THE APOCALYPSE OF ST. JOHN
At the end of the New Testament stands
a remarkable document, the Apocalypse, the secret
Revelation of St. John. We have only to read
the opening words to feel the deep mystic character
of this book. “The Revelation of Jesus
Christ, which God gave unto him, to shew unto his
servants how the necessary things are shortly going
to happen; and this is sent in signs by the angel
of God unto his servant John.” What is
here revealed is “sent in signs.”
Therefore we must not take the literal meaning of
the words as they stand, but seek for a deeper meaning
of which the words are only signs. But there are
other things also which point to a hidden meaning.
St. John addresses himself to the seven churches in
Asia. Not actual, material churches are meant;
the number seven is the sacred number, chosen on account
of its symbolic meaning. The actual number of
the Asiatic churches was different. And the manner
in which St. John arrived at the revelation also points
to something mysterious. “I was in the Spirit
on the Lord’s day, and heard behind me a great
voice, as of a trumpet, saying, ’What thou seest,
write in a book, and send it unto the seven churches.’”
Thus, we have to do with a revelation received by St.
John in the spirit. And it is the revelation
of Jesus Christ. Wrapped in a hidden meaning
there appears what Christ Jesus manifested to the
world. Therefore we must also look for this hidden
meaning in the teachings of Christ. This revelation
bears the same relation to ordinary Christianity as
was borne by the revelation of the Mysteries, in pre-Christian
times, to the people’s religion. On this
account the attempt to treat the Apocalypse as a mystery
appears to be justified.
The Apocalypse is addressed to seven
churches. For the reason of this we have only
to single out one of the seven messages sent.
In the first of these it is said, “Unto the
angel of the church of Ephesus write; these things
saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right
hand, who walketh in the midst of the seven golden
candlesticks; I know thy works, and thy labour, and
thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which
are evil: and thou hast tried them which say they
are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars:
and hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name’s
sake hast laboured, and hast not fainted. Nevertheless
I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left
thy highest love. Remember therefore from whence
thou art fallen, and repent, and do the best works;
or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove
thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.
But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the
Nicolaitanes, which I also hate. He that hath
an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the
churches; to him that overcometh will I give to eat
of the tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise
of God.” This is the message addressed to
the angel of the first community. The angel,
who represents the spirit of this community, has entered
upon the path pointed out by Christianity. He
is able to distinguish between the false adherents
of Christianity and the true. He wishes to be
Christian, and has founded his work on the name of
Christ. But it is required of him that he should
not bar his own way to the highest love by any kind
of mistakes. He is shown the possibility of taking
a wrong course through such errors. Through Christ
Jesus the way for attaining to the divine has been
pointed out. Perseverance is needed for advancing
further in the spirit in which the first impulse was
given. It is possible to believe too soon that
one has the right spirit. This happens when the
disciple lets himself be led a short way by Christ
and then leaves his leadership, giving way to false
ideas about it. The disciple thereby falls back
again into the lower self. He has left his “highest
love.” The knowledge which is attached
to the senses and intellect may be raised into a higher
sphere, becoming wisdom, by being spiritualised and
made divine. If it does not reach this height,
it remains amongst perishable things. Christ
Jesus has pointed out the path to the Eternal, and
knowledge must with unwearied perseverance follow the
path which leads to its becoming divine. Lovingly
must it trace out the methods which transmute it into
wisdom. The Nicolaitanes were a sect who took
Christianity too lightly. They saw one thing only,
that Christ is the Divine Word, the Eternal Wisdom
which is born in man. Therefore they concluded
that human wisdom was the Divine Word, and that it
was enough to pursue human knowledge in order to realise
the divine in the world. But the meaning of Christian
wisdom cannot be construed thus. The knowledge
which in the first instance is human wisdom is as
perishable as anything else, unless it is first transmuted
into divine wisdom. “Thou art not thus,”
says the “Spirit” to the angel of Ephesus;
“thou hast ‘not relied’ merely upon
human wisdom. Thou hast patiently trodden the
Christian path. But thou must not think that
the ‘highest’ love is not needed to attain
to the goal. Such a love is necessary which far
surpasses all love to other things. Only such
can be the ‘highest’ love. The path
to the divine is an infinite one, and it is to be
understood that when the first step has been gained,
it can only be the preparation for ascending higher
and higher.” Such is the first of these
messages, as they are to be interpreted. The
meaning of the others may be found in a similar way.
