Ancient Mysteries and Christianity

GA 87 — 29 March 1902, Berlin

21. Gnosis and the Apocalypse

Highly Esteemed Attendees!

We began to characterize the Apocalypse last time. It represents a late product of the various views that developed around the time of Christ's birth, especially in the schools from which the deeper theological teachings of Christianity emerged, which only later took on a popular form. We can imagine the process that took place in the first and perhaps also in the second century after Christ in such a way that the old teachings that came from the Mysteries were cultivated in the most diverse ways in the most diverse places of learning, in the most diverse mystery schools, and in particular experienced a spiritual, that is, a theological deepening; these old teachings and this theological deepening are undoubtedly the basis of later Christian theology. With this later Christian theology, it is the case that ecclesiastical Christianity, under the leadership of the spiritual world, the bishops and so on, then tries to popularize it. Now I believe that we can gain an insight into the way in which what is now presented to us as Christian mystical theology was formed in the first centuries [after the birth of Christ] if we follow how Christian dogma was formed in its actual spiritual quality. One then gets the impression that it was formed essentially under the influence of the most diverse mystery cults. What is the relationship between the Apocalypse and this world of mystery cults and later theology? It can still be seen in the Apocalypse that it emerged from the endeavor to absorb and process the teachings of the ancients and to teach them as a preparation, as it were, as something that is ordered towards the new Christianity, as something that is called to replace the old mysteries and to proclaim the deeper content of the same as a world gospel.

If you follow the Apocalypse in its entire composition, you can clearly see this twofold character. You can clearly see the old views precisely represented in the basic components and then you can also see them shimmering through: Now the time is fulfilled, a new way of salvation has come into the world. This new way is the one that has been lived out in Christianity.

So we can trace the two interwoven components of the Apocalypse, which are presented to us in a double number seven, a number seven with a view to the past and a number seven with a view to the future. Everything that is told to us at the opening of the seven seals refers to the past, and everything that is told to us at the sounding of the seven trumpets refers to the future. The fact that the book with the seven seals only refers to the past is clear from the solution to it. If you want to understand the whole situation, you have to visualize it: What has been taught in the theosophical-mystical schools? One must also have an idea [of] who the writer of the Apocalypse was. It is not the specific personality that matters, but what these views arose from, what they were formed from. It was only in the middle of the second century that they were worked together into the form in which we have them now. The author emerged from Gnostic schools that still flourished everywhere in the second century AD. They were a continuation of the old Gnostic schools, which did nothing more than further develop the mysteries. It is difficult to find out what was taught in these Gnostic schools. There are only a few documents that can give us the necessary clues about the actual spiritual world [of these schools]. These Gnostic schools, which were widespread throughout the world at that time, had a spiritualized view of the ancient mystery cults. I do not mean to say that it was a higher level. The spiritual in knowledge does not have to be a higher level than that when one penetrates down into life and grasps the spiritual there. The actual Gnostics, on whom the Christian doctrine is based, were essentially theologians and philosophers who cultivated a very intellectual doctrine. The main thing with the Gnostics - the basic nerve that we can distil from the various schools - was in fact a kind of longing to connect the world of man with the great world of the cosmos. Last time I showed that the Christ doctrine is the cosmic conviction that the redemptive history of humanity is a model of what takes place in the individual human being.

I would like to give a summary of the world view, which perhaps has not really been cultivated in any Gnostic school, but which emerges as an average conception. We must imagine that it is a matter of showing a strict parallelism between the course of the great world and the life of the individual human being. The Gnostic wanted above all to depict the individual human life as that which repeats the macrocosmic microcosmically on its path at the various stages of development, just as the historical aspects of world life are also repeated.

[To show how the historical world life lived in the Gnostic view - to illustrate how it was expressed - I will use the "Exodus from Egypt"). It is an allegory of the inner development of the soul. The land is to be understood as the body of the individual. [The exodus from Egypt thus corresponds to the entry into the "Garden of Eden and the exodus from the sensual body" in the story of the Israelites.] The Gnostic seeks to overcome this, to move out, as it were. By approaching the higher, he is led out [from the sensual nature] by the Initiate. He is not immediately led to Palestine, to the "Promised Land". He must first go through various stages of development. We have a symbol in the 'brazen serpent' set up by Moses as a remedy against the many snakes. Anyone who was bitten by a snake had to die. At the sight of the brazen serpent, however, he was to remain alive. The brazen serpent was nothing other than the prophetic foretelling of redemption through Christ Jesus. The serpent has always been an important symbol. The people then reached the inner world, the life of the soul, the Promised Land, where the Messiah must appear. This is how the Gnostics understood this event: as an allegory of the inner life of the soul. The serpent is regarded everywhere as a symbol of the development of spiritual life passing through matter. The [brazen] serpent symbolizes the destruction of the last material manifestation. The very last stage, the coarsest stage, is precisely that in which the Logos, the highest spirit of God, expresses itself, from which man, human individuality, must [wriggle] out. The turning back, the return of the earthly to the divine must be undertaken. The bronze serpent is the symbol for the exemplary human being who is so far advanced that he can contribute to the spiritualization of the rest of the world through his spiritualization. The Gnostics interpreted all historical events in this way. They saw them as allegories for individual soul processes of the actual human being and thus grew into the divine world processes.

