ALL
of these lectures are tending more or less to the central
question of man's calling or profession. Some
people may think that the study of this question from the
spiritual-scientific point of view is one of the least
interesting subjects. But it is not so, — especially not
in this present period, the 5th post-Atlantean. For in this
period all the conditions in which men live will very largely
be changed, as against the conditions that obtained in former
periods on Earth. And for this change, man himself, out of his
freedom, will have to bring with him more than he brought with
him in former times, when his allotted task in earthly
evolution worked itself out more or less instinctively, and the
direction he had to take in one respect or another was
suggested to him, as it were, from a higher source.
Let
us look back for instance to the Egypto-Chaldean civilization,
or any other civilization of former times. As to the forming of
his outer destiny, not nearly so much was left in man's own
hands as is the case to-day (and it will be more and more so in
the future). In the Egypto-Chaldean epoch each man had his
station — his rank in life — and was fastened in it
(albeit not so firmly), much like an animal is fixed within its
species. Thus many things that come within the scope of human
freedom to-day did not do so in the past. There was, however, a
certain counterpoise to this restriction of man's freedom in
olden times. Our external historians think in a very
short-sighted way. People often imagine that it was in olden
times as it is to-day; that the leaders of human affairs were
inspired by mere human impulses like the leading
personalities of our day and generation. But you must
remember that in the Mysteries of olden time there were quite
definite procedures whereby the leaders informed themselves of
the will and intention — not of earthly Beings, but of
the Beings who guide this earthly life from realms beyond the
Earth. I have told you how the high priest's conducted certain
ceremonies of the Mysteries at certain seasons — we
need not describe them again in detail now. The purport of the
ceremony was, as it were, to place into connection with the
Cosmos — with processes beyond the Earth — chosen
individuals within the temple-service. For then, into the
consciousness of these chosen individuals — who were
especially suited to receive Their influence —
Beings who guided the Earth from regions far beyond, could
work. What the priests thus received of the will of the guiding
spiritual Beings, this they accepted as instruction for the
measures which they had to take. We may illustrate it by a
hypothetical assumption, — though of cour.se in our time
things are not done in this way. Let us suppose that our
Christmas festival did not take its course as it does to-day,
where it remains for most people a more or less external
festivity. Let us suppose we were aware throughout the
Christmas festival: ‘During the Christmas Season, our Earth as
a living Being is peculiarly adapted to receive into its aura
Ideas which cannot enter the Earth's aura at other seasons
— in summer time for instance.’ I have explained
how the Earth is awake during the winter season. One of the
brightest points of this awakeness is the time of
Christmas. At this time the aura of the Earth is woven
through and through with Thoughts. At this time the Earth is
meditating on the surrounding Universe, just as we human
beings in our day-waking Life meditate in thought upon the
things that surround us. In summer the Earth is asleep.
In summer, therefore, certain Thoughts cannot be found in the
Earth. In winter it is awake, — and most radiantly of all
at the time of Christmas. For then the aura of the Earth is
woven through and through with Thoughts, and in these Thoughts
we may read what the Cosmos requires of our earthly
happenings.
Certain human beings had to undergo an individual training, so
as to become sensitive and receptive to what was living in the
Earth's aura. The priests of the sacrifice who trained them
were then able, as it were, at certain moments to connect them
in the temples with these Thoughts of the Earth, which voiced
the cosmic Will. So were the priests enabled to find out the
cosmic Will. According to what they thus discovered as the
‘Will of Heaven,’ they could then determine who was to
remain within a certain tribe, or who should be received
within the Mysteries, thereafter to assume a leading place in
statecraft or priesthood.
