II
Anthroposophy Does not Disturb Any Religious Confession
Basel, 19 October 1917
If
religious feeling and experience wanted to understand its task
properly towards the requirements of modern time and faced that
with full understanding what anthroposophy intends, the
religious feeling and confessing would consider anthroposophy
as a welcome confederate just today. However, one does not
always make it his business in the present to get to know the
properties of those things about which one believes to judge
competently. This is true to the greatest extent in particular
compared with anthroposophy. One judges what one faces while
one labels it from without, often sketches a caricature of that
what it concerns in reality. Then one does not judge this
reality but the self-made picture, the self-made
caricature.
If
one delved on anthroposophy, if one envisaged its task towards
the riddles and problems of our time, one would become
attentive above all to the fact that anthroposophy differs from
all other opinions and views that arise about world and human
being et cetera, because it is deeply penetrated by the idea of
development in the most comprehensive sense.
Human opinions and worldviews feel contented only if they can
say to themselves, in certain sense and within certain limits
at least, I have thoughts that are true; they are valid in
themselves; science, religion, or I have found them; but they
are valid in themselves.
That does not apply to anthroposophy. Anthroposophy knows that
the thoughts have to come from the spirit of time in every
epoch. The spirit of humanity is continually developing. That
is why that what appears as opinion in the world in an age must
have another form than in another age. While anthroposophy
appears to the world today, it knows that after centuries that
what it says today it has to say in quite different form for
quite different human needs and interests that it cannot aim at
“absolute truths” but that it is in living
development.
From such conditions a certain attitude results. On it the
judgement depends, which anthroposophy must have about other
spiritual attempts and currents; its relationship to other
spiritual currents, other opinions, other views depends on it.
Above all one has to take into consideration that anthroposophy
did not originate in such a way as many people mean, and that
it is not able to position itself in the network of
contemporary opinions and views as one thinks frequently. Since
one thinks if one gets to know anything about anthroposophy
cursorily, while one has heard a talk about it once or has read
a few pages of any book about it, or maybe not even this, but
has heard from anybody who knows only very dubiously what
anthroposophy intends; one thinks that anthroposophy is a
religious confession as other religious confessions are.
In
the course of time, one has just developed the sensation:
developing ideas about the world is a religious view beside
others. Hence, one thinks that anthroposophy is also such a
sect, as many sects exist in the world.
I
have to stress on the other hand first, just this is
distinctive of anthroposophy that it did not appear anyhow in
the world beside or in contrast to any faith. It did not appear
because of this or that creed on which it has to take a stand,
but because the scientific development made it necessary which
has a formative influence on the views of the present.
Anthroposophy wants to extend and to perfect what natural
sciences have brought. One has to consider this starting point.
If one gets to know the scientific achievements that go over in
the public consciousness and work on its worldview, one has to
say, natural sciences have worked and will work their way out
even more in the course of time as interpreter of the outer
sense-perceptible existence. The laws and methods that they
develop are suitable in the most eminent sense to understand
the outer existence, but unsuitable if one does not transform
them in order to grasp the spiritual. If one wants to grasp the
spiritual just with the same scientific severity as one grasps
the natural, one has to work into the spiritual world as I have
shown it yesterday from the way of thinking and attitude of
natural sciences.
There, however, big difficulties tower up for some people. One
may say: just by the brilliant progress of natural sciences by
which one has also looked into the spiritual border areas it
has happened that one has developed a worldview in which,
actually, the spirit has no place. This must be like that. Just
as the scientific methods are suitable for the natural
existence, they must be in such a way that they exclude the
spirit from their research fields. If one takes the human being
himself into account, one has to say, anatomy, physiology, and
biology can study the bodily existence of the human being only
if they show that with their methods, with their way of
research the spirit is excluded as it were.
However, if one gets involved how natural sciences go forward,
then one can continue natural sciences in such a way as I have
characterised this yesterday. One finds his way with certain
methods that the human soul applies to itself just from the
natural existence to the spiritual world. The spiritual world
becomes such a reality to the spiritual senses, as the mineral
realm and other realms of nature are real to the outer senses.
One works the way up to the spiritual.
A
difficulty arises there for many people. They say if one speaks
of the relationship of natural sciences to anthroposophy in
such a way, yes, he is right maybe completely if he speaks
about natural sciences; one cannot grasp the spirit with the
scientific methods, one cannot know anything of the spirit;
there are just borders, there are areas beyond natural sciences
about which we can know nothing.
However, just from the yesterday's talk it may have arisen that
anthroposophy is not of this opinion. The opposite is the
experience of anthroposophy: that one can really penetrate into
the spirit, into this unknown land with certain spiritual
methods. It is hard for some people to concede that one can
still get to know something of an area if one gets involved in
certain ideas and research results.
