The Temple Legend II
GA 93
29 May 1905, Berlin
13. Concerning the Lost Temple and How it is to be Restored III
(In connection with the Legend of the True Cross, or Golden Legend)
Since we have spoken several times about Christianity and its present and future development, we have reached the point where today we have also to consider the meaning of the Cross symbol—not so much historically as factually.
You know, of course, what an all-embracing and symbolical meaning the emblem of the Cross has had for Christianity; and today I would like just to shed light on the connection between the Cross symbol and the significance of Solomon's Temple for world history.
Indeed there exists a so-called holy legend about the whole development of the Cross; in it we are dealing less with the Cross sign or its universal symbolical meaning, than with that very special and particular Cross of which Christ speaks, the very Cross on which Christ Jesus was crucified. Now you know too that the Cross is a symbol for all men, and it is found not only in Christianity, but in the religious beliefs and symbolism of all peoples, so that it must have the same common significance for all mankind. However, what particularly interests us today is how the Cross symbol acquired its basic significance for Christianity.
The Christian legend about the Cross 1Parts of this legend are to be found in The Golden Legend or Lives of the Saints, a collection of legends from the thirteenth century by Jacobus de Voragine, translated into English by William Caxton (edited by F.S. Ellis, Temple Classics, 1939). In this the death of Adam is described and how he sent ‘Seth his son into Paradise for to fetch the oil of mercy, where he received certain grains of the fruit of the tree of mercy by an angel ...
‘And then he laid the grains or kernels under his father's tongue and buried him in the vale of Hebron; and out of his mouth grew three trees of the three grains, of which trees the cross that our Lord suffered his passion on was made ...’ In another place in the same work we are told more about the history of the wood of the cross. Under the section headed ‘The Invention of the Holy Cross’ it is stated:
‘... it is read in the Gospel of Nicodemus that, when Adam waxed sick, Seth his son went to the gate of Paradise terrestrial for to get the oil of mercy for to anoint withal his father's body ...
‘In another place it is read that the angel brought him a branch, and commanded him to plant it in the Mount of Lebanon. Yet find we in another place that he gave him of the tree that Adam ate of, and said to him that when that bare fruit he should be guerished and all whole. When Seth came again lie found his father dead and planted this tree upon his grave, and it endured there unto the time of Solomon. And because he saw that it was fair, he did hew it down and set it in his house named Saltus. And when the Queen of Sheba came to visit Solomon she worshipped this tree, because she said the Saviour of all the world should be hanged thereon ...
‘Then, after this history, the cross by which we be saved came of the tree by which we were damned.’
This extract of The Golden Legend by William Caxton differs from the German version in that some details given by Caxton are omitted in the German and vice versa. The fact that the tree was not found suitable for the building and was used as a bridge over which the Queen of Sheba was to pass is not mentioned in the English text.
In Bilder Okkulter Siegel und Säulen. Der Munchner Kongress, Pfingsten 1907, und seine Auswirkungen, Bibl. 284, there is a comprehensive note dealing with the source of the Temple Legend. It is there said that, according to the research of Otto Zockler (Das Kreuz Christi, chapter headed: ‘Medieval Legends concerning the Wood of the Cross,’ Gutersloh 1875—preserved in the University Library, Basle) the legend about the three seeds from the Tree of Life forms part of a complicated series of legends from the twelfth century onwards. The earliest literary mention of Adam being buried on Golgotha is quoted by the Alexandrian Church Father, Origen, from a tradition out of the second century, to which was added the tradition of Seth's journey to Paradise which is recorded in the third century in the Nicodemus Gospel, which originally contained an account of the fetching of the Oil of Mercy for the healing of Seth's sick father, Adam. It was only in later centuries that the genealogical connection between the wood of the Tree of Paradise and the Cross of Christ was established in its various forms.
This legend, including the elaborations concerning Seth's journey to Paradise for the three seeds, was freely quoted by Rudolf Steiner on many occasions including: The present lecture on 29th May 1905, lectures in Leipzig on 15th December 1906 (Bibl. 97), in Berlin on 17th December 1906 (Bibl. 96), in Munich on 21st May 1907 (Bibl. 284), in Cassel on 29th June 1907 and in Basle on 25th November 1907 (both in Bibl. 100) and in Dornach on 19th December 1915 (Bibl. 165).
In his lecture in Cassel, The Golden Legend was characterised as having provided a subject for occult instruction since the most ancient times and, referring to Seth, it interprets his mission as of one who could see ‘into the end times, when the harmony between the two principles of mankind would be re-established.’ By the two principles is meant the two trees pertaining to the red and purple blood which are represented in the two pillars of the Temple.
As is evident from the interpretation of the legend by spiritual science the pictures which it presents are symbolic of the Fourth Degree in the Rosicrucian initiation, which is characterised by the ‘Finding of the Philosopher's Stone’ and is also known as the guldene, or ‘golden degree.’ This gives us an esoteric explanation of why it was usually referred to by Rudolf Steiner as The Golden Legend.
There is a much longer and more detailed version of this legend in an old Cornish legend (The Ancient Cornish Drama, edited and translated by Edwin Norris, Oxford University, 1859).
In this version there is not only the account of the fetching of the Oil of Mercy by Seth, but also of the attempt by Solomon to incorporate the wood from this tree into the Temple and its final rejection.
The portion of this drama relating to the Oil of Mercy is also to be found in Lyra Celtica, an anthology of Celtic poetry edited by E. A. Sharp and J. Matthay Oohn Grant, Edinburgh, 1932). is as follows: we shall begin with it.
The wood or tree from which the Cross had been taken is not ordinary wood, but—so the legend relates—was, in the beginning, a scion of the Tree of Life, which had been cut for Adam, the first man. This scion was planted in the earth by Adam's son, Seth, and the young tree developed three trunks which grew together. The famous rod of Moses 2Also, according to a mystic Hebrew source, the rod of Moses inscribed with the unutterable name of God is nothing else than the Tree of Life. In the Midrasch Wojoscha (the smaller Midrasch commentary on the later legends of the Old Testament) it is said: ‘I (Moses) asked her (Zippora) where he (Jithro) obtained this tree? She answered: It is the rod which the Holy One, Blessed may He be! created on the sabbath eve after having created His world. The Holy One, Blessed may He be! handed it to the first man, who handed it to Chanoch, who handed it to Noa, who handed it to Sem, who handed it to Abraham, who handed it to Jacob, who brought it with him to Egypt and gave it to Joseph his son. When Joseph died, the Egyptians plundered his house and brought this roc to Pharoah's palace. My father Jithro was one of Pharoah's great astrologers, he saw the rod, conceived a desire for it, stole it and brought it to his own house. On this rod was inscribed the unutterable name of God and the ten plagues which the Holy One, Blessed may He be! would one day cause to fall on the Egyptians in the land of Egypt ... And how many days and how many years did this rod lie already in my father's house until the day when he took it in his hand, went out into the garden and planted it in the ground. When he returned to the garden to fetch it he found that it had already sprouted and grown blossoms.’ (Quoted from Hans Ludwig Held: ‘Von Golem und Shem.’ from the periodical: Das Reich, January 1917). was later cut from this wood. Then, in the legend, the same wood plays a role in connection with King Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem. That is, it was to have been used as a main pillar, in building the Temple. But then something peculiar came to light. It appeared that it would not fit in any way. It would not let itself be inserted in the Temple, and so it was laid across a brook, as a bridge. Here it was little valued until the Queen of Sheba came; as she was crossing it, she saw what the point about this piece of wood was. Here indeed she had for the first time met again with the meaning of the wood [used for this] bridge, which lay there between the two spheres, between the bank on this side and the bank on the other side, for crossing over the stream. So then, the Cross on which the Redeemer hung was made out of this [same] wood, after which it set out upon its various further travels.
Thus you see that the point of this legend is to do with the origin and evolution of the human race. Adam's son Seth is supposed to have taken this scion from the Tree of Life, and it then grew three trunks. These three trunks symbolise the three principles, the three underlying forces of nature, Atma, Buddhi and Manas, which have grown together and form the trinity which is the foundation of all growth and all development. It is apt that Seth—the son of Adam who took the place of Abel, murdered by Cain should have planted the scion in the earth.
You know that on the one hand we are dealing with the Cain current [of evolution] and on the other hand with the descendants of Abel and Seth. The sons of Cain, who work upon the outer world, cultivate the sciences and arts in particular. They are the ones who bring in the stones from the outer world to build the Temple. It is through their art that the Temple is to be built. The descendants of the line of Abel/Seth are the so-called Sons of God, who cultivate the true spiritual part of man's nature. These two currents were always somewhat in antithesis. On the one hand we have the worldly activity of man, the development of those sciences which serve man's comfort and outward life in general; on the other hand we have the Sons of God, occupied with the development of man's higher attributes.
We must make ourselves clear about it: the viewpoint from which the Legend of the True Cross springs, makes a firm distinction between the mere outward building of the World Temple through science and technology, and what as religious warp and woof works towards the sanctification of the whole Temple of Humanity., Only because this Temple of Humanity is given a higher task—only because the outer building, so to speak, serving as it does only our convenience, makes itself into an expression of the House of God—can it become a receptacle for the spiritual inner part in which the higher tasks of humanity are nurtured. Only because strength is transformed into striving for heavenly virtue outward form into beauty, the words of man's ordinary intercourse into the words that serve divine wisdom, and thus only because the worldly is remodelled into the divine, can it attain its perfection. When the three virtues, Wisdom, Beauty and Strength, become the receptacle of the divine, then will the Temple of Humanity be perfected. That is how the viewpoint underlying this legend looks at the matter.
We must therefore picture—quite in the sense of this legend—that up to the appearance of Christ Jesus on earth, there were two tendencies: the one, that built the earthly temple, that had its impact on the doings of men, so that at a later time the Divine Word that had come to earth through the Christ Jesus, could be received. A dwelling had to be prepared for the appearance of the Divine Word on earth. Next, the Divine itself should for a while develop itself upwards over the course of time as a kind of parallel tendency to the second current. Hence a distinction is made between the sons of men, the descendants of Cain, who were to prepare the worldly aspect, and the sons Abel/Seth, who cultivated the divine aspect, until the two streams could be united with each other, Christ Jesus united these two streams. The Temple had first to be built outwardly, therefore, until, in the shape of Christ Jesus, He should arrive Who was able to raise it up again in three days. On the one hand, then, we have the current of the Sons of Cain, and on the other that of the Abel/Seth line, both of which are preparing the development of mankind, so that the Son of God can then unite the two sides, and make the two streams into one. This finds expression in the holy legend in a profound way.
Seth himself is the one who planted the scion that he had taken for Adam from the Tree of Life, and raised a tree with three trunks. What is the meaning of this triple stemmed tree? Nothing else at all than the trinity, Atma, Buddhi and Manas, the threefold higher nature of man which will be implanted in his lower principles. But within man this is veiled at first. Through his three bodies—physical, etheric and astral—man is at first like an outer covering for the real divine trinity, Atma, Buddhi and Manas. You must imagine, therefore, that the trinity of physical, etheric and astral body are like an outer representation of the higher forces of Atma, Buddhi and Manas. And just as the artist fashions outer forms or expresses a certain idea in colours, so these three coverings also express a work of art. If you conceive these higher principles as the idea of a work of art, you will have come half way to grasping how the life of these three bodies is made up.
Now man is indeed living in his physical, etheric and astral sheaths, together with his ‘I’, through which he will so transform his threefold nature that the three higher principles find their appropriate dwelling place and feel at home here on earth. That had to be provided for by the Old Covenant. Through the arts of the race of Cain, it had to bring Sons of Men into the world, and through these Sons of Men were to be produced all the outward things that would serve the physical, etheric and astral bodies. What outward things were these?
