ANTHROPOSOPHY AND CHRISTIANITY
A public lecture delivered by Rudolf Steiner
at Norrköping, July 13, 1914
I'd like to ask your forgiveness, first of all, for being unable to
speak to you tonight in your native language. But friends who have
been attending my lectures to members of the Anthroposophical Society
this week have assured me that it would be all right to speak to you
on a spiritual scientific subject in German.
The local members have also suggested the underlying theme of this
evening's talk; I am to speak on the relationship of spiritual science
— or anthroposophy, as it may also be called — to Christianity. In
order to do so, I must first say something about the nature and
significance of what is meant by spiritual science, about the point of
view from which I shall be speaking.
This spiritual science is not trying to found either a new religion or
a new religious sect of any kind. It hopes to be able to fulfill the
tasks required spiritually of our contemporary culture.
Several hundred years ago, the dawning of the modern scientific age
signified an advance in human cultural life which can be compared to
the steps we must now take in mankind's development if further
progress is to be made. Natural science opened the modern age for
mankind through the knowledge of external physical laws. Spiritual
science should play a similar role in the present and near future in
recognizing the laws of the realms of soul and spirit and applying
them to ethical, social, and all other aspects of cultural life.
Although it is still misunderstood and misrepresented — and
understandably so — it can trust the power and effectiveness of its
truth when it considers the course of natural science at the beginning
of the modern age. Natural scientists, too, had to face prejudices
hundreds and even thousands of years old. But truth possesses powers
which always help it to victory against any hostile forces.
Now that we have mentioned the trust the spiritual scientist has in
the truth and effectiveness of his work, let us turn to the nature of
that research which is the basis for this spiritual science.
The spiritual scientist's way of looking at things is wholly in
keeping with the methods of natural science. However, it must
certainly be clear that since spiritual science covers an entirely
different field from the external sense-perceptible field covered by
natural science, researching the spiritual realm requires a
fundamental modification of the natural scientific approach. The
methods of spiritual science are in keeping with those of natural
science in the sense that any unprejudiced person trained in natural
science can accept the premises of spiritual science. However, as long
as the natural scientific method is conceived one-sidedly, as all too
often happens today, then prejudice will be heaped upon prejudice when
it comes to applying the natural scientific approach to spiritual
life. Granted, natural scientific logic must be applied to what most
concerns man but which is most difficult to investigate for that very
reason. Granted, this way of thinking must be applied to the very
being of man himself. Granted, in spiritual science man must examine
his own nature, making use of the only tool that he has at his
disposal — himself. The premise of spiritual science is that in
becoming an instrument of investigation into the spiritual world, man
has to undergo a transformation that enables him to look into the
spiritual world, something he cannot do in ordinary life.
I'd like to start with a comparison from natural science, not to prove
anything but just to make it clear how the spiritual scientific way of
looking at things rests entirely on the premises of natural scientific
thinking. Let us take water as an example drawn from nature. Suppose
we are looking at the qualities of water as we find it around us. Then
along comes the chemist and applies his methods to the water, breaking
it down into hydrogen and oxygen. Well, what is he doing to the water?
As you all know, water doesn't burn. The chemist takes hydrogen out of
the water, and hydrogen is a gas that burns. No one just looking at
water can tell that it contains hydrogen and oxygen, which have
totally different properties from water.
As spiritual science shows, it is equally impossible for us to see the
inner qualities of another person. Just as the chemist can split water
into hydrogen and oxygen, the spiritual scientist, by means of an
inner process which must be prepared in the soul's very depths, is
able to distinguish between the external physical and soul-spiritual
aspects of what confronts him outwardly as a human being. He is
interested initially in examining, from the spiritual scientific
viewpoint, the soul-spiritual aspect as something separate from the
bodily nature. No one can discern the real facts of the soul-spiritual
from looking at the merely external bodily nature, any more than the
nature of hydrogen can be discerned without first extracting it from
water.
Nowadays it very often happens that as soon as one begins to say this
sort of thing one hears: “This conflicts with monism, which must be
adhered to at all costs.” Well, monism can't keep even chemists from
splitting water into two parts. It's no argument against monism when
something that can actually happen does happen — for instance,
when the soul-spiritual is recognized as distinct from the bodily nature by
applying the methods of spiritual research.
These methods, however, cannot be applied in laboratories or
hospitals, but are processes that have to take place in the soul
itself. They are not miraculous qualities; they are faculties which we
possess to a certain degree in daily life. But they have to be
infinitely heightened if we are to become spiritual researchers.