St. John turned, and saw “seven
golden candlesticks,” and “in the midst
of the seven candlesticks one like unto the Son of
Man, clothed with a garment down to the foot, and
girt about the paps with a golden girdle. His
head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as
snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire.”
We are told that “the seven candlesticks
are the seven churches.” This means that
the candlesticks are seven different ways of attaining
to the divine. They are all more or less imperfect.
And the Son of Man “had in his right hand seven
stars” . The seven stars are the
angels of the seven churches . The guiding
spirits, or daimons (cf. , of the wisdom
of the Mysteries have here become the guiding angels
of the churches. The churches are represented
as bodies for spiritual beings, and the angels are
the souls of those bodies, just as human souls are
the guiding powers of human bodies. The churches
are the imperfect ways to the divine, and the souls
of the churches were to become guides along those
paths. For this purpose they must themselves
have for their leader the being who has in his right
hand seven stars. “And out of his mouth
went a sharp two-edged sword: and his countenance
was as the sun shineth in his strength.”
This sword is also found in the Mysteries. The
candidate for initiation was terrified by a flashing
sword (cf. . This indicates the
situation of one who wishes to know the divine by experience,
so that the face of wisdom may shine upon him like
the sun. St. John also goes through this experience.
It is to be a test of his strength (cf. . “And when I saw him, I fell at his
feet as dead. And he laid his right hand upon
me, saying unto me, Fear not” . The
candidate for initiation must pass through the experiences
which otherwise man only undergoes at the gate of
death. His guide must lead him beyond the region
in which birth and death have a meaning. The initiate
enters upon a new life. “And I was dead;
and, behold, I am alive for evermore, Amen; and have
the keys of hell and of death.”
Thus prepared, St. John is led on
to learn the secrets of existence. “After
this I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven:
and the first voice which I heard was as it were of
a trumpet talking with me; which said, Come up hither,
and I will shew thee things which must be hereafter.”
The messages to the seven spirits of the churches make
known to St. John what is to take place in the physical
world in order to prepare the way for Christianity.
What he now sees “in the Spirit” takes
him to the spiritual fountain-head of things, hidden
behind physical evolution, but which will be realised,
in a spiritualised age, in the near future, by means
of physical evolution. The initiate experiences
now in the spirit what is to happen in the future, “And
immediately I was in the spirit: and, behold,
a throne was set in heaven, and one sat on the throne.
And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and
a sardine stone: and there was a rainbow round
about the throne, in sight like unto an emerald.”
In this way is described the source of things in the
world of sense, in the pictures in which it appears
to the seer. “And round about the throne
were four and twenty seats: and upon the seats
I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in white
raiment; and they had on their heads crowns of gold”
(i-4). The beings far advanced on the path
of wisdom thus surround the fountain-head of existence,
to gaze on its infinite essence and bear testimony
to it. “And in the midst of the throne,
and round about the throne, were four beasts full
of eyes before and behind. And the first beast
was like a lion, and the second beast like a calf,
and the third beast had a face as a man, and the fourth
beast was like a flying eagle. And the four beasts
had each of them six wings about him; and they were
full of eyes within: and they rest not day and
night, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty,
which was, and is, and is to come.” It
is not difficult to see that the four beasts represent
the supersensible life underlying physical forms of
life. Afterwards, when the trumpets sound, they
lift up their voices, i.e., when the life expressed
in sense-forms has been transmuted into spiritual
life.
In the right hand of him who sits
on the throne is the book in which the path to the
highest wisdom is traced out . There is
only one worthy to open the book. “Behold,
the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David,
hath prevailed to open the book and to loose the seven
seals thereof.” The seven seals of the book
denote that human wisdom is sevenfold. That this
is so is again connected with the sacred character
of the number seven. The mystic wisdom of Philo
designates as seals the eternal cosmic thoughts which
come to expression in things. Human wisdom seeks
for those creative thoughts; but only in the book,
which is sealed with them, is divine truth to be found.
The fundamental thoughts of creation must first be
unveiled, the seals must be opened, before what is
in the book can be revealed. Jesus, the Lion,
has power to open the seals. He has given a direction
to the great creative thoughts which, through them,
leads to wisdom. The Lamb that was slain and
that has bought its divinity with its blood, Jesus,
who drew down the Christ into Himself and who thus,
in the supreme sense, passed through the Life-Death-Mystery,
opens the book , 10). And as each seal is
opened (vi), the four beasts declare what they know.
At the opening of the first seal,
St. John sees a white horse, on which sits a rider
with a bow. The first universal power, an embodiment
of Creative Thought, becomes visible. It is put
into the right direction by the new rider, Christianity.