The things which serve the physical body are firstly all that is contrived by technology to satisfy the physical body and provide for its comfort. Then, what we have in the way of the social and political institutions which [regulate] men's living together, what relates to nourishment and reproduction [of the race], all serve the development of the etheric body. And working upon the astral body we have the sphere of moral codes and ethics, bringing the instincts and emotions under control, which regulate and raise up the astral nature to a higher stage.
Thus, during the Old Covenant, the Sons of Cain were building the Three-tiered Temple. In all this, since it is made up of our outer institutions—in which you can includeour dwellings and tools, the social and political organs, the system of morals—is the building of the Sons of Cain, that serves the lower members of man's nature.
The other tendency worked alongside, presided over by the Sons of God, their pupils and followers. From this stream come the servants of the divine world order, the attendants of the Ark of the Covenant. In them we find something which, as a separate current, runs parallel to [that of] those who serve the external world. They occupied a special position. Only after Solomon's Temple hadbeen erected was the Ark of the Covenant to be placed inside it; that is to say, everything else had to be made subservient to the Ark of the Covenant, to be arranged around it. Everything which was formerly of a worldly nature was to become an external expression, an outer covering, for what the Ark of the Covenant meant for mankind. The meaning of the Temple of Solomon will best be understood by whoever visualises it as something which expresses outwardly in its physiognomy what the Ark of the Covenant should be, in its soul nature.
What has given life to man's outward three bodies, has been taken by the Sons of God from the Tree of Life. That is symbolically expressed in that building wood later used for Christ's Cross. It was first given to the Sons of God. What did they do with it? What is the deeper meaning of the wood of the Cross? In this holy legend about the wood of the Cross lies a very deep meaning.
For what in general is the task of the human being in his earthly evolution? He has to raise the present three bodies with which he is endowed to a higher stage. Thus, he must raise his physical body to a higher realm and likewise his etheric and astral bodies. This development is incumbent upon humanity. That is the real sense of it: to transform our three bodies into the three higher members of the whole divine plan of creation.
There is another kingdom above that which man has immediately and physically around him. But to which kingdom does man in his physical nature belong? At the present stage of his evolution, he belongs with his physical nature to the mineral kingdom. Physical, chemical and mineral laws hold sway over man's physical body. Yet even as far as his spiritual nature is concerned, he belongs to the mineral kingdom, since he understands through his intellect only what is mineral, Life, as such, he is only gradually learning to comprehend. Precisely for this reason, official science disowns life, being still at that stage of development in which it can only grasp the dead, the mineral. It is in the process of learning to understand this in very intricate detail. Hence it understands the human body only in so far as it is a dead, mineral thing. It treats the human body basically as something dead with which one works, as if with a substance in a chemical laboratory. Other substances are introduced into [the body], in the same way that substances are poured into a retort. Even when the doctor, who nowadays is brought up entirely on mineral science, sets about working on the human body, it is as though the latter were only an artificial product.
Hence we are dealing with man's body at the stage of the mineral kingdom in two ways: man has acquired reality in the mineral kingdom through having a physical body, and with his intellect is only able to grasp facts relating to the mineral kingdom. This is a necessary transitional stage for man. However, when man no longer relies only on the intellect but also upon intuition and spiritual powers, we will then be aware we are moving into a future in which our dead mineral body will work towards becoming one that is alive. And our science must lead the way, must prepare for what has to happen with the bodily essence in the future. In the near future, it must itself develop into something which has life in itself,recognise the life inherent in the earth for what it is. For in a deeper sense it is true, it is the thoughts of man that prepare the future. As an old Indian aphorism rightly says: What you think today, that you will be tomorrow.
The very being of the world springs out of living thought; not from dead matter. What outward matter is, is a consequence of living thought, just as ice is a consequence of water; the material world is, as it were, frozen thoughts. We must dissolve it back again into its higher elements, because we grasp life in thought. If we are able to lead the mineral up into life, if we transform [it into] the thoughts of the whole of human nature, then we will have succeeded, our science will have become a science of the living and not of dead matter. We shall raise thereby the lowest principle [of man]—at first in our understanding, and later also in reality—into the next sphere. And thus we shall raise each member of man's nature—the etheric and the astral included—one stage higher.
What man formerly used to be, we call, in theosophical terminology, the three Elementary Kingdoms [See the chart at the end of the notes to Lecture 10]. These preceded the Mineral Kingdom in which we live today; that is, the Kingdom to which our science restricts itself, and in which our physical body lives. The three Elementary Kingdoms are bygone stages [of evolution]. The three Higher Kingdoms—the Plant Kingdom, the Animal Kingdom and the Human Kingdom—which will develop themselves out of the Mineral Kingdom, are as yet only at a rudimentary stage.
The lowest principle in man, [the physical body,] must indeed still pass through these three kingdoms, just as it is at present passing through the Mineral Kingdom. Just as today man lives in the Mineral Kingdom with his physical nature, so in the future he will live in the Plant Kingdom, and then rise to still higher Kingdoms. Today with our physical nature we are in a transitional stage between the Mineral and Plant Kingdoms, with our etheric nature in transition from the Plant Kingdom to the Animal Kingdom, and with our astral nature in transition from the Animal Kingdom to the Human Kingdom. And finally, we extend beyond the three Kingdoms into the Divine Kingdom, with that part which we have in the Sphere of Wisdom, where we extend in our own nature beyond the astral.
Thus man is engaged in an ascent. But this is not brought about by any outer contrivance or construction, but by the living self which is awakened in us; which does not use mere outward building stones, but works in a creative and growing way. This force of life must enter into evolution and must first take hold of man's innermost being; his religious life must be gripped by living forces. Therefore what the Sons of Cain did for the lower members of man's nature during the Old Covenant was a kind of preparation, and what the prophets, the guardians of the Ark of the Covenant, did was like a prophetic forecast of the future. The Divine should now descend into the Ark of the Covenant, into the soul, so that it may itself dwell in the Temple as Holy of Holies.
Adam, the first man, was already endowed, from the Tree of Life, with these living forces of metamorphosis and transformation, the creatively working forces that re-shape Nature. But [these forces] were entrusted to those not engaged in the work of outward building, to the Sons of God, the sons of Abel and Seth. Through Christianity, these forces should now become common property; the two streams should unite together. And it is basically a Christian attitude today which holds that nothing external, no temple, no house, no social institution, ought to be created, that is not red hot with inner life, with the life-giving force rather than the mineral force that can only manipulate things.
The first attempt which was made to guide the lower nature of man to a higher stage was Solomon's Temple, as we have seen. The pentagon was to be seen at the entrance as the great symbol, for man was to strive towards the fifth principle [of his nature]; that is to say, human nature had to raise itself up from the lower principles to the higher, each member [of man's being] was to be ennobled.
And here we come to the Cross's real meaning, which has led it to acquire such basic and real significance as a symbol of Christianity. What is the Cross? There are three Kingdoms towards which mankind is striving—the Plant Kingdom, the Animal Kingdom and the Human Kingdom. Today man finds his reality in the Mineral Kingdom, to which plants, animals and man belong. You should see it as it is meant in all creeds of wisdom, that man as a being of soul and spirit is a part of the universal soul, the world soul as Giordano Bruno, for example, called it.3Philotheus Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) De rerum Principiis Elementis et Causis, Dialogue: ‘Universal reasoning is the most inward, real and individual faculty and a potential part of the World Soul.’ Perhaps the individual soul is like a drop in the world soul which we can imagine as a great ocean. Now Plato said about this, that the world soul has been crucified on the world body.4See note 10 to the preceding lecture.
The world soul, as it expresses itself in man, is spread out over the Mineral Kingdom. It must raise itself above this, and evolve upwards to the three higher Kingdoms. Hence it must become incorporated in the Plant, Animal and Human Kingdoms during the next three Rounds. The fourth Round is nothing else than the incorporation of the human soul into the Mineral Kingdom, the fifth Round into the Plant Kingdom, the sixth into the Animal Kingdom, and finally the seventh Round is the embodiment of man into the Human Kingdom proper, in which man will become wholly an image of the Godhead. Until then man has to take the world body as his sheath three times.
If we take a look at mankind's future, it presents itself to us as threefold materiality—vegetable, animal and human. This human [substance] is not the same, however, as the substantiality we have today; for the latter is mineral, since man has indeed so far only arrived at the mineral cycle [in his evolution]. Only when the lowest Kingdom has [become] the Human Kingdom, when there are no more lower beings, when all beings have been redeemed by man through the force of his own life, then he will have arrived in the seventh Round, where God rests, because man himself creates. Then will have come the seventh Day of Creation, in which man will have taken on the likeness of God. These are the stages in the story of creation.
Now plant, animal and man, as they stand before us today, are only the germ of what they are to become. The plant of today is only a symbolical indication of something which is to appear in the next human evolutionary cycle in greater glory and clarity. And when man has overcome and stripped off animality, he will have become something of which today he is only a hint. Thus the Plant, Animal and Human Kingdoms are the three material kingdoms through which man has to pass; they are to be world body, and the soul has to be crucified on this world body.
Be clear from now on about the respective positions of plant, animal and man. The plant is the precise counterpart of man. There is a very deep and significant meaning in our conceiving the plant as the exact counterpart of man, and man as the inverse of plant nature. Outer science does not concern itself with such matters; it takes things as they present themselves to the outer senses. Science connected with theosophy, however, considers the meaning of things in their connection with all the rest of evolution. For, as Goethe says,5Second part of Faust, end chorus: ‘All things transitory are but a likeness.’ each thing must be seen only as a parable.
The plant has its roots in the earth and unfolds its leaves and blooms to the sun. At present the sun has in itself the force which was once united with the earth. The sun has of course separated itself from our earth. Thus the entire sun forces are something with which our earth was at one time permeated; the sun forces then lived in the earth. Today the plant is still searching for those times when the sun forces were still united with the earth, by exposing its flowering system to those forces. The sun forces are the [same as those which work as] etheric forces in the plants. By presenting its reproductive organs to the sun, the plant shows its deep affinity with it; its reproductive principle is occultly linked with the sun forces. The head of the plant, [the root] which is embedded in the darkness of the earth,is on the other hand similarly akin to the earth. Earth and sun are the two polar opposites in evolution.
Man is the inverse of the plant; [the plant] has its generative organs turned towards the sun and its head pointing downwards. With man it is exactly the opposite; he carries his head on high, orientated towards the higher worlds in order to receive the spirit—his generative organs are directed downwards. The animal stands halfway between plant and man. It has made a half turn, forming, so to speak, a crosspiece to the line of direction of both plant and man. The animal carries its backbone horizontally, thus cutting across the line formed by plant and man, to make a cross. Imagine to yourselves the Plant Kingdom growing downward, the Human Kingdom upward, and the Animal Kingdom thus horizontally; then you have formed the Cross from the Plant, Animal and Human Kingdoms.

That is the symbol of the Cross.
It represents the three Kingdoms of Life, into which man has to enter. The Plant, Animal and Human Kingdoms are the next three material Kingdoms [to be entered by man]. The whole evolves out of the Mineral Kingdom; this is the basis today- The Animal Kingdom forms a kind of dam between the Plant and Human Kingdoms, and the plant is a kind of mirror image of man. This ties up with human life—what lives in man physically—finding its closest kinship with what lives in the plant. It would take many lectures to confirm that thoroughly; today I can only hint at it. When man wants to maintain his physical life activity, he can best do so with a plant diet, since he would then be consuming what originally had an affinity with the physical life activity of the earth. The sun is the bearer of the life forces, and the plant is what grows in response to the sun forces. And man must unite what lives in the plant with his own life forces. Thus his food-stuffs are, occultly, the same as the plant. The Animal Kingdom acts as a dam, a drawing back, thereby interposing itself crosswise against the development process, in order to begin a new flow.