It
is much more comfortable to say, this is an area about which
all human beings know nothing — because they themselves
know nothing about it. However, this is no proof that one can
know nothing of it, although one often concludes this. Hence,
it concerns just if anthroposophy argues that one can enter as
a human being into the spiritual world — using those
methods to which I have yesterday pointed — in which in
truth the human being lives with his soul. In this spiritual
world, he experiences immortality and freedom, the real
impulses of his supersensible existence.
Because during the last centuries and up to now natural
sciences follow the transient, just something had to face them
that appreciates the same scientificity in the spiritual area.
In former times, natural sciences did not yet face the
religious confessions that referred the human beings to the
spiritual world. Hence, a special spiritual science was not yet
necessary. Such natural sciences did not yet exist which could
dupe the human beings into regarding the outer
sense-perceptible reality as the only one. Only in the time
when such a science and with it such a belief could appear, a
spiritual science had to come.
This is in the course of development. That is why one can
understand the emergence of anthroposophy only properly if one
understands its arising from natural sciences. If natural
sciences produced a kind of confession only of their own accord
in the human beings, they would gradually entice them because
of their strictly scientific methods and completely dissuade
them from the view that one can penetrate by knowledge into the
spiritual world. They would bring along that the human beings
believe to the greatest extent: well, one can know everything
about the sense-perceptible world; anything else that is beyond
the sense-perceptible world is subject to faith that can never
lead to any certainty.
Here is the point that is hard to understand for the
contemporaries at first because it requires a major effort to
subject the soul to those experiences by which it attains
spiritual senses to itself beside the physical senses to
penetrate into the real spiritual world. It will still last
long, until the prejudices disappear which prevail in this
respect, until an sufficiently big number of human beings
realise that one can really penetrate into the spiritual world
as scientifically as into nature.
So
that spiritual science can gradually settle down in our
cultural life, it is necessary that people unite who intend and
feel a need to maintain it. From that desire everything has
also originated that comes into being in the Dornach building
and its surroundings. However, the union of single persons
leads straight away to the wrong opinion: well, there one deals
with a sect, there the persons consort who want to support any
new faith among themselves. However, associating in this area
has another sense than associating in sects. Associating in the
anthroposophic area has the sense that anthroposophy cannot be
attained by reading a single talk, but that anthroposophy is
something on which someone who wants to know it properly has to
work gradually.
This takes place also in the schools, in the universities; and
if one wants to call an audience in the university a
“sect,” one may call an association of those who
practise anthroposophy a “sect,” otherwise not. If
to certain talks, to certain events only some persons can come
who have absorbed other things already in themselves, this
seems quite natural; since with any other knowledge it is that
way. Anthroposophy wants just to consider the modern
institutions. Nothing mysterious forms the basis if human
beings come together and carry out events, but only that which
they have searched as preparation as you prepare yourself for
university lectures, before you can visit them because,
otherwise, the visit is useless. Any other view about such a
coming together does not apply because it does not get to the
heart of the matter.
However, one has to say, an association in this area must have
another character in certain respect than an association of
students at a college, for example. The cognitions that a
college provides refer mostly to the outer life, with the
exception of quite small “enclaves;” they refer by
the influence of natural sciences to the intellect based on the
sensory observation. However, this is directed more to the mere
thinking, to a part of the human being, to the head. By no
means has anthroposophy opposed the intellectual understanding!
— People who consider themselves as capable sometimes
judge anthroposophy just with their prejudices and regard
anthroposophy as amateurish. However, if these people engaged
in it, they would realise that the thinking and the logic that
one uses in the outer science must also exist in anthroposophy,
but a much subtler, higher logic is necessary to understand its
advanced parts really. However, what anthroposophy reveals of
the spiritual world because of its research seizes not only the
head, not only the thinking, but it seizes the whole
human being with his whole soul: feeling, thinking, and
willing. However, the human being thereby gets a more intimate
relationship to that what is delivered to him as knowledge than
possibly the mere university study does.
I would now like to go back — in order to make
understood myself completely in this regard — to the fact
that anthroposophy is important for the human development as a
supplement of natural sciences that it appears in the sense of
the spirit of our time that, however, the cognitions that
anthroposophy intends as they corresponded to the needs and
interests of former times were always there. Nevertheless, one
had other views about the development of the suitable
knowledge. One has to talk about mysteries, even of secret
societies if one looks for the analogous things of former times
that correspond to anthroposophy. One performed that in the
mysteries in the course of the human development which today
anthroposophy does in another form, which corresponds to the
present. Those who did such researches in former times
initiated procedures by which the higher knowledge of the
spiritual world approached the human beings. They took the view
that they had to cut themselves off just in a circle of human
beings who were very well prepared for such activities. With
them one had made sure that they really had that attitude and
character which is necessary to receive something that seizes
the whole human being and his whole soul. Hence, one has
strictly kept secret the knowledge that one cultivated in such
mysteries, in such secret societies.
