Finding Buddha's Eightfold Path in St John's Gospel

Submitted by Kristina Kaine on Sat, 05/05/2007 - 9:15pm.

Introduction

Gautama Buddha was a Being who had always been able to incarnate in the earthly bodies of the various periods of civilisation, without having had to use everything in this human organisation. It had not been necessary for this Being to go through real human incarnations. Now, however, came an important turning-point for the Bodhisattva; it now became necessary for him to make himself acquainted with all the destinies of the human organisation within an earthly body which he was to enter. He was to experience something which could only be experienced in an earthly body; and because he was such a high Individuality, this one incarnation was sufficient for him to see all that a human body can develop. Other people have to evolve the inner capacities gradually, throughout the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh periods; but Buddha could experience in this one incarnation all that it was possible to evolve. In his incarnation as Gautama Buddha he saw, in advance, the first germ of what was to arise in man as conscience, which will become greater and greater as time goes on. He was therefore able to re-ascend into the spiritual world directly after that incarnation; there was no need for him to go through another. What man will, in a certain sphere evolve out of himself during future cycles, Buddha was able to give in this one incarnation, as a great directing force. This came about through the event which has been described as the “sitting under the Bodhi-tree.” He then gave forth — in accordance with his special mission — the teaching of compassion and love contained in the eightfold path. This great Ethic of humanity which men will acquire as their own during the civilisations yet to come, was laid down as a basic force in the mind of the Buddha who descended at that time, and from Bodhisattva became Buddha, which means that he really rose a stage higher, for he learnt through his descent.

That, in different words, describes that great event in Eastern civilisation known as “the Bodhisattva becoming Buddha.” When this Bodhisattva, who had never really incarnated, was 29 years of age, his individuality fully entered the son of Suddhodana; not having fully had possession of him. He then experienced the great human teaching of compassion and love. Why did this Bodhisattva, who then became Buddha, incarnate in this people? Why not in the Graeco-Latin people?

If this Bodhisattva was really to become the Buddha of the fourth Post-Atlantean period of civilisation, he had to bring in something new for the future. When the consciousness-or spiritual-soul has been fully developed, man will, by its means, gradually become sufficiently ripe to recognise of himself the great impetus given by Buddha. At a time when man had only developed the intellectual soul, it was necessary that Buddha should already have developed the spiritual soul. He had so to use the physical instrument of the brain that he was complete master of it; and this in quite a different fashion than could have been done by one who might have progressed in advance as far as the Graeco-Latin period of civilisation. The Graeco-Latin brain would have been too hard for him to use. It would only have enabled him to develop the intellectual or mind (Mind in the sense of ‘I have a mind to do a thing.’) soul, whereas he had to develop the spiritual soul. For that he required a brain that had remained softer. He made use of the soul that was only to develop later, in an instrument that had been used by man in earlier times and had been retained by the Indian people. Here again we have a recapitulation: Buddha repeated a human organisation belonging to earlier times, together with a soul-capacity belonging to times yet to come. The events that take place in the evolution of humanity are to this extent, of the nature of a necessity. In the 5th to the 6th century before our era, Buddha had the task of introducing the spiritual-soul into the organisation of man. He, as a single individual, could not, however, take over the whole task of doing all that was necessary in order that the spiritual-soul might prepare itself in the right way from the 5th century onward. His own particular mission only comprised one part of that task: that of bringing to man the doctrine of Compassion and Love. Other teachers of humanity would have other tasks. This part of the Ethics of Humanity, the ethic of Love and Compassion, was first introduced by Buddha, and its vibrations still endure; but humanity must in future develop a number of other qualities besides these, as, for instance, that of thinking in forms of pure thought, in crystal-clear thoughts. It was no part of Buddha's mission to build up thoughts, to add one clear thought to another. His task was to form and establish that which leads man of his own accord to find the eight-fold path. From "The Christ Impulse and the Development of the Ego-Consciousness" Lecture one, The Sphere of the Bodhisattvas, by Rudolf Steiner, Berlin, 25th October, 1909.