Man and plant, while set against each other, are mutually akin; whereas the animal—and all that comes to expression in the astral body is the animal—is a crossing of the two principles of life. The human etheric body will provide the basis, at a higher stage, for the immortal man, who will no longer be subject to death. The etheric body at present still dissolves with the death of the human being. But the more man perfects and purifies himself from within, the nearer will he get to permanence, the less will he perish. Every labour undertaken for the etheric body contributes towards; man's immortality. In this sense it is true that man will gain more mastery of immortality, the more evolution takes place naturally, the more it is directed towards the forces of life—which does not mean towards animal sexuality and passion.
Animality is a current which breaks across human life it was a retardation, necessary for a turning point in the stream of life. Man had to combine with animality for a while, because this turning point had to take place. But he must free himself from it again and return again to the stream of life.
At the beginning of our human incarnations on earth we were endowed with the force of life. That is symbolically expressed in the legend, where Adam's son, Seth, took the scion from the Tree of Life; this was then further cultivated by the Sons of God, [which expressed] that threefold human nature, which had to be ennobled.
After that, Moses cut his rod from this wood of life. This rod of Moses is nothing else than the external law. But what is external law?
External law is present when someone who has to erect An external building has a plan—that is, a systematic scheme on paper—so that the outward building stones can be shaped and fitted together according to the plan. Thus, the law underlying the plan of a state is external law. Mankind is under Moses' rod. And anyone who follows a moral code out of fear or in hope of reward, is only following the external law. Moreover, whoever looks at science only in an external way, is only following external law; for what else can there [then] be in it but external laws! All the laws we are acquainted with in science are such external laws; through them, however, we will never find that way through to higher human nature, but will only follow the law of the Old Covenant, which is the Rod of Moses. However, this external law should be a model for the inner law. Man must learn inwardly to follow law. This inner law must become for man the impulse of life; out of the inner law he must learn to follow external law. One does not make the inner law reality by concocting a plan; instead one has to build the Temple out of inner impulse, so that the soul streams forth in the work of joining the stones together. He who lives in the inner law is not the one who merely follows the laws of the state, but he to whom they are the impulse of his life, because his soul is immersed in them. And it is not he who follows a moral code out of fear or because of reward who is a moral person, but he who follows it because he loves it.
As long as mankind was not ripe for following the law inwardly, as long as man was under a yoke, and the Rod of Moses was present, in the law, so long would the law lie in the Ark of the Covenant; until the Pauline principle, the principle of grace came to man, giving him the possibility of becoming free from the law. The profundity of the Pauline doctrine lies in its making a distinction between law and grace. When law becomes inflamed with love, when love has united with the law, that then is grace. That is how the Pauline distinction between law and grace is to be understood.
Now we can follow the legend of the Cross still further. The wood was used as a bridge between two riverbanks. because it did not suit as a pillar in Solomon's Temple. This was a preparation. The Ark of the Covenant was in the Temple, but the Word-become-Flesh was not yet there. The wood of the Cross was laid as a bridge across a stream; only the Queen of Sheba recognised the worth of the wood for the temple, which should live in the consciousness of the soul of all humanity. Now the same wood was used for the construction of the Cross on which the Redeemer hung. He who unites the two earlier currents [of evolution], who allows the worldly and the spiritual to flow into each other, the Christ, is Himself joined to the living Cross. That is how He can carry the wood of the Cross as something [external] which He carries on His back. He is Himself united with the wood of the bridge, and can therefore take the dead wood upon Himself.
Man is today drawn into higher nature. Formerly he lived in lower nature. In the Christian sense he now lives in higher nature, and the Cross—the lower nature—he carries forward as something alien, through his inner living forces. Religion now becomes the living force in the world, now the life in external nature ceases, the Cross becomes entirely wood. The outer body [of man] now becomes a vehicle for the inner living force. There the great mystery consummates itself: the Cross is taken on [man's] back.
Our great poet Goethe presented the idea of the bridge in a beautiful and significant way in his ‘Fairy Story of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily,’6Goethe: Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, Floris Books, 1979. See also Goethe's Standard of the Soul as illustrated in Faust and in the Fairy Story of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, Anthroposophical Publishing Company, London, 1925; and Goethe's Secret Revelation and the Riddle of Faust, Rudolf Steiner Publishing Company, London, 1933. where he has a bridge being built, by the snake laying itself across the river as a living bridge. All the more advanced initiates use this same symbol for one and the same thing.
Thus we have become acquainted with the deep inner meaning of the holy legend of the Cross. We have seen how the revolution was prepared for, which Christianity brought about, and which must fulfil itself more and more as time goes on by Christianising the world. We have seen how the Cross, inasmuch as it is the image of the three external bodies, dies; how it is only able to form an external union between the three lower and the three higher Kingdoms, between the two banks divided by the stream—the wood of the Cross could not become a pillar in Solomon's Temple—until man recognises it as his own particular symbol. Only then, when he sacrifices himself, makes his own body into the Temple, and becomes able to carry the Cross, will the merging of the two streams be made possible.
That is why the Christian churches have the symbol of the Cross in their foundations; thereby expressing the secretion of the living Cross in the outward edifice of the Temple. However, these two streams, the living divine stream on the one hand, and the worldly mineral stream on the other, have become united in the Redeemer hanging on the Cross, where the higher principles are in the Redeemer Himself, and the lower ones in the Cross. And henceforth this connection must now become organic and living, as the Apostle Paul expressed particularly deeply. Without [a knowledge of] what has been discussed today, the writings of the Apostle Paul cannot be understood. It was clear to him that the Old Covenant, which creates an antithesis between man and the law, must come to an end. Only when man unites himself with the law, takes it upon his back, carries it, will there no longer be any contradiction between man's inner nature and the external law. Then that which Christianity seeks to achieve, is achieved.
‘With the law sin came into the world.’ 7‘With the law sin came into the world.’
The Epistle of Paul to the Romans, Chapter 5, verse 13 and Chapter 8, verse 2. That is a profound saying of Paul's. When is there sin in the world? Only when there is a law which can be broken. But when the law becomes so united with human nature that man only does good, then there can be no [more] sin. Man only contradicts the law of the Cross as long as it does not live within him, but is something external. Therefore Paid sees the Christ on the Cross as the conquest of law and the conquest of sin. To hang on the Cross means to be subjected to the law—and that is a curse. Sin and the law belong together in the Old Covenant, the law and love belong together in the New Covenant. It is a negative law which is involved in the Old Covenant; but the law of the New Covenant is a living positive law. He who united the Old Covenant with His own life is the One who has overcome it. He has at the same time sanctified it.
That is what is meant by those words of Paul which are to be found in the Epistle to the Galatians, Chapter 3:11–13.: ‘But that no man is justified by the law in the sight of God, is evident, for the just shall live by faith and the law is not of faith, but the man that doeth them shall live in them. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us, for it is written: Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree.’
With the word ‘tree’ [literally ‘wood’ in the German Bible] Paul connects the concept with which we have been dealing today. We must indeed keep penetrating deeper into what the great initiates have said. We do not come closer to Christianity by adapting it to what might be termed our demands, by adapting it to the contemporary materialist judgments that deny anything higher—but by continually raising ourselves further into spiritual heights. For Christianity was born of initiation and we shall only understand it and be able to believe that it contains infinite depths, if we abandon the view that we have to bring Christianity nearer to contemporary ideas; but instead raise our anti-spiritual materialist thinking back again to Christianity. The contemporary view must raise itself from what is mineral and dead to what is living and spiritual, if it is to understand Christianity.
I have presented these views so as to arrive at a conception of the New Jerusalem.
Answer to a question
Question: Is the legend very old?
Answer (1): This legend existed at the time of the mysteries, but it was not written down. The mysteries of Antioch were Adonis mysteries. In them was celebrated the Crucifixion, the Entombment and the Resurrection as an outer image of initiation. The mourning of the women at the Cross already appeared there; this appeared to us again in [the persons] of Mary and Mary Magdalen. This links up with a version, similar to that in [this] legend, which is also to be found in the Apis and Mithras mysteries and again in the Osiris mysteries. What was still apocalyptic there, is fulfilled in Christianity. The old apocalypses change into new legends, in the same way that John portrays the future in his Revelations.
Answer (2): The legend is historically medieval, but was previously recorded in all its completeness by the Gnostics. The further course of the Cross is given there. Moreover, the medieval version also contains indications of this; the medieval legends indicate the way to the mysteries less clearly; but we can trace them all back. This legend is connected with the Adonis mysteries, with the Antioch legend, in which the Crucifixion, Entombment and Resurrection become an outward image of inner initiation. The mourning women also appear there, and there is a connected version which is very similar to the Osiris legend. Everything that is apocalyptic in these legends is fulfilled Christianity. The Queen of Sheba sees deeper and is versed in the true wisdom.
13. Über Den Verlorenen Und Wiederzuerrichtenden Tempel im Zusammenhang mit der Kreuzesholz- oder Goldenen Legende
Die Kreuzesholzlegende und die weltgeschichtliche Bedeutung des Salomonischen Tempels
Nachdem wir schon einige Male über das Christentum und seine Entwickelung in der Gegenwart und Zukunft gesprochen haben, sind wir soweit gekommen, daß wir heute auch einmal die Bedeutung des Kreuzsymboles - nicht so sehr geschichtlich als tatsächlich - zu betrachten haben.
Sie wissen ja, was für eine umfassende sinnbildliche Bedeutung das Kreuzsymbol für das Christentum hat; und heute möchte ich nun gerade den Zusammenhang des Kreuzsymboles mit der weltgeschichtlichen Bedeutung des Salomonischen Tempels beleuchten.
Es gibt ja eine sogenannte heilige Legende über die ganze Entwickelung des Kreuzes, und zwar haben wir darin weniger das Kreuzeszeichen oder die allgemeine Weltsymbolik des Kreuzes vor Augen, als vielmehr jenes bestimmte, besondere Kreuz, von dem der Christ spricht, jenes Kreuz eben, an dem der Christus Jesus gekreuzigt worden ist. Nun wissen Sie aber auch, daß das Kreuz ein allgemein menschliches Symbol ist, und es sich nicht nur im Christentum, sondern in den religiösen Anschauungen und Sinnbildern aller Völker findet, so daß seine Bedeutung eine allgemein menschliche sein muß. Was uns aber heute besonders interessiert, das ist, wie das Kreuzsymbol diese grundlegende Bedeutung im Christentum erhalten hat.
Die christliche Legende über das Kreuz ist folgende; von ihr gehen wir aus:
Das Holz oder der Baum, aus dem das Holz des Kreuzes genommen worden ist, ist nicht einfach Holz, sondern - so erzählt die Legende — war ursprünglich ein Sproß vom Baume des Lebens, der für Adam, den ersten Menschen, abgeschnitten worden ist. Durch Adams Sohn Seth wurde dieser Sproß in die Erde gepflanzt, und dieser junge Baum hat drei Stämme getrieben, die miteinander verwachsen sind. Später habe sich Moses den berühmten Stab auch aus diesem Holz gearbeitet. Dann spielt in der Legende dasselbe Holz wiederum eine Rolle im Zusammenhang mit dem Jerusalemtempel des Königs Salomo. Es sollte nämlich beim Tempelbau als ein wichtiger Pfeiler verwendet werden. Aber da stellte sich etwas Eigentümliches heraus. Es zeigte sich, daß er in keiner Weise hineinpassen wollte. Er ließ sich in den Tempel nicht einfügen und so legte man ihn denn als Brücke über einen Fluß. Hier kam er wenig zur Geltung, bis jene Königin von Saba kam, die, als sie darüberging, sah, um was es sich bei diesem Brückenholz handelte. Sie hat auch hier wiederum zuerst gefunden, was dieses Brückenholz bedeutet, das da zwischen den zwei Gebieten, dem diesseitigen und dem jenseitigen Ufer, zum Überschreiten des Flusses lag. Sodann wurde aus diesem Holz das Kreuz gezimmert, an dem der Erlöser gehangen hat, und dann hat es seine verschiedenen weiteren Wanderungen angetreten.