One
can realise even today that good reasons existed to protect
this higher knowledge against profanation by the public. There
were good reasons. More in view of the today's development of
spiritual science I would like to indicate something of these
reasons.
If
you get from the sense-perceptible world to the spiritual one,
as I have described it yesterday, you have to cross a certain
border area. One may very well use a term that many people used
who understood something of such things: one has to cross the
threshold of the spiritual world. This expression means
something. It is not an only pictorial term. It means
something, as far as the science of the spiritual — if it
really approaches the human being and the human being combines
with it — brings images, ideas and views with it which
are completely different from the images, ideas, and views
which one has in the outer sensory world. One can already say:
someone who is habitually eager to accept the truth of the
outer sensory world only will discover that truths of the
spiritual world sound paradoxical at first; they are so
different from the truths of the sensory world that they could
seem maybe crazy, fantastic. This comes from the fact that one
completely goes astray if one believes, the spiritual world
which forms the basis of our sensory one is only a kind of
continuation of this sensory world; it only seems somewhat more
nebulous, somewhat subtler and thinner than the sensory world.
No, you have already to familiarise yourself with the fact that
you must experience something new, incredible, paradox as truth
if you want to engage in the real spiritual world.
Hence, this engagement in the real spiritual world is not only
something astonishing, but it often evokes feelings of fright
in the human being, in particular if he stands at the threshold
of the spiritual world. They are like fear, like shyness that
always exists if the human being if he enters into an unknown
area. Since for someone who has done his experiences only in
the sensory world the spiritual world is an unknown area.
Hence, it happens that at the threshold of the spiritual world
two things may flow into each other: on one side that is which
you have still to acknowledge as truth concerning the sensory
world that you have to acknowledge as consecutive facts, as
lawful course of facts. Then, however, something confronts us
from the other side of the world, from the spiritual side,
something that is subject to other laws, that proceeds quite
different that makes a paradoxical impression. This can
intertwine at first. However, thereby the thinking comes into a
situation, which puts high claims to the human mind, to a
healthy power of judgement of the whole state of all
circumstances. One must be well prepared if one wants to
distinguish illusion from spiritual reality within the border
area.
Someone who studies the books really which I have mentioned
yesterday will realise that the given method to penetrate into
the spiritual world is designed in such a way that the human
being does not impair the health of his senses, of his mind,
and reason, on the contrary it furthers it. Any intrusion in
the spiritual world that is managed mystically or with hypnosis
is the opposite of that what a healthy spiritual research
intends.
However, this does not prevent that malevolent people come
repeatedly and state that the spiritual-scientific method
hypnotises the human beings, persuade them of all kinds of
things. Nothing can contribute so decidedly to save the human
being from any hypnotic influence and suggestion as the true
spiritual-scientific methods do which make the human being
free. One works in the spiritual-scientific method with the
following principle: I have pointed in my book The Riddle of
Man to the fact that one can say: as well as the human
being awakes from sleep where he has only a quite vague
consciousness; he can wake from the usual consciousness to the
spiritual beholding. It is like an awakening in a spiritual
world what you attain with the spiritual-scientific method.
However, as the usual day life can be never healthy unless one
makes preparations so that the sleep is healthy, the entry into
the spiritual world cannot be healthy unless one can develop a
healthy everyday life based on reality, on worldly wisdom
unless one has disciplined himself, so that one is a human
being who copes with reality.
The
awakening to the beholding can occur only from a healthy day
life. Spiritual science has to expel all preparations in the
usual life by which the human being becomes estranged to this
life may it be by prejudices, by wrong asceticism, or by wrong
turning away from life. Just the proper existence in the
practical life is the best preparation to enter into the
spiritual world.
However, if one has acquired a healthy sense for the outer
reality if one has developed, — to put it another way
— a healthy mind and power of judgement, you can
distinguish illusion and reality in the border areas of the
sensory and spiritual worlds, where the threshold is between
both worlds. Hence, one has himself strictly convinced in
former times whether the human beings who associated with the
mysteries were really prepared to stand the stronger fight that
the common sense had to lead off in the border area. Since
someone who does not have common sense is misled by the
apparently paradox phenomena. He soon leaves the whole matter
as one drops an ember if one has burnt himself, and he feels
disappointed and becomes more and more an opponent of any
spiritual pursuit. These ancient societies wanted to be sure of
their people.