I don't want to beat around the bush with all kinds of general
statements, so I'll come right to the point. We are all familiar with
the soul capacity known as memory, and are aware of how much depends
on it. Imagine waking up some morning with no idea of where we've been
and who we are. We would lose everything that makes us human. Our
memory, which has possessed inner coherence ever since early
childhood, is essential to our life as human beings. The study of
memory leaves contemporary philosophers perplexed. There are already
some among them who go so far as to turn away from the
monistic-materialistic view when it comes to looking at memory. In
precise research they find that, although sensory perception (if one
may refer to an activity of soul in this way) is superficially bound
to the body, it will never be possible to say that memory is bound to
the body at all. I am just calling this to your attention. Even the
French philosopher Bergson, a man who certainly shows no tendency to
delve into anthroposophy, has pointed to the spiritual nature of
memory.
How do memory and the power of recall actually confront us? Events
long past enter our soul as images. Although the events themselves may
lie far in the past, our soul is actively involved in conjuring them
up from the depths of our inner life. And what emerges from these
depths can be compared with the original experience, though in
contrast to the images provided by our sensory perceptions memories
are pale. However, they are closely connected with the integrity of
our soul life. And without memory, we would not find our way in the
world. But memory is built upon the power to recall, through which the
soul can conjure up what is hidden in its memories.
This is where spiritual science comes in. Please note that it is not
memory as such, but the power of summoning up a mental content from
the soul's depths, which can be infinitely strengthened. Then this
power can be used not only for conjuring up past experiences but for
quite other purposes as well. Methods of spiritual research are not
founded upon any external procedures applicable in laboratories or
upon anything perceptible to external senses, but rather upon
intensive soul processes which anyone can undergo. What makes these
processes valuable is the boundless heightening of our attentiveness
or, in other words, the concentration of our thought life.
What is this concentration of thought life?
This evening I have only a short hour to speak, so I'll just be able
to touch on the principles of the topic under discussion. You can find
the details in my books,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
Occult Science — an Outline,
and The Threshold of the Spiritual World.
Let me outline the basic soul activities which
represent a boundless heightening of the attentiveness necessary for
human life. Only this heightening makes spiritual research possible.
What activity does a person usually engage in when he confronts his
surroundings? He perceives things; he applies his brain-bound thinking
to them and forms mental images about them. As a rule he does nothing
further with these images. But methods of spiritual science, based
upon the concentration of thinking, begin just where our everyday
mental activity leaves off. Anyone wanting to become a spiritual
researcher must carry on from this point.
We must choose mental images which we ourselves can form for ourselves
in detail and bring them into our field of consciousness. These should
preferably be symbolic images that do not need to correspond with the
external world. We must place these images, taken from the practice of
spiritual science or suggested to us by the spiritual researcher, at
the center of our full consciousness, so that for a longer period we
turn our attention away from everything external, concentrating on a
single image. Whereas we usually move on from one mental image to
another, in this case we marshal all our soul forces, concentrate
them on one chosen image, and devote ourselves totally to this image.
A person observed in this activity seems to be engaged in something
resembling sleep (although it is in fact radically different). For if
such concentration is to be fruitful, that person must indeed become
in some respects like a sleeper.
Just before we fall asleep, we feel how the will forces in our limbs
quiet down, how a kind of twilight settles around us, how the activity
of the senses ebbs away. Then we lose consciousness. In concentration,
as in sleep, our senses must be wholly shut off from all impressions
of the outer world; the eye should see as little, the ear hear as
little as in sleep, and so on. Then the whole soul life is focused on
a single mental image. This is what makes concentration radically
different from sleep. In fact, it could be called fully conscious
sleeping. Whereas in sleep the darkness of unconsciousness floods the
soul, the aspiring spiritual researcher lives in a heightened state of
soul activity. He mobilizes all the strengths of his soul and focuses
them on the chosen image. The point here is not that we observe the
mental image; it rather gives us the opportunity to pull our soul
forces together and channel them. That's the important thing, because
in this way we gradually succeed in wresting our soul-spiritual being
free from our bodily nature. Again I refer you to my books for the
details.
What I've just explained cannot be achieved all at once. Most people,
even those who are not distracted by the demands of daily life, have
to work for years on such concentration exercises; it is impossible to
keep at them for more than a few minutes at a time, or for more than a
fraction of an hour at most. We must repeat them again and again until
we really succeed in strengthening the powers that otherwise slumber
in everyday life (but are nevertheless there) so that they become
effective in us to the point of freeing our soul-spiritual being from
our bodily nature.
Let me share facts with you rather than talk abstractions, and say at
once that if the spiritual researcher succeeds, by persevering
energetically and devotedly in his exercises, in reaping the fruits of
his efforts, then he arrives at an experience of what could be called
purely inner consciousness. From then on, he can make sense of a
statement that previously meant nothing to him: “I know that I am
outside my body; in grasping and experiencing my inner being, I am
outside my body.”