Sie sehen also, daß es sich in dieser Legende um etwas handelt, was mit der Entstehung und Entwickelung des Menschengeschlechts zusammenhängt. Adams Sohn Seth soll jenen Sproß dem Baum des Lebens entnommen haben, der dann drei Sprosse trieb. Diese drei Sprosse symbolisieren die drei Prinzipien, die drei ewigen Mächte der Natur, Atma, Buddhi, Manas, die zusammengewachsen sind und jene Dreiheit bilden, die die Grundlage von allem Werden und aller Entwickelung ist. Sehr charakteristisch ist es, daß Seth, jener Sohn Adams, der an die Stelle des von Kain getöteten Abel getreten ist, diesen Sproß in die Erde einpflanzt.
Sie wissen, daß wir es einerseits zu tun haben mit der Kainsströmung und andererseits mit der Strömung der Abel-Seth-Nachkommen. Die Kainssöhne, die die äußere Welt bearbeiten, pflegen vorzüglich die Wissenschaften, die Künste. Sie sind es, die aus der äußeren Welt die Bausteine zu dem Tempel herbeitragen. Durch ihre Kunst sollte der Tempel gebaut werden. Die Nachkommen aus dem Geschlechte von Abel-Seth sind die sogenannten Gottessöhne, die das eigentliche Spirituelle der Menschennatur pflegen. Diese beiden Strömungen waren immer in einer Art Gegensatz. Auf der einen Seite haben wir das weltliche Treiben der Menschen, das Ausgestalten jener Wissenschaften, die der menschlichen Behaglichkeit oder dem äußeren Leben überhaupt dienen; auf der anderen Seite stehen die Gottessöhne, die sich mit der Ausgestaltung der höheren Attribute der Menschen beschäftigen.
Wir müssen uns dabei klarmachen, daß diejenige Anschauung, aus der die heilige Kreuzeslegende hervorgegangen ist, streng unterscheidet zwischen dem, was durch Wissenschaft und Technik bloß äußeres Bauen am Weltentempel ist, und dem, was als religiöse Durchtränkung, als religiöser Einschlag für die Heiligung des ganzen Menschheitstempels wirkt. Erst dadurch, daß dieser Menschheitstempel eine höhere Aufgabe erhält, daß sozusagen das äußere Gebäude, das nur einer bloßen Nützlichkeit dient, sich zum Ausdruck des Gotteshauses gestaltet, wird das äußere Gebäude eine Umhüllung für das spirituelle Innere, in dem die höheren Aufgaben der Menschheit gepflegt werden. Erst dadurch, daß die Stärke zum Streben zur göttlichen Tugend, daß die äußere Form zu der Schönheit, daß das Wort, das dem äußeren Verkehr der Menschen dient, in den Dienst der göttlichen Weisheit gestellt wird, also erst dadurch, daß das Weltliche zum Göttlichen umgeformt wird, erreicht es seine Vollendung. Sind die drei Tugenden Weisheit, Schönheit und Stärke die Hüllen des Göttlichen, dann wird der Tempel der Menschheit vollendet sein. So stellte sich die Anschauung, welche im Sinne dieser Legende wirkt, die Sache vor.
Wir müssen uns also ganz im Sinne der Legende vorstellen, daß bis zum Erscheinen des Christus Jesus auf Erden zwei Strömungen vorhanden waren. Die eine, die den weltlichen Tempel baute, die die Taten der Menschen ausprägte, damit dann später das göttliche Wort, das durch den Christus Jesus auf die Erde gekommen war, aufgenommen werden konnte. Ein Wohnhaus sollte bereitet werden der Erscheinung des göttlichen Wortes auf der Erde. Daneben sollte sich einstweilen das Göttliche selbst als eine Art von Nebenströmung in der zweiten Strömung durch die Zeiten heraufentwickeln. Daher unterschied man die Menschensöhne, das Kainsgeschlecht, die das Weltliche vorbereiten sollten, von den Gottessöhnen, den Söhnen des Abel-Seth, die das Göttliche pflegten, bis beide Strömungen die Ehe miteinander eingehen konnten. Christus Jesus vereinigte diese beiden Strömungen. Der Tempel sollte erst äußerlich errichtet werden, bis dann in Christus Jesus der erschien, der ihn in drei Tagen von neuem aufrichten konnte. Auf der einen Seite haben wir also die Strömung der Kainssöhne und auf der anderen Seite die Strömung der Nachkommen von Abel-Seth, welche beide die Entwickelung der Menschheit vorbereiten, damit dann der Gottessohn die beiden Seiten vereinigen, die beiden Strömungen zu einer einzigen machen konnte. Das ist in tiefsinniger Weise in der heiligen Legende zum Ausdruck gekommen.
Seth selbst ist derjenige, der jenen Sproß, den er für Adam dem Baume des Lebens entnommen hat, in die Erde pflanzte und einen dreisprossigen Baum züchtete. Was bedeutet dieser dreisprossige Baum? Zunächst nichts anderes als die Dreiheit Atma, Buddhi, Manas, die dreifache höhere Natur des Menschen, die in die niederen Prinzipien eingepflanzt wird. Aber im Menschen ist sie zunächst wie verschleiert; der Mensch ist zunächst durch seine drei Körper, den physischen, ätherischen und astralischen Körper, wie eine äußere Umhüllung der eigentlichen göttlichen Dreiheit Atma, Buddhi, Manas. Sie müssen sich also vorstellen, daß die Dreiheit von physischem, ätherischem und astralischem Leib wie eine äußere Darstellung der oberen Kräfte Atma, Buddhi, Manas ist. Und so wie der Künstler äußere Formen gestaltet, eine bestimmte Idee in Farben darstellt, so stellen auch diese drei Hüllen gleichsam ein Kunstwerk dar. Wenn Sie sich vorstellen, daß die höheren Prinzipien wie die Idee eines Kunstwerkes sind, so haben Sie halbwegs eine Vorstellung von dem, was das Leben dieser drei Körper ausmacht.
Nun wohnt ja der Mensch in seiner physischen, ätherischen und astralischen Hülle mit seinem Ich, durch das er diese dreifache Natur so umwandeln soll, damit die drei höheren Prinzipien hier auf der Erde ihren entsprechenden Wohnplatz erhalten und sich heimisch fühlen können. Dafür sollte der alte Bund sorgen. Er sollte durch die Künste des Kainsgeschlechtes Menschensöhne in die Welt bringen und durch diese Menschensöhne sollte alles Äußere geschaffen werden, was dem physischen, ätherischen und astralischen Leibe dient. Was ist das alles?
Was dem physischen Leib dient, ist zunächst alles, was durch die technischen Künste eingerichtet wird zur Befriedigung des physischen Leibes und zu seiner Behaglichkeit. Was wir dann an gesellschaftlichen, staatlichen Einrichtungen und Organisationen haben in bezug auf das Zusammenleben der Menschen, was sich auf Ernährung und Fortpflanzung bezieht, dient zum Aufbau des Lebensleibes. Und auf den Astralkörper wirkend haben wir das Gebiet der sittlichen Vorschriften, der Ethik, was die Triebe und Leidenschaften in Ordnung bringen, die astralische Natur regeln und auf eine höhere Stufe heben soll.
So bauten die Kainssöhne den ganzen alten Bund hindurch diesen dreistufigen Tempel auf. Er ist, so wie er sich zusammensetzt aus unseren äußeren Einrichtungen — Sie können dabei an unsere Wohnungen, Werkzeuge, an das Gesellschafts- und Staatswesen, die sittlichen Einrichtungen denken -, in allem diesem ist er der Bau der Kainssöhne, der den unteren Gliedern der menschlichen Natur dient.
Daneben arbeitete die andere Strömung, welcher die Göttersöhne, ihre Schüler und ihre Nachfolger vorstehen. Von dorther haben wir die Diener der göttlichen Weltordnung, die Diener der Bundeslade. In ihnen haben wir etwas, was als eigene Strömung hergeht neben den Dienern der Welt. Sie nahmen eine besondere Stellung ein. Erst als der Salomonische Tempel errichtet war, sollte ja die Bundeslade hineingestellt werden, das heißt, alles andere sollte gleichsam hingeordnet werden zu der Bundeslade, sich um sie gruppieren. Alles was früher weltlich war, sollte ein äußerer Ausdruck, ein Bau werden für das, was die Bundeslade für die Menschheit bedeutet. Derjenige wird sich am besten den Tempel Salomos vorstellen, der sich ihn vorstellt als etwas, was äußerlich, als Physiognomie zum Ausdruck bringt, was die Bundeslade als Seele sein soll.
Was die äußeren drei Körper des Menschen belebt hat, ihnen das Leben gegeben hat, ist von den Göttersöhnen entlehnt dem Baum des Lebens. Das ist sinnbildlich ausgedrückt in jenem Bauholz, das später zum Kreuz Christi verwendet worden ist. Den Göttersöhnen war es zuerst gegeben. Was taten sie damit? Was bedeutet im tieferen Sinn das Kreuzesholz? Es liegt eine ungeheuer tiefe Bedeutung in dieser heiligen Legende vom Kreuzesholz.
Welche Aufgabe hat denn überhaupt der Mensch bei seiner irdischen Entwickelung? Er soll seine jetzigen drei Körper, die er erhalten hat, um eine Stufe höher hinaufheben. Also, er soll den physischen Körper hinaufheben in ein höheres Reich und er soll auch den Ätherund Astralleib hinaufheben in ein höheres Reich. Diese Entwickelung obliegt dem Menschen. Das ist ihr eigentlicher Sinn: unsere drei Körper zu drei höheren Gliedern der ganzen göttlichen Weltordnung zu machen.
Höher als dasjenige, was der Mensch zunächst physisch hat, liegt ein anderes Reich. Welchem Reich aber gehört der Mensch seiner physischen Natur nach an? Seiner physischen Natur nach gehört er auf der gegenwärtigen Stufe seiner Entwickelung dem Mineralreich an. Die physischen, chemischen, mineralischen Gesetze herrschen in unserem physischen Leib. Aber auch seiner geistigen Natur nach gehört er dem Mineralreich an, denn er begreift mit seinem Verstande nur das Mineralreich. Das Leben als solches lernt er erst allmählich begreifen. Gerade deshalb leugnet die offizielle Wissenschaft das Leben, weil sie noch in dieser Entwickelungsphase ist, daß sie nur das Tote, das Mineralische begreift. Sie ist dabei, dieses in der feinsten Weise zu begreifen. Daher begreift sie auch den menschlichen Körper nur insofern, als er ein Totes, ein Mineralisches ist. Sie behandelt ihn im Grunde wie ein totes Produkt, mit dem man arbeitet wie mit einem Stoff im chemischen Laboratorium. Man führt andere Stoffe in ihn ein, wie man in eine Retorte Stoffe einführt. Auch wenn der Arzt, der heute ganz in der mineralischen Wissenschaft erzogen ist, an dem menschlichen Körper herumoperiert, ist es so, als wenn dieser nichts anderes wäre als ein maschinelles Produkt.
Wir haben es also in zweifacher Beziehung mit dem Leib des Menschen auf der Stufe des mineralischen Reiches zu tun: der Mensch ist seinem physischen Leib nach in dem Mineralreich verwirklicht und er begreift mit dem bloßen Verstande auch nur das Mineralreich. Das ist eine notwendige Durchgangsstufe für den Menschen. Wenn er aber nicht bloß auf den Verstand, sondern auf die Intuition, die spirituelle Kraft sich verläßt, dann werden wir uns klar sein, daß wir einer Zukunft entgegengehen, in der unser toter, mineralischer Leib entgegenarbeitet einem Lebendigen. Und unsere Wissenschaft muß da vorangehen, muß vorbereiten, was mit dem leiblichen Wesen in Zukunft geschehen soll. Sie muß in der nächsten Zukunft selbst etwas werden, was das Lebendige in sich enthält, sie muß das, was auf der Erde lebt, als etwas Lebendiges begreifen. Denn in einem tieferen Sinne ist es wahr, daß die Gedanken der Menschen es sind, die das Künftige vorbereiten. Mit Recht sagt daher ein alter indischer Spruch: Was du heute denkst, das wirst du morgen sein.