Such associations have continued their work up to now; there
are still ones. Anthroposophy does not belong to them;
anthroposophy reckons that today on a much bigger scale than it
was the case in former times, everything that approaches the
human being must be subject to the public. We hear with a
certain right that even the secret diplomacy has to be replaced
by a public one. The spirit of time tends to public. However,
just with this spirit of time anthroposophy lives. Only in this
respect which I have mentioned before — because certain
preparations are necessary if one wants to understand something
later — only from such conditions something still has the
appearance of the old institutions, but it strives to position
itself completely in the public. Since anthroposophy can only
become an element of the modern cultural life — what has
to happen — if anthroposophy positions itself in the
public.
However, not only this is a peculiarity of anthroposophy what I
have just indicated, but this internal soul experience which
enables you to behold in the spiritual world as you look with
the physical senses in the physical world. This requires that
you can generally behave to concepts, views, and mental
pictures somewhat different from you behave toward the outer
reality. In this area, natural sciences have also created
concepts that are useless as such in spiritual science. They
are useless because the spiritual researcher realises the
following very soon: a concept, an idea, a mental picture is
real, as soon as one approaches the spiritual facts and beings,
is nothing but an image, a photo which one gets in the physical
world, we say of a tree. If one takes a photo of a tree from
one side and a photo from another side, a photo from the third
side — these pictures look different. However, they all
are of the one and same tree. Only because one takes these
photos from different sides one can receive a complete idea of
reality. However, one does not like that today. One likes
limited concepts. One wants to adhere to them. Spiritual
science cannot do this. Spiritual science describes a matter
from most different sides; it describes it once from one side
and knows that it gives an one-sided picture only; then it
describes it from a second side, from a third side, from a
third viewpoint.
Indeed, what astonishes even more is the following. If one
really wants to become a spiritual scientist, one has to be
completely penetrated by the sentence that Goethe formed:
between two contrary opinions, the problem is right in the
middle. One must know not only — if one wants to know the
truth of a spiritual being or a spiritual fact — what
militates for it, but also what speaks against it.
The
listeners who have frequently heard talks by me know that it is
my habit from the spiritual-scientific attitude to not only say
what militates for, but also what militates against a matter.
In particular, I have the habit of doing this always if I hold
talks about more intimate talks on higher fields of
anthroposophy. That is why someone who peruses my writings not
only discovers with which arguments one can found certain
spiritual facts, spiritual beings, but also with which
arguments one can disprove the things. Only thereby, one
receives truthful experience.
However, this has led just in this anthroposophic area to
strange things that one can experience, actually, only in this
area today. Just from within the ranks of the followers,
persons have appeared who did not search work in
spiritual-scientific respect but personal interests. They have
seceded; they became adversaries. They needed only to copy what
one can read in my writings what I have said in my talks, and
then they could easily disprove anthroposophy. Indeed, one does
not need to invent own disproofs, one needs only to copy the
disproofs!
However, what I have just indicated is a peculiarity of
anthroposophic research: to light up the things from the most
different sides. Thereby only one acquires the necessary inner
discipline if one does not want to live only in abstractions,
but wants to unite with spiritual realities. Someone who only
knows the outer nature and natural sciences has no idea of this
inner discipline. For he thinks, he may be able to transfer
certain concepts, certain mental pictures that one obtains from
the outer nature, simply to the spiritual area; since he
regards them as generally valid. However, one is not able to do
this.
I
would like to clarify this with the following. Indeed, the
paradoxical concepts immediately begin with it. I think, for
example, of a lecture which at the beginning of this century
Professor Dewar (James D., 1842-1923) held in London. Professor
Dewar attempted in a similar way, as the geologists do
concerning the beginning of the earth, to form ideas of the
possible end of the earth from physics, from chemistry. These
ideas are exceptionally brilliant. If one pursues how the earth
cools off gradually, and with it the conditions of the single
substances change on earth, one gets to certain insights which
are valid within the border of observation. Then one extends
them and asks: how will all that be after millions of years?
— One can be a rather witty physicist or chemist and
imagine, it is so cold that, actually, no human being can live
with his current constitution; even so, one calculates, how
then, we say, for example, the milk looks like. Then the milk
will be solid, it cannot be liquid and will have another
colour. One can find certain materials, as for example proteins
with which one coats the walls, so that they shine, so that one
can read newspapers. The professor has derived all that from
physics and chemistry as a nice idea.
Nevertheless, someone who has trained himself with
spiritual-scientific methods must deny himself such ideas with
inner soul discipline; he cannot get to them. Since how does
one attain them, actually?
I
just get now to what is paradoxical compared with the usual
mental pictures: if one observes how the vital functions of a
child change from the seventh, eighth years on, you get a
suitable picture. Then you can continue calculating how the
organs must look in 150 years. This is exactly the same method
after which Professor Dewar calculated the final state of the
earth.