I'd like to describe this experience to you in detail. We notice first
of all that the power of thinking, which is usually active only in the
affairs of daily life, frees itself from the body. To begin with, this
experience is faint, but it makes its appearance in such a way that,
having had it, we know it for what it is. Only when we return to our
body and have submerged ourselves in the life of the brain, manifested
in physical substance, do we realize what resistance the brain offers.
We are aware that we use the brain as an instrument for ordinary
thinking; but now we know that we have been outside it. We gradually
learn to make sense of the statement, “You are experiencing yourself
in the soul-spiritual element.” We experience our head as though
clothed in its thoughts. We know what it means to have separated our
soul-spiritual element from our external bodily nature. First we get to
know the resistance that bodily life puts up, and then to know life
independent of the body. It is just as if hydrogen were to become
aware of itself outside of the watery element. That is the case with a
person who does exercises of this kind. And if he continues to do them
faithfully, the great and significant moment comes when real spiritual
research begins — a profoundly shattering moment that has
far-reaching consequences for our entire existence. This moment can
occur in thousands of different ways, but I will characterize it in
the way it most typically comes about.
If we have carried on these exercises for a certain period of time,
training our souls in conformity with the natural scientific approach,
then that moment finally comes, either during waking life or in a
sleep from which we awaken to realize that we are not dreaming but
experiencing a brand new reality. The experience can be such, for
example, that we say, “What is going on around me? It is as though my
surroundings were receding from me, as though the natural elements
were striking like lightning and destroying my body, and I
nevertheless maintained myself, unlike this body.” We come to know
what seers throughout the ages have always pictured as “reaching the
gates of death.” This image brings home to us the true soul-spiritual
state of man when he is living purely in the soul-spiritual element,
instead of perceiving himself and the world through the instrument of
his body (and this we experience only through the image; the reality
is met only in death).
The shattering thing is to know that we have released ourselves from
our body with our thinking capacity. And other forces can be similarly
released so that we become ever richer and more inward as regards our
soul life.
But the one exercise that I have characterized as concentration or as
an unbounded heightening of attentiveness is not enough. We achieve
the following result with this exercise: When we have arrived at the
point where the soul experiences itself, images that we can call real
imaginations make their appearance. Images rise up, but they are
vastly different from those of our ordinary memory. Whereas ordinary
memory contains only images of external experiences, these images
arising now from the grey depths of our soul have nothing in common
with anything that can be experienced in the outer world of the
senses. Objections that we might easily be deceiving ourselves, that
what thus arises from these grey depths of soul may merely be
reminiscences produced by memory, don't hold up. For the spiritual
researcher learns to distinguish exactly between what memory can
summon up and something radically different from the content of
memory.
We must keep one thing in mind, however, when talking about this
moment of entering the spiritual world: namely, that people who suffer
from visions, hallucinations, or other such pathological conditions
are not well suited to spiritual research. The less a person tends in
that direction, which is a mere reflection of ordinary experience, the
more safely and certainly he advances in the field of spiritual
research. A large part of the preparation for spiritual research
consists in learning to distinguish exactly between something that
arises in an unconscious and pathological manner from within, and the
new element which can make its appearance as spiritual reality
following a spiritual scientific schooling of our soul.
I'd like to mention a radical difference between visionary or
hallucinatory experiences and what the spiritual researcher perceives.
Why is it that so many people believe themselves to be already in the
spiritual world, when they are only having hallucinations and visions?
How unwilling people are to learn anything really new! They cling to
the old and familiar. These sick soul-figments appear to us in
hallucinations and visions in basically the same way as external
sensory reality. They are simply there, confronting us; we do nothing
to make them appear. The spiritual researcher is not in the same
situation with regard to his new spiritual surroundings. I've told you
how he has to concentrate and refine all the forces of his soul that
are usually asleep. This requires him to exert a strength and energy
of soul not present in external life. He must constantly hold on to
this strength when he enters the spiritual world. It is characteristic
of hallucinations and visions that a person remains passive; he
doesn't need to exert himself. However, as soon as we become passive
toward the spiritual world for even a moment, everything disappears.
We have to stay with it and to be continuously active. That is why we
cannot be mistaken, since nothing of the spiritual world can appear to
us in the way a vision or hallucination does. We must be fully active
in confronting every least detail of what appears to us out of the
spiritual world, so that we grasp what we are facing. This
uninterrupted activity is vital for true spiritual research. But only
then do we enter a world radically different from the world of the
senses, a world where spiritual actualities and beings surround us.
But another thing is still needed: Wresting the soul free of the body
happens as described. This further need, however, can again be
explained with a scientific comparison. When we extract hydrogen, it
remains separate at first, but then it combines with other substances,
becoming something quite different. The same thing must happen to our
soul-spiritual being after its separation from the body. This being
must link itself up with beings not of the sensory world. It must
unite with them and thus perceive them.
