Ancient Mysteries and Christianity

GA 87 — 8 March 1902, Berlin

18. The Gospel of Matthew and Its Relationship to Egyptian and Modern Spiritual Life

Highly Esteemed Attendees!

Last time I concluded with a reference to the beginning of the Gospel of Matthew. Today I would like to follow on from this remark that the Gospel of Matthew begins by tracing the birth of Christ back to a forty-two-member family tree. In fact, this beginning of Matthew's Gospel shows us how the nature of Jesus Christ was understood by those from whom Matthew actually took his view of this nature. The forty-two ancestral line can only be understood if we manage to understand that we are dealing with the Egyptian view of the 42 judges of the dead, before whom the one who wants to ascend to divinity, i.e. who wants to become "Osiris", has to appear. This is also a factor in the Essaean doctrine. [The Essaeans] know this series, which must be gone through. According to the Essaeans, every person who is on the path to becoming God is about to pass through these 42 stages. They symbolize the 42 points of passage. When he has then reached the forty-third stage, he is already in the higher spheres, where becoming God already begins, or - if I express myself in Egyptian terms - where he becomes "Osiris". The fact that there are still divisions there, too, is of little interest to us for the time being.

The main point is that man now appears on a level in which he is "Osiris, divine being. I have said that these are views that Matthew has simply adopted. This can be seen from the fact that Matthew speaks of 3 times 14 ancestors = 42 ancestors. However, since he only really lists thirteen in the end, we can assume that he is well aware that the number 42 plays a major role, but that he has unconsciously omitted the last step. We therefore have to look less at how the matter is expressed in detail.

We are therefore dealing with the view in Matthew that man has 42 stations on his path to ancestors and that when he has passed through [these stages], he enters divinity

ness. These stations, these ancestors, can be spread over many lives. But only the one who has passed through forty-two stages can enter the world as Buddha" or "Christ. It is quite the same. Buddha also had to go through the same series of ancestors. With Buddha we also have 6 times 7 = 42 stages or embodiments. It is therefore the case that we not only have a deep similarity between Jesus and Buddha, but that we also have before us in the transcendent Jesus nature the same thing that is in the Buddha nature. We are dealing with a person at a higher stage of development who has gone through all the stages that one has gone through when one has survived life with all its trials and when one has entered the stage where one can be the judge of the dead. He will return again after he has come down to judge the living and the dead, he will enter the realm of the judges of the dead, he, Jesus, who has passed through the forty-two-link chain of the judges of the dead. It is just as it says in the Buddhist legend, where the Buddha passed through forty-two stages. He then entered the stage where he himself became God; the man who has become God is now no longer dependent on passing through the eternal necessity of the limbs. He appears on a divine counsel. Hence we are told with Jesus and Buddha that they are sent by divine decree and [...] by the will of the Father. The individual links in the chain of ancestors proceeded according to a world order.

So with the Essaeans we are dealing with a Christ, with the Buddhists with a Buddha, with an entity which, after having undergone all the trials that have to be passed through, appears within mankind as a man who has become God. This tells us nothing other than the Egyptians' and the Buddhists' way of looking at things. We are therefore dealing here with a real Buddha and a real Christ.

This can only be understood from this point of view. You will [otherwise] never understand how Matthew came to juxtapose the chain of ancestors and [the supernatural descent] of Jesus. He says in chapter 1, verse 17: "All the links from Abraham to David are fourteen links. From David to the Babylonian captivity are fourteen members. From the Babylonian captivity to Christ there are fourteen members." [Up to verse 17] you have given the natural genealogy of Jesus and immediately afterwards you have told how Joseph is told by the angel that there is a supernatural birth and that it is about Jesus coming into the world through the Holy Spirit. This is a complete contradiction in terms. However, it is a doctrine that must stand as such, a doctrine that we find everywhere where it is a question of indicating the reincarnation of a personality that has already reached the "Osiris stage". Such a personality experiences a double birth.

It is extremely difficult to talk about this. For Theosophy and for a real Theosophist, this is incredibly elementary. For those who have already penetrated a little deeper into the Theosophical teachings, it seems understandable when they say that they have reached the forty-second stage. For others, however, it is quite incomprehensible. Perhaps I can make myself understood by suggesting a path that almost every modern, thinking person will have to take if he wants to move from the most modern views into Theosophy. This path throws a weighty light on all these things. We must indeed say that for the Occident, at least for our European education, there is no more plausible way of arriving at those things which we find expressed here in such a difficult-to-understand way than from natural science. This is also the same path that leads to what underlies what Matthew drew from. I am convinced that - more than all Western religions are capable of - this path will lead to the goal if the teachings of natural science are to flow into Theosophy.