Das ganze Weltensein entspringt nicht aus dem toten Stofflichen, es entspringt aus dem lebendig Gedanklichen. Was äußerer Stoff ist, ist ein Ergebnis des lebendig Gedanklichen, so wie das Eis ein Ergebnis des Wassers ist. Die stoffliche Welt ist gleichsam gefrorene Gedanken. Wir müssen sie wiederum auflösen in ihre höheren Elemente, indem wir das Leben in den Gedanken ergreifen. Wenn wir das Mineralische in das Lebendige hinaufleiten können, wenn wir den Gedanken der ganzen Menschennatur umgestalten, dann erreichen wir, daß unsere Wissenschaft eine Wissenschaft des Lebens und nicht des toten Stoffes wird. Wir rücken damit das unterste Prinzip — zunächst in unserem Verständnis und später auch in Wirklichkeit — hinauf in das nächste Reich. Und so rücken wir ein jedes Glied der menschlichen Natur — das ätherische und das astralische ebenfalls - um eine Stufe höher hinauf.
Was der Mensch einstmals gewesen ist, das nennen wir in der theosophischen Sprache die drei Elementarreiche. Diese gehen unserem mineralischen Reich, in dem wir heute leben, voran, das heißt, dem Reich, in dem unsere Wissenschaft sich erschöpft und in dem unser physischer Körper lebt. Die drei Elementarreiche sind verflossene Stadien. Erst in ihren Anfängen sind aber die drei höheren Reiche, die sich auf dem Mineralreich aufbauen: das Pflanzenreich, das Tierteich und das Menschenreich.
Diese drei Reiche muß das unterste Prinzip des Menschen noch ebenso durchlaufen, wie es heute das mineralische Reich durchläuft. So wie der Mensch heute seiner physischen Natur nach im Mineralreich wohnt, so wird er später im Pflanzenreich wohnen und dann zu noch höheren Reichen aufsteigen. Heute stehen wir unserer physischen Natur nach im Übergangsstadium vom Mineral- zum Pflanzenreich, unserer ätherischen Natur nach im Übergang vom Pflanzenzum Tierreich und unserer astralischen Natur nach im Übergang vom Tierreich zum Menschenreich. Und erst mit dem, was wir als Ansatz haben aus der Weisheitsregion, wo wir mit unserer eigenen Natur hinausragen aus dem, was astralische Natur ist, da ragen wir über die drei Reiche hinaus in das göttliche Reich hinein.
So ist also der Mensch in einem Aufstieg begriffen. Aber nicht eine äußere Einrichtung, nicht ein äußerer Bau bewirkt das, sondern das Lebendige selbst, das in uns erwacht, das nicht bloß die äußeren Bausteine zusammensetzt, sondern gestaltend, wachsend wirkt. Diese Kraft des Lebens muß in die Entwickelung eingreifen und sie muß zunächst des Menschen Innerstes ergreifen; sein religiöses Leben muß von dem Lebendigen ergriffen werden. Deshalb war es wie eine Vorbereitung, was die Kainssöhne während des alten Bundes für die unteren Glieder der Menschennatur geleistet haben und wie ein prophetischer Hinweis auf die Zukunft war es, was die Propheten, die Hüter der Bundeslade, geleistet haben. Das Göttliche sollte aber nun heruntersteigen in die Bundeslade, in die Seele, um als Allerheiligstes in dem Tempel selbst zu wohnen.
Diese lebendigen Kräfte, die verwandelnd und umgestaltend wirken, die in der Umgestaltung der Natur lebendig wirkenden Kräfte, sie waren schon dem ersten Menschen, Adam, mitgegeben worden vom Baum des Lebens. Aber sie waren anvertraut denjenigen, die sich nicht mit dem äußeren Bau beschäftigten, den Gottessöhnen, den Söhnen von Abel und Seth. Durch das Christentum sollten nun diese Kräfte Allgemeingut werden. Die beiden Strömungen sollten sich miteinander verbinden. Und christlich ist heute im Grunde genommen alles, was von der Anschauung ausgeht, daß kein Äußeres, kein Tempel, kein Haus, keine Gesellschaftseinrichtung entstehen sollten, die nicht durchglüht sind von innerem Leben, von der lebendigmachenden anstelle der bloß zusammensetzenden mineralischen Kraft.
Der erste Versuch, der gemacht wurde, um die niedere Natur des Menschen hinaufzuleiten zur höheren, war, wie wir gesehen haben, der Salomonische Tempel. Das Fünfeck war als das große Symbol am Eingang zu sehen, denn zum fünften Prinzip sollte der Mensch streben, das heißt, die menschliche Natur sollte sich aus den niederen Prinzipien zu dem Höheren hinaufentwickeln, sollte ihre einzelnen Glieder veredeln.
Und hier kommen wir zu jener tiefen Bedeutung, die das Kreuz hat und die bewirkte, daß es als Symbol jene grundsätzliche und tatsächliche Bedeutung im Christentum gefunden hat. Was ist das Kreuz? Drei Reiche sind es, zu denen die Menschennatur hinaufstrebt: das Pflanzenreich, das Tierreich und das Menschenreich. Heute ist der Mensch im Mineralreich verwirklicht, dazu gehört Pflanze, Tier, Mensch. Fassen Sie das so auf, wie es in allen Weisheitsbekenntnissen heißt, daß der Mensch als seelisch-geistiges Wesen ein Teil der Allseele ist, dessen, was zum Beispiel Giordano Bruno die Weltseele genannt hat. Vielleicht wie ein Tropfen der Weltseele, die wir als großes Meer uns denken, ist die einzelne Seele. Nun hat schon Plato davon gesprochen, daß die Weltenseele an den Weltenleib gekreuzigt worden ist.
Die Weltenseele, wie sie sich im Menschen ausprägt, ist heute ausgespannt im mineralischen Reich. Sie soll sich darüber erheben, sich hinaufgestalten zu den drei höheren Reichen. Dazu muß sie in den nächsten drei Runden noch verkörpert werden im Pflanzen-, Tier- und Menschenreich. Die vierte Runde ist nichts anderes als die Verkörperung der Menschenseele im Mineralreich, die fünfte Runde diejenige im Pflanzenreich, die sechste diejenige im Tierreich, und erst die siebente Runde ist die Verkörperung im eigentlichen Menschenreich, wo der Mensch ganz ein Ebenbild der Gottheit sein wird. Bis dahin hat er noch dreimal den Weltenleib zu seiner Hülle zu nehmen.
Blicken wir auf diese Menschenzukunft hin, so stellt sie sich uns als eine dreifache Stofflichkeit oder Materialität dar: als pflanzliche, tietische und menschliche. Diese menschliche ist aber nicht diejenige Stofflichkeit, die wir heute haben, denn das ist die mineralische, denn der Mensch ist ja heute erst in dem mineralischen Zyklus angelangt. Erst wenn das unterste Reich das Menschenreich sein wird, wenn es keine niederen Wesen mehr geben wird, wenn der Mensch alle Wesen erlöst haben wird durch die Kraft seines eigenen Lebens, dann wird er in der siebenten Runde angelangt sein, wo Gott ruht, weil der Mensch selbst schafft. Dann ist der siebente Schöpfungstag da, wo der Mensch ein Ebenbild Gottes geworden sein wird. Das sind die Stufen in der Schöpfungsgeschichte.
Nun sind heute Pflanze, Tier und Mensch, wie sie vor uns dastehen, erst die Keime zu dem, was sie werden sollen. Die Pflanze ist heute erst eine sinnbildliche Hindeutung auf etwas, was in höherer Glorie und Klarheit erst im nächsten menschlichen Entwickelungszyklus erscheinen soll. Und wenn der Mensch die Tierheit überwunden, abgestreift haben wird, dann wird er etwas sein, wovon er heute auch erst nur eine Andeutung ist. So sind Pflanzen-, Tier- und Menschenreich die drei stofflichen Reiche, die der Mensch noch zu durchlaufen hat; sie sind sein Weltenleib und die Seele hat an diesen Weltenleib gekreuzigt zu sein.
Nun machen Sie sich einmal den Gegensatz zwischen Pflanze, Tier und Mensch klar. Die Pflanze ist das genaue Gegenbild des Menschen. Es hat dies eine sehr tiefe, sinnvolle Bedeutung, wenn wir die Pflanze als das genaue Gegenbild des Menschen und den Menschen als die umgekehrte Pflanzennatur auffassen. Die äußere Wissenschaft beschäftigt sich mit solchen Dingen nicht, sie nimmt die Dinge, wie sie sich den äußeren Sinnen darbieten. Die Wissenschaft aber, welche mit Theosophie etwas zu tun hat, betrachtet die Bedeutung der Dinge in ihrem Zusammenhang mit der ganzen übrigen Entwickelung. Denn jedes Ding ist, wie Goethe sagt, nur als ein Gleichnis aufzufassen.
Die Pflanze hat ihre Wurzel im Boden und entfaltet die Blätter und Blütenorgane der Sonne zu. Die Sonne hat heute in sich die Kraft, die mit der Erde einmal verbunden war. Die Sonne hat sich ja von unserer Erde getrennt. Die ganze Sonnenkraft also ist etwas, womit unsere Erde einst durchsetzt war. Da lebte die Kraft der Sonne in der Erde. Die Pflanze sucht heute noch, indem sie ihre Blütenorgane der Sonnenkraft entgegenhält, jene Zeiten auf, in denen die Sonnenkraft mit der Erde verbunden war. Sonnenkraft heißt Ätherkraft der Pflanze. Indem die Pflanze ihre Fortpflanzungsorgane der Sonne entgegenhält, zeigt sie ihre tiefe Verwandtschaft mit der Sonne; ihr Fortpflanzungsprinzip ist okkult verknüpft mit der Sonnenkraft. Das Haupt der Pflanze dagegen, das in dem Dunkel der Erde steckt, ist zugleich verwandt mit der Erde. Erde und Sonne sind zwei Gegenpole in der Entwickelung.
Der Mensch ist die umgekehrte Pflanze; sie hat die Geschlechtswerkzeuge der Sonne zugekehrt, den Kopf nach unten. Beim Menschen ist es genau umgekehrt: er trägt den Kopf nach oben, den höheren Welten zugewandt, um den Geist aufzunehmen, die Geschlechtsorgane hat er nach unten. Das Tier steht mitten darinnen, steht zwischen Pflanze und Mensch. Es hat die halbe Wendung erst gemacht und bildet so gewissermaßen einen Querriegel zu der Richtungslinie von Pflanze und Mensch. Es trägt sein Rückgrat in horizontaler Richtung, dadurch die Linie, die durch Pflanze und Mensch gebildet wird, in Kreuzesform durchschneidend. Denken Sie sich das Pflanzenreich nach unten wachsend, das Menschenreich nach oben und das Tierreich so waagerecht wachsend, dann haben Sie aus Pflanzen-, Tier- und Menschenreich das Kreuz gebildet.

Das ist das Kreuzsymbol.
Es stellt die drei Lebensreiche dar, in die der Mensch einzutreten hat. Pflanzen-, Tier- und Menschenreich sind die drei nächsten stofflichen Reiche. Aus dem Mineralreich wächst das ganze heraus; es ist heute die Grundlage. Das Tierreich steht wie eine Art von Stauung zwischen dem Pflanzen- und dem Menschenreich und die Pflanze ist eine Art Gegenbild des Menschen. Damit hängt es zusammen, daß des Menschen Leben, dasjenige, was im Menschen physisch lebt, seine beste Verwandtschaft findet mit dem, was in der Pflanze lebt. Das könnte in vielen Vorträgen tief begründet werden, heute kann ich das nur andeuten. Wenn der Mensch seine physische Lebenstätigkeit erhalten will, so kann er es am besten durch die Pflanzennahrung, weil er dann aufnimmt, was ursprünglich mit der physischen Lebenstätigkeit der Erde eine Verwandtschaft hat. Die Sonne ist die Trägerin der Lebenskraft und die Pflanze ist das, was der Sonnenkraft entgegenwächst. Und der Mensch muß dieses, was in der Pflanze lebt, mit seiner Lebenskraft vereinigen. So sind seine Ernährungsstoffe okkult mit der Pflanze gleich. Das Tierreich stellt eine Stauung, eine Zurückstauung dar. Es unterbricht daher in Kreuzesform den Fortgang der Entwickelung, um einen neuen Ansatz zu beginnen.