The first stage of spiritual research is separation of the
soul-spiritual from the bodily nature. The second is entering into
relationship with beings that work behind the scenes of the sensory
world. To say this is held against one nowadays, even more so than any
vague talk of “spirit” in general. Many people today feel the
urge to acknowledge the existence of something spiritual; they speak of a
spirit behind the world order and are perfectly satisfied to be
pantheists. But as the spiritual researcher sees it, pantheism is just
like taking someone out into nature and remarking, “Look, all this
around you is nature,” instead of saying, “Those are trees,
clouds; that's a lily, that's a rose.” Leading a person from one
experience of nature to another, from one being to the next, and saying,
“All this is nature,” is to tell him nothing. The facts must
be presented concretely and in detail. It is acceptable today to speak of
an all-pervading spirit, but the spiritual researcher cannot rest content
with that. After all, he is entering a realm of spirit beings and
spiritual realities which are differentiated, just as the external
world is concretely differentiated into clouds, mountains, valleys,
trees, flowers, and so on. But although we differentiate natural
phenomena into plant, animal and human kingdoms, it is not acceptable
today to speak of concrete details and facts encountered upon entering
the spiritual world. The spiritual researcher cannot help but point
out that entering the spiritual world means entering a world of real,
concrete spiritual beings and events.
Another exercise we need to do is to intensify our feeling of devotion
— devotion felt in everyday life and in life's special moments as
religious reverence. This devotion must be boundlessly heightened and
developed, so that a person can reach the stage of giving himself
devoutly over to the stream of cosmic events, as he does in sleep. In
contemplation or meditation, he must forget about any bodily movement,
again as he does in sleep.
This is the second exercise, and it must alternate with the first. The
person doing the exercise forgets his body so completely that he not
only stops thinking about it but can even shut out all stirrings of
feeling and will, just as in sleep he shuts out all awareness of
bodily stirrings. But this condition must be brought about
consciously. Adding this exercise in devotion to the first, he will
succeed in making himself at home in the spiritual world with the help
of his awakening spiritual senses, just as he finds his way into his
physical surroundings with the help of his external senses.
A new world now dawns before him, a world that is always inhabited by
his soul-spiritual being. A reality becomes apparent to his inner
observation — a reality still rejected by current prejudices,
although it is just as much a fact of strictly scientific research as
our modern evolutionary theory. I am referring to the fact that he
comes to know the soul-spiritual core of his being in such a way the
he realizes: “Before I was conceived and born into this life which
clothed me in a body, I existed as a soul-spiritual being in a
spiritual realm. When I pass through the gates of death, my body will
fall away. But what I have come to know as the soul-spiritual core of
my being, which can live outside my body, will pass through the gates
of death. From then on, it lives in a spiritual world.”
In other words, we come to recognize the immortality of the soul
already in this life between birth and death. We become familiar with
something we know to be independent of the body and with the world
that the human soul enters after death. We come to know this
soul-spiritual core in such a way that we can describe it with
scientific clarity.
Observing a plant, we see how the seed germinates, how leaves and
blossoms develop, and how the fruit forms, producing new seed. We
realize how its life culminates in this seed. Leaves and blossoms drop
off, but the seed remains, bearing the promise of a new plant. We
become aware that the seed, the essential part of a new plant, is
already living in the plant we are observing. As we look at life
between birth and death, we thus come to recognize that something
develops in the soul-spiritual element that passes through the gates
of death and is, moreover, the germ and essential core of a new life.
The soul-spiritual core of our being, which is hidden in everyday life
but reveals itself to spiritual science, carries the potential for a
new human life just as certainly as a plant seed has the potential to
become a new plant. Looking at things in this way, we arrive at the
realization of repeated earth-lives in full harmony with the natural
scientific approach. We know that the sum total of man's life consists
not only of the life between birth and death but also of the life
running its course between death and rebirth, from which man then
embarks upon a new incarnation.
The only possible objection to what I've just said is that the
germinating seed could perish if conditions didn't foster the
development of a new plant. Spiritual science meets this objection by
pointing out that, though the plant seed in its dependence on outer
conditions may perish, there is nothing in the spiritual world to
hinder the gradual ripening of the core of the human soul as it
prepares for a new life on earth. In other words, the core of the
human soul which matures during one earth-life will appear again in a
further life on earth. I can only indicate briefly how the spiritual
researcher, faithful to natural scientific methods of investigation,
comes to this view of repeated earth-lives.
People have accused spiritual science of being Buddhistic because it
speaks of reincarnation. Spiritual science certainly does not draw
what it has to say from Buddhism; it is firmly founded on the premises
and principles of modern natural science. But spiritual science widens
modern natural science to cover the life of the spirit without even
taking Buddhism into account. Spiritual science can't help
acknowledging the truth of reincarnation. It can't change the fact
that in ancient times Buddhism spoke out of old traditions about
repeated earth-lives.