I would like to shed some light on the path that natural science will take in order to reach the point where Theosophy stands when it draws on ancient wisdom teachings. We must not take a completely pessimistic view of our Western development of spiritual life, even if we see how disregarded some people are of religious beliefs. This is because they have no idea of what is esoterically written in these scriptures. When we also see how amateurish the latest phenomena are.

It was only a year ago that a detailed discussion of Messiah Consciousness was published by Wrede, not August Wrede. Before that, one could be pessimistic. But science can no longer do anything other than end up where Theosophy seeks to take Western humanity. This is not too difficult to say. But in order to fully feel the thought, to penetrate it completely, to understand its full implications, where it shines into the whole of spiritual life, where it no longer lets us go once we have grasped it, [for this it is necessary to have suffered from the scientific ideas and to have carried them around with us as a confessor; for this it is necessary for those who go through the natural science of our days with their minds, the realization, the metamorphosis of that process, without getting completely caught up in this materialism. ]

Anyone who has confronted materialism and - like Goethe - has seen it with spiritual eyes, and who is able to see and understand these mysteries in their full scope, will not be able to harbor pessimistic views, even if he looks at the natural sciences of the last decade in particular.

I have personally had the best experiences with the natural sciences. In 1889, I wrote an essay in which I stated that, according to our scientific findings, the concepts of substance, matter and force are not even scientifically clear in the sober, mindless conception of force and substance found in Büchner and Strauss. Anyone who penetrates the facts of nature scientifically comes to the conclusion, directly as an experience, that natural science provides us with the proof that there is no substance, but that everything we call substance is nothing other than another form of spirit. Substance is only an apparent form of spirit that is expressed in a certain way. The world is spirit. That will have to become our confession.

The person who knows how to look at natural science with the eyes of the spirit comes to this realization. At that time I stated that what natural scientists have imagined as matter does not exist, that matter is nothing other than the lowest manifestation, the lowest form of spirit, and that natural science itself will come to this realization. Soon afterwards, in the richly fragmented literature of natural science, a natural scientist emerged with a work in which he expressed exactly the same thing in almost the same words as I did.

Whoever realizes that [natural] science can only be a factor in spiritual life, only a part of spiritual life, must be pleased when a chemist comes along who explains that what has been regarded as a substance cannot be justified scientifically as long as the substance is regarded as the carrier of natural science.

Unfortunately, Ernst Haeckel could not bring himself to accept what sprouted from our natural science. There is no doubt that we are no longer dealing with the old theory of matter. Only [today] the chemist - and also the physicist - will say that he is dealing with energies, because he is only dealing with expressions of force. The other, however, sees spirit in it. Natural science will go its own way in order to finally rise to the view that even that which underlies an apparently material process is nothing other than that which underlies the Indian wisdom teachings, that it is nothing other than that which materializes the Logos. Pessimism no longer clings to us today.

Natural science has incorporated a great good into us, namely the idea of development. Science has rediscovered this idea for itself in the field of biology. It has treated a special chapter in the way in which the theosophists of all times have regarded spiritual beings. They have looked at living beings from the point of view of development. And what does this development consist of? You need only put together the views of an eighteenth-century naturalist and those of a nineteenth-century naturalist. Linn& says that there are as many plant and animal species on earth as were originally created by so many acts of creation. The natural sciences of the nineteenth century allowed the juxtaposed forms to emerge one after the other, one after the other. What came into being later arose from what came before. In this way, natural science has eliminated the miracle from the world. In the past, there were only juxtaposed miracles. Theosophy has always stood on [the standpoint of development]. It transformed everything side by side into a succession. When a higher living being leads back to an earlier product of life, he who looks at it from a spiritual point of view sees stages of development.

The human being who has reached a higher stage, who has attained a higher degree of perfection, has not done so through a genius fallen from heaven. Genius, of which those who do not know what it is speak the most, is nothing other than the miracle transferred to natural science. Natural science has long since set aside this concept, which is still in use today - especially among the so-called aesthetes - in its own field, and has long since consigned it to the dustbin. Theosophy has never regarded genius as a miracle, but as a higher stage of development [of the personality]. It has seen in it nothing other than a personality that has gone through exactly the same thing as any other individuality, only it has gone through what another individuality goes through in this period in an earlier stage of development. What is experience for me today, what is stored up in me today, appears to me [later] as something self-evident, as a mature product, seemingly like a miracle. But it is only what I have acquired. I had to practise for a long time before I acquired, let's say, a movement that I then perform unconsciously. I also had to learn for years to grasp mathematics. But once I have the concept, it soon becomes a habit.

