1. The Sway of the Trinity in Human Destiny
2. Some General Viewpoints on the Lord’s Prayer as a Whole
A Translation Project by Robert J. Kelder of "Anthroposophical Contemplations on the Old Testament, the New Testament and the Apocalypse " by Valentin Tomberg with as an Appendix his Essay on Rudolf Steiner's Foundation Stone Meditation in the Framework of "AGENDA 2033" to Celebrate the 2000th 'Anniversary' of Christ Jezus as the Spirit of the Earth and the I-consciousness of Humanity
1. The Sway of the Trinity in Human Destiny
2. Some General Viewpoints on the Lord’s Prayer as a Whole
Note by the translator: That this translation project begins with Ch. V from Valentin Tombergs Contemplations on the New Testament is occasioned by the fact that I only decided to start this study blog when I was editing my Dutch translation of this chapter for publication in book form. Back in 2014, a start was made in presenting this Bible trilogy in public by weekly readings of my working translation of the Contemplations of the Old Testament in the Chapel of the Castle in Oud-Zuylen near Utrecht under the title "The New Christianity - Towards the re-Christianization of the Low Lands" followed by weekly reading of the contemplations on the New Testament and the Apocalypse 2015 in the library of the Willehalm Institute in Amsterdam. On Easter Monday April 7 last, I celebrated this premiere by making a video in Oud-Zuylen (in Dutch) that it was exactly 12 years ago that it was, as far as I know, the first time that the New Christianity was under this term presented in the Low Lands, this New Christianity that was inaugurated during the refoundation of the Anthroposophical Society in 1923/24 by Rudolf Steiner as the heavenly ordained form in which anthroposophy was to be spread on earth. (See my many articles on this subject). Simultaneously with the weekly readings the texts of the working translations were put online and later as well the study by Valentin Tomberg on Rudolf Steiner's Foundation Stone Meditation. It is from these Dutch translations that the English translation of Ch. V presented here was made with the assistance of AI with cross-checks to the German original and the English translation "Christ and Sophia" published in 2006.
This translation project, as mentioned in the blog description, is part of the project "AGENDA 2033" to prepare the celebration in 2033 of the 2000th anniversary of the birth of Christ Jesus in the year 33 as the Spirit of the Earth and the "I-consciousness of Humanity and to further the calendar reform inaugurated by Rudolf Steiner. It arose after the English presentation in Amsterdam during Christmas time of my Dutch translation of "The Jesus Mysteries - Rudolf Steiner's Chronology of the Gospels and the Christ Prophecy of Zarathustra" from the third volume "Waking Up to Goethe" of Werner Greub's trilogy "How the Grail Sites Were Found - Wolfram von Eschenbach as a Historian", which can be seen on YouTube. Other works that are scheduled to be (re)translated and (re)published in the framework of AGENDA 2033 are, among others, those by the philosopher of the New Christianity Herbert Witzenmann and the seer of the New Christianity Are Thoresen. (See the many references to these authors on this blog). As an organ of AGENDA 2033 "The Vriend of God", based on a passage from C. 2 of these Anthroposophical Contemplations on the New Testament about the task of Vriend of God to realize the Kingdom of God, Heaven on earth.
INTRODUCTION
The nine Beatitudes of the Sermon on the Mount are not moral exhortations, nor poetic blessings, nor spiritual ideals. They are formulas of transformation — precise indications of how the human soul is reshaped when it allows the Christ‑impulse to enter its depths.
Chapter V of "Anthroposophical Contemplations on the New Testament" by Valentin Tomberg opens this hidden architecture. It shows how the Beatitudes unfold as a threefold path:
the first three: the trials of the whole human being,
the middle three: the metamorphoses of the soul,
the final three: the transformations of destiny itself.
Here the Beatitudes become transparent as initiatory stages, each revealing a different relation between the human being and the spiritual world. They illuminate how the Christ‑impulse works inwardly — in the sentient soul, the intellectual soul, and the consciousness soul — and outwardly, in the objective events of karma and world‑destiny.