Mankind has grown out of all these things. Mankind, in a
certain sense, is handed over to chaos in this respect. Of that
we must be well aware. The transition from these old and
definite conditions, when men discovered from the Will of Gods
what should take place here on the Earth, took place throughout
the fourth post-Atlantean period. For in that period the human
individuality was emancipating itself, so to speak, from the
cosmic Will, and the old customs gradually passed over into our
present, somewhat chaotic conditions. Everything is tending to
be placed more into the hands of man. But it is all the more
necessary for the Will of the Cosmos to enter into our earthly
conditions in a new way. Even in the Egyptian and Babylonian
period of civilization (the 3rd post-Atlantean), that which
works and weaves into the earthly realm out of the several
human trades and callings was to a high degree an image of the
cosmic will. It would take us a long time to explain this, but
we might well do so. It was brought about in the way above
described. But in the course of the 4th post-Atlantean time,
all this was growing vague and confused, and it became utterly
so during the present time (the 5th post-Atlantean) which, as
you know, began about the 15th century. It is a pity the
people of to-day do not observe what really happens. It is a
pity they dish up a fable convenue in place of real
History. If they were more observant they would recognize, even
from the outer facts, to how large an extent everything has
changed since the 14th and 15th centuries in the
living-together of men in their several callings. And from the
present conditions they would then perceive how increasingly
different these things will become in future. Truly a kind of
anarchy would overwhelm the human race if there were no-one to
perceive these deeper relationships, and communicate to
the spiritual life of man on Earth ideas which can reckon with
these changes. For the changes are inherent in the very course
of evolution.
Anyone who has a real feeling for human life would be
astonished to discover all that is observable even in
outer History, in the rise of the modern life of callings
and vocations, since the 15th century. Anyone who really let
work upon him what is quite recognisable even in this
way, would assuredly reproach himself with having lived
so sleepily, without giving a thought to what is connected so
profoundly with the evolving destinies of mankind.
Now
as I pointed out in our last lecture, the life of human
callings and professions is by no means without meaning for
the cosmic whole, though at first sight if might appear so. We
human beings, as I said, have undergone successively the
Saturn evolution (when the first plan of the physical human
body was prepared), the Sun epoch (when the etheric man was
prepared), the Moon epoch (when the astral man was
prepared), and we are now undergoing the Earth epoch,
during which the Ego is growing and developing. These
will be followed by others — the Jupiter, Venus, Vulcan
epochs. And we may say: As the Earth is the fourth stage from
Saturn, so is Vulcan the fourth stage from Earth. Earth is, in
a manner speaking, the Saturn of Vulcan. The
processes that took place on old Saturn are intimately
connected with our evolution, for we owe to them the first plan
and beginning of our physical body, which is still working in
us. So likewise on the present Earth, something must take
place, which, working on in evolution, will attain on
Vulcan a fourth stage of development, even as the
processes on Saturn have attained a fourth stage of development
during the Earth epoch. Moreover, as I showed you, these
processes which will correspond on Vulcan to what we have on
Earth from Saturn evolution, are none other than what lives and
works in the varied callings which men take up upon Earth. Men
upon Earth are working at their several callings, and as
they do so there evolves on Earth, within their work,
something which is a first beginning for Vulcan, just as
the Saturn activity was a first beginning for the physical
human body of to-day.
Consider now in this connection the tremendous change which the
life of callings and professions has undergone since the
fifth post-Atlantean age began. Then you will realise how
increasingly necessary it will be to place the life of
human callings into the whole course of cosmic evolution,
thinking of it from the points of view which spiritual science
can evolve. We must first acquaint ourselves with the objective
aspects of the vocational life of man. Only then can we arrive
at true conceptions of the Karma of vocation. And we must
be still more interested in the present tendencies
of evolution in this respect. For the tendencies
which are at work will give us a clearer idea than the actual
conditions which prevail to-day.
Further developments in this respect will lead to the several
callings growing more and more specialised and
differentiated. This we can easily recognise, if only we
look out into the world to-day with common sense. People to-day
sometimes speak critically of this increasing
specialisation of callings and occupations in modern time. But
there is little wisdom in such criticism. ‘Not many centuries
ago,’ they say, ‘man at his daily work was still able to see
the connection of the thing he made with its use and meaning
for the world. He had an intimate vision of what would become
of his product in the lives of men.’ So indeed it was in former
times, while to-day, for the majority of men, it is no longer
so.
