THE GOSPELS
The accounts of the life of Jesus
which can be submitted to historical examination are
contained in the Gospels. All that does not come
from this source might, in the opinion of one of those
who are considered the greatest historical authorities
on the subject (Harnack), be “easily written
on a quarto page.”
But what kind of documents are these
Gospels? The fourth, that of St. John, differs
so much from the others, that those who think themselves
obliged to follow the path of historical research in
order to study the subject, come to the conclusion:
“If John possesses the genuine tradition about
the life of Jesus, that of the first three Evangelists
(the Synoptists) is untenable. If the Synoptists
are right, the Fourth Gospel must be rejected as a
historical source” (Otto Schmiedel, Die Hauptprobleme
der Leben Jesu Forschung, . This is
a statement made from the standpoint of the historical
investigator.
In the present work, in which we are
dealing with the mystical contents of the Gospels,
such a point of view is neither to be accepted nor
rejected. But attention must certainly be drawn
to such an opinion as the following: “Measured
by the standard of consistency, inspiration, and completeness,
these writings leave very much to be desired, and
even measured by the ordinary human standard, they
suffer from not a few imperfections.” This
is the opinion of a Christian theologian (Harnack,
Wesen des Christentums).
One who takes his stand on a mystical
origin of the Gospels easily finds an explanation
of what is apparently contradictory, and also discovers
harmony between the fourth Gospel and the three others.
For none of these writings are meant to be mere historical
tradition in the ordinary sense of the word.
They do not profess to give a historical biography
(cf. et seq.). What they
intended to give was already shadowed forth in the
traditions of the Mysteries, as the typical life of
a Son of God. It was these traditions which were
drawn upon, not history. Now it was only natural
that these traditions should not be in complete verbal
agreement in every Mystery centre. Still, the
agreement was so close that the Buddhists narrated
the life of their divine man almost in the same way
in which the Evangelists narrated the life of Christ.
But naturally there were differences. We have
only to assume that the four Evangelists drew from
four different mystery traditions. It testifies
to the extraordinary personality of Jesus that in
four writers, belonging to different traditions, he
awakened the belief that he was one who so perfectly
corresponded with their type of an initiate, that
they were able to describe him as one who lived the
typical life marked out in their Mysteries. They
each described his life according to their own mystic
traditions. And if the narratives of the first
three Evangelists resemble each other, it proves nothing
more than that they drew from similar mystery traditions.
The fourth Evangelist saturated his Gospel with ideas
which are, in many respects, reminiscent of the religious
philosopher, Philo (cf. . This only
proves that he was rooted in the same mystic tradition
as Philo.
There are various elements in the
Gospels. Firstly, facts are related, which seem
to lay claim to being historical. Secondly, there
are parables, in which the narrative form is only
used to symbolise a deeper truth. And, thirdly,
there are teachings characteristic of the Christian
conception of life. In St. John’s Gospel
there is no real parable. The source from which
he drew was a mystical school which considered parables
unnecessary.
The part played by ostensibly historical
facts and parables in the first three Gospels is clearly
shown in the narrative of the cursing of the fig tree.
In St. Mark x-14, we read: “And Jesus
entered into Jerusalem, and into the temple:
and when he had looked round about upon all things,
and now the eventide was come, he went out unto Bethany
with the twelve. And on the morrow, when they
were come from Bethany, he was hungry: and seeing
a fig tree afar off having leaves, he came, if haply
he might find any thing thereon: and when he came
to it, he found nothing but leaves; for the time of
figs was not yet. And Jesus answered and said
unto it, No man eat fruit of thee hereafter for ever.”
In the corresponding passage in St. Luke’s Gospel,
he relates a parable (xii, 7): “He
spake also this parable; A certain man had a fig tree
planted in his vineyard; and he came and sought fruit
thereon, and found none. Then said he unto the
dresser of his vineyard, Behold these three years
I come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and find none:
cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?” This
is a parable symbolising the uselessness of the old
teaching, represented by the barren fig tree.
That which is meant metaphorically, St. Mark relates
as a fact appearing to be historical. We may
therefore assume that, in general, facts related in
the Gospels are not to be taken as only historical,
or as if they were only to hold good in the physical
world, but as mystical facts; as experiences, for
the recognition of which spiritual vision is necessary,
and which arise from various mystical traditions.
If we admit this, the difference between the Gospel
of St. John and the Synoptists ceases to exist.
For mystical interpretation, historical research has
not to be taken into account. Even if one or another
Gospel were written a few decades earlier or later
than the others, they are all of like historical value
to the mystic, St. John’s Gospel as well as
the others.
And the “miracles” do
not present the least difficulty when interpreted
mystically. They are supposed to break through
the laws of nature. They only do this when they
are considered as events which have so come about
on the physical plane, in the perishable world, that
ordinary sense-perception could see through them offhand.
But if they are experiences which can only be fathomed
on a higher stage of existence, namely the spiritual,
it is obvious that they cannot be understood by means
of the laws of physical nature.
It is thus first of all necessary
to read the Gospels correctly; then we shall know
in what way they are speaking of the Founder of Christianity.