This chapter asks for a reading that is not merely intellectual but participatory. For the Beatitudes are not doctrines to be understood; they are living forces that shape the soul according to the measure of its openness.
To enter this text is to step into the movement from the human being toward the Son, and through the Son toward the Father — the movement that stands at the heart of Christian esotericism.
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1. Inner Transformations of the Soul‑Members of Man on the Path of Christian Spiritual Schooling
The two
preceding contemplations (III and IV) were devoted to the first three
Beatitudes of the Sermon on the Mount — as the formulae of the schooling of
human consciousness in the physical body, the astral body, and the etheric
body. The next three Beatitudes concern the purely soul transformations — as
this contemplation will attempt to show — which human consciousness can undergo
within itself on the path of realizing the Christ‑Impulse. The final three Beatitudes, however, refer to the objective
transformations of the events of destiny that prevail outside the soul. They
answer the question: how does the world (the supra‑human, the human, and the sub‑human) respond
to the fact that the soul and physical being becomes imbued by Christ? While the
middle three Beatitudes answer the question: how does the Christianization of
the soul‑members (the Sentient Soul, the Intellectual Soul, and the Consciousness Soul) take place? the
first three Beatitudes shed light on the question through which trials and tribulations the whole human being must pass in order to reach the three stages of spiritual development in the sense of the Christ‑impulse.
Thus, one may characterize the first three Beatitudes as formulae of Christian‑oriented occultism; for the initiatory knowledge of occultism consists essentially in the fact that it embraces both the subjective, inner and the objective, outer — and embraces both under a cosmic viewpoint. This becomes especially clear in the Beatitude: “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth,” where an inner condition of the soul is brought into connection with a cosmic future event.
The middle three Beatitudes may be characterized as psychosophical, for they concern the changes in the inner states of the human soul during the passage through the developmental stages indicated in the first three beatitudes.
The last three Beatitudes may be characterized as karmic, for they concern the changes in karma that are brought about by ascending those stages of development. At the same time, these Beatitudes refer to the working of the threefold spiritual being of the human being (Spirit‑Self, Life‑Spirit, and Spirit‑Man), which expresses itself directly in the transformations of destiny.
Only when the nine Beatitudes have become the object of a deeper knowledge in their totality can insight be gained into the nature of the human being of the future, who will have taken the Christ‑impulse into his whole being. Then one will also be able to confront sharply the anti‑Christian counter‑image of the ninefold human being — as he is intended to be brought forth from the nine spheres of the interior of the Earth — as the opposite of the first. For obscurity exists only as long as the object of contemplation remains in a mixed condition; once it becomes possible to separate one side and consider it on its own, a clear picture of the other side also arises.
After the inner composition and the resulting task of this contemplation have been outlined, we may now proceed with the continuation of the discussion of the Beatitudes. And we must indeed begin with the middle group, the psychosophical Beatitudes, since the first three Beatitudes were already the subject of the two preceding contemplations. Thus, the first task is to open a deeper understanding of the fourth Beatitude. To this end, several building‑stones necessary for this understanding must be gathered. One such building‑stone is found when one asks: What exactly is meant in the Beatitude by the 'hunger' and 'thirst' of the soul, and by its 'being satisfied'?
To answer this question, let us begin with the experience that physical existence offers through hunger and thirst. Through this ordinary experience one learns that quenching thirst and satisfying hunger are polar opposites. For in quenching thirst, one extinguishes the excessive fire of the metabolic activity of the body, whereas in satisfying hunger one adds fuel to this fire. In the first case the fire is limited; in the other it is stoked. The condition in which the body feels neither hunger nor thirst is the state of equilibrium between these two polarities — a harmonization of the bodily condition.
A similar polarity is also present in the soul experience of the human being. It consists in the fact that, on the one hand, impressions stream into the soul from the outer world, filling it with sensations and representations, and that, on the other hand, this stream from without encounters the stream of inner demands which the soul directs toward the world or toward the expectations it harbors regarding the world.