I would like to present one such idea, in which the cosmological grows out [from the depths]: the idea of the initial state of the world. Formed out of the general nothingness, the Gnostic imagines the beginning of the world. Two great world lights then appear: [the Father and the Son; the eternal world spirit and the image of the eternal world spirit]. The All-Mother then appears as the third. The All-Mother is the material principle, and here the non-existence of matter triumphs. The Gnostics imagined matter as something that must be overcome. The highest of these is the Father with the Son. These divine entities work to recognize themselves in order to become life. This is what the development of the world means, what the actual becoming is.

When the world spirit - Father and Son - merges in the womb of the All-Mother, what is called the four elements - fire, earth, air and water - comes into being. These four elements represent in their spiritual essence what the Gnostics thought of as the highest Christ. They envisioned a supreme being that emerged through the marriage of the spiritual and the material. The material, as dark matter, was initially the primordial principle under the image of the All-Mother [who was just as primordial as the Father]. The two supreme spiritual entities unite with these four elements: Father and Son, and produce a spiritual-material entity: [the Christ]. The Christ strives back to the primordial ground of existence.

Then we find that [the Gnostics] thought of heaven as a kind of closed circle. However, they did not imagine the vault of heaven as such. Heaven with Father and Son is first of all the Logos, the spiritual-material entity that is now hidden in the universe and represents the Christ: As the highest celestial, spiritual-etheric entity, they thought of him as the cosmological entity of the universe. In addition to the fertilization of the "All Mother, however, a droplet of light flowed out into the chaos under the name of Sophia, Wisdom. Through this secondary light, which as a lost one in the world space has entered into a different kind of connection with matter than that which is represented in Christ, through this secondary light, through this Sophia, everything has come into being that has led to the formation of humanity - according to the view of the Gnostics. This is the lower, that which we will get to know further. Because it also originates from the two primordial lights, there will be a kind of parallelism with the Upper. Through the connection of Sophia with the chaotic, with the material element, that which is actually described to us in Gnosis comes into being. The whole doctrine of the origin of the world, as it is found in Gnosis, first arose from these small secondary planets of the "great light". The 'Sophia-World-Mother' - in contrast to the "All-Mother" - has fertilized matter once again. From this union of the droplet Sophia emerged the son Jaldabaoth. He produced seven more sons, and these are the seven powers, the seven spheres. We have before us the seven basic forces of the visible world, that is, that from which the world nature is built up, from the actual matter, from the life principle, from the astral body, from the animal soul and from the upper three spiritual forces. The whole human being is built up from these [seven basic forces]. But these emerged from the marriage of Sophia with the elements, so that Gnosis renewed the origin of the world. While Christ represents the actual product of the marriage of the earthly light, Jaldabaoth represents a kind of sub-deity that [worked] down to human existence and brought forth man. This is therefore a cosmological doctrine that reaches down to man.

How does the Gnostic now imagine the formation of man? He has man built up from the seven basic parts. But they are formed through the marriage of Sophia in such a way that they take the downward path. We have to make our way back again. So we have to find our way back. This is how the Gnostics imagined it: Jaldabaoth had gotten into some kind of argument with Sophia, who is from the heavenly lights themselves. If Jaldabaoth had formed man alone, then man would undoubtedly have been lost. It was only because the dispute resulted in a continuous cooperation between Jaldabaoth and Sophia that man was able to find his way back to God.

We have to imagine the story of creation in connection with the story of man in mystical allegorical form. The divine spark of light, the "Sophia", remained with mankind. They led it back, as it was a descent from the spiritual to the material. But the way back was not possible through their own strength. It was only possible because help came to man from the next sphere. This happened through the connection of a perfect human being with that which had previously developed into the highest sphere. This is symbolized in a gnostic way. The return of man to God was envisioned by the Gnostics in such a way that man was able to enter and complete the path to heaven, that he could gradually approach the divine in the course of the various lives. When man has then come so far that he has developed his memory to such an extent - this is gnostic - that in retrospect he can survey the whole cosmological development, as I have now presented it as a general gnostic conception, in such a way that he has it before him not merely as a doctrine but as a fact, when man has again traveled a part of the path in such a way that he sees the rest lying clearly before his spirit, then he is the one who is able to make the waters of the Nile flow upward.