This is theosophy. Transfer that to the big world whole, to the big world events. What you have absorbed as experience appears as that which reappears on a higher level. In this way we can explain the most varied experiences of life and natural science through spiritual insight and deepening and make them fruitful for Theosophy. By contrasting two personalities, you will see that there is a spiritual explanation for a large number of things and phenomena in ordinary life, and that basically we are not dealing with anything other than attention and spiritual comprehension. You can thus see the beginnings of theosophy in scientific books.

[Perhaps take an elementary book of natural science, such as Topinard's "Anthropology", which explains how the individual organisms have developed. It tells us how the lowest levels of organization developed first, then we come to animals, apes and humans. Topinard repeats how Ernst Haeckel wrote about these things and says that Haeckel forgot something; he forgot to enumerate "the twenty-third degree in which Lamarck and Newton shine". You can continue to write this anthropology for the spirit, you can transfer what the natural scientist undertakes to the spiritual. There are countless degrees in the spiritual life. When you consider this, you realize what it is all about.

Goethe and Schiller are the two personalities I am referring to. They attended a meeting of natural scientists in Jena. Batsch had given a lecture, but it did little to satisfy Schiller and Goethe. Basically, Schiller and Goethe lacked the intellectual bond, the big picture. Schiller sensed this. And when he left the meeting with Goethe, he said: "It is dreary to see plant after plant lined up next to each other without an overview of the whole. There must be something common in all plants." Goethe answered him by talking about the original plant, of which all the others are only special forms. Then he said, "But that can be made clear in another way," took his pencil and drew the original plant with a few strokes, noting that it does not exist, but that this original plant can be recognized in every plant. Yes, said Schiller: "But that's not experience, it's an idea." But you can only achieve this if you go through all the plants and examine what they have in common. Then you get the general idea. "If that is an idea," Goethe replied, "then I see my ideas with my eyes." In fact, Goethe did not need to know all the plants. He only needed to see the essence of the individual plants. He saw the spirit, the truth of the plant. Schiller is quite right from his point of view when he says that [this was an] idea. And Goethe is also right when he says that he sees this idea, sees the whole thing at a glance. He is on a higher level. That is also what Schiller recognized without envy. This can be seen from Schiller's letters, where he described Goethe's nature in a magnificent way. We can see from this that such a spirit also had to go through this work. You can study this throughout Goethe's life. His whole conception was to see the spirit in nature. A seven-year-old boy does not otherwise do what Goethe did at that age. The embodiment of Goethe is a further, higher stage of development that Schiller still had to go through in Goethe's life. The seven-year-old Goethe took the stones from [his father's] mineral collection and used them to build himself an altar on the music stand, took a small incense burner and lit it through a burning glass by the light of the sun because he wanted to offer his service in this way.

Why does Goethe see the idea of the primordial plant and Schiller does not? Either we do not see the spiritual in the same way or we absolutely must extend our view of nature to the spiritual. Then we arrive at that spiritual development which is a content of all times.

I need not tell those who are familiar with theosophical literature that theosophical authors would present us with miracles in exactly the same way as the natural science of the eighteenth century, which presented the individual plants and animals and their genera as miracles. But through the ability to judge the spiritual as well as the physical, the views of the advanced natural science of the nineteenth century have passed over to the theosophical point of view. It is a question here of being able to judge the spiritual in the same way as the physical.

It is undoubted that with consistent thinking and when the natural sciences are supplemented by younger forces, a spiritual science will emerge from the natural sciences, as has already happened in the field of chemistry. Whoever thinks scientifically and has the inner courage to extend this scientific way of thinking to the spiritual world and to observe it after awakening the spiritual sense organs, must be led from natural science to Theosophy and its views.