Mensch und Pflanze sind einander entgegengesetzt, aber miteinander verwandt. Das Tierische aber - und was im Astralleib zunächst zum Ausdruck kommt, ist das Tierische - ist eine Durchkreuzung der zwei Prinzipien des Lebens. Der menschliche Ätherleib wird auf einer höheren Stufe die Grundlage abgeben für den unsterblichen Menschen, der nicht mehr dem Tode unterworfen sein wird. Der Ätherkörper löst sich heute noch mit dem Tode des Menschen auf. Je mehr der Mensch sich aber vervollkommnet und läutert von innen heraus, desto mehr erhält er an Beständigkeit, desto weniger geht er zugrunde. Alles, was in bezug auf diesen Ätherkörper gearbeitet wird, trägt zu seiner Unsterblichkeit bei. In diesem Sinne ist es richtig: je natürlicher die Entwickelung und je mehr sie auf die Kräfte des Lebens hingeleitet wird — es ist damit nicht hingedeutet auf das Genitalische und das Leidenschaftliche des Tieres -, desto mehr bemächtigt sich des Menschen die Unsterblichkeit.
Das Tierische ist ein Strom, der das menschliche Leben unterbricht, es war jene Verzögerung, die notwendig war zur Umkehr des Lebensstromes. Der Mensch mußte sich eine Zeitlang mit dem Tierischen verbinden, weil die Umkehr stattfinden mußte. Aber er muß sich davon wieder freimachen und wieder in den Strom des Lebens einlenken.
Beim Beginn unserer Menschwerdung war uns die Kraft des Lebens mitgegeben. Das ist symbolisch ausgedrückt in der Legende damit, daß Adams Sohn Seth von dem Baum des Lebens den Sproß nimmt, den die Göttersöhne dann weiter kultivieren, jene dreifache Menschennatur, die veredelt werden soll. Dann formt sich Moses seinen Stab aus diesem Holz des Lebens. Dieser Mosesstab ist nichts anderes als das äußere Gesetz. Was ist aber äußeres Gesetz?
Äußeres Gesetz ist vorhanden, wenn derjenige, der einen äußeren Bau aufrichten soll, einen Plan hat — das sind die gesetzmäßigen Zusammenhänge auf dem Papier -, und dann werden die äußeren Bausteine seinem Plane gemäß behauen und aufeinandergefügt. Auch das, was als Gesetz einem Staatenplan zugrunde liegt, ist äußeres Gesetz. Die Menschen stehen unter dem Stabe des Moses. Auch der, der aus Furcht oder aus Hoffnung auf Belohnung die Sittengesetze befolgt, befolgt nur das äußere Gesetz. Aber auch derjenige befolgt nur das äußere Gesetz, der die Wissenschaft nur in einer äußeren Weise betrachtet. Denn was hat er anderes als äußere Gesetze! Alle Gesetze, die wir in der Wissenschaft kennenlernen, sind solche äußeren Gesetze. Durch diese können wir aber nicht jenen Übergang zu der höheren Menschennatur finden, sondern nur das Gesetz des alten Bundes befolgen, das ist der Stab des Moses. Aber ein Vorbild sollte dieses äußere Gesetz sein für das innere Gesetz. Der Mensch soll lernen, dem Gesetz im Inneren zu folgen. Es muß dieses innere Gesetz der Impuls des Lebens werden beim Menschen, aus dem inneren Gesetz heraus muß er lernen, das äußere Gesetz zu befolgen. Nicht der verwirklicht das innere Gesetz, der einen Bauplan anfertigt, sondern der, der aus innerlichem Impuls heraus den Tempel baut, so daß also die Seele übergeht in die Zusammenfügung der Bausteine. Nicht der lebt in dem inneren Gesetz, der den staatlichen Gesetzen nur folgt, sondern der, dem sie Impuls seines Lebens sind, weil sie mit seiner Seele verwachsen sind. Und nicht derjenige ist ein sittlicher Mensch, der die Sittengebote aus Furcht oder wegen Belohnung befolgt, sondern der, welcher sie befolgt, weil er sie liebt.
Solange die Menschen nicht reif waren, die Gesetze innerlich aufzunehmen, solange in dem Gesetz der Stab des Moses vorhanden ist, der die Menschen unter ein Joch zwang, so lange lag das Gesetz in der Bundeslade. Bis dann das paulinische Prinzip, das Prinzip der Gnade über den Menschen kam und er die Möglichkeit bekam, frei zu werden vom Gesetz. Darin liegt die Tiefe der paulinischen Auffassung, daß sie einen Unterschied macht zwischen Gesetz und Gnade. Wenn das Gesetz von Liebe durchglüht ist, wenn sich die Liebe mit dem Gesetz verbunden hat, dann ist es die Gnade. So ist der paulinische Unterschied zwischen Gesetz und Gnade aufzufassen.
Nun können wir die Legende vom Kreuz auch noch weiter verfolgen. Als Brücke zwischen zwei Ufern wird das Holz verwendet, weil es als Pfeiler in den Salomonischen Tempel nicht taugte. Dies war eine Vorbereitung. Die Bundeslade war im Tempel, aber das fleischgewordene Wort war noch nicht da. Als Brücke über einen Fluß wird das Kreuzesholz gelegt, aber erst die Königin von Saba erkannte den Wert des Holzes für den Tempel, der im Bewußtsein der ganzen Menschenseele leben soll. Nun wird dasselbe Holz verwendet, um das Kreuz, an dem der Erlöser hängt, daraus zu zimmern. Derjenige, der die beiden früheren Strömungen vereinigt, der die weltliche und die spirituelle Strömung ineinanderlaufen läßt, der Christus ist selbst vereint mit dem lebendigen Kreuz. Daher kann er das Holz des Kreuzes tragen als etwas, was er auf seinen Rücken nimmt, als etwas, was außer ihm lebt. Er ist selbst vereint mit dem Holz der Brücke, daher kann er das tote Holz auf sich nehmen.
Der Mensch ist jetzt eingezogen in die höhere Natur. Früher lebte er in der niederen Natur. Im Sinne des Christentums lebt er jetzt in der höheren Natur, und das Kreuz - die niedere Natur - trägt er wie ein Fremdes weiter durch seine innere lebendige Kraft. Jetzt wird die Religion lebendige Kraft in der Welt, jetzt hört das Leben in der äußeren Natur auf, das Kreuz wird völlig Holz. Der äußere Leib wird nun zum Vehikel der inneren lebendigen Kraft. Da vollzieht sich das große Geheimnis: das Kreuz wird auf den Rücken genommen.
Schön und bedeutsam hat auch unser großer Dichter Goethe in dem «Märchen von der grünen Schlange und der schönen Lilie» die Idee der Brücke zum Ausdruck gebracht da, wo er eine Brücke bauen läßt, indem die Schlange sich wie eine lebendige Brücke über den Fluß legt. Alle tiefer Eingeweihten haben dieses selbe Symbol für ein und dieselbe Sache.
So haben wir die heilige Legende vom Kreuz in ihrer tiefen inneren Bedeutung kennengelernt. Wir haben gesehen, wie der Umschwung vorbereitet wurde, welcher sich durch das Christentum vollzogen hat und sich durch die Verchristlichung der Welt immer mehr und mehr vollziehen muß in der späteren Zeit. Wir haben gesehen, wie das Kreuz, insofern es Abbild der äußeren drei Körper ist, abstirbt, wie es nur eine äußere Verbindung zwischen den drei niederen und den drei höheren Reichen, zwischen den beiden Ufern, die durch den Strom getrennt sind, herstellen kann — Pfeiler im Salomonischen Tempel konnte das Kreuzesholz nicht werden -, bis es der Mensch als sein eigenes Symbol erkennt. Erst dann, wenn er sich selbst opfert, seinen eigenen Körper zum Tempel macht und fähig wird, das Kreuz selbst zu tragen, ist die Verbindung der zwei Strömungen ermöglicht.
Daher haben auch die christlichen Kirchen das Kreuzeszeichen schon in ihrer Anlage. Damit soll ausgedrückt sein, daß das lebendige Kreuz hineingeheimnißt ist in den äußeren Tempelbau. Jene zwei Strömungen aber, auf der einen Seite das göttlich Lebendige und auf der anderen Seite das weltlich Mineralische, haben sich in eins zusammengefügt in dem am Kreuze hängenden Erlöser, wo die höheren Prinzipien im Erlöser selbst, die niederen im Kreuze liegen. Und daß fortan dieser Zusammenhang ein organischer, ein lebendiger sein soll, drückt besonders tief der Apostel Paulus aus. Ohne das, was wir heute durchgenommen haben, kann man die Schriften des Apostel Paulus nicht verstehen. Ihm war es klar, daß jener alte Bund zu Ende gehen muß, welcher einen Gegensatz zwischen dem Menschen und dem Gesetz errichtet. Erst wenn der Mensch das Gesetz mit sich vereinigt, es auf seinen Rücken nimmt, es trägt, dann wird es keinen Widerspruch mehr geben zwischen der inneren Menschennatur und dem äußeren Gesetz. Dann ist das erreicht, was das Christentum erreichen will.
«Die Sünde ist durch das Gesetz in die Welt gekommen.» Das ist ein tiefer Ausspruch des Paulus. Wann ist die Sünde in der Welt? Wenn eben ein Gesetz da ist, das übertreten werden kann. Wenn aber das Gesetz so mit der menschlichen Natur vereinigt ist, daß das, was der Mensch tut, das Gute ist, dann kann es keine Sünde geben. Nur so lange widerspricht der Mensch dem Kreuzgesetz, als es nicht in ihm lebt, solange es äußerlich ist. Daher sieht Paulus den Christus am Kreuz als die Überwindung des Gesetzes und die Überwindung der Sünde an. Ein Fluch ist es, am Holze des Kreuzes zu hangen, das heißt, dem Gesetze zu verfallen. Sünde und Gesetz gehören zusammen nach dem alten Bund, Gesetz und Liebe gehören zusammen nach dem neuen Bund. Es ist ein negatives Gesetz, welches verbunden ist mit dem alten Bund; ein positives Gesetz, das lebt, ist aber das Gesetz des neuen Bundes. Der hat das Gesetz des alten Bundes überwunden, der es mit seinem eigenen Leben vereinigt hat. Der hat es aber auch geheiligt.
Das ist gemeint mit jenen paulinischen Worten, die im GalaterBrief (3. Kapitel, 11-13) zu lesen sind: «Daß aber durch das Gesetz niemand gerecht wird vor Gott, ist offenbar, denn der Gerechte wird seines Glaubens leben. Das Gesetz aber gründet sich nicht auf den Glauben, sondern der Mensch, der es tut, wird dadurch leben. Christus aber hat uns losgekauft von dem Fluch des Gesetzes, da er ward ein Fluch für uns, denn es steht geschrieben: Verflucht ist jedermann, der am Holze hänget.»
