Sacrament

From AnthroWiki

A (Christian) sacrament (from the ecclesiastical Latinsacramentum "[religious] mystery") is a physical act that is performed in such a way that a spiritual process is symbolically expressed in it and is thus intended to make people aware of the effects of the spiritual in everyday life. Sacramentalism is a conscious action from the spiritual.

The Essence of Sacramentalism

„It is the essence of sacramentalism that man fills the everyday with spiritual consecration. The ancient sagas had the purpose of setting the souls of men in the right vibrations so that they were filled with spiritual power. The simplest action of a naive mind can be sanctified by this. This is something that is effective and will always be effective. Those who know this also know that a conversion is necessary in our culture. No matter how hard one tries to bring this physical plan into harmony, into order, it will fail as long as one works only on the physical plane; if harmony is created on one side, disharmony will arise on the other. But if you let the spiritual work, you will see that the mundane is handled in quite a different way. That is sacramentalism.

This idea also underlies Christian sacramentalism: healing from the spiritual plane. A sacrament is a physical act performed in such a way that it symbolically expresses a spiritual process. It is a symbolism that has its justification in higher plans. Nothing in the sacrament is arbitrary. Everything, down to the smallest detail, is an image of a higher occult process. He who wishes to understand a sacrament in which the ceremonial is an image of a spiritual process must acquaint himself with what underlies it. It is an occult process which is withdrawn from the outer eyes. In every sacramentalism there is not only something intellectual taking place, but something that has a real, occult meaning. Take, for example, the occult significance of fire. Fire did not exist in the earliest epochs of development. It could only come into being when the earth was so far compacted that this fire could be beaten out of earthly matter. Therefore, the invention of fire is described to us as a process of our fifth root race.

Prometheus brought fire from heaven to earth. The bringing forth of fire has given our culture its character. Realise what it would be like if we had no fire. In the first epochs of time we had no fire. Our development owes everything intellectual, everything technical, to fire. Fire is that which leads down to the physical plane. We owe material culture to fire. The priests therefore had to see something special in fire. Therefore, in the second post-Atlantean cultural epoch, the Persian magicians saw in fire above all that which must work in the sacrament. What did the Persian priest ceremonially realise on his altar? Occultism knows that there have been seven Zoroasters. The Zoroaster of history is the seventh. The Persian magician had a special way of bringing forth fire. This process was the image of the great cosmic creation of fire. There stood the Persian magician with his thyrsus and did his ceremonies, which every occultist knows well, but only the occultist. This process was an image of the great cosmic creation of fire. When the priestly schools no longer understood how to produce fire with the thyrsus, they at least sought a natural fire. First they created fire through lightning, and then they propagated it through the so-called eternal fire, which could only ever be lit one after the other. The fire that is produced by nature is said to be more effective than the artificially produced fire. When an animal epidemic occurred in England in 1826 and in Hanover in 1828, people took wood and rubbed fire with it because they believed that the herbs cooked with it were more effective.

Man must again create spiritual life in every movement and every step; and to reintroduce this is the task and the endeavour of the spiritual movement. The sacramentalism of the past must return. One must know that it is different to act out of the spirit than to act out of the material. To let spiritual life flow out again, that is our aim.“ (Lit.:GA 92, p. 35f)

The 7 Sacraments

In the Orthodox Church there are seven sacraments, which are regarded as sacred mysteries. In the tradition of the Roman Catholic Church, too, a seven-fold number of sacraments has prevailed since the 13th century. In the Protestant and Anglican Church, on the other hand, only two sacraments are accepted today: the Lord's Supper and baptism. The other five sacraments are regarded here only as rites with a sacramental character. Martin Luther, however, originally also counted confession among the sacraments.

According to Rudolf Steiner, the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church correspond to seven stages of human development in earthly life between birth and death, which are related to the seven members of man:

„That which lies in Catholic dogma goes back to certain forms of older knowledge. One imagines that between birth and death man goes through seven stages. First of all, birth itself, then what is called maturation, puberty, then what is called the realisation of inwardness around the age of 20, then the feeling of not conforming to the world, of not being fully human, that is the fourth. And then, isn't it true, the gradual growing into the spiritual. These things then became somewhat fluctuating, but one imagined the whole of human life, including social life, in seven stages, and one imagined that man grows out of the spirit between birth and death. In modern times, the Catholic Church does not recognise pre-existence. There is only a thought of God, and this growing out of the thought of God is represented in seven stages. These seven stages must [each] be countered by other forces. Birth is an evolution, maturation is an evolution, each form of evolution is countered by a form of involution: birth by baptism, puberty by confirmation. Each sacrament is the inverse of a natural stage in evolution. One can say that Catholic doctrine presents seven stages of evolution, which it juxtaposes with seven stages of involution, and these are the seven sacraments, four of which are earthly, namely Baptism, Confirmation, Sacrament of the Altar, Repentance. These four are as general-human as physical body, etheric body, astral body and I. If you go higher, you come to the spirit-self, life-spirit and spirit-man. Just as the coming in from the spiritual world, so the three last sacraments are those that go into the social: marriage, ordination, last rites. The penetration of the spiritual world is expressed in the priestly ordination. So these are the seven sacraments, the last of which are last rites, priestly ordination and marriage. The sacraments are simply the inverse processes for the natural processes that take place for man, and the corresponding ritual acts are also arranged accordingly.

The idea of the seven sacraments is certainly not an arbitrary one. It is rather arbitrary to limit these seven sacraments to two. This happened at a time when people no longer had any feeling for the inner numerical constitution of the world. It is these things, of course, that make Catholic priests who are to be taken seriously, especially the religious, such despisers of Protestantism. They regard it throughout as a rationalism, as something that knows nothing more.“ (Lit.:GA 342, p. 137f)

Literature

References to the work of Rudolf Steiner follow Rudolf Steiner's Collected Works (CW or GA), Rudolf Steiner Verlag, Dornach/Switzerland, unless otherwise stated.
Email: verlag@steinerverlag.com URL: www.steinerverlag.com.
Index to the Complete Works of Rudolf Steiner - Aelzina Books
A complete list by Volume Number and a full list of known English translations you may also find at Rudolf Steiner's Collected Works
Rudolf Steiner Archive - The largest online collection of Rudolf Steiner's books, lectures and articles in English.
Rudolf Steiner Audio - Recorded and Read by Dale Brunsvold
steinerbooks.org - Anthroposophic Press Inc. (USA)
Rudolf Steiner Handbook - Christian Karl's proven standard work for orientation in Rudolf Steiner's Collected Works for free download as PDF.