Take a radical instance. Destiny places a man into a factory.
Maybe he does not even make a nail, but only part of a nail,
which another man will then piece together with a
different part. He cannot develop any real interest in
the way in which, what he has manufactured from early morning
till late evening, will place itself into the whole nexus of
human life. Compare the former handicrafts with the
present factory system. There is a radical difference between
what now obtains and what existed not so very long ago.
Moreover, what has already taken place to a high degree in
certain branches of work will take place more and more.
Increasing specialization and differentiation will inevitably
come into the life and work of men. Really it is not very wise
to criticise the fact. It is a necessity of evolution and it
will come about, more and more. There is no escaping it.
What sort of a prospect does this open up? This prospect, we
might imagine: Men would increasingly lose interest in that
which occupies the greater part of their lives. They would be
more or less mechanically given up to their work in the
external world. And yet, that is not even the most
important aspect. For it goes without saying that the
outer habit of man's life must affect his inner being —
and that is far more important. Study once more the historic
evolution of mankind and you will find to what a degree men
have become the impress of their several occupations during the
5th post-Atlantean age. Man's occupation works its way
down into his inner soul. The human beings themselves
grow specialised. You must not adopt as your standard the
majority of those who are now living in the Anthroposophical
Society. For many of these are in the happy position to
be able to sever themselves from the whole complex of modern
life. In the happy position, did I say? ... I might equally
well have said, in the unhappy position. For to a large extent
it is happiness only for our subjective, selfish human feeling;
not for the World at large. The World will more and more
require men to do good work in special spheres. The World
itself will require men to specialise. More and more,
therefore, this will be the question: What is to happen
alongside of the specialising of men? They
will specialize; the necessities of World-evolution will
see to that, quickly enough. But what must happen in
addition?
In
a none too distant future this will become one of the most
important ‘family questions,’ and people will need an
understanding of it if they want to educate their children.
They will need to place themselves intelligently into the
whole course and trend of human evolution when the question
comes before them: How shall I place my child into this human
evolution? It will depend on their large-minded understanding
of this question. Today, out of a certain sloppiness of
thought, it may still be possible to adhere to the old phrases
which are a mere relic of former times and will soon reveal
their emptiness — pretty phrases, which so many people
still admire: ‘Observe the child's predisposition. Let
him take up what accords with his native talents.’ This above
all will soon be proved — an empty phrase. For in the
first place, as we shall presently see, those who are born into
the world henceforth will be related to their former
incarnations in a far more complicated way than in the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch. The whole system of predispositions will
be of a complexity hitherto unknown.
Predispositions were simpler in former times. We shall live and
learn, ... and as to those who think themselves
peculiarly wise in examining the talents and predispositions of
adolescent children and declaring them fit for this or
that calling, we shall soon discover that such insight is
often no more than the fantastic imaginings of men who think
themselves too clever. And apart from that, the life of men
will in the none too distant future grow so complicated that
the word ‘calling’ will assume quite another meaning.
To-day, when we speak of ‘calling,’ or ‘vocation,’
we still often think of something inwardly determined; But in reality
most people's ‘calling’ is no longer so. We speak of
‘calling’; we imagine: ‘That to which the man
is called by virtue of his inner qualities.’ Well, let us
inquire objectively, especially in the towns and cities. How many
people will answer, I am in my
calling because I recognise that this is the only one which
answers to my talents and predispositions from a child. Of the
town populations, at any rate, a very small proportion will
reply that they are in the very calling which answers to their
talents. I think, from your own observations of life, you will
scarcely believe that it is otherwise. To-day already, in a
high degree, our ‘calling’ is that to which we are called by
the objective course of evolution of the World. It will be more
and more so in future. Outside, in the outer World, is the
organism, the complex, or if you will, the machine, — it
matters not how you name it — which makes its demands on
man, i.e., which ‘calls’ him.