I'd like to mention in this connection that Lessing's mature thinking,
deepened by experience, led him to speak about reincarnation. At the
end of a long working life, Lessing wrote his treatise on the
education of the human race, in which he advanced the idea of repeated
earth-lives. He said somewhat as follows: “Is this teaching to be
rejected just because it appears at the dawn of human culture, before
any scholarly prejudice could cloud it?” Lessing refused to be swayed
by the fact that this teaching was a product of ancient times, a
teaching that was later pushed into the background by scholarly
prejudice. Spiritual science also doesn't need to shy away from it
simply because it appears in Buddhistic doctrine. That is certainly no
reason to accuse spiritual science of Buddhistic leanings.
Spiritual science recognizes the truth of repeated earth-lives out of
its own sources, and it points us to our connection with the totality
of human life through the ages. For the souls living in us have been
here many times before, and will return again and again. Let us look
back on early cultural epochs — for instance, to the time when people
lifted their eyes to the pyramids. We know that our souls were already
living at that time and that they will appear again in the future;
they take part in every epoch.
It is still perfectly understandable today that people have a bias
against such teachings. There are also people who take everything the
way they want to see it. They know that Lessing was a great man, but
it makes them uncomfortable to know that he acknowledged the truth of
reincarnation at the height of his career. So they say, “Oh, well,
Lessing was getting senile in his old age.” That makes people more
comfortable than to think that we have each been part of every
civilization that ever existed on the earth.
Now, how does spiritual science want to introduce the facts I've just
explained into contemporary culture? Why, no differently than natural
science presents its findings, although this means that spiritual
science is subject to the same prejudices as the initial findings
based on the modern natural scientific approach. Just think of
Copernicus, Galileo, or Giordano Bruno. What happened when Copernicus
claimed that the earth didn't stand still, but revolved around the
sun, and that the sun actually stood still in relation to the earth?
How did people react? They thought that religion was at stake, that
people's religious piety was jeopardized by this advance in knowledge.
It took the Church until the nineteenth century to remove the
teachings of Copernicus from the Index and to integrate them into its
doctrine. In every age advances in thought have had to fight against
old prejudices. This young spiritual knowledge wants to make itself
felt in human culture today in the same way as the new natural
scientific knowledge did in its day. Spiritual science wants to
emphasize the fact that mankind is ready to acquire knowledge of the
spirit, just as in the achievements of Copernicus, Galileo, and
Giordano Bruno the need for a new science of nature was made evident
at a time when mankind was ready for it.
In his day, even Nicholas Copernicus, a canon of the Church, was
accused of not being a Christian. And now it is easy in certain
respects to accuse spiritual science of being unchristian. When this
happens, I always think of a priest who, on becoming rector of his
university, delivered a lecture about Galileo. He spoke somewhat as
follows: “In those days people had religious prejudices against
Copernicus. But a truly religious person knows that God's glory and
light are not dimmed when we consciously penetrate the secrets of the
universe. He knows that the grandeur of our view of God has in fact
only increased as a result of extending our knowledge beyond the realm
of the senses to calculate the course of the stars and the particular
characteristics of the heavenly bodies.”
A truly religious person can grasp that religion is only enriched and
deepened by scientific knowledge. Spiritual science doesn't want to
have anything to do with founding a new religion or to give rise to
prophets or founders of sects. Mankind has matured; the time for
prophets and founding religions is over. And in future people who feel
the urge to be prophets will suffer a different fate from the prophets
of old, who, in accordance with the ways of their times, were rightly
revered as outstanding individuals. People of today who try to be
prophets in the old sense will simply be laughed at. Spiritual science
doesn't need any prophets because by its very nature it bases what it
has to say upon the depths of the human soul, depths which our souls
cannot always illuminate. And the spiritual scientist simply wants to
investigate his subject as an unassuming researcher, drawing attention
to vital matters. He says, “I've discovered it; you can discover it
for yourself, too, if you try.” It won't take long until the spiritual
investigator is recognized as a researcher just like any chemist or
biologist. The difference is that the spiritual researcher does his
research in a field of concern to every human soul.
Tonight I could only sketch the activity of the research done in this
field. But if you study the matter in more detail, you will find that
it addresses the most vital questions of the human soul, questions
concerning the nature of man and his destiny. Both are questions which
can stir human beings to their depths every hour of every day; they
give us strength for our work. And because the concerns of spiritual
science deal with the depths of the human soul, it is only natural
that it should grip us and unite with our inmost self, thereby
deepening and enhancing our religious feeling to an unusual degree.