Strife is allayed by the new faith. At the opening
of the second seal a red horse appears, ridden by
one who takes away from the earth Peace, the
second universal power, so that humanity may not neglect,
through sloth, to cultivate divine things. The
opening of the third seal shows the universal power
of Justice, guided by Christianity. The fourth
brings the power of Religion which, through Christianity,
has received new dignity.
The meaning of the four beasts thus
becomes plain. They are the four chief universal
powers, to which Christianity gives a new direction:
War (the lion); Peaceful Work (the bull); Justice (the
being with the human face); and Religious Enthusiasm
(the eagle). The meaning of the third being becomes
clear when it is said, at the opening of the third
seal, “A measure of wheat for a penny, and three
measures of barley for a penny,” and that the
rider holds “a pair of balances.”
And at the opening of the fourth seal a rider becomes
visible whose name “was Death, and Hell followed
with him.” This rider is Religious Justice
(v, 8). When the fifth seal is opened there
appear the souls of those who have already acted in
the spirit of Christianity. Creative thought
itself, embodied in Christianity, shows itself here;
but by this Christianity is at first meant only the
first Christian community, which was transitory like
other forms of creation. The sixth seal is opened
(vi.); it is made evident that the spiritual world
of Christianity is an eternal world. The people
at large seem to be permeated by that spiritual world
out of which Christianity itself proceeded. What
it has itself created becomes sanctified. “And
I heard the number of them which were sealed:
and there were sealed an hundred and forty and four
thousand of all the tribes of the children of Israel”
(vi. They are those who prepared for the
Eternal before the coming of Christianity, and who
were transformed by the Christ-impulse.
The opening of the seventh seal follows.
It becomes evident what true Christianity is to be
in the evolution of the world. The seven angels,
“which stood before God,” appear (Rev.
vii. Again these angels are spirits from
the ancient Mysteries transferred to Christianity.
They are the spirits who lead to the vision of God
in a really Christian way. Therefore what is
next accomplished is a leading to God: it is
an “initiation” which is bestowed upon
St. John. The proclamations of the angels are
accompanied by the necessary signs during initiations.
“The first angel sounded and there followed hail
and fire mingled with blood, and they were cast upon
the earth: and the third part of trees was burnt
up, and all green grass was burnt up.”
And similar things take place when the other angels
sound their trumpets.
At this point we see that this was
not merely an initiation in the old sense, but that
a new one was taking the place of the old. Christianity
was not to be confined, like the ancient Mysteries,
to a few elect ones. It was to belong to the
whole of humanity. It was to be a religion of
the people; the truth was to be ready for each one
who “has ears to hear.” The old Mystics
were singled out from a great number; the trumpets
of Christianity sound for every one who is willing
to hear them. Whether he draws near or not depends
on himself. This is the reason why the terrors
accompanying this initiation of humanity are so enormously
enhanced. What is to become of the earth and
its inhabitants in a far distant future is revealed
to St. John at his initiation. Underlying this
is the thought that initiates are able to foresee
in higher worlds what is realised in the lower world
only in the future. The seven messages present
the meaning of Christianity to that age, the seven
seals represent what was then being prepared through
Christianity for future accomplishment. The future
is veiled and sealed to the uninitiated; it is unsealed
in initiation. When the earthly period is over
during which the seven messages hold good, a more
spiritual time will begin. Then life will no more
flow on as it appears in physical forms, but even
outwardly it will be a copy of its supersensible forms.
These latter are represented by the four animals and
the other seal-pictures. In a still later future
appears that form of the earth which the initiate
experiences through the trumpets.
Thus the initiate prophetically goes
through what is to happen. And the Christian
initiate learns how the Christ-impulse interposes and
works on in earthly evolution. After it has been
shown how all that is too much attached to perishable
things perishes to attain true Christianity, there
appears the mighty angel with a little book open in
his hand, which he gives to St. John. “And
he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and it shall
make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth
sweet as honey” . St. John was not
only to read the little book, he was to absorb it
and let its contents permeate him. What avails
any knowledge unless man is vitally and thoroughly
imbued with it? Wisdom has to become life, man
must not merely recognise the divine, but become divine
himself. Such wisdom as is written in the book
no doubt causes pain to the perishable part of man,
“it shall make thy belly bitter,” but
so much the more does it make happy the eternal part,
“but it shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey.”