All
this will become more and more intensified. Nevertheless, in
this very process, what mankind achieves in vocational work is
loosed from the man himself and grows more objective. And
precisely inasmuch as it is thus severed from man, it will
increasingly become what in the further development
through Jupiter, Venus and Vulcan will undergo a similar
process to what was undergone for the Earth through Saturn, Sun
and Moon.
It
is strange. When as a spiritual scientist one speaks of things
that touch the life of man so nearly, one cannot generally
speak so as to please. Spiritual Science will be less and less
exposed to the danger of speaking after the pattern of that
‘wisdom’ which is expressed in the quotation:
‘At most a deed
of State with excellent pragmatic maxims, suitable for
puppets to declaim.’ On the contrary, Spiritual Science
will often be obliged to declare great and fraught with meaning
for World-evolution, precisely the things which human beings
would not gladly have. Many a person of today — who
thinks himself a man of genius because his head is filled with
modern, Philistine ideas, — may say of these things, ‘How
prosaic and external!’ To a true Spiritual Science the
vocational life of man appears in quite a different light.
Spiritual Science must say: The vocational life is necessary
for the development of relationships which have a cosmic
meaning, precisely inasmuch as it is in a certain measure
loosed and separated from human interest.
Some will say, perhaps: ‘What a sad perspective for the future!
Man is having to enter the treadmill of life more and more; and
not even Spiritual Science can give him comfort at this
prospect.’ But to draw this conclusion would again be a
great mistake. For in the Universe it is so: things work
themselves out through a balancing of polar opposites. You need
only think how it forces itself on your attention everywhere.
Positive and negative electricity produce their effects in the
balancing-out of their mutual relation; they are necessary one
to another. The male and female are necessary for the
propagation of the human race. In World-evolution the totality
evolves out of one-sidednesses.
And
this, too, underlies the matter we have just explained. In the
vocational work which is severed from the human being, we
have to create the first cosmic beginnings of a far-reaching
World-evolution. All that happens in World-evolution stands in
relation to the spiritual; and in all that we do in trades and
callings and professions — whether by manual or by
so-called mental work — there lies as it were the
starting-point for the incorporation of spiritual beings.
Now, during earthly time, the.se beings are still of an
elemental kind — we might call them elemental of the
fourth degree. But when the Jupiter evolution has
arrived, they will be elementals of the third degree, ... and
so on. The work we do, precisely in the objective process of
our callings, is severed from us and becomes the outer garment,
the outer vehicle, for elemental beings who will develop on
through cosmic evolution. Yet this will happen only under
one condition. On the one hand we must say: We are only
beginning to understand the meaning of what is so often
maligned as the mere prosaic life. Yet at the same time we must
realise that the meaning of it will not be fully unveiled till
we understand it as a whole, in the great World-connection.