If the world conveys unsatisfying impressions to the soul, then the inner fire of desire is felt more strongly through the lack of fulfillment, and one may speak of a “thirsting” of the soul. If, on the other hand, the world brings no new desire‑awakening impressions to the soul, so that the life of desire finds fewer and fewer desirable things in the world and therefore turns inward upon the soul‑life itself, then a “hungering” of the soul arises.
But when it is a matter of deeper moral demands, expectations, and longings of the soul, then the soul experiences the balance between its inner appeal to the world and the inflow of impressions from without as justice. When the soul is primarily morally oriented, the relation between inner impulse and outer reality becomes the life‑question of justice. There the alternating “hungering” and “thirsting” of the soul becomes a “hungering and thirsting after justice.” For justice is the state of moral harmonization of the Sentient Soul, just as the satisfaction of hunger and thirst is the state of natural harmonization of the body. The sentient soul — that is, the soul‑being that lives in perceptions of outer impressions and perceptions of inner expressions of desire — is morally as dependent on justice as the body is dependent on food and drink.
Now the Sentient Soul is that part of the total soul‑being of Man that expresses the condition of the entire soul‑life. The contents of knowledge of the Consciousness Soul and the judgments of the Intellectual Soul bring about a change in the condition of the soul‑life only when they have become living sensations. The Sentient Soul expresses the way in which the human soul‑life is placed in life; whether the human being stands harmoniously in life or not — of this the condition of his Sentient Soul bears witness. For this reason, justice is not only the moral life‑element of the Sentient Soul itself, but also the concrete life‑expression of the entire moral condition of the soul. The degree of justice that Man expresses in his relation to the world — not merely demands from the world — is not the criterion of what he will become morally, but of what he has become.
That justice is the summarizing expression of the entire moral condition of Man — this was already known in antiquity and was also taught in the mystery schools. Thus, the initiate of such mysteries, Plato, described the doctrine of the fundamental moral qualities of the friend of wisdom, the philosopher, in such a way that the threefold human being has three “virtues” to develop, which, however, find their harmony and their summarizing outward expression in their common fruit: justice. The wisdom (Sophia) that the head‑human has to develop becomes courage in the breast‑human and becomes temperance, the self‑mastery of the impulses, in the lower limbs‑human — but in the expression of the whole human being toward the surrounding world, wisdom, courage, and temperance reveal themselves together as justice Harmony of the thinking, feeling, and willing human being was therefore the meaning of dikaiosýnē. It was the condition of the entire soul‑life of Man in which the equilibrium between the soul‑life dedicated to the spirit, the soul‑life dedicated to the body, and the soul‑life proper had been brought into being.
This harmony is something toward which the most important representatives of the spiritual life have always striven. How it can be attained in the present, however, and what it signifies on the path of spiritual knowledge — concerning this, the most essential things have been said in Rudolf Steiner’s book How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds (GA 10), in connection with the development of the six‑petaled lotus flower: “A free soul that stands in equilibrium between sensuality and spirituality” is precisely that for which Man hungers and thirsts when he has entered into a living relationship with the Christ‑impulse. And the power that the human I, through its union with the Christ‑impulse, is enabled to unfold — the power that brings about this harmonization of the soul‑condition — is what is meant in the Beatitude that says: “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for justice, for they shall be satisfied” ). The 'satisfaction' of the striving for the harmonious condition of the soul is precisely that harmony which arises as the consequence of the Christianizing of the Sentient Soul.
If the Sentient Soul denotes the condition of the human soul in the way it is placed within life, then the Intellectual Soul denotes that in the human being which adds something of its own to life. The Sentient Soul enables - be it harmonious or disharmonious - participation in life; the Intellectual Soul judges this life and the participation in it. What Man experiences in the world is owed to the Sentient Soul; what he says out of himself about the experience is produced by the Intellectual Soul. For the Intellectual Soul is the speaking soul. Concerning experiences and sensations, it has something to say from within itself; as such, it rises above mere experience to its estimation, to its judgment.
Rendering judgment is therefore the essential active expression of the Intellectual Soul. If this activity of the Intellectual Soul is not mechanized but remains within the proper human‑moral realm, then every judgment contains, in essence, a moral pronouncement. The intellectual soul continually exercises a judging activity — whether the human being is aware of it or not. To apply the Intellectual Soul means to judge, whether concerning oneself, other human beings, nature, or the world. For one cannot judge without attributing or denying value.