Their intention is to relate his life in the manner
in which communications were made through the Mysteries.
They relate it in the way in which a Mystic would
speak of an initiate. Only, they give the initiation
as the unique characteristic of one unique being.
And they make salvation depend on man’s holding
fast to the initiate of this unique order. What
had come to the initiates was the “kingdom of
God.” This unique being has brought the
kingdom to all who will cleave to him. What was
formerly the personal concern of each individual has
become the common concern of all those who are willing
to acknowledge Jesus as their Lord.
We can understand how this came about
if we admit that the wisdom of the Mysteries was imbedded
in the popular religion of the Jews. Christianity
arose out of Judaism. We need not therefore be
surprised at finding engrafted on Judaism, together
with Christianity those mystical ideas which we have
seen to be the common property of Greek and Egyptian
spiritual life. If we examine national religions,
we find various conceptions of the spiritual; but
if, in each case, we go back to the deeper wisdom
of the priests, which proves to be the spiritual nucleus
of them all, we find agreement everywhere. Plato
knows himself to be in agreement with the priest-sages
of Egypt when he is trying to set forth the main content
of Greek wisdom in his philosophical view of the universe.
It is related of Pythagoras that he travelled to Egypt
and India, and was instructed by the sages in those
countries. Thinkers who lived in the earlier days
of Christianity found so much agreement between the
philosophical teachings of Plato and the deeper meaning
of the Mosaic writings, that they called Plato a Moses
with Attic tongue.
Thus Mystery wisdom existed everywhere.
In Judaism it acquired a form which it had to assume
if it was to become a world-religion.
Judaism expected the Messiah.
It is not to be wondered at that when the personality
of an unique initiate appeared, the Jews could only
conceive of him as being the Messiah. Indeed this
circumstance throws light on the fact that what had
been an individual matter in the Mysteries became
an affair of the whole nation. The Jewish religion
had from the beginning been a national religion.
The Jewish people looked upon itself as one organism.
Its Jao was the God of the whole nation. If the
son of this God were to be born, he must be the redeemer
of the whole nation. The individual Mystic was
not to be saved apart from others, the whole nation
was to share in the redemption. That one is to
die for all is founded on the fundamental ideas of
the Jewish religion.
It is also certain that there were
mysteries in Judaism, which could be brought out of
the dimness of a secret cult into the popular religion.
A fully-developed mysticism existed side by side with
the priestly wisdom which was attached to the outer
formalism of the Pharisees. This mystery wisdom
is spoken of among the Jews just as it is elsewhere.
When one day an initiate was speaking of it, and his
hearers sensed the secret meaning of his words, they
said: “Old man, what hast thou done?
Oh, that thou hadst kept silence! Thou thinkest
to navigate the boundless ocean without sail or mast.
This is what thou art attempting. Wilt thou fly
upwards? Thou canst not. Wilt thou descend
into the depths? An immeasurable abyss is yawning
before thee.” And the Kabbalists, from
whom the above is taken, also speak of four Rabbis;
and these four Rabbis sought the secret path
to the divine. The first died; the second lost
his reason; the third caused monstrous evils, and
only the fourth, Rabbi Akiba, went in and out of the
spiritual world in peace.
We thus see that within Judaism also
there was a soil in which an initiate of an unique
kind could develop. He had only to say to himself:
“I will not let salvation be limited to a few
chosen people. I will let all people participate
in it.” He was to carry out into the world
at large what the elect had experienced in the temples
of the Mysteries. He had to be willing to take
upon himself to be, in spirit, to his community, through
his personality, that which the cult of the Mysteries
had heretofore been to those who took part in them.
It is true he could not at once give to the whole
community the experiences of the Mysteries, nor would
he have wished to do so. But he wished to give
to all the certainty of the truth contemplated in the
Mysteries. He wished to cause the life, which
flowed within the Mysteries, to flow through the further
historical evolution of humanity, and thus to raise
mankind to a higher stage of existence. “Blessed
are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.”
He wished to plant unshakably in human hearts, in
the form of confidence, the certainty that the divine
really exists. One who stands outside initiation
and has this confidence will certainly go further
than one who is without it. It must have weighed
like a mountain on the mind of Jesus to think that
there might be many standing outside who do not find
the way. He wished to lessen the gulf between
those to be initiated and the “people.”
Christianity was to be a means by which every one might
find the way. Should one or another not yet be
ripe, at any rate he is not cut off from the possibility
of sharing, more or less unconsciously, in the benefit
of the spiritual current flowing through the Mysteries.
“The Son of Man is come to seek and to save that
which was lost.” Henceforward even those
who cannot yet share in initiation may enjoy some
of the fruits of the Mysteries. Henceforth the
Kingdom of God was not to be dependent on outward
ceremonies: “Neither shall they say, Lo
here! or, Lo there! for, behold, the Kingdom of God
is within you.” With Jesus the point in
question was not so much how far this or that person
advanced in the kingdom of the spirit, as that all
should be convinced that that kingdom exists.
“In this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject
unto you; but rather rejoice, because your names are
written in heaven.” That is, have confidence
in the divine. The time will come when you will
find it.