What we create in our daily occupations can indeed gain
significance for Vulcan evolution. But to this end
another thing is necessary. As positive electricity is
needed for negative, and male for female, so, too, an opposite
pole is needed, to add to these occupational activities
which will more and more be loosed and severed from
mankind. Such polarity, depending upon contrasts, existed
already in former evolutionary epochs of mankind. It is not
altogether new, needless to say; something not unlike it was
already there before. But as you look back on former periods of
culture — even a few centuries ago — you will find
things very different. For with his feelings, even his passions
— his whole emotional life, in a word, — man
was far more engaged in his daily occupation than he can be
to-day. Compare the many joys a man could have in his calling-,
even a hundred years ago, with all the unhappy drudgery which
many a one to-day already has to undergo if he has nothing else
in life beside his calling. Then you will gain an idea of what
I mean. Such things are far too little considered nowadays, and
for a simple reason: Those who do most of the talking about
vocations — about the different kinds and
characters and choices of vocation — are generally
people for whom it is easy enough to talk: schoolmasters,
litterateurs and parsons, people who experience least of all
the disadvantages of modern vocational life. To hear
people talk in the usual literature of to-day (not excluding
that on education) one generally feels, they are like
blind people talking about colours. For a man of to-day, who
with a certain social background went to public school,
and then, maybe, looked around him a little at some University,
it is easy enough to1 feel very clever when he sets
himself up as a reformer of mankind and knows how all things
should be done. For he has absorbed all manner of ideas. There
are many such reformers; but to anyone who sees through life,
these people who tell us how things should be done
generally appear the most foolish of all. Their
foolishness only passes unobserved, because, for the
moment, there is still a great respect for those who have
undergone such education. The time is yet to come, when it will
rather be the prevailing feeling that a litterateur, a
journalist, a schoolmaster — trained in the way
schoolmasters generally are nowadays — understands
least of all of the real facts of life. This, too, must
gradually become the prevailing judgment.
The
point is now, that we should see more clearly: The vocational
life of former times was connected with the emotional life of
men, and it is of the very essence of evolution in this respect
that the vocational life has grown out of the human life of
emotions and will do so more and more in future. Hence,
too, the opposite pole, which the vocational life requires,
must become different from what it was before. What was it in
former times? You have it before you still when you observe
with sympathy what has to-day become a more or less outer husk
of culture (and will inevitably become so more and more). There
are the houses in the village, wherein the several trades and
callings are pursued, gathered around the Church. The
Church in the centre. Six days of the week are devoted to trade
and craft and calling, and Sunday to what the human being shall
receive only for his soul. Such were the two poles
before: the vocational life and the life in religious
thoughts.
It
would be the greatest possible mistake to suppose that this
other pole can remain to-day as the religious societies and
sects imagine. It cannot remain as it now is, for it is
altogether adapted to a kind of vocational life which is bound
up with the human emotions. All human life would be parched and
stunted if an insight into these matters did not now arise. The
old religious ideas were to some extent sufficient so long as
the elemental spirituality which man created at his calling
— for he did create elemental spirituality in the
above-described sense — did not sever itself from man.
To-day, they are no longer sufficient, and they will be less
and less so the farther we go on into the future. What is
necessary now is the very thing which is most attacked in
certain quarters. There must now enter into human evolution the
other pole which will consist in this: Men must be able to form
clear and detailed ideas about the Spiritual Worlds.
The
existing representatives of religious faiths will often say,
‘There goes Spiritual Science, talking of many Spirits, many
Gods. One God is all that matters. Is not one God enough?’
To-day one can still make a certain impression by telling
people of the great advantage of reaching out to the one God
— especially if one does so at the family tea party,
pouring derision on ‘these modern movements,’ and putting
the thing forward in a more than usually Philistine and
self-sufficient way. Nevertheless, it is essential that the
points of view of men grow wider. Humanity must learn to know
not only that everything is permeated by one Divine
Spirituality (conceived as vaguely as possible), but that
Spirituality is everywhere — concrete, detailed
Spirituality. The workman who stands at the lathe will
have to know: As the sparks fly out, so too are the elemental
spirits created, who then pass out into the World-process and
have their significance in the World-process. Some who believe
themselves unduly clever may reply: ‘That is unwise; the
elemental spirits will arise, even if one who has no notion of
it is standing at the lathe.’ They will arise, no doubt. But
the point is, that they should arise in the right way. The
point is not that they must arise at all, but that they should
arise in the right way. For there may either arise elemental
spirits who disturb the cosmic process, or who
serve it.
