. But despite their eagerness to catch every word, he gradually became more and more silent. He became so silent that his surroundings often found him extremely unpleasant. But he fought within himself, fought a tremendous battle, a battle that took place within his inner self between the ages of twelve and eighteen. There was truly something in his soul like the unfolding of inner treasures of wisdom, something like the sun of the former Zarathustra wisdom light shining in the form of Jewish scholarship.

At first, this manifested itself in such a way that this boy seemed to listen with the utmost attention to everything that the numerous scribes who came to the house said, and, as if by a special gift of the spirit, he knew how to respond to everything. Thus, even at home in Nazareth, he surprised those who came there as scribes and marveled at him as a child prodigy. But then he became more and more silent and listened only silently to what the others said. During those years, however, great ideas, moral precepts, and especially significant moral impulses arose in his own soul. While he listened silently, what he heard from the scribes gathered in the house made a certain impression on him, but it was an impression that often caused bitterness in his soul, because he had the distinct feeling, even at that young age, that there must be much that was uncertain and prone to error in what those scribes said about the old traditions about the ancient writings that were collected in the Old Testament. But it weighed particularly heavily on his soul when he heard that in ancient times the Spirit had come upon the prophets, that God Himself had spoken through the ancient prophets, and that now inspiration had departed from the generations that followed. But he always listened particularly attentively to one of them, because he felt that what was being said would come to pass in his own life. Those scribes often said: Yes, that high spirit, that mighty spirit that came upon Elijah, for example, no longer speaks; but whoever still speaks—what some of the scribes still believed they heard as inspiration from the spiritual heights—what still speaks is a weaker voice, but a voice that some still believe they hear as something given by the spirit of Yahweh himself. The Bath-Kol was the name given to that peculiar, inspiring voice, a weaker voice of inspiration, a voice of a lesser kind than the spirit that inspired the ancient prophets, but still something similar. This is how many in the vicinity of Jesus spoke of the Bath-Kol. Much is told about this Bath-Kol in later Jewish writings.

I will now insert something into this Fifth Gospel that does not actually belong here, but is only intended to explain the Bath-Kol. Some time later, after the emergence of Christianity, a dispute broke out between two rabbinical schools. The famous Rabbi Eheser ben Hirkano claimed a doctrine and, to prove it, claimed that he could perform miracles, as recounted in the Talmud. Rabbi Elieser ben Hirkano caused a carob tree to rise from the ground, as the Talmud recounts, and replant itself a hundred cubits away in another place. He caused a river to flow backwards, and thirdly, he invoked the voice from heaven as a revelation he had received from Bath Kol himself. But in the opposing rabbinical school of Rabbi Joshua, this teaching was not believed, and Rabbi Joshua replied: Even if Rabbi Eliezer can have carob trees transplanted from one place to another to confirm his teaching, even if he can make rivers flow upstream, even if he invokes the great Bath Kol himself—it is written in the law that the eternal laws of existence must be laid down in the mouth and heart of man. And if Rabbi Eliezer wants to convince us of his teaching, he must not invoke the Bath-Kol, but must convince us of what the human heart can comprehend. — I tell this story from the Talmud because we see that soon after the introduction of Christianity in certain rabbinical schools, the Bath-Kol was held in low esteem. But in a certain way it flourished as an inspiring voice among the rabbis and scribes.

While the scribes gathered in the house of Jesus of Nazareth were talking about this inspiring voice of the Bath-Kol, and the young Jesus heard, felt, and received all this within himself, he felt the inspiration of the Bath-Kol. It was remarkable that, through the fertilization of this soul with the ego of Zarathustra, Jesus of Nazareth was indeed able to quickly absorb everything that those around him knew. Not only was he able to give the scribes powerful answers at the age of twelve, but he could also hear the Bath Kol in his own breast. But it was precisely this inspiration from the Bath-Kol that affected Jesus of Nazareth when he was sixteen or seventeen years old and he often heard this revealing voice of the Bath-Kol, so that he was led into bitter, heavy inner soul struggles. For the Bath-Kol revealed to him—and he believed he heard it clearly—that the time was not far off when, in the course of the old current of the Old Testament, this spirit would no longer speak to the old Jewish teachers as it had spoken to them in the past. And one day, and this was terrible for the soul of Jesus, he believed that the Bath-Kol revealed to him: I no longer reach the heights where the Spirit can truly reveal to me the truth about the future of the Jewish people. That was a terrible moment, a terrible impression that the soul of the young Jesus received when the Bath-Kol seemed to reveal to him that she could not be the continuator of the old revelations, that she declared herself, so to speak, incapable of being the continuator of the old revelations of Judaism. Thus, in his sixteenth and seventeenth years, Jesus of Nazareth believed that all ground had been pulled out from under his feet, and he had many days when he had to say to himself: All the powers of my soul with which I believed myself to be endowed only lead me to understand that in the substance of the evolution of Judaism there is no longer any possibility of reaching the revelations of the Spirit of God.