Mit dem Wort «Holze» verbindet Paulus die Begriffe, die wir heute behandelt haben. So müssen wir immer tiefer eindringen in dasjenige, was die großen Eingeweihten gesagt haben. Nicht dadurch nähern wir uns dem Christentum, daß wir es sozusagen unseren Anforderungen anpassen, anpassen dem dem Höheren abgeneigten materialistischen Verstande von heute, sondern dadurch, daß wir uns immer mehr und mehr in die Höhen des Geistigen erheben. Denn das Christentum ist aus der Einweihung heraus geboren, und erst dann werden wir es verstehen und daran glauben können, daß unendliche Tiefen in dem Christentum enthalten sind, wenn wir nicht mehr der Meinung sind, wir müßten dem heutigen Verstand das Christentum annähern, sondern wenn der dem Höheren abgeneigte materialistische Verstand sich wieder zum Christentum erhebt. Der heutige Verstand muß sich vom Mineralisch-Toten zum Lebendig-Geistigen erheben, wenn er das Christentum verstehen will.
Ich habe diese Anschauungen vorgetragen, um zum Begriffe des neuen Jerusalem zu kommen.
13. On the Lost and Restored Temple in connection with the Legend of the Holy Cross or Golden Legend
The Legend of the Holy Cross and the World-Historical Significance of Solomon's Temple
Having already spoken several times about Christianity and its development in the present and future, we have now reached the point where we must also consider the meaning of the symbol of the cross—not so much in historical terms as in actual terms.
You know what a comprehensive symbolic meaning the cross symbol has for Christianity, and today I would like to shed light on the connection between the cross symbol and the world-historical significance of Solomon's Temple.
There is a so-called sacred legend about the entire development of the cross, and in it we have before our eyes not so much the sign of the cross or the general world symbolism of the cross, but rather that particular, special cross of which Christians speak, the very cross on which Jesus Christ was crucified. But you also know that the cross is a universal human symbol, found not only in Christianity but in the religious beliefs and symbols of all peoples, so that its meaning must be universal. What interests us particularly today, however, is how the symbol of the cross acquired this fundamental meaning in Christianity.
The Christian legend about the cross is as follows; we will start from there:
The wood or tree from which the wood of the cross was taken is not simply wood, but—according to legend—was originally a shoot from the tree of life that was cut down for Adam, the first human being. This shoot was planted in the ground by Adam's son Seth, and this young tree grew three trunks that grew together. Later, Moses made his famous staff from this wood. Then, in the legend, the same wood plays a role again in connection with King Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem. It was to be used as an important pillar in the construction of the temple. But something peculiar happened. It turned out that it did not fit in any way. It could not be inserted into the temple, so it was laid across a river as a bridge. Here it was of little use until the Queen of Sheba came along and, when she crossed it, saw what this bridge wood was. Here, too, she was the first to discover the meaning of this bridge wood, which lay between the two areas, this side and the other side of the river, to enable people to cross. This wood was then used to build the cross on which the Savior was crucified, and then it began its various further wanderings.
You see, then, that this legend is about something connected with the origin and development of the human race. Adam's son Seth is said to have taken that shoot from the tree of life, which then sprouted three shoots. These three shoots symbolize the three principles, the three eternal powers of nature, Atma, Buddhi, Manas, which have grown together and form the trinity that is the basis of all becoming and all development. It is very characteristic that Seth, the son of Adam who took the place of Abel, who was killed by Cain, planted this shoot in the ground.
You know that we are dealing on the one hand with the Cain stream and on the other with the stream of the descendants of Abel-Seth. The sons of Cain, who work on the outer world, are especially devoted to the sciences and the arts. It is they who bring the building blocks for the temple from the outer world. The temple was to be built through their art. The descendants of the Abel-Seth lineage are the so-called sons of God, who cultivate the true spirituality of human nature. These two currents have always been in a kind of opposition. On the one hand, we have the worldly activities of human beings, the development of those sciences that serve human comfort or external life in general; on the other hand, we have the sons of God, who are concerned with the development of the higher attributes of human beings.
We must realize that the view from which the sacred legend of the Cross arose makes a strict distinction between what science and technology do, which is merely external construction of the temple of the world, and what acts as a religious permeation, as a religious influence for the sanctification of the entire temple of humanity. Only when this temple of humanity is given a higher purpose, when the outer building, which serves only a practical purpose, is transformed into an expression of the house of God, does the outer building become an envelope for the spiritual interior, in which the higher tasks of humanity are cultivated. Only when the strength to strive for divine virtue, the outer form for beauty, and the word that serves the outer communication of human beings are placed in the service of divine wisdom—only when the worldly is transformed into the divine—does it attain its perfection. If the three virtues of wisdom, beauty, and strength are the envelopes of the divine, then the temple of humanity will be complete. This is how the view that operates in the sense of this legend imagined things.
We must therefore imagine, entirely in the spirit of the legend, that until the appearance of Christ Jesus on earth, two currents existed. One built the worldly temple and shaped the deeds of human beings so that later the divine Word, which had come to earth through Christ Jesus, could be received. A dwelling place had to be prepared for the appearance of the divine Word on earth. Alongside this, the divine itself was to develop through the ages as a kind of secondary current within the second current. Therefore, a distinction was made between the sons of men, the Cain lineage, who were to prepare the world, and the sons of God, the sons of Abel-Seth, who cultivated the divine, until both currents could enter into marriage with each other. Christ Jesus united these two currents. The temple was to be built externally first, until the one who could raise it anew in three days appeared in Christ Jesus. So, on the one hand, we have the stream of the sons of Cain and, on the other hand, the stream of the descendants of Abel-Seth, both of which prepare the development of humanity so that the Son of God can then unite the two sides and make the two streams into one. This is expressed in a profound way in the sacred legend.
Seth himself is the one who planted the sprout he took from the tree of life for Adam into the earth and grew a three-branched tree. What does this three-branched tree mean? At first, nothing other than the trinity of Atma, Buddhi, and Manas, the threefold higher nature of man, which is planted into the lower principles. But in humans it is initially veiled; humans are initially like an outer shell of the actual divine Trinity of Atma, Buddhi, and Manas through their three bodies, the physical, etheric, and astral bodies. You must therefore imagine that the Trinity of the physical, etheric, and astral bodies is like an outer representation of the higher forces Atma, Buddhi, and Manas. And just as an artist creates external forms, representing a certain idea in colors, so these three sheaths also represent a work of art, as it were. If you imagine that the higher principles are like the idea of a work of art, you will have some idea of what constitutes the life of these three bodies.
Now, human beings dwell in their physical, etheric, and astral sheaths with their ego, through which they are to transform this threefold nature so that the three higher principles may find their proper dwelling place here on earth and feel at home. The old covenant was supposed to take care of this. It was supposed to bring human sons into the world through the arts of Cain's lineage, and through these human sons, everything external that serves the physical, etheric, and astral bodies was to be created. What is all this?
What serves the physical body is, first of all, everything that is established through the technical arts for the satisfaction of the physical body and for its comfort. What we then have in terms of social and state institutions and organizations relating to human coexistence, relating to nutrition and reproduction, serves to build up the life body. And acting on the astral body, we have the realm of moral precepts, of ethics, which are intended to bring order to the instincts and passions, to regulate the astral nature and raise it to a higher level.
Thus, throughout the entire old covenant, the sons of Cain built this three-stage temple. It is, as it is composed of our external institutions—you can think of our dwellings, tools, social and state institutions, moral institutions—in all this it is the building of the sons of Cain, which serves the lower members of human nature.
Alongside this worked the other current, presided over by the sons of God, their disciples, and their successors. From there we have the servants of the divine world order, the servants of the Ark of the Covenant. In them we have something that goes as a separate current alongside the servants of the world. They occupied a special position. Only when Solomon's Temple was built was the Ark of the Covenant to be placed there, that is, everything else was to be arranged around the Ark of the Covenant, grouped around it. Everything that was previously worldly was to become an outward expression, a structure for what the Ark of the Covenant meant for humanity. One can best imagine Solomon's Temple as something that outwardly, as a physiognomy, expresses what the Ark of the Covenant is meant to be as a soul.
What animated the three outer bodies of the human being, what gave them life, was borrowed by the Sons of God from the Tree of Life. This is symbolically expressed in the wood that was later used to make the cross of Christ. It was first given to the Sons of God. What did they do with it? What is the deeper meaning of the wood of the cross? There is an enormously profound meaning in this sacred legend of the wood of the cross.
What is the task of the human being in his earthly development? He is to raise his three bodies, which he has received, to a higher level. In other words, he should raise his physical body to a higher realm, and he should also raise his etheric and astral bodies to a higher realm. This development is incumbent upon man. That is its actual meaning: to make our three bodies into three higher members of the entire divine world order.
Higher than what man initially has physically, there is another realm. But to which realm does man belong according to his physical nature? According to his physical nature, he belongs to the mineral realm at the present stage of his development. The physical, chemical, and mineral laws prevail in our physical body. But he also belongs to the mineral realm according to his spiritual nature, for he comprehends only the mineral realm with his intellect. He only gradually learns to comprehend life as such. It is precisely because it is still in this phase of development, in which it understands only the dead, the mineral, that official science denies life. It is in the process of understanding this in the most subtle way. Therefore, it understands the human body only insofar as it is dead, mineral. It treats it basically as a dead product, working with it as one would with a substance in a chemical laboratory. Other substances are introduced into it, just as substances are introduced into a retort. Even when a doctor, who today is educated entirely in mineral science, operates on the human body, it is as if it were nothing more than a mechanical product.
We are therefore dealing with the human body on the level of the mineral kingdom in two ways: the human being is realized in the mineral kingdom through his physical body, and he can only comprehend the mineral kingdom with his pure intellect. This is a necessary transitional stage for human beings. But if we rely not only on the intellect but also on intuition, on spiritual power, then we will realize that we are heading toward a future in which our dead, mineral body will work against something living. And our science must lead the way, must prepare what is to happen to the physical being in the future. In the near future, it must itself become something that contains life within itself; it must understand what lives on earth as something living. For in a deeper sense, it is true that it is human thoughts that prepare the future. An ancient Indian saying is therefore right when it says: What you think today, you will be tomorrow.
The whole world does not spring from dead matter; it springs from living thought. What is external matter is a result of living thought, just as ice is a result of water. The material world is, as it were, frozen thought. We must dissolve it again into its higher elements by grasping the life in thought. If we can raise the mineral into the living, if we can transform the thoughts of the whole human nature, then we will achieve that our science becomes a science of life and not of dead matter. We thereby raise the lowest principle—first in our understanding and later also in reality—into the next realm. And in this way we raise every member of human nature — including the etheric and astral members — one step higher.
What human beings once were, we call in theosophical language the three elemental kingdoms. These precede our mineral kingdom, in which we live today, that is, the kingdom in which our science is exhausted and in which our physical body lives. The three elemental realms are past stages. But the three higher realms, which are built upon the mineral realm, are only in their infancy: the plant realm, the animal realm, and the human realm.
The lowest principle of the human being must pass through these three realms just as it passes through the mineral realm today. Just as human beings today dwell in the mineral kingdom according to their physical nature, so will they later dwell in the plant kingdom and then ascend to even higher kingdoms. Today, according to our physical nature, we are in the transition stage from the mineral to the plant kingdom; according to our etheric nature, we are in the transition from the plant to the animal kingdom; and according to our astral nature, we are in the transition from the animal kingdom to the human kingdom. And only with what we have as a starting point from the realm of wisdom, where we rise above what is astral nature with our own nature, do we rise above the three realms into the divine realm.
So human beings are in the process of ascending. But it is not an external institution, not an external structure that brings this about, but the living itself that awakens within us, which does not merely assemble the external building blocks, but works in a formative, growing way. This life force must intervene in development and must first take hold of the innermost being of the human being; his religious life must be seized by the living. Therefore, what the sons of Cain accomplished for the lower members of human nature during the old covenant was like a preparation, and what the prophets, the guardians of the Ark of the Covenant, accomplished was like a prophetic hint of the future. But now the divine was to descend into the Ark of the Covenant, into the soul, in order to dwell as the Holy of Holies in the temple itself.