You
will best see what I mean if you consider it in one especial
sphere. In all these matters, we are now at the beginning of an
evolution which stands directly at our doors. Many a man
is beginning already now to divine something of it. If it were
translated into reality without passing over at once into
spiritual-scientific strivings, it would be the worst thing
that could happen to the Earth. For what has chiefly happened
during the fourth post-Atlantean epoch is this: Man has been
loosed, to begin with, from the outer inorganic world which he
embodies in his tools. He will be brought together again
with what he embodies in his tools. Nowadays, many machines
are constructed. It goes without saying, the machines
today are objective. There is little of the human element
in them as yet. But it will not always be so. The tendency of
World-evolution is for a connection to arise between what a man
is and what he creates — what he produces. This
connection will become more and more intimate. It will
emerge to begin with in those spheres on which a closer
relationship between man and man is founded — in the
treatment of chemical substances for instance, when they
are worked up into medicines. People today may still
believe that a substance consists of sulphur and oxygen and
hydrogen and what-not besides; and that the product of
combination will only contain the effects that proceed from the
several substances combined. To-day, to a large extent, this is
still true; but the tendency of World-evolution is in another
direction altogether. Intimate pulsations which are inherent in
man's life of will and feeling, will more and more be woven and
incorporated in that which he produces. It will no longer
be a matter of indifference whether we receive a
preparation from one man or another.
Even the coldest and most external technical developments are
tending in a very definite direction. He to-day who can divine
with his imagination future technical developments, is well
aware that in the time to come whole factories will work in an
individual way according to the manager. The spirit, the mood
and outlook of the man will go into the factory and be
transmitted to the way in which the machines work. Thus man
will grow together with the objective things. All that we touch
will by and by bear the impress of human being. Humanity will
learn, however foolish it may yet appear to the clever people.
(Did not St. Paul already say, What men hold wise is often
foolish before God?) The times are coming when a machine will
stand there and remain at rest. A human being will approach it,
knowing that he must make one movement of the hand in
this way, another in a definite relation to it, and a third
again; and through the pulsations in the air which thus arise
out of a certain sign, the motor, being attuned to this
particular sign, will be set in motion.
Then the development of economic life will assume an aspect
such that external patents and the like will be out of the
question; for the effect of these things will be replaced by
what I have just explained. Moreover, anything that has no
relation at all to human nature will be excluded, and a quite
definite result will be made possible. Imagine at some future
time a really good man, highly evolved in his whole mood and
outlook. He will be able to construct machines and to determine
signs for them — signs which can only be made by men of a
like spirit, men who are also good like himself. While all who
are evilly disposed will, if they try to use the sign,
create a quite different pulsation and the machine will not
work.
It
was not for nothing that I told you how certain people can see
flames dance under the influence of certain notes. If further
researches are made in this direction, the way will presently
be found to what I have just indicated. Or, as we might also
put it, the way will be found again to those old times when the
one alchemist, who only wanted money for his purse, could
attain nothing, where, with the very same process,
another one who did not want to put money in his purse but
desired to enact a sacrament in honour of the Gods and for the
healing of Mankind, succeeded.
So
long as the product of the daily work of men carried the aura
of their emotions — of the joy and gladness which they
put into their work — it was inaccessible to the kind of
influence which I have just described. But now that the work
done by the labour of men at their several vocations can no
longer be produced with special enthusiasm, what thus
goes out from men will be able to become a motive force —
and in like measure. In a certain sense, man is giving back, to
the world of machines which proceed from his labour or which
serve his labour, its chastity and purity, inasmuch as he
can no longer connect it with his emotions. In future it will
no longer be possible, so to speak, from the glowing hearth of
joyful work at one's vocation to endow the things one makes
with one's own human warmth. But on the other hand one will
place them into the world more chastely, and thereby also make
them more receptive to the motor force, which, as above
described — proceeding from man himself —
will be destined by man for the several objects. But to give
human evolution this direction, detailed knowledge is necessary
of the spiritual forces which can be investigated only by
Spiritual Science. Only in this way can it come about. For such
a thing to happen as we have just described, depends upon a
larger number of people in the world finding increasingly the
other pole. For in this they will find their way to one another
— from man to man — in those interests which,
though they go beyond our daily work, our callings, can
nevertheless illumine and penetrate them through and
through. Life in the spiritual-scientific movement can lay the
foundations of a united human life which will lead all the
vocations together. Purely external progress in the
development of the vocations would soon lead to the dissolution
of all bonds of humanity. Men would understand one another less
and less; they could unfold less and less of those relations
that accord with the true human nature. Increasingly, they
would pass one another by, seeking no longer any more than
their advantage. They would come into no other relation to one
another than that of competition. This must not be
allowed to happen, for otherwise the human race would
fall into utter decadence. Spiritual Science must be spread in
order that this may not be so.