Let us put ourselves for a moment in his mind, in the soul of the young Jesus of Nazareth, who was going through such experiences in his soul. It was at the same time that the young Jesus of Nazareth, in his sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth years, partly prompted by his trade and partly by other circumstances, made many journeys. On these journeys he got to know many parts of Palestine, and also some places outside Palestine. Now, at that time—this can be seen quite clearly if one penetrates the Akashic Records with clairvoyance—an Asian cult spread throughout the regions of the Near East, and even as far as southern Europe, which was a mixture of various other cults, but which was mainly the cult of Mithras. In many places in various regions there were temples for the worship of Mithras. In some places it was more similar to the worship of Attis, but essentially it was the worship of Mithras, and it was in temples and places of worship that the sacrifices to Mithras and Attis were performed everywhere. It was, in a sense, an ancient paganism, but in a certain way permeated by the customs and ceremonies of the cult of Mithras or Attis. How widespread this was, even beyond the Italian peninsula, can be seen, for example, from the fact that St. Peter's Basilica in Rome stands on the site of a former place of worship. Yes, one must even utter the word that is blasphemous to some Catholics: The ceremonial service of St. Peter's Church and everything derived from it is, in terms of its outward form, not unlike the cult of the ancient Attis, which was performed in the temple that once stood on the same site where St. Peter's Church now stands. And the cult of the Catholic Church is in many respects merely a continuation of the ancient cult of Mithras.

Jesus of Nazareth learned about what existed in such places of worship when he began to wander around in his sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth years. And he continued to do so later on. He learned, if we may say so, to know the soul of the pagans through external, physical observation. And at that time, through the powerful process of the transition of the Zarathustra ego into his soul, something was developed in his soul in a high degree, which others could only acquire with great effort, but which was naturally developed in him: a high clairvoyant power. Therefore, when he watched such cults, he experienced something completely different from the other spectators. He experienced many shocking events there. And even if it seems fabulous, I must emphasize that when the priests performed the cult at some pagan altars and Jesus of Nazareth then looked at the sacrifice with his clairvoyant powers, he saw how various demonic beings were summoned through the sacrificial act. He also discovered that many of the idols that were worshipped there were not images of good spiritual beings from the higher hierarchies, but of evil, demonic powers. Yes, he went on to discover that these evil, demonic powers often passed over into the believers, into the confessors who took part in such cultic acts. For reasons that are easy to understand, these things did not find their way into the other Gospels. And it is basically only within the bosom of our spiritual movement that it is possible to speak about such things, because only in our time can the human soul truly understand those tremendous, profound, and powerful experiences that took place in the young Jesus of Nazareth long before the baptism of John.

These wanderings continued into the twentieth, twenty-second, and twenty-fourth years. There was always bitterness in his soul when he saw the workings of the demons, the demons brought forth, as it were, by Lucifer and Ahriman, and saw how paganism had even gone so far in many respects as to accepting demons as gods, even having images of wild demonic powers in idols, which were attracted by these images, by these cult rituals, and passed over into the praying people, the praying people who participated in good faith, making them possessed. These were bitter experiences that Jesus of Nazareth had to go through. And these experiences came to a certain conclusion at about the age of twenty-four. Then Jesus of Nazareth had the experience which followed as a new, infinitely difficult experience after the disappointment with the Bath-Kol. Since I also have to recount this experience of Jesus of Nazareth, I must say that I am still not in a position to indicate at which point in his travels this event took place. I was able to decipher the scene itself with a high degree of accuracy. However, I am unable to specify the exact location of this scene today. It seems to me, however, that this scene took place during a journey of Jesus of Nazareth outside Palestine. But I cannot say this with certainty; I must simply recount the scene.