If this judgment arises from a healthy, that is, harmonized Sentient Soul, it will be just. If the Christ‑Impulse is alive in the Sentient Soul, this becomes the condition for the Intellectual Soul — provided the human being is of good will — to judge justly. But if the Intellectual Soul itself receives the Christ‑impulse, then something enters its judging activity through which the 'I' manifests itself more strongly, for the Intellectual Soul stands closer to the revelation of the 'I' than the Sentient Soul. Something then enters judgment that surpasses justice. For ordinary justice judges on the basis of past and present; it rests upon what the judged has become. Goodness, mercy, however, surpass justice in that they do right not only to past and present but also to present and future. They judge not only on the basis of what has become, but also in trust toward the positive future possibilities that goodness takes into account. In this sense goodness, mercy, is more just than ordinary justice, for it also does right to the future.
When goodness enters the judging of the Intellectual Soul, rendering judgment becomes an activity according to the “New Law” of the Sermon on the Mount. It surpasses the Platonic dikaiosýnē and gradually grows into the new manner of rendering judgment that corresponds to the spirit of the New Testament.
The consequence is that the karmic judgment that approaches a judging human being also becomes merciful. Whoever judges the human being not only as one who has become but also as one who is becoming, thereby creates the condition to be judged likewise. This does not occur directly, but through the detour of karma — but occur it will. The healing and harmonizing of human relationships in the social sphere is the consequence of receiving the Christ‑impulse into the Intellectual Soul, just as the harmonizing of the inner soul‑condition is the consequence of receiving Him into the Sentient Soul. These fundamental truths concerning the inner transformation of the Intellectual Soul through the Christ‑Impulse, and its consequences are expressed in the fifth Beatitude: “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.”
While the Intellectual Soul permeated by Christ thus becomes a 'Mercy Soul', the present consciousness finds it difficult to form any mental picture of a 'merciful intellect.' All experience seems to suggest that the intellect — usually associated with a 'sharp mind' — carries a heartless ruthlessness, even an inner cruelty of judgment. Even if one brackets out its hardness and coldness, one can scarcely imagine anything positive in a 'soft' or 'warm' intellect; and it becomes difficult to think of it as still sharp. Vagueness and subjectivity seem the inevitable consequences of a 'softened intellect.'Yet it is possible to judge with concepts of utmost clarity that are inwardly not only crystal‑clear but also sun-warm. To show the world that this is possible — as a social reality — that is the task entrusted to anthroposophical human beings in their way of judging one another and judging the world by Rudolf Steiner and by the spiritual world.
If it is thus not easy today to already form a mental picture of the intellectual soul permeated by the Christ‑impulse, it is even more difficult to form a picture of the Consciousness Soul as it reveals itself in the sense of the Christ‑Impulse. For the experience that present-day life offers of the Consciousness Soul is that of an unartistic, amoral, materialistic objectivity — the “no‑nonsense” attitude that dominates science and much else. Can this objectivity become creative, moral, spiritual? That is the question the present state of consciousness poses to humanity.
The transformation that must occur in the Consciousness Soul through the Christ‑Impulse consists essentially in this: just as the Sentient Soul must become a 'Justice Soul', and the Intellectual Soul a 'Mercy Soul', so must the Consciousness Soul become a 'Conscience Soul.' Not merely conscience in the narrow sense of personal right and wrong, but a conscience of responsibility toward nature and humanity. The objectivity of the Consciousness Soul must remain; but it must become the bearer of a conscience projected outward.
Modern science has gathered immense factual knowledge of the kingdoms of nature; what is now required is that this knowledge be taken up into conscience. Through knowledge, nature has been made serviceable Man; through conscience, Man will become her conscious servant — giving to nature the moral‑spiritual that she needs, as she gives to Man the physical‑material that he needs.