However, if one applies it to the human being, one notices: he
does no longer live in 150 years! One does not consider that
that is not applicable to the human being, that the earth is
dead before the state enters which one calculates from physics.
One could also calculate from the changes from the seventh
until the ninth years how the child was 180 years ago —
but it was not there! The geologists calculate how the earth
looked millions of years ago. However, at that time the earth
did not yet exist.
This sounds paradoxical, and one has as a spiritual researcher
to bring in concepts that sound paradoxical. Nevertheless, what
one gets to know spiritual-scientifically is just something
that can give soul discipline. To settle in the spiritual, just
a soul discipline is necessary which can also deny itself
certain concepts, which does not calculate after the same
pattern which one would follow if one said, the human being who
faces me existed 200 years ago. — The calculation would
completely be after the same pattern.
I
know very well how paradoxical this is what I say with it.
However, if one does not point to such paradoxes, one draws
attention to that which upsets some people so much. If one
crosses the threshold of the spiritual world, one cannot enough
emphasise how much the common sense must be active. However, if
one appropriates such a soul discipline, one can unite with
reality this way; then this becomes an achievement of the whole
soul; it becomes a disposition, a basic character of the
soul.
Then, however, the soul can judge how its view relates to other
worldviews. Then it will understand how its worldview relates
to other viewpoints. Then one can pursue which other currents
of thinking, feeling and experiencing are there to criticise
not only but to settle in them. Such a behaviour extends to all
historical and contemporary developments concerning the human
cultural life.
Only if one takes the attitude from the deepest impulses of
anthroposophy, one can judge the relation of spiritual science
to the religious confessions. Anthroposophy attempts to
understand these religious confessions above all. It attempts
to settle down into them not with critical mind, but in such a
way, that one takes them, as they are to understand their right
to exist. Hence, anthroposophy succeeds in making a fair
judgement of the past spiritual currents in quite different
sense than other directions of thought often do.
Let
us take the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas or the philosophy of
Aristotle at first. Someone who is today a philosopher or
scientist after the pattern of the common concepts says: well,
Aristotle is an old obsolete philosopher; the philosophy of
Thomas Aquinas is a thing of the Middle Ages. —
Anthroposophy knows that something special must arise from the
conditions and impulses of the spirit of our times; it does not
want to take over what in former epochs was the right thing.
However, it understands that out of the conditions of those
epochs what only those epochs could offer. It understands their
nature; it knows that the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas was
basically a servant of Christianity at that time that it could
arise from the spirit of that time. You have to familiarise
yourself with what cannot arise only from the spirit of our
time. Anthroposophy does not regard the engagement in Thomism
as an only historical study, as something that one can get only
from it. This is very important. Since this does not produce
that washed out tolerance, but it produces that understanding
tolerance which looks at that what developed once not as
something obsolete, but appreciates it at its place,
appreciates it also in its developing reality. Some things have
to develop in nature, in the spiritual life as annual plants
develop from which again annual plants originate. However,
other plants develop further from one year into the other
forming wood, for example; they are perennial plants.
In
the spiritual culture, it is likewise. Something must go on in
the spiritual culture, must be taken up in later times by those
who want to feel united with the whole development of humanity.
You can also get an idea of the relationship of anthroposophy
and the religious confessions that believe, but only because of
a misunderstanding, that anthroposophy opposes them as another
religion.
No,
that is not true. Anthroposophy knows very well that it can
never become a religion because it knows that just as little,
as one can become a child at the age of 60 years again, just as
little the modern humanity will be able to form religions of
its own accord. New religions do no longer originate. Hence,
anthroposophy is appropriate just to figure out the absolute
value of the confessions. Anthroposophy would badly get along
with itself if it believed to be able to found a new
confession. However, the religions originated because human
beings should receive impressions of the spiritual world. They
keep their value and can be understood just with anthroposophy
that also works its way to the spiritual world.
Hence, properly understood, religion and anthroposophy can meet
each other. Anthroposophy works its way from the human being,
developing human forces, to that spiritual area in which the
religion puts its revelations.
May
one be, actually, so little religious that one can believe, one
has received the religion as truth from divine heights and one
does fear for it if the human being strives now after working
his way to the truth of the spiritual world with the forces
that he received from God, as the religions believe? Is it not
religious from the start if one knows that one has revelations
of truth in the religion that one is not afraid that this truth
will comply with that truth which the human being finds with
his forces given by spirit?
One
should consider that seriously if one wants to judge the
relationship of religion and anthroposophy. In former times,
the human being was not minded in such a way that he needed one
way more into the spiritual world beside the religious way. As
the human being of the Middle Ages did not need the Copernican
worldview, he did not need anthroposophy. Today he needs it
because humanity is developing. Nevertheless, that which
certain forces, existing only in certain epochs, gave once to
humanity keeps its value.