So Jesus of Nazareth came to a place in the twenty-fourth year of his life where there was a pagan place of worship where sacrifices were made to a certain deity. All around, however, there were only sad people afflicted with all kinds of terrible mental and physical illnesses. The priests had long since abandoned the place of worship. And Jesus heard the people lamenting: “The priests have forsaken us, the blessings of the sacrifice do not come down upon us, and we are lepers and sick, we are weary and burdened because the priests have forsaken us.” Jesus looked upon these poor people with deep sorrow; he was moved by pity for this oppressed people, and an infinite love for these afflicted ones flared up in his soul. The people around him must have noticed something of this infinite love that was reviving in his soul; it must have made a deep impression on the lamenting people, who had been abandoned by their priests and, as they believed, also by their gods. And now, one might say as if in a single blow, something arose in the hearts of most of this people, which was expressed in the words of the people, who recognized the expression of infinite love on the face of Jesus: “You are the new priest sent to us.” They pushed him toward the altar of sacrifice and placed him on the pagan altar. And he stood on the pagan altar, and they waited, yes, they demanded that he perform the sacrifices so that the blessings of their god would come upon them again.

And while this was happening, while the people lifted him up on the altar of sacrifice, he fell down as if dead, his soul was as if taken away, and the people around him, who believed that their God had returned, saw the terrible sight of the one whom they had held to be the new priest sent from heaven lying there as if dead. But the raptured soul of Jesus of Nazareth felt itself being lifted up into the spiritual realms; it felt as if it had been transported into the realm of solar existence. And now it heard words sounding out of the spheres of solar existence, words such as this soul had often heard before through the Bath-Kol. But now the Bath-Kol had been transformed into something completely different. The voice also came from a completely different direction, and what Jesus of Nazareth now heard can be summarized, when translated into our language, in the words that I was allowed to share for the first time when we recently laid the foundation stone for our building in Dornach.

There are occult obligations! And following such an occult obligation, I had to share what Jesus of Nazareth heard through the transformed voice of the Bath-Kol at the time when what I have just told you happened. Jesus of Nazareth heard the words: (See notes on page 333.)

Amen
Evil reigns
Witnesses of dissolving egoism
Self-debt incurred by others
Experienced in daily bread
In which the will of Heaven does not reign
Since man separated himself from Your kingdom
And forgot Your name
You fathers in heaven.

This is the only way I can translate into English what was heard as the transformed voice of Bath-Kol from Jesus of Nazareth at that time. No other way! These were the words that brought back the soul of Jesus of Nazareth when it awoke from the stupor that had made it feel transported during the event just described. And when Jesus of Nazareth had come to himself and looked around at the crowd of weary and burdened people who had lifted him up on the altar, they had fled. And when he let his clear gaze wander into the distance, he could only see a crowd of demonic figures, demonic beings, all connected to these people.

This was the second significant event, the second significant conclusion in the various periods of soul development that Jesus of Nazareth underwent since his twelfth year. Yes, my dear friends, events that, so to speak, by their pleasant nature only put the soul in a blissful mood, were not those that made the greatest impression on the soul of the growing Jesus of Nazareth. This soul had to learn about the depths of human nature at such a young age, before the event at the Jordan took place.

And from this journey, Jesus of Nazareth came home. It was around the time when his father, who had remained at home, died, when Jesus of Nazareth was about twenty-four years old. When Jesus came home, he had a vivid impression in his soul of the demonic influences that had sunk into many aspects of the old pagan religion. But as it is always the case that certain stages of higher knowledge can only be attained by getting to know the abysses of life, so it was in a certain sense with Jesus of Nazareth that he—at a place I do not know—around the age of twenty-four, by looking so infinitely deeply into human souls, into souls in which was concentrated all the soul-anguish of humanity at that time, he also became particularly immersed in wisdom, which, however, pierces the soul like red-hot iron, but also makes the soul so clairvoyant that it can see through the light expanses of the spirit. And because he had heard the transformed voice of Bath-Kol, he was also transformed. Thus, at a relatively young age, he was endowed with a calm, penetrating spiritual insight. Jesus of Nazareth had become a man who looked deeply into the mysteries of life, who could see into the mysteries of life as no one else on earth had ever done before, because no one before him had been able to see to what degree human misery could increase. First, he had seen how one can lose one's footing through mere scholarship; then he had experienced how the ancient inspirations were lost; then he had seen how cults and sacrificial rites, instead of connecting people with the gods, conjured up all kinds of demonic beings that possessed people and thus brought them into all kinds of mental and physical illnesses and misery. Certainly no one on earth had looked so deeply into all this human misery as Jesus of Nazareth, no one had felt such infinite compassion in his soul as he did when he saw that people possessed by demons. Certainly no one on earth was so prepared for the question: How, how can the spread of this misery on earth be stopped?

