“Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.” How many times have we recited this phrase, in church or in solitude, perhaps in haste, perhaps from memory, without ever truly stopping to question its meaning.
What if it were not a simple supplication? What if it were the keystone of an entire system of spiritual and material transformation, the instruction for an operation that changes the very nature of our existence? According to an initiatory reading that traverses the anthropology of Rudolf Steiner, alchemy, and the deepest core of Christ’s message, the Lord’s Prayer is not just a prayer: it is an equation, a procedure, a manual for an inner laboratory.
Let me try to take you inside this secret laboratory. The key phrase—”forgive us our debts”—does not speak only of sins or offenses. It speaks of an energy circuit, of a “clearing chamber” that finally closes the moment the ego stops demanding. Every time we ask for forgiveness, and every time we grant it, something deflates: the ego, the claim to always be right, the accumulated weight of expectations.
And in that deflation, the divine life process can advance smoothly, from birth to death, like a river that finally finds its bed. It is not a comforting morality; it is a subtle mechanics: debt, in the spiritual economy, is a currency that should never circulate. Returning it means ceasing to feed the illusion of separateness.
At this point, a powerful image enters the scene: that of the loaves and the fishes. The Gospel miracle of multiplication is often told as an act of divine generosity. But there is another reading, more radical. The passage “from loaves to fishes” represents the overcoming of raw matter—the bread, fruit of the earth worked, fruit of human toil—toward a subtler form of nourishment. The fish is a symbol of Christ, but also of water, of the unconscious, of life coming from another realm, from a depth we do not control. Transforming loaves into fishes means ceasing to accumulate, to demand, to barter. It means entrusting one’s cognition—one’s way of knowing and evaluating—directly to God, without passing through earthly currency.
And here is the crucial point: every time we try to exchange something with the divine—prayers in exchange for graces, sacrifices for blessings, good deeds for salvation—we are using our “own currency” which has no value in the divine circuit. It is like offering stones to a jeweler. The only accepted currency is emptiness: letting go of debts, not asking for anything back, not demanding justice.
In alchemy, this is called “solution”: the raw matter—the ego with its resentments, its demands, its calculations—is dissolved in the acid of forgiveness. And from that dissolution emerges gold, the philosopher’s stone. Which is not a substance, but a state of being: the capacity to speak directly with God, without intermediaries, without merits, without contracts.
Perhaps we have reduced faith to a system of beliefs, when instead it is a laboratory. Christ did not teach us to be good to go to heaven. He taught an alchemical operation: to transmute matter—debts, guilt, expectations—into light, into unconditional love.
And he did it with symbolic gestures: multiplying loaves, walking on water, turning water into wine. Every miracle is a lesson in spiritual physics, a suggestion on how man can shift his energy from below to above, from the dense to the subtle, from the ego to the Self.
There is a term, in the texts of Gnosis and Theosophy, that perhaps few know: Denaryon. It is not a coin, but the gnoseological explanation of this path: how one arrives at God solely through an alchemical process. Denaryon is the awareness that every debt has already been paid, that every fault has already been redeemed, that every separation is only apparent. Whoever understands this ceases to accumulate merits and resentments, and begins to live as a flow, a breath, a dance. And in this dance, the astral body—that which Steiner describes as the vehicle of transformed emotions and desires—is purified and becomes transparent to the divine light.
Christ’s words are clear: “Unless you become like children, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven.” The child does not keep track of debts, does not calculate, does not demand. The child lives in the gift. And the gift, in spiritual economy, is the only currency that never devalues.
So, perhaps, we should stop reciting the Lord’s Prayer as an empty formula, and begin to live it as an instruction. “Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors”: it is not a request, it is a statement of intent. It is the chemical formula that, if applied, causes the clearing chamber to close, the ego to deflate, matter to transmute. And in that transmutation, what we find is not success, not egoic happiness, not wealth. It is true gold: eternal life, the love of the Most High, the certainty of being already home, even when everything around seems to be falling apart.
There is no need to be alchemists with a crucible. There is a need to be human beings with the courage to forgive. Because forgiveness is the only fire capable of burning debts and leaving only the essence intact. And the essence, in the end, is always divine.
We had simply forgotten.
RVSCB




