These living forces, which have a transforming and reshaping effect, the forces that are actively at work in the transformation of nature, had already been given to the first human being, Adam, from the Tree of Life. But they were entrusted to those who did not concern themselves with the outer structure, the sons of God, the sons of Abel and Seth. Through Christianity, these forces were now to become common property. The two currents were to be united. And today, everything that proceeds from the view that no external form, no temple, no house, no social institution should come into being that is not permeated by inner life, by the life-giving instead of the merely composite mineral force, is essentially Christian.
The first attempt made to raise the lower nature of man to the higher was, as we have seen, the Temple of Solomon. The pentagon was to be seen as the great symbol at the entrance, for man was to strive toward the fifth principle, that is, human nature was to develop from the lower principles to the higher, was to refine its individual members.
And here we come to the profound meaning of the cross, which caused it to find such fundamental and actual significance as a symbol in Christianity. What is the cross? There are three kingdoms to which human nature aspires: the plant kingdom, the animal kingdom, and the human kingdom. Today, man is realized in the mineral kingdom, which includes plants, animals, and humans. Understand this as it is stated in all wisdom traditions, that man, as a soul-spiritual being, is part of the universal soul, what Giordano Bruno, for example, called the world soul. Perhaps the individual soul is like a drop of the world soul, which we imagine as a great sea. Plato already spoke of the world soul being crucified on the world body.
The world soul, as it manifests itself in human beings, is today stretched out in the mineral kingdom. It must rise above itself and develop upward into the three higher kingdoms. To do this, it must be embodied in the plant, animal, and human kingdoms in the next three cycles. The fourth round is nothing other than the embodiment of the human soul in the mineral kingdom, the fifth round in the plant kingdom, the sixth in the animal kingdom, and only the seventh round is the embodiment in the actual human kingdom, where the human being will be completely in the image of the deity. Until then, he must take the world body as his shell three more times.
If we look at this future of humanity, it appears to us as a threefold materiality: plant, animal, and human. However, this human materiality is not the materiality we have today, for that is the mineral materiality, since humanity has only just entered the mineral cycle. Only when the lowest realm becomes the human realm, when there are no longer any lower beings, when man has redeemed all beings through the power of his own life, will he have reached the seventh round, where God rests because man himself creates. Then the seventh day of creation will have arrived, when man will have become the image of God. These are the stages in the history of creation.
Now, plants, animals, and humans, as they stand before us today, are only the seeds of what they are to become. Today, plants are only a symbolic hint of something that will appear in higher glory and clarity in the next cycle of human development. And when human beings have overcome and cast off their animal nature, they will be something of which today they are only a hint. Thus, the plant, animal, and human kingdoms are the three material kingdoms that human beings still have to pass through; they are their world body, and the soul must be crucified on this world body.
Now consider the contrast between plants, animals, and humans. Plants are the exact opposite of humans. This has a very deep, meaningful significance when we understand plants as the exact opposite of humans and humans as the reverse of plant nature. Outer science does not concern itself with such things; it takes things as they appear to the outer senses. But science that has something to do with theosophy considers the meaning of things in their connection with the whole of the rest of evolution. For, as Goethe says, every thing is to be understood only as a parable.
The plant has its roots in the ground and unfolds its leaves and flower organs toward the sun. Today, the sun has within itself the power that was once connected with the earth. The sun has separated itself from our earth. The entire power of the sun is therefore something with which our earth was once imbued. The power of the sun lived in the earth. Today, by holding its flower organs toward the power of the sun, the plant still seeks those times when the power of the sun was connected with the earth. The power of the sun is the etheric power of the plant. By holding its reproductive organs toward the sun, the plant shows its deep kinship with the sun; its reproductive principle is occultly linked to the power of the sun. The head of the plant, on the other hand, which is hidden in the darkness of the earth, is at the same time related to the earth. Earth and sun are two opposite poles in evolution.
The human being is the inverted plant; it has turned its reproductive organs toward the sun, with its head pointing downward. In humans, it is exactly the opposite: they carry their heads upward, toward the higher worlds, in order to receive the spirit, and their reproductive organs point downward. The animal stands in the middle, between the plant and the human being. It has only made half the turn and thus forms, as it were, a crossbar to the directional line of the plant and the human being. It carries its spine horizontally, thereby intersecting the line formed by the plant and the human being in the shape of a cross. Imagine the plant kingdom growing downward, the human kingdom upward, and the animal kingdom growing horizontally, and you will have formed the cross from the plant, animal, and human kingdoms.

This is the symbol of the cross.
It represents the three realms of life into which human beings must enter. The plant, animal, and human kingdoms are the three closest material kingdoms. The whole grows out of the mineral kingdom; today it is the foundation. The animal kingdom stands as a kind of dam between the plant and human kingdoms, and the plant is a kind of counter-image of the human being. This is connected with the fact that human life, that which lives physically in the human being, finds its closest kinship with that which lives in the plant. This could be explained in depth in many lectures, but today I can only hint at it. If humans want to maintain their physical life activity, they can best do so through plant nutrition, because then they take in what is originally related to the physical life activity of the earth. The sun is the carrier of life force, and plants are what grow toward the sun's energy. And humans must unite what lives in plants with their life force. Thus, their nutrients are occultly equivalent to plants. The animal kingdom represents a blockage, a backflow. It therefore interrupts the progress of evolution in a cross-shaped pattern in order to begin a new start.
Humans and plants are opposites, but they are related to each other. The animal, however – and what is initially expressed in the astral body is the animal – is a crossing of the two principles of life. At a higher level, the human etheric body will provide the basis for the immortal human being, who will no longer be subject to death. Today, the etheric body still dissolves with the death of the human being. But the more the human being perfects and purifies himself from within, the more he gains in permanence, the less he perishes. Everything that is worked on in relation to this etheric body contributes to its immortality. In this sense, it is true that the more natural the development and the more it is directed toward the forces of life—this does not refer to the genital and passionate aspects of the animal—the more immortality takes hold of the human being.
The animal is a stream that interrupts human life; it was the delay that was necessary for the reversal of the stream of life. Man had to connect himself with the animal for a time because the reversal had to take place. But he must free himself from it again and return to the stream of life.
At the beginning of our human development, we were given the power of life. This is symbolically expressed in the legend that Adam's son Seth took the sprout from the tree of life, which the sons of God then cultivated further, that threefold human nature that is to be ennobled. Then Moses formed his staff from this wood of life. This staff of Moses is nothing other than the outer law. But what is external law?
External law exists when the person who is to erect an external structure has a plan—that is, the lawful connections on paper—and then the external building blocks are cut and assembled according to his plan. That which underlies a state plan as law is also external law. Human beings are under the rod of Moses. Even those who obey the moral laws out of fear or hope of reward are only obeying the external law. But even those who view science only in an external way are only obeying the external law. For what else do they have but external laws? All the laws we learn in science are such external laws. Through these, however, we cannot find the transition to the higher human nature, but only obey the law of the old covenant, which is the staff of Moses. But this external law should be a model for the internal law. Man should learn to follow the law within himself. This internal law must become the impulse of life in man; from the internal law he must learn to obey the external law. It is not he who draws up a blueprint who realizes the inner law, but he who builds the temple out of inner impulse, so that the soul passes into the joining together of the building blocks. It is not he who lives in the inner law who merely follows the laws of the state, but he to whom they are the impulse of his life because they have grown together with his soul. And it is not the person who obeys moral precepts out of fear or for reward who is a moral person, but the person who obeys them because he loves them.
As long as people were not mature enough to accept the laws internally, as long as the rod of Moses was present in the law, forcing people under a yoke, the law remained in the Ark of the Covenant. Until then, the Pauline principle, the principle of grace over man, came and he was given the opportunity to become free from the law. Therein lies the depth of the Pauline view that it makes a distinction between law and grace. When the law is imbued with love, when love has become united with the law, then it is grace. This is how the Pauline distinction between law and grace is to be understood.
Now we can follow the legend of the cross even further. Wood is used as a bridge between two banks because it was not suitable as a pillar in Solomon's Temple. This was a preparation. The Ark of the Covenant was in the temple, but the Word made flesh was not yet there. The wood of the cross is laid as a bridge over a river, but it was only the Queen of Sheba who recognized the value of the wood for the temple, which is to live in the consciousness of the whole human soul. Now the same wood is used to build the cross on which the Savior hangs. The one who unites the two earlier currents, who allows the worldly and spiritual currents to flow into one another, is Christ himself, who is united with the living cross. Therefore, he can carry the wood of the cross as something he takes upon his back, as something that lives outside of him. He is himself united with the wood of the bridge, and therefore he can take the dead wood upon himself.
Man has now entered into the higher nature. Formerly, he lived in the lower nature. In the sense of Christianity, he now lives in the higher nature, and he carries the cross—the lower nature—like a foreign object through his inner living power. Now religion becomes a living force in the world, now life in the outer nature ceases, the cross becomes completely wood. The outer body now becomes the vehicle of the inner living power. There the great mystery is accomplished: the cross is taken upon the back.
Our great poet Goethe also expressed the idea of the bridge beautifully and meaningfully in his “Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily,” where he has a bridge built by the snake laying itself across the river like a living bridge. All deeply initiated people have this same symbol for one and the same thing.
Thus we have come to know the sacred legend of the cross in its deep inner meaning. We have seen how the change was prepared which was brought about by Christianity and which must be completed more and more in later times through the Christianization of the world. We have seen how the cross, insofar as it is the image of the three outer bodies, dies, how it can only establish an outer connection between the three lower and the three higher realms, between the two banks separated by the stream—the wood of the cross could not become pillars in Solomon's Temple—until man recognizes it as his own symbol. Only when he sacrifices himself, makes his own body a temple, and becomes capable of carrying the cross himself, is the connection between the two currents made possible.
This is why the Christian churches also have the sign of the cross in their design. This is meant to express that the living cross is hidden in the outer temple building. But these two currents, on the one hand the divine life and on the other the worldly mineral, have merged into one in the Savior hanging on the cross, where the higher principles lie in the Savior himself and the lower ones in the cross. And the Apostle Paul expresses particularly deeply that from now on this connection is to be an organic, a living one. Without what we have gone through today, it is impossible to understand the writings of the Apostle Paul. It was clear to him that the old covenant, which established a contrast between man and the law, had to come to an end. Only when man unites the law with himself, takes it upon his back, carries it, will there no longer be any contradiction between the inner nature of man and the outer law. Then what Christianity wants to achieve will have been achieved.
“Sin entered the world through the law.” This is a profound statement by Paul. When is sin in the world? When there is a law that can be broken. But when the law is so united with human nature that what man does is good, then there can be no sin. Man contradicts the law of the cross only as long as it does not live in him, as long as it is external. Therefore, Paul sees Christ on the cross as the overcoming of the law and the overcoming of sin. It is a curse to hang on the wood of the cross, that is, to fall under the law. Sin and law belong together according to the old covenant; law and love belong together according to the new covenant. It is a negative law that is connected with the old covenant; but a positive law that lives is the law of the new covenant. He who has united it with his own life has overcome the law of the old covenant. But he has also sanctified it.
This is what is meant by those words of Paul that can be read in the Epistle to the Galatians (chapter 3, verses 11-13): “But that no one is justified before God by the law is evident, for the righteous will live by his faith. The law does not rest on faith, but the man who does it will live by it. But Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us, for it is written, 'Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree.'”
With the word “wood,” Paul connects the concepts we have discussed today. Thus, we must delve ever deeper into what the great initiates have said. We do not approach Christianity by adapting it, so to speak, to our requirements, to the materialistic mind of today, which is averse to the higher, but by rising more and more into the heights of the spiritual. For Christianity was born out of initiation, and only then will we be able to understand and believe that infinite depths are contained in Christianity, when we no longer believe that we must bring Christianity closer to the present-day intellect, but when the materialistic intellect, which is averse to the higher, rises again to Christianity. The present intellect must rise from the mineral-dead to the living-spiritual if it wants to understand Christianity.
I have presented these views in order to arrive at the concept of the New Jerusalem.