Thus, Jesus of Nazareth was not only endowed with the insight and knowledge of the wise, but in a certain sense had become an initiate through his life. This was known to people who had gathered at that time in a certain order known to the world as the Essene Order. The Essenes were people who practiced a kind of secret service and secret teachings in certain places in Palestine. It was a strict order. Anyone who wanted to join the order had to undergo at least one year, but usually several years, of rigorous testing. They had to show through their behavior, their manners, their service to the highest spiritual powers, their sense of justice, equality among people, their disregard for external human goods and the like, that they were worthy of being initiated. Once they were accepted into the order, there were various degrees through which one could ascend to the Essene way of life, which was characterized by a certain separation and isolation from the rest of humanity, strict monastic discipline, and certain purity requirements, through which one sought to rid oneself of all physical and spiritual unworthiness in order to come closer to the spiritual world. This is already expressed in many of the symbolic laws of the Essene order. The deciphering of the Akashic Records has shown that the name Essene comes from or is at least related to the Jewish word “Essin” or “Assin.” This means something like “shovel” or “little shovel,” because the Essenes always wore a small shovel as their only symbolic sign, which has been preserved in some religious communities to this day. Certain symbolic customs also expressed what the Essenes wanted: that they were not allowed to carry coins with them, that they were not allowed to pass through a gate that was painted or had pictures near it. And because the Essene order was recognized in a certain way at that time, special unpainted gates were built in Jerusalem so that they could enter the city. For if an Essene came to a painted gate, he had to turn back. Within the order itself, there were ancient documents and traditions, the contents of which were strictly kept secret by the members of the order. They were allowed to teach, but only what they had learned within the order. Everyone who joined the order had to surrender their possessions to the order. At the time of Jesus of Nazareth, the number of Essenes was very large, about four to five thousand. People from all over the world at that time had come together to devote themselves to the strict rules. Whenever they had a house somewhere far away, in Asia Minor or even further, they donated it to the Essene order, and the order acquired small properties, houses, gardens, and even large fields everywhere. No one was accepted who did not donate everything that became the common property of the Essenes. Everything belonged to everyone; no individual had any possessions. One law that was extremely strict by today's standards, but understandable, was that an Essene was allowed to support all needy and burdened people with the goods of the order, except those who belonged to his own family.

In Nazareth, there was such a settlement of the Essene order through donation, and thus what the Essene order was came into the field of vision of Jesus of Nazareth. In the center of the order, word spread of the profound wisdom that had sunk into the soul of Jesus of Nazareth in the manner described, and a certain mood arose among the most important and wisest of the Essenes. A certain prophetic view had developed among them: if the world was to continue in the right direction, then a particularly wise soul would have to arise who would act as a kind of Messiah. Therefore, they had looked around to see where particularly wise souls might be found. And they were deeply moved when they heard of the profound wisdom that had arisen in the soul of Jesus of Nazareth. It was therefore no wonder that the Essenes, without Jesus of Nazareth having to undergo the trials of the lower degrees, accepted him into their community as an external member—I do not want to say into the order itself—and that even the wisest Essenes became trusting and open-hearted in a certain way with regard to their secrets toward this wise young man. In fact, in this Essene order, the young Jesus of Nazareth heard much, much more about the secrets that had been preserved by the Hebrews than he had heard from the scribes in his father's house. He also heard many things that he had already heard earlier through the Bath-Kol, as if through an illumination shining in his soul. In short, a lively exchange of ideas took place between Jesus of Nazareth and the Essenes. And Jesus of Nazareth learned almost everything the Essene order had to offer during his contact with the Essenes in his twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth years of life and beyond. For what was not communicated to him in words was revealed to him through all kinds of clairvoyant impressions. Jesus of Nazareth had important clairvoyant impressions either within the community of the Essenes themselves or some time later at home in Nazareth, where he lived a more contemplative life and allowed what had entered his soul from forces that had come to him to work on him. of which the Essenes had no inkling, but which were experienced in his soul as a result of the significant conversations he had with the Essenes.

One of these experiences, one of these inner impressions, must be particularly emphasized because it can shed light on the entire spiritual course of human development. It was a powerful, significant vision that Jesus of Nazareth had, as if in a kind of rapture, in which Buddha appeared to him as if in his immediate presence. Yes, Buddha appeared to Jesus of Nazareth as a result of the exchange of ideas with the Essenes. And one can say that at that time a spiritual conversation took place between Jesus and Buddha. It is part of my occult obligation to share with you the content of this spiritual conversation, for we may, indeed we must, touch upon these significant secrets of human evolution today. In this significant spiritual conversation, Jesus of Nazareth learned from Buddha that he said something like this: If my teachings were to be fulfilled completely as I have taught them, then all people would have to become like the Essenes. But that cannot be. That was the error in my teaching. Even the Essenes can only continue to progress by separating themselves from the rest of humanity; other human souls must be there for them. Through the fulfillment of my teaching, only Essenes would come into being. But that cannot be. This was a significant experience that Jesus of Nazareth had through his association with the Essenes.