The steps on the Eightfold path can be found in many teachings and are sometimes called by different names.

Rudolf Steiner used these steps as part of his esoteric class and assigned a day of the week to focus on each one.

Buddhism is founded on the Four Noble Truths from Buddha’s first sermon:

  • 1. Suffering exists
  • 2. Suffering arises from attachment to desires
  • 3. Suffering ceases when attachment to desire ceases
  • 4. Freedom from suffering is possible by practicing the Eightfold Path
  • Comment viewing options

    Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

    First real Psychologist

    Thanks for your article.

    Buddha seems to have been the first historical manifestation of real psychology. There are moments of great humanity amongst the Graeco-Romans but this is only partial. The reconnection with Buddhism in the West seems to have happened in the 19th Century via Schoppenhauer and then Nietzsche followed by Steiner.

    Interest in Buddhism has grown massively in more recent years. My only concern with this is that, in the West at least, Buddhism has become an adjunct to the way we live rather than a way of transforming it. For example, many people lead lives of considerable aquisitiveness and add on Buddhistic practices without seeing the whole picture, but maybe this is a necessary step on the way to change. Buddhism is thus in danger of becoming another aquisition amidst our obsessive materialism. The interesting thing about Steiner is that he enjoins us to transform life from a practical perspective. When Buddha was around materialism was barely in its infancy! From what I see of it in Britain, Buddhism is serving a useful function as a 'retreat' from the way things are but not as a mode of transforming it practically.

    Buddha essential to Golgotha

    I agree with you Simon that Buddhism is used as a 'retreat'. Of course, Buddha lived during the period in evolution when the personal ability to feel was developed. We now live in the period where we can not only think but have freedom in our thinking. Then we are able to see the panorama of evolution and the glory of the human being becoming divine.

    It is so free-making to understand the mighty role Buddha played in the Mystery of Golgotha. Prokofieff's "The Cycle of the Year as a Path of Initiation" describes this wondrous story so well. In one of my recent reflections I wrote: "The I AM (Ego) unites every human, belief speaks of the different paths to it."

    Reshaping our world

    Hello, Kristina.

    What brought me to Steiner was this sense in which, with our awareness of thinking, (also found amongst Quakers who sensed what is called the 'etheric Christ' or the teacher within)we then use our will to reshape the world and practically transform our relationships with each other. We can really feel the need for it now as more and more social discontent and unhappiness intensifies because we cling to stale thinking. Buddhism was a great impetus on this path. The forces pulling us on opposing directions are very strong, hence much mental illness and depression around us. The work is now ours and we can really on no external authority.

    Yes! Simon !

    Well done Simon ! Its  wonderful you have embraced the etheric Christ !

    Changing ourselves

    Ah Simon, I wrote exactly that on my new website for my book "I Connecting : The Quest of the Soul" www.i-connecting.com

    "If each of us reads this book several times, and thinks deeply about what it says, we will connect up with our I, our Real Self, and our view of the world will change. Not only that, our relationships will change, those we have relationships with will change also and consequently the world will change - in unexpected ways. We won't change the world, but the world will become a different place because we have changed ourselves."

    your book i-connecting

    Hi Kristina
    There seems to be a problem with your i-connection.com site. Where can I get a copy of your book "I Connecting : The Quest of the Soul" ?
    Eve

    i-connecting wed site

    Hi Eve,

    There was a typo in the url - www.i-connecting.com

    You will be able to buy the book in about 2 weeks from http://www.goldenstonepress.com/
    K

    Post new comment

    • Allowed HTML tags: <b> <i> <u> <a> <ul> <ol> <li> <p> <br> <strong> <em> <img>
    • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
    • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
    • Glossary terms will be automatically marked with links to their descriptions

    More information about formatting options

    Captcha
    This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
    7 + 1 =
    Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.