Let us now turn again to Matthew's views on the personality, the essence of Jesus. We are dealing here with the view that sees Jesus as a personality who emerged after attaining the greatest possible number of re-embodiments. It is a personality that has reached the highest level of developmental possibility, which brings into the world as a finished disposition everything that other personalities are only on the way to achieving. Out of it is born that which others must first struggle for. That which appears as the spiritual when the transition from the forty-second to the forty-third stage takes place is the beginning and the transition of the human into the divine. Just as the purely physical and chemical in the organism has a higher nature and perception, so the physical on the level of divinity also has a higher nature and perception. The physical body, the physical organization is no longer what it was or what it is. It disappears in relation to the spiritual process. In fact, it has a metaphysical, transcendental past within itself. Just as it is born of the flesh, it is born of the divine. We must be clear about the fact that a new higher level of development of materiality has been reached and that the material itself has spiritualized to a higher level, so that we are not dealing with a birth out of the physical, but with a taking up of the physical birth by higher divine powers. We are therefore dealing with a direct emergence from primordial matter, which only becomes worldly at the moment of birth. There this primordial matter, which was not yet embodied, which was still decided in the pure spiritual, first passes over into the material. So in the forty-third degree, on the forty-third stage, we are dealing with the birth of primordial matter that has not yet entered into union with physical matter. This is what the ancient teachings refer to. The Egyptians say of the birth of Horus that the eye of Osiris shone above Isis, that a purely spiritual birth took place. In the birth of Horus you have the birth of the god out of still virgin matter.

If we go back to the Egyptian myth, we are dealing with three eternal great symbols for what we call the father, the mother and the child. This juxtaposition of Osiris, Isis and Horus is the original symbol. The child has remained on the Christian cross. The material on the one side has become merely evil, the father principle on the other side merely good. On Golgotha we see this symbolized in the three crosses. On the left we have evil, on the right good and in the middle the child. This symbol has been transformed, has become something else.

Now I come to a very important point. The striking thing that confronts us is the following: We can still trace the origin of the Christian symbol from the Egyptian symbol in the Christian myth of the earliest times. I would like to draw your attention to the fact that in all the other contemporary literature - apart from the Gospels themselves - although this myth is discussed in the most diverse ways, including by Jewish mystics, we do not find one thing that we actually only find in Matthew and Luke, namely the Holy Spirit. This is something that is actually not present. This is in addition. This Holy Spirit is nothing other than the transformed Isis. As a result, the virgin birth, which is still conveyed in the Osiris myth, was actually replaced by the real, natural birth. God the Father brought about this virgin birth through his magical influence, so that this birth is mediated on the one hand by the Father and on the other by the Holy Spirit, who is now the representative of the Father.

We encounter this Holy Spirit in the first period of Christianity [...], where the Christian view [of the virgin birth] emerges. We can therefore say that because the Holy Spirit first appears in Christianity, we see in it a division of the originally feminine principle of the world symbol. We have a spirit that gives the child its origin. [The origin from the divine tree arose within the Essaean community, where one actually stood on the standpoint of asceticism, where one already saw something evil in the sexual in itself. There it was impossible to receive the feminine in the same way as in ancient Egyptianism, as was the case with the Osiris service of the Egyptians, where the overshadowing of Osiris by Isis is transformed into the overshadowing by the Holy Spirit]. This is a temporary means by which the ancient Egyptian teaching was transformed into the Christian one. We have thus seen that we are actually dealing with the same way of looking at things. The Christian view sees in the Christ-personality a deified human being in exactly the same way as the Mystery Cult has always seen these [deified] human beings.

What doctrines may have underpinned this whole view? Anyone who really knows how to read the Gospels sees nothing in the Gospels other than, I would say, a more detailed account of the ritual, which was intended to initiate the Mystics into the Mysteries. And if we visualize what the initiation is about, if we want to be clear about what such a Myst wanted to achieve, should achieve, why he, the Myst to be initiated, the Myst was placed on a cross, why he was placed in a death-like state, we must say to ourselves, remember, that it is about the awakening of a higher life force, that it is about bringing him to resurrection on the third day. And if we ask ourselves how the initiation was accomplished for the mystics, we must say to ourselves that the mystical view was clear about the fact that the individual human being has to go through the whole process of creation in his own body. This was presented as a return to the Godhead, as a continual deification of the world.

Matter is what the spirit pours itself into in order to return to divinity via a detour through matter, in order to be as a soul what it originally was as a spirit. That is where we get the path. The Myste should bring matter within himself to the point of dying so that matter is no longer the ruling force in him. His soul should be reborn so that his material body also reaches a higher level. They were to be spiritualized at higher levels. It was not a higher scientific education that the myst was striving for, but for the myst to spiritualize matter, to bring matter one step further in its development. Everything that the myst had to go through had as its goal the [resurrection] with a spiritual body, with a reborn body.

The Myste had to go through this path of [returning] the soul to the Godhead. It was also made clear to him that he was not going through what he was going through for himself, but as part of the great universe, which was going through a degree of development in him. We know that the whole process at the initiation is described to us in such a way that when the sun awakens the Mystic on the third day, the thunder rolls, just as it did at the resurrection of Jesus. These events are told to us as components of the mystical process.