Another experience was that Jesus of Nazareth made the acquaintance of an even younger man, a man of almost the same age, who had approached him, albeit in a completely different way than Jesus of Nazareth, the Essene order, but who nevertheless had not become a complete Essene. He was, one might say, like a lay brother living within the Essene community: John the Baptist. He dressed like the Essenes, for they wore camel hair garments in winter. But he had never been able to completely replace the teachings of Judaism with those of the Essenes. However, since the teachings of the Essenes and the entire life of the Essenes made a great impression on him, he lived the Essene life as a lay brother, allowed himself to be stimulated, gradually became inspired, and little by little came to what is recounted in the Gospels about John the Baptist. Many conversations took place between Jesus of Nazareth and John the Baptist. Then one day—I know what it means to tell these things so simply, but nothing can stop me; I know nevertheless that these things must now be told in accordance with that occult obligation—then one day, while Jesus of Nazareth was talking with John the Baptist, the physical body of the Baptist seemed to disappear before his eyes and he had a vision of Elijah. This was the second important spiritual experience within the community of the Essene Order.

But there were other experiences. For some time, Jesus of Nazareth had observed something special: when he came to places where there were Essene gates, where there were gates without images, Jesus of Nazareth could not pass through such gates without having a bitter experience. He saw these gateways without images, but for him there were spiritual images at these gateways; for him, on both sides of such a 'gateway,' there always appeared what we have now come to know in various spiritual scientific discussions under the names Ahriman and Lucifer. And gradually the feeling, the impression, became fixed in his soul that the Essenes' aversion to the images on the gates must have something to do with conjuring up such spiritual beings as he saw at these gates, that the images on the gates were representations of Lucifer and Ahriman. And Jesus of Nazareth had noticed this more and more often; such feelings had risen more and more often in his soul.

Those who experience such things do not think that one should ponder them too much, for they have too disturbing an effect on the soul. One also feels very quickly that human thoughts are not sufficient to fathom them deeply enough. One does not consider one's thoughts capable of penetrating these things. But the impressions not only dig deep into the soul, they become part of the soul life itself. One feels connected to the part of one's soul where one has gathered such experiences, connected to the experiences themselves, and one carries these experiences through life.

Thus, Jesus of Nazareth carried through his life the two images of Lucifer and Ahriman, which he had often seen at the gates of the Essenes. At first, this had no effect other than to make him aware that a mystery existed between these spiritual beings and the Essenes. And the effect this had on his soul carried over into his communication with the Essenes; since these experiences, it was no longer possible to understand each other so well in the soul of Jesus of Nazareth. For there was something living in his soul that he could not speak of to the Essenes, because every time he tried, something seemed to choke him, for what he had experienced at the gates of the Essenes always came between him and his words.

One day, after a particularly important and significant conversation in which many of the highest spiritual matters had been discussed, Jesus of Nazareth left the gate of the main building of the Essenes and, as he passed through the gate, he encountered the figures he knew to be Lucifer and Ahriman. And he saw Lucifer and Ahriman fleeing from the gate of the Essene monastery. And a question sank into his soul. But it was not as if he himself, not as if he were thinking with his mind, but with a deep, elemental force, the question rose up in his soul: Where are they fleeing, where are Lucifer and Ahriman fleeing? For he knew that the sanctity of the Essene monastery had caused them to flee. But the question lived in his soul: Where are they fleeing? And he could not rid his soul of this question; it burned like fire in his soul; with this question he wandered about every hour, every minute, for the next few weeks. When, after the spiritual conversation he had had, he left the gates of the main building of the Essenes, the question burned in his soul: Where are Lucifer and Ahriman fleeing to?

What he did next, under the impression of this question living in his soul, after he had experienced that the old inspirations had been lost, that the religions and cults had been corrupted by demonic powers, and when he had fallen down at the altar of the pagan cult, heard the transformed voice of Bath-Kol, and had to ask himself what the words of Bath-Kol meant, and what the story I have just told meant, that the soul of Jesus of Nazareth now asked himself: Where are Lucifer and Ahriman fleeing to? — we will continue talking about this tomorrow.