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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: The Son of God and the Son of Man. The Sacrifice of Orpheus 16 Jan 1911, Berlin
Translated by E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

The story relates that Eurydice, the transmitter of his revelations, his soul-bride, was torn away from him through the bite of an adder—a picture of his human failings—and carried off to the underworld. He could win her back only by passing through an Initiation.—Whenever we are told of a journey into the underworld, an Initiation is meant.
He had indeed acquired the capacity to make his way into the underworld, but on his return, when his eyes again encountered the sunlight, Eurydice vanished from his sight.
Hence the command of the God of the underworld that no man may seek to penetrate the mysteries of childhood, to remember where the Threshold is fixed.
124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: The Voice of the Angelos and the Speech of the Exousiai 02 Feb 1911, Koblenz
Translated by E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

We know that the Bible is here referring to John the Baptist. But to understand why the word ‘Angel’ is used we must go back to conditions in an earlier period of our Earth's evolution and consider what ranks of Beings belonged to it.
If we direct the light gained from Spiritual Science upon the words of the Bible, all the bleakness with which materialists are so prone to invest them, disappears. We understand the real meaning of the words which say that God sent an Angel in advance, to prepare the way of the one who was to come. The Angel is a more highly developed Being of the hierarchy of the rank immediately above man, a Being who sheathed his spirit in the maya of a human body—in this case in the body of John the Baptist, the reincarnated Elijah. If we are to understand the words of the Bible truly, it is only a matter of shedding the right light upon them and interpreting them literally.
124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: The Higher Members of Man's Constitution 28 Feb 1911, Berlin
Translated by E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

The first contain something which endures as a destructive element in a man's whole life; they are images held in the astral body which react upon the whole human constitution and gradually undermine it; they are closely connected with the way in which a man in his life on the physical plane slowly undermines his forces until he dies.
But we must be quite clear that what happens in life is under the sway of necessity. When there is something unusual about the direction taken by a current of air the physicist can apply his laws to discover the reason.
Mirth or laughter indicates that our ‘I’ feels more confident of its understanding and grasp of things and events. In laughter, our ‘I’ gathers such intensity that it pours itself out over the environment.
124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: Laws of Rhythm in the Domain of Soul-and-Spirit 07 Mar 1911, Berlin
Translated by E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

To understand the reason for this, many subjects recently touched upon must be connected both with facts already familiar to us and with others that are new.
But He said to those around him: ‘But whom do you say is the ‘I’?’ And Peter answered: ‘We understand the ‘I’ in its essential spirituality to be Thou, the Christ!’ And Christ charged those around Him: ‘Tell nothing of this to ordinary men, for they cannot yet understand this mystery!’
Contemplation of what took place on Golgotha could now lead to an experience that could hitherto have been undergone only in the Mysteries. An understanding of the Christ Impulse is consequently the most important thing which a man can acquire for his earthly being, for the power which, since the coming of the Christ Impulse, must waken in the human ‘I’.
124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: The Moon-Religion of Jahve and its Reflection in Arabism 13 Mar 1911, Berlin
Translated by E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

So we find ourselves living, but now with full understanding, at a point where two streams converge. The first stream should give us a deeper understanding of the Christ-problem and the Mystery of Golgotha; the other should inaugurate new ideas and concepts of reality.
And in a certain sense it is the adherents of Spiritual Science who will find it particularly necessary to understand these facts. Some of our members might counter the exposition I have been giving here, by saying: What you have told us is very difficult to understand and we shall have to work at it for a long time.
They build instead upon what can be tested by human reason, understanding and intellect. Those in touch with the source of our Rosicrucian Spiritual Science know that whatever is said has been carefully tested.
124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: Rosicrucian Wisdom in Folk-Mythology 10 Jun 1911, Berlin
Translated by E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

Instead of the pictures of the copper, silver and golden cloaks we speak to-day in terms which convey an understanding of how the solid physical body is related to the other sheaths of the human being as copper ore is related to silver and gold.
It will become active again but in such a way as to kindle human powers and forces; and it will enable us to have some understanding of what is meant by the spirit of Rosicrucianism—the spirit that must make its way into the souls of men.
If there are souls who recognise their duty to the World-Spirit and endeavour to understand the riddles of the world, the hopes cherished by the best men of earlier times will be fulfilled.
124. Excursus on the Gospel According to St. Mark: A Retrospect 17 Oct 1910, Berlin
Translator Unknown

All this shows that a new understanding and new conclusions with regard to Christian truths are necessary to the education of to-day.
From these we receive many ideas that in no way prevent our understanding the problem of Christ, but may, if rightly received, actually lead us to a true and full appreciation of Christ Jesus.
Ideas dealing with the Bodhisattvas have not existed for any length of time in the spiritual life of the West, and it is only when we realise what these beings are that we are able to rise to a true understanding of what the Christ has been, is, and can continue to be to mankind. From this you see how wide is the circle of spiritual development that has to become fruitful to man before he really understands what it is so necessary he should understand concerning the education, culture, and spiritual life within which he lives.
124. Excursus on the Gospel According to St. Mark: Some Practical Points of View 24 Oct 1910, Berlin
Translator Unknown

If Anthropology can be compared with a man who gathers facts and tries to understand them by walking about on the level, Theosophy can be compared with the observer who climbs a mountain in order to observe the surrounding country from its summit.
To make what is seen on spiritual heights so clear to the understanding, that sound logic and a healthy sense of truth can accept and understand them presents the very greatest difficulties.
Let us suppose the following—at some period of your lives you grasp a thought or idea. You understand the idea that comes to you. By what means do you understand it? Only through other ideas that you have previously accepted.
124. Excursus on the Gospel According to St. Mark: Lecture One 07 Nov 1910, Berlin
Translator Unknown

If we enquire into the causes of this we have to understand that in the evolution of the world a middle period always comes after the first three of any seven periods.
Naturally this spiritual impulse could not be understood at first, only in the periods that follow will it be possible for him to understand it. But now we can at least recognise the task before us:—We have to refill our ideas with spirit from within.
The construction of machines, instruments, telephones and the like, is something very different from understanding science in the right way or carrying it a step further. Anyone can make use of an electric apparatus without necessarily understanding it.
124. Excursus on the Gospel According to St. Mark: Lecture Two 06 Dec 1910, Berlin
Translator Unknown

Spiritual science alone can provide a foundation for such an understanding, and also for all it has to tell us about the Christ-Event. What is the fact of greatest importance in the Christ-Impulse?
He describes astronomical occurrences when he says:—“Understand what I have to say to you in this way: suppose there is here a wall on which visible shadows play.
When you have done this you will have taken the first step in the understanding of one of the greatest documents in the world—the Gospel according to St. Mark. 1.

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