However, in this respect there is a complete contrast of
anthroposophy and the modern scientific current: The latter
owes its brilliant results, its value just to the fact that its
methods are not suited to lead into the spiritual world.
Anthroposophy could not get to such errors because quite
different forces lead to anthroposophy and because it would
regard any attempt to found a religion as not contemporary. It
would be as if a man wanted to do the same as a child does.
That what the child does has not to be less worth than what the
man does. Anthroposophy knows that the time of forming
religions is over. Hence, it will use just its forces to
understand the religions, to lead the human being deeper and
deeper into the understanding of the religions.
One
has to say, as the soul strives after the spiritual world
anthroposophically with its own cognitive forces not only of
the head but also of the whole soul, the religions did not
strive. They strove in such a way that one may say: while
anthroposophy takes the human being as starting point and works
its way to the spiritual world, the religions took that as
starting point what they had received like by gracious
revelation. However, this fulfils the human soul different from
that what is created with his own forces. Anthroposophy is a
science. That, however, which works there as religious truth
seizes the soul different from a cognitive truth as
anthroposophy must be. One cannot change anthroposophy
immediately into a religion. However, from the properly
understood anthroposophy a real religious need will also
originate. Since the soul is not uniform, but multifarious. The
human soul needs different ways to reach its goals. It needs
not only the way of knowledge to the spiritual world but also
the way of the warm religious feeling.
One
thing was always strange. I have received many letters here
from Switzerland that always had a fundamental note. In these
letters, you may read the following: I can understand quite
well what you intend with spiritual science, I can also
understand that it is entitled to enter the spiritual world
this way — not everybody writes in such a way, however,
there are those who write this — but I miss that it leads
so intimately into the Christian experiences as — and
then the writers bring in this or that sectarian direction.
Yes, one wants to express a lack of spiritual science, of
anthroposophy, in such a way. In my view, this lack is always a
particular advantage. Since one demands something from
anthroposophy that it just does not at all want to be by its
whole nature. However, it wants also to concede the same right
to the other side. They hold something against you if you still
keep a way open to them. This is something peculiar.
Today some priests resent if one keeps a way open to them on
which anthroposophy does not at all want to walk. There
refutations appear, for example: you say something else about
Christ than we do — anthroposophy says nothing else; it
tells it only more explicitly — hence, you are not on the
right track; we have to disprove you.
Yes, however, if the matter were in such a way that one just
says that what he does not say, and lets him say what he can
know what is on his way. He attacks you just because you want
to accept him. On one side, he resents that anthroposophy does
not solve his task because I leave it to him. If one said
anything else, it would also be taken amiss. Thus the
paradoxical appears that someone refutes you with that what he
would have just to feel as benefit. Because anthroposophy does
not want to interfere with the very own thing of the
confessions because it gives them the right to work at their
place of their own accord, therefore, it just says something
else that is not said at this place. Anthroposophy does that in
order to show the authorisation of the confessions. One demands
from it, it should take over the task of the religion. In this
area, a whole sum of clear mental pictures would have to
replace unclear ideas.
One
may say, a start has been made with the excellent book which
Ricarda Huch (1864-1947. German author) has written about
Luther's Faith (1916). Beside some other excellent
things one gets an idea of this quite different colouring of
the sentimental way that the religious confession takes. The
way of the religious truth speaks from every page of this book.
However, today deeper truths are trivialised as a rule because
everybody believes, he does not need much to get involved with
the depths of this or that matter, he is already perfect.
Ricarda Huch has passed an appropriate remark concerning the
way how Nietzsche's followers have originated everywhere some
years ago because they believed to have the makings in
themselves to be such men as they were described here and
there. They do not want to work their way up, but they want
above all to be on par with a superman if one describes a
superman. Thus, one saw numerous “supermen” walking
around who did not even have the anlage of a respectable guinea
pig, they walked around as “blond beasts” in the
sense of Nietzsche.
Anthroposophy is a way into the spiritual world, as the present
demands it, which supports the religious confessions, the
religious experience. One also judges the outer course of
history too cursorily. One thinks, one has to familiarise wide
sections of the population with the religion again, which does
not have that influence as in former times. One believes to do
the religion a favour if one fights against the putative
opponents. If one goes into the deeper reasons, why, for
example, — as it was stated in 1873 — only one
third of the French population was religious in the
ecclesiastical sense if one took the matter seriously, you
would say to yourself: not from these superficial reasons, but
from deep soul impulses an indifference has arisen not only
towards the single religions, but also towards the spiritual
reality generally. A materialist age has approached.