Spiritual science does not want to usurp the place of Christianity; on
the contrary it would like to be instrumental in making Christianity
understood. Thus it becomes clear to us through spiritual science that
the being whom we call Christ is to be recognized as the center of
life on earth, that the Christian religion is the ultimate religion
for the earth's whole future. Spiritual science shows us particularly
that the pre-Christian religions outgrow their one-sidedness and come
together in the Christian faith. It is not the desire of spiritual
science to set something else in the place of Christianity; rather it
wants to contribute to a deeper, more heartfelt understanding of
Christianity.
Can it be said that when Copernicus was arriving at his concept of the
solar system in the peace and quiet of his study, he wanted to reshape
the order of nature? It would be mad to say anything of the sort.
Nature stayed as it was, but people learned to think about nature in a
way that accorded with the new view of the world. I've taken the
liberty of calling a book on Christianity that I wrote many years ago
Christianity as Mystical Fact. No one used to mulling over what he
presents to the world would choose such a title without weighing it
carefully. Why, then, did I choose it? Only in order to show that
Christianity is not a mere doctrine to be interpreted this way or
that; it has entered the world as a fact that can only be understood
spiritually. Nature didn't change because of Copernicus, nor does the
truth of Christianity change when spiritual science is used as a tool
for understanding it more completely than was possible in times gone
by.
I've taken more time than was intended, but perhaps you will let me
draw your attention to one concrete aspect of Christian spiritual
research. Studying ancient pre-Christian cultures from the viewpoint
of the spiritual researcher, we find that they all had mystery places
which were simultaneously centers of religion, art, and science.
Although the exoteric cultures of earlier times did not allow people
to delve into the spiritual world by means of the spiritual scientific
methods I have described, it was possible for certain individuals to
be admitted into the mysteries as pupils or candidates for initiation.
The art of the mysteries helped them to achieve what I have just been
describing — namely, withdrawing from the physical body and
developing a body-free soul life. And what came of it? The achieving
of this body-free soul life enabled them to experience the spiritual
world and the pivotal event in man's evolutionary history, the Christ
Event.
Exoteric scholarship pays far too little attention to the role played
by these pupils of the mysteries, although this is not for lack of
available material on the subject.
Let me mention a symptomatic instance. St. Augustine said that there
have been Christians not only since Christ's appearance on earth, but
even before His coming. Anyone saying that today would be accused of
heresy. A Church Father could say it, however, and that was indeed St.
Augustine's opinion. Why did this Christian teacher state such a
thing? We get a sense of why he said it when we see in reading Plato,
for instance, how he prized the mysteries and how he speaks of their
significance for the whole life and being of mankind. Some words of
Plato that seem harsh have come down to us. He said that human souls
live in muddy swamps after death if they have not been initiated into
the holy mysteries. Plato spoke out of his conviction that the human
soul is essentially of a spiritual nature, and that he who withdraws
his soul from the physical body as a result of initiation can behold
the spiritual world. A person who has not worked his way into the
mysteries seems to Plato to be cut off from his true being. The
crucial point is that in ancient times the mysteries were the only way
to leave the world of the senses and gain entry into the world of the
spirit. So it was that those who were recognized as schooled in the
mysteries, men like Heraclitus and Plato, were called “Christians”
by the Church Fathers because the mysteries had taught them to see the
spiritual world.
That, however, is no longer the case. The relationship of the human
soul to the spiritual world is tremendously different today than it
was in pre-Christian times. What I have been describing tonight about
what every soul can undertake for itself to succeed in entering the
spiritual world has been possible only since the founding of
Christianity. Since then, every soul who applies the methods set forth
in the books mentioned above can ascend to the spiritual world through
a process of self-education. In pre-Christian times the mysteries and
the authoritative guidance of teachers were essential; there was no
such thing as self-initiation then. And when spiritual science is
asked what brought about this change, the reply based on its research
must be that it was brought about by the Mystery of Golgotha
(see Note 1).
The founding of Christianity has introduced to mankind a reality that can
only be researched spiritually. Christ Himself could be found
previously in the realm of the spirit only by a person who had learned
in the mysteries to withdraw from his body. He can be found since the
Christ Event by every human soul willing to make the effort. What the
mysteries once introduced to human souls dwells since the Mystery of
Golgotha in every human soul, shared by all alike.
How is this to be understood?
Those who were recognized as schooled in the mysteries, men like
Heraclitus and Plato, were called “Christians” by the
Church Fathers because the mysteries had taught them to see into the
spiritual world. Spiritual science shows that while Jesus was living
in the way the Gospels tell of it, there came a moment in His life
— the baptism in the Jordan — when Jesus was transformed.