But
there is the possibility to describe in the right way
what many people — though they may deny it — are
striving for unconsciously to-day. You know how many there are
nowadays who say, ‘To talk of the spiritual — what
antiquated nonsense! We will develop the purely physical
sciences in all domains. That is the real advancement of
mankind. Once men grow beyond the stage of talking
antiquated nonsense about spiritual things, then there
will be as it were the Paradise on Earth.’ But it would
not be Paradise, it would be Hell on Earth if the human race
were dominated by no more than competition and the
acquisitive impulse, with this as the balancing and
equalising principle. After all, if things are to go on at all,
there must be another pole; and if people refuse to look
for the spiritual pole, then perforce they must have an
Ahrimanic one. When human occupations grow more and more
specialised, we might, after all, still have this unifying
principle. We could say, ‘The one man is this, the other
that, but they all have this much in common; each one
desires through his calling to earn, to gain as much as
possible. That is what makes all people equal.’ No doubt! But
it is purely Ahrimanic principle.
To
imagine that the world can manage with a one-sided
development, advancing purely on external lines as we
have here described it, would be precisely the same in this
sphere as if someone were to declare (for let us assume that
there was such a queer crank — or shall we say, for
politeness, ‘lady-crank’): ‘Men have become
worse and worse and worse; they are quite impossible people;
they ought to be exterminated. Then only shall we have the
right kind of evolution on the physical plane.’ She
would be a queer crank, would she not, who imagined this,
for nothing at all would be the result if all the men were
exterminated. Because it is in the world of the senses,
people understand this. In the Spiritual World they fail
to understand the corresponding ‘crankiness.’
And yet, for spiritual things it is precisely the same when
anyone imagines that external evolution can go forward by
itself. It cannot.
Just as the former periods of evolution demanded the
abstract religions, so does the evolution of modern time demand
the more concrete spiritual knowledge which we are striving
after in the spiritual-scientific movement. Born of the
occupational work of man which is now severed from the man
himself, the elemental spirits will have to be fertilised by
the human soul, through what the human soul receives from the
impulses that rise to spiritual regions. Not that this is the
only task of Spiritual Science. But it is its task in
face of the developing and changing life of human callings.
Demanded as it is by World-evolution itself upon the Earth,
this insight must come into the hearts of men, in like measure
as their occupations mechanise the human being. This
counter-pole must become more and more active, precisely for
the human beings of to-day who are becoming specialised and
mechanised. The counter-pole is this: Man must be able to
fill his soul with that which brings him near to every other
human soul, no matter in what direction specialised.
And
this will lead us to far more ... Our time, with the
indifference and solitude and separation which it often
involves for specialists and workers, must give way to quite
another age, when men will work inspired once more by very
different impulses. These will truly be no worse than the good
old impulses of trade and craft and calling; but the latter
cannot ever be renewed. They must be replaced by others. In
this respect, we to-day can no longer merely indicate in
abstract terms a human ideal which Spiritual Science wishes to
unfold. In all detail, we must point to an ideal which will
shew what the callings and professions too can become for man
when he has the understanding rightly to perceive the signs of
the time.
Of
all these things, and their significance for human
individuality and karma, we shall continue to speak in the next
lecture.
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