This expansion of conscience into the kingdoms of nature arises from a deepening of knowledge of nature. For when facts of nature are exactly and extensively investigated , what is actually investigated are the consequences of the Fall. The probing consciousness cannot avoid encountering, within the totality of natural phenomena, the fact of the Fall — that the whole of nature is decadent humanity. This fact will be' discovered' as surely as gravity was once discovered. And this discovery will demand that Man turn his heart toward nature. Then the great catharsis will occur: the purification of the heart. For the heart is purified when it ceases to be cramped in itself and opens to the world.
Once the fact of the 'Fall' of nature becomes content of consciousness, the image of the total being that lies fragmented and decadent within nature will on the other hand also arise. This primordial image of Man who bears the whole of nature within himself, the Adam Kadmon of tradition, who as the “image and likeness of God” is now the longing of all creatures — this archetype will rise before consciousness out of fallen nature. The "pure in heart," those who have turned their hearts toward the fallen kingdoms of nature, will behold their God, the ideal archetype. In His image God becomes visible to them, once they will have first purified their hearts by beholding the tragic distortion of that image. Thus, it is not a question of beholding the Father‑God of the world, wen in the sixth Beatitude it is said: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” - but of beholding the divine archetype of the All‑Human, who in the elemental world will be beheld as the hope of the resurrection of nature in the age of the Consciousness Soul.
He will however only be capable of being beheld by those human beings vision who will have extended conscience beyond merely individual and merely human concerns into the kingdoms of nature. This expansion will awaken the new natural clairvoyance, the “etheric clairvoyance” of which Rudolf Steiner spoke. The light that will make the elemental world, the "Shamballa” of the oriental sagas — visible, is the light of the conscience of the katharoi tē kardia, the pure in heart.
2. THE SPIRITUAL PATHS OF DESTINY ACCORDING TO THE LAST THREE BEATITUDES OF THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT
3. THE COSMIC MEANING OF THE BEATITUDES OF THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT
The nine Beatitudes have thus far been considered in their meaning for the karma of humanity, now the question naturally arises: what do they mean for the karma of the world? For such a meaning they must have, since humanity is indeed an essential part of world‑events, and the Christ‑Impulse concerns not only the history of humanity but also its karma. - An answer to this question can be found when one considers the text of the Sermon on the Mount that immediately follows the ninth Beatitude (as given in the Gospel of Matthew). This text, which forms a kind of summarizing epilogue to the Beatitudes, culminates in two sentences:The ‘Moral Ether’ is destined to be the organ of the constructive activity of the Good in nature, just as salt can serve as an organ for the constructive I‑activity that normally works through the blood within the human organization. Through deeds that express the morally awakened will, human beings will permeate the events of nature with flashes of ‘Moral Ether’. And the beings of nature will orient themselves toward these streams of ‘Moral Ether’; these streams will represent the conscience of nature. Then nature will follow Man out of free affection — not as an enslaved servant, but as the soul of Kundry, who may now entrust herself to those who have become worthy of her trust. For then Kundry will be freed from the curse of double service — to Klingsor and to the Knights of the Grail — and will devote herself solely to the service of the Holy Grail.
The working of the Moral Ether, as the conscience of nature, is the secret of the white mechanical occultism of the future. Then the mechanisms will not dominate the forces of nature, but the forces of nature — following the ‘Moral Ether’ of Man — will set the mechanisms in motion. And it will be the will of Man that causes the moral ether to stream forth, the will in which the Christ‑impulse lives so strongly that it has led Man to the realization of the words of Christ Jesus: “No one comes to the Father except through Me.” There will be Father‑forces at work when Man has permeated his will — the will that causes this ‘Moral Ether’ to stream forth — with the Christ‑impulse, just as the prophets of the Old Testament worked and were persecuted (Matt. 5:12).