Now
anthroposophy knows the following of the course of development
of humanity. While any developmental current proceeds, another
proceeds unnoticed in the depths of consciousness. For example,
while the tendency of materialism and denial of spirit
prevailed, the need to find the way into the spiritual world
developed in the unconscious depths of the souls. Thus, a human
being could be with his head an atheist like David Friedrich
Strauss (1808-1872 theologian and philosopher); and develop his
soul forces which can be developed, however, only on a direct
path of knowledge, just on the anthroposophic way, if one finds
it. Then, however, one finds the connection with the religious
confession again on this detour, while one leaves the religious
confession if one sticks only to the brilliant progress of
natural sciences.
How
have those scientific directions positioned themselves that
have developed only under the influence of natural sciences to
the religious development? Quite different from anthroposophy.
Anthroposophy attempts to understand the religious confessions.
Because religious confessions speak of the spirit and
anthroposophy knows spiritual facts and spiritual beings as its
research results, it encounters the religious confessions.
Other directions speak different. I want to bring in the
example of the psychologist Ebbinghaus (Hermann E., 1850-1909,
German psychologist); he investigates with his scientific mind,
with his power of judgement how religion came into being. He
says, the human beings of former times did not yet have the
enlightened thinking of the present, they noticed that they are
exposed to dangers in the outer world, to heavy showers,
thunderstorms and the like; there they imagined that hostile
powers are there. Out of their fear, they imagined demoniacal
spiritual beings. Then from necessity, they have invented the
gods who should help them.
Such things sound rather nice, and that human being who is
accustomed to the popular ideas of today understands these
things easily. However, one takes a very wrong idea as starting
point if one says repeatedly, the child of nature is inclined
as any child to personify, to ensoul an edge of a table; if it
stumbles against it, and it bashes the edge. It does not at all
ensoul the edge of a table, but it does not yet know the
difference of something dead and something living, and from an
internal desire it bashes the dead; it does not at all ensoul
anything. The child of nature does also not at all ensoul
anything, but it follows its desires; and it is right that it
always tries to explain that what faces it hostilely or
harmfully anyhow by invention of a demon. I do not believe, if
a naughty boy is a threat to a savage anyhow, that the savage
invents a demon with which he defends himself against the boy,
but he bashes him.
These things seem to be paradoxical again. Only spiritual
science can judge it properly. Spiritual science knows how to
interpret the facts properly that the child, actually, is not
yet minded religiously, just as little as the savage is minded
this way. One regards the religion as something childish.
However, just the child is not minded religiously, but it must
be educated to religion first. Thus, the human being has been
educated in the course of human evolution.
A
quotation by Ebbinghaus is in such a way that he says first,
fear and hardship are the mothers of religion. — Then he
says: “The churches fill and the pilgrimages increase in
times of war and disastrous epidemics.”
I
would like to know whether the churches also fill with those
who are materialistically minded from the start at epidemics
and war times. Nevertheless, they fill with those only who have
a religious disposition anyway. However, this does not
originate from fear and hardship, this originates because the
human being experiences the spiritual in his soul. In ancient
times, he experienced that more instinctively. Today he can
experience it more consciously. Because the human being has
gradually developed to the experience of the spiritual, he
realises an image of the spiritual in the
sense-perceptible.
If
you want to call the connection that the human soul has with
the environment if it faces the spirit with spiritual organs,
but if you want to call it only with an analogon, you may say,
it is a kind of sympathy. You know sympathy in the moral sense;
it is a kind of love. The connection with the spiritual world
can be compared with the feeling of love. Thus, anthroposophy
may say, even if primitive religions originated from hardship
and troubles, they were filled with spiritual contents, with
concepts and ideas of the spiritual world because the human
being lives in it. Perfect religions, above all that religion
which is the synthesis, the union of the other religions have
not developed from fear and hardship; it has developed from
that what one can call spiritualised love, coalescing with the
spiritual world. Not fear and hardship but love produces the
perfect religions.
Hence, you may say, those who have materialist-scientific
mental pictures only misjudge the whole relationship of
religion and cognitive truth. One is allowed to repeat
repeatedly: if one stands firmly on the ground of a religious
truth, one can assume — if the human being approaches the
spiritual world from another side — that understanding,
even support is possible. Thus, one will experience more and
more — even if people do not want to admit this today
— that, while by the impulses of the scientific worldview
the religions feel weak, their value for humanity is
acknowledged if the human being can approach the spirit
spiritual-scientifically. The representatives of religion
should be just friends of anthroposophy.
They will become friends. Since the conflict between religion
and science does not originate from certain religious
conditions. This conflict originated from the fact that
strictly speaking the representatives of the religious
confessions once represented science at the same time. You need
not go far back and you will find, the representatives of
religion were at the same time those who taught the worldly
sciences. They were connected with these worldly sciences. Only
in the course of time, natural sciences emancipated themselves
from religion. This emancipation contributes to the spiritual
world process.