Such people are the ones who are able to make the waters of the Nile flow upward.

Such people - so the Gnostics assume - exist. The Gnostics knew such people. These are the "messiahs". Now comes something that [the Gnostics] see in Christianity. There is a beginning, a connection halfway between Jesus and Christ. A personality is embodied in Jesus who is able to ally himself with the Christ of the upper region. This is how the Gnostics saw the emergence of the "Son of Man" - and also the emergence of the Buddha - on the one hand; and on the other, the descent of the Christ, the world spirit, and its connection with these "gods" developing from below.

I hope that I have at least evoked a general idea [of gnosis]. [In its essence] gnosis consists in the fact that man can reach this high degree of development in the course of various re-embodiments, and that he has reached the highest when not only his personal life lies before his memory, but when he can look back in this way, when his memory is so far extended that he is able to embrace all embodiments in his memory. This is how far Jesus was, who emerged from the small droplet of sidelight. He is ripe to receive the Christ from the upper regions as "Vahän", as a "vessel". The human being becomes the bearer of the Christ. Thus we have the Christ born out of the spiritual world and the Jesus Christ of the Gnostics.

This is the concept of Christ that gradually emerged in the first two centuries. It is the Christ [who develops an initiated person up to higher levels]. An initiated human being is the one who is developed. An initiated human being is the one who has developed to the highest human state, and a Christ is the one who has ascended to the highest spiritual. According to the Gnostics, it was a halfway connection.

We see this view again in the Apocalypse, only now it interprets the matter in the following way - I would like to present it in the following manner: The person who is on the path of perfection goes back step by step the elemental forces. One by one, the seven seals are unsealed. In this way he follows the initiatory path of the ancients. This path is there at the turn of the Christian world age. But there is also something higher, the gospel of Christ, which consists in the fact that through the long preparatory study man has become mature in his entirety to receive the gospel within himself. Thus what used to be a place of worship is now to be replaced. It is now to be replaced by the entirety of humanity. It is to be the temple of God.

Later it was said that it would be the church that took the place of the temple, and the cult of the past would be replaced by the new sacrifice of the Mass.

In the four parts of the Mass we see the spiritual life and its transformations expressed. First the spiritual, the Gospel - the way back is proclaimed. It goes through two parts of the Mass; bread and wine are offered. It then goes on to the consecration, in which the body and blood are actually transformed into the divine. And in communion, where man receives the divine, Christ is received through Jesus.

Later Christianity only externalized what was cultivated in the Gnostic schools. The person who sees and understands a Catholic mass will see nothing but an embodiment of what the Gnostics saw from their point of view as man's path to Christ, nothing but a popularization of the old mystery teachings. Whereas previously the individual had to be initiated, this initiation is now built up for the whole community, every day this symbolism is repeated for the community, and this repetition is intended to awaken those who are called to it.

Later Christianity endeavored to blur the old. It wanted to emphasize that it was something new, that a new era had dawned. Nevertheless, it will also be possible to rediscover many Gnostic views in the external symbolism, and thus to find old mysteries. But at the same time it will be seen that only those to whom the real meaning of the matter will dawn will be able to penetrate and reveal Christian symbolism. But it is a matter of popularization, and therefore [the Mass] must be repeated over and over again.

The Church Fathers - in their standpoint against the Gnostics - are almost on the same [standpoint]. Their endeavor was to blur what came over from the "old", and yet we can still find all the teachings expressed in symbolism, in the new church, which should be and wants to be "universal". In essence, the Apocalypse represents this replacement of the former, of the mysteries by the general communion of saints. The Apocalypse is nothing other than the paraphrase of the one sentence: The mystery is to become popular. Nothing else is to be achieved than that in the idea of the one-time original initiation - in the repetition of the mass action - it is pointed out again and again that everyone should walk the path and that he will find it when he is ripe for it.

I would just like to draw attention to one passage in the final chapter. The angel says to John: "Do not seal up the words of the prophecy in this book, for the time is near..." and so on. These things will show us that for us the Apocalypse is a paraphrase of the sentence: The mystery is to become popular. It is to revive as a church.