A Being not there before entered into Him and lived within Him for the
next three years. The Being that thus entered Him went through the
Mystery of Golgotha. This is not the time to go into detail concerning
the Mystery of Golgotha, but spiritual science, from its fully scientific
point of view, confirms what the Gospels relate. Through the Event on
Golgotha the Being Who could previously be experienced only in spiritual
heights united with earthly humanity. Since the time He passed through death
on Golgotha, Christ lives in all human souls alike. He is the source
of strength whereby every soul can find its way into the spiritual
world. Human souls on earth have been transformed by the Mystery of
Golgotha. The Christ came, as He said, “from above,” but He
has taken up His earthly abode in our human world.
Spiritual science is reproached for saying that Jesus was not always
the Christ, but that Christ's life on earth began only when Jesus was
thirty years old. Prejudiced humanity confronts spiritual science with
one superficiality after another. The mere stating of the fact
instantly invites prejudice. And the same holds true of almost
everything that our opponents say regarding the position spiritual
science takes on Christianity.
Don't we all agree that a child only begins to remember around his
third year? Does this mean that what lives in him now was not already
present before then? When we speak of Christ's entering into Jesus,
are we thereby denying that Christ had been related to Jesus from
birth on? We would not deny this any more than we would deny that the
child has a soul before the soul becomes aware of itself during the
third year of life. If we understood rightly what spiritual science
had to say, we would not oppose it.
Anthroposophy is further reproached for making Christ a cosmic being;
however, it only widens our earthly way of looking at things beyond
merely terrestrial concerns into the far reaches of the universe. Thus
our knowledge can embrace the universe spiritually, just as
Copernicus, with his knowledge, embraced the external world. The need
spiritual science feels to encompass what is most holy to it is simply
due to a feeling that is religious and deeply scientific at the same
time. Before Copernicus, people determined the movements of the stars
on the basis of what they saw. Since Copernicus, they have learned to
draw conclusions independent of their sensory perception. Is spiritual
science to be blamed for doing the same with respect to the spiritual
concerns of mankind? Up until now, people regarded Christianity and
the life of Christ Jesus in the only way open to them. Spiritual
science would like to widen their view to include cosmic spiritual
reality as well. It adds what it has researched to what was known
before about the Christ. It recognizes in Christ an eternal Being Who,
unlike other human beings, entered once only into a physical body and
is henceforth united with all human souls.
Those persons who make Christianity the basis for battling against
spiritual science commit a peculiar error. Just inquire of spiritual
science whether it opposes what it finds in Christianity! It affirms
everything Christianity stands for and then adds something more to it.
But to suppress what spiritual science has to add is not to insist on
Christianity but rather to insist on a narrow view of it. In other
words, it means to behave just like those who condemned Copernicus,
Galileo, and Giordano Bruno. It is easy to see the logical error at
the root of this argument. People come along and say, “You talk of a
cosmic Christ living in the far reaches of the universe; this makes
you a Gnostic.” This is the same kind of error that we fall into if a
person says to us, “I've just been given money by someone who owed me
thirty crowns. But he gave me forty, because he was lending me ten in
addition.” If we now insist that the man hasn't paid his debt because
he returned forty crowns instead of thirty, we're talking nonsense,
aren't we? If people reproach the spokesmen of spiritual science with
the remark, “You are not only saying what we say about the Christ, but
you add to it,” they don't notice what a monstrous mistake they've
made; they are not speaking truly objectively, but out of strong
emotion. Let people argue whether or not the findings of spiritual
science about Christianity mean anything to them. That depends on what
people think they need. Of course it would be possible for us to
reject Copernicus, Galileo, or Giordano Bruno. But we cannot claim
that spiritual science has less to offer on the subject of
Christianity or that it is hostile to it.
And there's something else that must be added here when the
relationship of spiritual science to Christianity is discussed.
Mankind changes as each individual goes from life to life in
succeeding epochs. Our souls incarnated in times before Christ united
with the earth, and they will continue to be reborn into further
earth-lives in which the Christ is joined with the earth. From now on,
Christ lives in each human soul. If our souls acquire ever greater
depth as they live through successive earth-lives, they become
increasingly independent and inwardly ever more free. Therefore they
need fresh means of understanding ancient wisdom and need to continue
making progress out of this inner freedom. It must be stated that
spiritual science confidently proclaims these ancient Christian truths
in a new form because it has understood the depth, truth and
significance of Christianity. Let those who insist on clinging to
their prejudices believe that spiritual science undermines
Christianity. Anyone familiar with modern culture will find that it is
precisely those people who cannot be old-fashioned Christians who have
been convinced of the truth of Christianity by spiritual science. For
what it has to say about Christianity can be said by spiritual science
to every human soul, since the Christ of Whom it speaks can be found
by every human soul within itself. But spiritual science can also say
that it sees Christ as the Being that once really entered into human
souls and into the earth-world through the fact of the Mystery of
Golgotha. Faith has nothing to fear from knowledge, for the elements
of faith, raised to the level of the spirit, need not shun the light
of knowledge. Thus spiritual science will win those souls for
Christianity who could not be won by speaking to them like a prophet
or as a founder of a sect, but instead they need to be addressed by an
unassuming scientist who draws their attention to what can be found in
the field of spiritual science and who sets the strings in every human
soul vibrating in harmony.