The mystic should be made aware that his own process has its foundation in the cosmic world process, that God has carried out the world process with the help of the Creator Word, the Logos, that this God is himself, and that the world process is carried out in reality in the mystic, that the process which man has to go through is like the world process. The world process is synonymous with the description of the path that the mystical individuality has to go through. This was an important part - not only with the Egyptians - of what was demonstrated to the mystics and then became flesh and blood.

Take together what is communicated individually, but which we must keep together. Take the whole parallelism between the Gospels and the Old Testament [and the Egyptian tradition], then if you follow the matter in this way, you will indeed be able to see that indeed the most devout confessors of Christianity in the later centuries had traces of the human process being the great cosmological world process. In some passages of St. Augustine's "Confessions" you can find such traces and hints. They may not be entirely clear, but he shows that in the individual events such as the birth, transfiguration, ascension of Christ and so on, he is dealing with nothing other than a repetition of the cosmic process. Thus he says at one point: "God also created the Christ of our earth. Our earth was desolate and empty. Ignorance weighed upon us. We left our darkness and turned to you. We were once darkness, but now we are light in the Lord." - He describes the resurrection of Jesus Christ with the words of Genesis. So here there was still an awareness of what was in the Mysteries themselves. In the Mysteries there was no difference between the process that the Myste had to undergo and the cosmic process. Therefore, every ritual was written in the same way as the description of the creation of the world. If we could compare within the Egyptian teaching the description of the path of the Egyptian mystics, we would see that it is one and the same as the cosmic development process. It is translated into the microcosmic what has taken place in the macrocosmic.

I would like to point out that such traces are not only to be found in Augustine. We also find them in other church scholars [for example in Eusebius] when they describe the life of Jesus. However, we have to go back to the fourth century, where the descriptions were even more fluid; we even have to go back to the third and second centuries. When we read or hear descriptions of the whole course of life, when we hear stories of the resurrection and ascension, then for those who are able to judge these things, it sounds like the translation of the Mystery initiation process.

After all, the Gospels, which later became authoritative and in which the view was crystallized and fixed, can no longer be interpreted. Eusebius was still Myste. So I think that if we look at the Gospels, we can still see from the style that something has remained of these old institutions of correspondence between the cosmological process and the initiation or initiation process:

Take the Gospel of John. What is it but a betrayal of the mystical - in style and layout nothing but individualized cosmogony? "In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God" and so on. This beginning of the Gospel of John starts in exactly the same way as Genesis. We are dealing with a Genesis. These phenomena show us directly the clear traces of the fact that we are actually dealing with initiatory writings in the Gospels, which did not exist in the first centuries of the Christian era. Only [oral] tradition existed at that time. We essentially owe the Gospels to the second century.

If we hold all this together, we will see even in the Gospels how this trace is still present of the correspondence between cosmogonic and individual development. Such a thing as is mentioned in the Gospel of Matthew cannot be understood at all if it is not interpreted theosophically, if the same thing is not seen in it that the Buddhists have gone through in forty-two stages. We are absorbed by God and born out of him again.

He who has developed this way of looking at things within Essaeanism, who has stepped out of the first teachings before he stepped out, must have been deeply imbued with this fact, must have had clearly before his eyes through a higher revelation what every other man must first laboriously gather together. It must have dawned on him in a single great glance.

Now we have in the Gospels - and this is the question I still have to raise - the indication that we are dealing with a personality who, in a single glance, encompassed everything that can be described as teachings of the past, as the result of past experiences. In a single vision we have the content of the Gospel, and now we must ask: Is it a real renewal in this period of time of this world mystery that is otherwise present in the symbol, this world mystery that is present to us in Father, Mother and Child? Is there such a view? I believe that it is the whole personality, the real personality, which underlies this, which radiates out as if renewing the past. This seems to me to be the apparition on the holy mountain, the apparition that Jesus had when he had only his most intimate disciples with him - Peter, James and John, his brother - and the apparition of Moses and Elijah.

If we visualize this apparition, if we understand it in this way and interpret it, then it becomes clear to us what we are dealing with here. Only from this apparition can we come to a full understanding of what this personality was through whom Christianity came into the world.

We can now understand what was going on, and once we have understood that, then we come to a mystical understanding of Christianity. This is the most important moment of this vision, where the founder of Christianity is not actually something isolated, but something in which the deepest mystery of existence was resolved, in which the deepest experience of man is concentrated.

It is impossible, since the time is too far advanced, to show what is radiated in the teachings and in the life of Jesus. When we understand this phenomenon, the necessary light will spread within us.

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