We only need to look at the whole skeleton of the Apocalypse to see that it is nothing other than a popularization of the stages of the Gnostic view. The seven seals signify the return path of man. At the opening of the first seal we are symbolized: the overcoming of the material. At the opening of the second seal: how man develops the higher spiritual forces within himself. At the opening of the third seal: how the understanding of the measure, order and harmony of the universe arises in him, how the spirit-matter becomes clear to him, where the great mystery of the world reveals itself to him.

So at first man is caught up in the material, then he comes to the principle of life.

On the fourth stage, matter is overcome, spirit and matter, through death. At the opening of the fifth seal, we see the spiritual powers of man emerge, the spiritual soul of man is unsealed, "the souls of those who were strangled for the word of God". After they were born again, "they cried out with a loud voice, saying, "Lord, holy and true, how long have you not judged and avenged our blood on those who dwell on the earth!"

At the opening of the seventh seal, the day of wrath breaks out, the day on which the wrath of God is poured out on all material things, where the higher is born out of the lower, the Budhi powers, the wisdom. Man becomes mature enough to sense what is actually divine. He becomes mature enough to sound the actual trumpets. This proclamation happened in the Gospel, and there we see how this maturity is expressed in the new message: Christ has come into the world and resounds through nature.

The seven trumpets represent the spiritualization, the coming to Christ of all human principles. While the Apocalypse initially follows the old mystery path, the sounding of the trumpets is intended to show us a new path that we are to find. In the Apocalypse we also see a kind of 'Exodus from Egypt' - in the second part. This is why we always have a reference to the plagues of animals, frogs and locusts. The Exodus of the Hebrews from Egypt to Palestine can be read as a parallel.

The exodus from Egypt is tailored to individual people. Where the writer then comes up to cosmological primal spirits, where he is in the midst of the heavenly world powers and what is represented in the higher heaven - in the middle the Lamb, the Christ - there he sees these cosmological ideas.

The book with the seven seals opens up the views of the ancient mystery cults to him. He imagines that I am being led before the Savior, Christ Jesus. The seven seals of the book are unsealed for me. That means nothing other than: It becomes clear to me that the world is built on the basis of seven principles that have flowed out of the Eternal. New things will now be proclaimed after man has reached the highest level, after wisdom and spiritual powers have developed, when the first trumpet sounds, the voice of the Lamb. Then Christ leads man further. In a larger human community, humanity is led back to the divine. We can see particularly clearly that this is the case when we see how the seventh vision [that of the New Jerusalem] is described last. This is nothing other than the new, larger community compared to the earlier, narrower community. The New Jerusalem is the new church, the new community. "And I saw a new heaven and a new earth." In the past, heaven and earth were also depicted: The light of dawn shone into the burial chambers.

Christ once called himself the cornerstone, the highest point of the pyramid. He is the one who has reached the highest. - "And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband." She is the new bride who is to be married in the new spirit. The Spirit is to unite with the church and it is to present the temple. "And he who sat on the throne said, 'Behold, I am making all things new! And he said to me, 'Write, for these words are true and certain. And he said to me: "It is done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give to the thirsty from the fountain of living water freely." The living water is the way up. Man has to make his way upwards through material things, he has to turn upwards. "He who overcomes will inherit all things, and I will be his God and he will be my son." The new Jerusalem, the bride of the Lamb is the new church.

Four roads lead to the new city. It "had twelve gates, and on the gates were twelve angels and names written on them, namely the twelve families of the children of Israel". Each path leads through three gates. "From the morning three gates, from midnight three gates, from noon three gates, from evening three gates." The twelve gates and twelve angels are twelve powers. The length, width and height of the city are the same - like the pyramid. The wall measures "one hundred and forty-four cubits, according to the measure of a man, which the angel has". ... "The wall of the city had twelve foundations, and on them the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb." ... "The foundations of the wall were adorned with precious stones." ... "The twelve gates were twelve pearls." ... "I saw no temple in the city, for the Lord God Almighty is its temple and the Lamb." - This states that the outer place is replaced by the spiritual temple. "The city has no need of the sun or the moon." These old lights are replaced. "The lamp is the Lamb." All the old symbols have merged into the Lamb, who brought the actual Gospel. But they prepared Christianity.

I would like to briefly summarize once again the basic character of what the Apocalypse wants to say: the Christian church has absorbed the ancient mysteries. What the ancient mysteries tell us is the doctrine of the sevenfold path of man. What Christianity tells us is presented in a generally understandable way. In place of the former temples, the Church places the return of the microcosmic to the macrocosmic. We can only understand the Apocalypse if we understand it from the gnosis: that we see in Jesus Christ the Paschal Lamb who has overcome the world, that through his religion he has made himself the bearer of all humanity and then the mystery temples are replaced by the Church. And this is the main proposition to be expressed by the Apocalypse.

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