Only because of the human nature, the understanding of such
things lags behind. As recently as in 1822, the Catholic Church
abolished the decrees that had condemned the teachings of
Copernicus and Galilei. Maybe it needs centuries that a decree,
an opinion is abolished which forbids to the Catholics to
believe in repeated lives on earth. However, this abolition
will come. Since human religious experience will not come into
conflicts with the repeated lives on earth, just as little as
with the Copernican worldview.
On
this occasion, I have repeatedly to remind of that priest
(Laurenz Müllner, 1848-1911) who was at the same time a
university professor. He said in a lecture on Galilei, a
properly understood religion will not rebel against scientific
progress, but on the contrary, the religious truth will feel
supported, that it can say to itself, if astronomy points to
the stars and discovers their laws, then it happens also out of
the magnificence and power of the divine being. Copernicus did
not undermine the religion, but he contributed with his
activity to the revelation of the divine being. — These
words of a priest are quite different from those, which oppose
that what must just appear in the history of humanity.
I
have already pointed out how strange it is that one demands
that one should accept, for example, not only that about Christ
Jesus as Christianity what the one or the other representative
of this or that denomination says, but one should say nothing
else. One cannot reproach anthroposophy that it disturbs any
religious confession. Nevertheless, it has to recognise
something of that most important incision of the earth
evolution that is significant for the whole universe. It still
can say things about the Christ impulse which are quite
different from that which was said up to now. One holds against
it that it wants to contribute even more to the understanding
of Christianity than the official representatives
contribute.
Do
realise only once how little one is up to the tasks of time if
one does not want to understand that anthroposophy never
disturbs the truthful religious confession, but deepens it.
Then, however, one needs an attitude as Bishop Ireland (John
I., 1838-1918) has expressed it with the words: religion needs
new forms and viewpoints to keep in step with the modern time.
We need apostles of thought and action.
Yes, there are also within the religious confessions those who
feel the signs of time. Then they even demand that another way
is coming up to meet them. Since they understand that if
humanity loses the interest in the spirit, also the interest in
religion gets lost. However, if humanity gets again interest in
the spiritual as it corresponds to its today's development,
then one will properly understood the religious confessions
again. Hence, one can always experience, while often by the
unilaterally qualified natural sciences the human beings have
been dissuaded from the religious experience, they are led
again if the mind is filled with anthroposophy.
If
one wanted to understand the way seriously how anthroposophy
understands the work of the spirit in the confessions how it
understands that from these conditions this confession, from
those conditions another confession has originated how it can
judge the value of the single confessions, one would never want
to combat anthroposophy just from this side.
Today one likes stopping at abstractions. One says,
anthroposophy wants to search the core in all religions; it
equates, actually, all religions. That does not hold true, but
it investigates how a religion developed from another. It tries
to understand how that confession which wants to content all
human beings in one spirit how the synthesis of the different
confessions is which are distributed to the single peoples. It
speaks like Frobenius (Leo Viktor F., 1873-1938, ethnographer)
of ethnic religions and of the religion of humanity.
The
relationship of the religious life to anthroposophy can become
clear only if one realises how anthroposophy wakes the human
being for the spiritual world and how he can thereby feel that
again what he can experience in the religious community.
Not
with details, I wanted to explain the relationship of
anthroposophy and the religious confessions but from the whole
spirit of the anthroposophic worldview. I wanted to show that
for that who knows anthroposophy there can be no talk that
anthroposophy disturbs any religious experience. In this
respect, one has also to consider what I have already said
yesterday: I would like best to call that worldview which has
arisen to me as anthroposophy from the healthy Goethean ideas,
I would like best to call it Goetheanism, and I would like best
to call the Dornach building Goetheanum.
Everything that one can find on the ground of anthroposophy
induces you to say to yourself, I continue only what this
unique spirit has put into the human evolution. He stopped in
many respects at the elementary mental pictures. But one is not
a supporter of Goetheanism in the right sense if one looks
historically or externally biographically at that what Goethe
himself wrote; but you are Goetheanist if you can project your
thoughts vividly in this worldview and develop it further.
Goethe was a Goetheanist up to 1832 here in the physical world.
Today he would express himself quite different from that time.
However, if anything is healthy, certain basic impulses remain
which also carry over a worldview from one epoch to the other.
If that blossoms anew what was there as seed, then it points to
this solidarity of the entire human development that it takes
up certain basic impulses. Thus, I would like to close with the
known confession of Goethe.
Who
has science and art,
Has
religion, too;
Who
does not have both,
Should have religion.
Concerning anthroposophy, I am perhaps allowed to continue:
Who
has anthroposophy,
Has
religion, too.
I
am only afraid that those who do not want to possess
anthroposophy or at least its spirit and sense will no longer
have religion in future.
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