I am sometimes asked what it means to be a member of The Christian
Community. It means that an individual has taken part in
the sacramental life of the congregation for a sufficient
length of time and has come to experience the Act of Consecration
of Man, the Communion service as his or her “spiritual home.”
Among those seeking for answers to the question of meaning
and wholeness in a fractured world are those who find help
through communion, through participation in Christ. Such
communion is union with a being who is the bearer of one’s
“real” self, one’s “higher” self. We experience a kind of
unification for a time, the world appears a bit more coherent.
Having found a “spiritual home” one can then feel more at
home in the earthly world.
Yet membership does not mean that one’s only access to the
spirit is in the sacraments, nor need it signify one’s decision
that the Christ can be found only in one Church. Christ
is at work everywhere in the world and would be heard in
the depths of every human soul. Communion with him, which
will always be holy whenever it really occurs, can take
place in different ways. And it is in the nature of Christ
himself that no single path to communion with him, be it
meditation, the sacraments or the largely unconscious path
of destiny can claim exclusiveness or greater validity for
a modern human being. Any path that leads to Christ is worthy,
for he said “I am the way …” Yet every path also has its
dangers: meditation: spiritual vanity; ritual: spiritual
indolence; destiny: resentment and refusal to wake up. These
risks are not unique to each path but overlap in large measure
just as the various paths can overlap in the lives of individuals.
Anyone following a path of spiritual discipline and meditation
will be only strengthened in those endeavors by an inwardly
active participation in ritual, in the sacraments. But only
if, for personal reasons residing deep within the should,
they themselves want to participate in ritual. There is
no question of should. On the other hand, regular attendance
at the Act of Consecration of Man, or any other valid form
of the Eucharist, when accompanied by a fervent heart filled
with an “active receptivity,” will serve to stimulate one’s
thinking by way of the heart. With thinking thus become
more lively and flexible it is natural then for an individual
to seek for an expanded understanding of the ideas heard,
thought and prayed in the ritual. This may lead people to
study, for example, the spiritual researches of Rudolf Steiner.
Thus, as one would expect of two paths leading to the same
goal, Christ himself, the two ways serve to complement and
support one another.
Rudolf Steiner was once asked whether an initiate, someone
able to directly commune with beings in the spiritual world,
would also take communion in the form of bread and wine.
He responded that the answer depended entirely upon the
initiate, that there is no general principle. In this most
personal area there are no rules as to which path or combination
of paths any individual or type of individual should follow
in seeking communion with Christ. The only certainty is
that everyone is individually responsible for deciding which
paths are fruitful for him or her.
An individual who has experienced the sacraments in The
Christian Community can come to the insight: “Yes, here is reality, here is healing and help for life. Here I find
the strength that helps me to help others. Here is a source
of THE GOOD in and for the world. I want to unite with this
community that the Good endure, that the Good be spread
further in the world.” When anyone come comes to this
conclusion and wants to become a member of the Christian
Community he or she should arrange to meet with a priest
to discuss the next step.
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