Just as the saying “Ye are the light of the world” refers to the overcoming of Lucifer in the objective outer world, so the saying “You are the salt of the Earth” refers to the struggle against Ahriman in the objective outer world. For just as Lucifer is the being who prevents the light of the Earth from streaming into the spiritual world, so Ahriman is the one who causes darkness upon the Earth. The spiritual‑moral darkness is also brought into nature by Ahriman. Yet this darkening is such only from a spiritual point of view; from the earthly point of view, it is a special kind of light. This special kind of light appears, for example, in electricity. In general, the most important weapon of Ahriman in nature is earthly electricity, which includes even finer forms than those known to humanity today. In the struggle against Ahriman for the sake of nature, the most important weapon of the beings of the spiritual world is the heavenly electricity. The heavenly lightning bolts often destroy and dissolve that which, from the sub‑earthly layers, had been prepared as a threat to the surface of the Earth — to nature and to humanity. Some preparations of evil are destroyed by the strokes of heavenly electricity. Nature, however, experiences this only as a struggle between two powers, a struggle that proceeds with alternating success. Neither the earthly electrical effects of Ahriman nor the lightning bolts of the heavenly electricity of Michael are convincing to nature in themselves. Driven by fear upon fear, she sighs for redemption and meanwhile serves now one side, then the other. Only the ‘Moral Ether’, which will reveal itself through Man, will she experience not as a power, but as a guiding call and a help.
A
phenomenon of this kind already existed in the past: A certain degree of
revelation of morally effective natural forces could occur through the
disciples of Christ Jesus after the event of Pentecost. Some of the miracles
mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles and in tradition can be explained simply
by the fact that the apostles stood for a certain time in a different
relationship to nature than was normally possible even then. One need only read
the Acts of the Apostles (Gr. Praxeis Apostolōn) from the viewpoint of the
relation between nature and the apostles, and one will find the statements here
confirmed. Indeed, one will find that the author of the Acts placed special
emphasis on making it clear to the reader that the apostles possessed a
new kind of magic — one that always triumphed when it came into conflict with
the old magic. The author of the Acts seems to have made it his special task to
convince the reader that the moral can work decisively upon the processes of
nature. It is not spells, amulets, talismans, and the like that are effective there, but the name of Christ Jesus and the inner permeation of the apostles with the Christ‑impulse (that is, with faith).
In the two sayings — about the light of the world and the salt of the Earth — the question is thus the objective significance for the world of that which in the nine Beatitudes was described as a human matter. This significance lies in the fact that through the reception of the Christ‑impulse, the Luciferic estrangement between heaven and Earth can be overcome, and the ahrimanically enslaved nature can gradually be brought closer being liberated.
The latter is namely a task that will only be able to reach its fulfillment in a distant future. For the “salt,” the working of which will become increasingly evident from the sixth, Philadelphian cultural epoch onward, will become — during the future Jupiter‑embodiment of the Earth — a factor governing the processes of nature just as gravity is today. For from the middle of the Jupiter‑evolution onward, gravity will lose its significance in nature. Then the beings of nature will no longer be bound to the theater of the Jupiter‑events by gravity; the force that prevents them from drifting away will be of a moral kind. The beings of nature will follow the ‘Moral Ether’ when they remain faithful to the planet Jupiter. The moral force of trust will keep them from drifting away — no longer the coercion of gravity, which on Jupiter will cease to exist.
With the completion of the contemplation of the nine Beatitudes, a step has been taken toward the knowledge of the working of Christ Jesus through the Word. But the nine Beatitudes signify the path of Man to the Son. A further step would be the contemplation of the path that leads through the Son to the Father. This further step is taken by Christ Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount when He gives the seven petitions of the Lord’s Prayer. The seven petitions of the Lord’s Prayer express the relation in which Man can stand to the Father‑God when he has united himself with the Son in the sense of the nine Beatitudes. One understands the relation of the Beatitudes to the Lord’s Prayer in its deeper meaning when one uses the words of Christ Jesus —“No one comes to the Father except through Me” — as the key. For these words provide the inner thread that leads from the Beatitudes to the Lord’s Prayer.
Thus, the Lord’s Prayer is — in a deeper sense — a continuation of what is revealed through the Beatitudes. For this reason, the next contemplation will have the seven petitions of the Lord’s Prayer as its subject.
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1. The Sway of the Trinity in Human Destiny At the end of the previous V. contemplation attention was already drawn to the relation between ...