Only by such an initiation can Christianity
become actual on the earth. It kills everything
belonging to the lower nature. “And their
dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city,
which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where
also our Lord was crucified.” By this is
meant the followers of Christ, who are ill-treated
by the temporal powers. But what is ill-treated
is only the mortal part of human nature, which they
will afterwards have conquered. Thereby their
fate is a copy of the prefiguring fate of Christ Jesus.
“Spiritually Sodom and Egypt” is the symbol
of a life which cleaves to the outer and is not changed
by the Christ-impulse. Christ is everywhere crucified
in the lower nature. When the lower nature conquers,
all remains dead. The dead bodies of men lie about
in the public places of cities. Those who overcome
the lower nature and awaken the crucified Christ hear
the trumpet of the seventh angel, “the kingdoms
of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord,
and of his Christ, and he shall reign for ever and
ever” (x. “And the temple of
God was opened in heaven, and there was seen in his
temple the ark of his testament” (x.
In the vision of these events, the
initiate sees renewed the old struggle between the
lower and the higher natures. For everything
which the candidate for initiation formerly had to
go through must be repeated in one who follows the
Christian path. Just as Osiris was threatened
by the evil Typhon so now “the great dragon,
that old serpent” (xi must be overcome.
The woman, the human soul, gives birth to lower knowledge,
which is an adverse power if it is not raised to wisdom.
Man must pass through that lower knowledge. In
the Apocalypse it appears as the “old serpent.”
From the remotest times the serpent had been the symbol
of knowledge in all mystic wisdom. Man may be
led astray by this serpent, knowledge, if
he does not bring to life in him the Son of God, who
crushes the serpent’s head. “And
the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called
the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world:
he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were
cast out with him” (xi. In these words
we can see what it was that Christianity wished to
be: a new kind of initiation. What
had been attained in the Mysteries was to be attained
in a new form. For in them too the serpent had
to be overcome, but this was no longer to take place
in the old way. The one, primeval mystery, the
Christian mystery, was to replace the many mysteries
of antiquity. Jesus, in whom the Logos had been
made flesh, was to become the initiator of the whole
of humanity, and humanity was to be his own community
of Mystics.
What was to take place was not a separation
of the elect, but a linking together of all.
As each grows up to it so does he become a Mystic.
The good tidings are announced to all, he who has an
ear to hear hastens to learn the secrets. The
voice of the heart is to decide in each individual
case. It is not that one person at a time is
introduced into the Mystery-temples, but that the word
is to be spoken to all, to one it will then appeal
more strongly than to another. It will be left
to the daimon, the angel within each individual, to
decide how far the latter may be initiated. The
whole world is a Mystery-temple. Not only is
salvation to come to those who see the wonderful processes
in the special temples for initiation, processes
which give them a guarantee of eternal life, but “Blessed
are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.”
Even if at first they grope in the dark, the light
may nevertheless come to them later. Nothing
is to be withheld from any one; the way is to be open
to all.
The latter part of the Apocalypse
describes clearly the dangers threatening Christianity
through anti-Christian powers, and the final triumph
of Christianity. All other gods are merged in
the one Christian divinity: “And the city
had no need of the sun, neither of the moon to shine
in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and
the Lamb is the light thereof” (xx.
The secret of the Revelation of St. John is that the
Mysteries are no longer to be kept under lock and
key. “And he saith unto me, Seal not the
sayings of the prophecy of this book, for the time
is at hand.”
The author of the Apocalypse has set
forth what he believes to be the relation of his church
to the churches of antiquity. He wished to express
in a spiritual mystery what he thought about the Mysteries
themselves. He wrote his mystery on the isle of
Patmos, and he is said to have received the “Revelation”
in a grotto. These details indicate that the
revelation was of a mystery character.
Thus Christianity arose out of the
Mysteries. Its wisdom is born as a mystery in
the Apocalypse, but a mystery which transcends the
limits of the old mystery world. The separate
Mysteries were to become one universal one.
It may appear to be a contradiction
to say that the secrets of the Mysteries became manifest
through Christianity, and that nevertheless a Christian
mystery is to be seen again in the spiritual visions
of the writer of the Apocalypse. The contradiction
disappears directly we reflect that the secrets of
the ancient Mysteries were revealed by the events
in Palestine. Through these there became manifest
what had previously been veiled in the Mysteries.
There is now a new secret, namely what has been introduced
into the evolution of the world by the appearance
of the Christ. The initiate of ancient times,
when in the spiritual world, saw how evolution points
the way to the as yet hidden Christ. The Christian
initiate experiences the unseen effects of the manifested
Christ.