Anyone can become a researcher in the field of the spirit; you can
find the ways described in the books mentioned earlier. But it is also
true that a person who is not a researcher in this field can be
permeated by the truth if he lets it work upon him without bias.
Otherwise, he won't be able to free himself from prejudices. All truth
resides in the human soul. Not everybody may be able to achieve the
seer's view of spiritual truth, but the more our thinking is freed
from sensory realms, the more fully it can follow the spiritual
scientist as he draws our attention to his findings along spiritual
paths. He only wants to make us aware that there are truths that can
spring to life in every soul because they are already dormant in it.
Before closing I'd like to point out how spiritual science fits into
our cultural life today. Spiritual science is in full agreement with
the natural scientific way of seeing and thinking about things. It
wants to present itself to culture in the same way that the loyal
canon Copernicus and Galileo and Giordano Bruno presented themselves
in their times.
Let's think for a moment of Giordano Bruno — what did he really do?
Before he appeared on the scene and spoke words so significant for
human evolution, people gazed into the skies and talked of the
heavenly spheres in the way they thought they saw them. They spoke of
the blue vault of the heavens as the boundary of the universe.
Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno had the courage to break
through sensory appearances and to establish a new way of thinking.
What was Giordano Bruno actually saying to his listeners? He said,
“Look at the firmament, the blue vault of the heavens. The limitations
of your knowledge have created it. That is as far as your eyes see; it
is your eyes that create this boundary.” Giordano Bruno extended their
view beyond these limits. He felt it permissible to point out that
everlasting starry worlds were embedded in the vastnesses of space.
What is the task of the spiritual researcher? Let me try to express it in
terms of recent spiritual evolution. The researcher must point to a sort
of “firmament of time,” to birth and death as the boundaries of
human life. He maintains that the exoteric viewpoint sees birth and
death as a “firmament of time” because of the limitations of human
understanding and perceptive capacity. Like Giordano Bruno, the
spiritual researcher must point out that this “time firmament”
doesn't really exist, but that people think it does simply because of their
limited way of seeing. Giordano Bruno pointed beyond the supposed
limits of space to endless worlds embedded in its vast expanses. The
spiritual scientist must similarly explain that behind the supposed
boundaries of birth and death there stretches never-ending time, in
which the eternity of the human soul, the eternal being of man as it
passes from life to life, is embedded. Spiritual science is in
complete harmony with the impulses that brought about these changes in
natural science.
May I be allowed to draw attention once again to the fact that
spiritual science has no desire to found a religion of any kind;
rather does it want to set a more religious mood of soul-life and to
lead us to the Christ as the Being at the center of religious life. It
brings about a deepened religious awareness. Anyone who fears that
spiritual science could destroy his religious awareness resembles a
person — if I may use this analogy — who might have approached
Columbus before he set sail for America and asked, “What do you want
to discover America for? The sun comes up so beautifully here in our
good old Europe. How do we know if the sun also rises in America,
warming people and shining on the earth?” Anyone familiar with the
laws of physical reality would have known that the sun shines on all
continents. But anyone fearing for Christianity is like the person
described as fearing the discovery of a new continent because he thinks
the sun might not shine there. He who truly bears the Christ-Sun in
his soul knows that the Christ-Sun shines on every continent. And
regardless of what may still be discovered, either in realms of nature
or in realms of spirit, the “America of the spirit”
will never be discovered unless truly religious life turns with a
sense of belonging toward the Christ-Sun as the center of our
existence on the earth, unless that Sun shines — warming, illumining,
and enkindling our human souls. Only a person whose religious feeling
is weak would fear that it could die or waste away because of some new
discovery. But a person strong in his genuine feeling for the Christ
will not be afraid that knowledge might undermine his faith.
Spiritual science lives in this conviction. It speaks out of this
conviction to contemporary culture. It knows that truly religious
thinking and feeling cannot be endangered by research of any kind, but
that only weak religious sentiment has anything to fear. Spiritual
science knows that we can trust our sense for truth. Through the
shattering events in his soul life which he has experienced
objectively, the spiritual researcher knows what lives in the depths
of the human soul. Through his investigations he has come to have
confidence in the human soul and has seen that it is most intimately
related to the truth. As a result, he believes — signs of the times
to the contrary — in the ultimate victory of spiritual science. And
he counts on the truth-loving and genuinely religious life of the
human soul to bring about this victory.
- Note 1:
- Translator's note: Steiner is referring here to Christ's
crucifixion and resurrection.
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