LECTURE TWO
THE
LECTURE YESTERDAY will have shown you that if we are to acquire
insight into the nature and evolution of humanity, we must be
constantly mindful of the power and influence of Lucifer, of
Christ, and of Ahriman.
These influences were, of
course, already at work in earlier stages of cosmic evolution, but in
spheres where it was unnecessary for people to have clear
consciousness of their effects. On the other hand, the very purpose
of our fifth post-Atlantean epoch is that human beings should become
increasingly conscious of what takes effect through them in
earthly existence. The unveiling of many more of the secrets of human
life would be desirable at the present time if only there were
greater willingness to face things frankly and objectively. For
without the knowledge of certain facts of the kind indicated
yesterday, it will not be possible for humanity to make progress
either in the inner life or in the sphere of social life. Think only
of something that is connected with the social problems we have
recently been studying. It has been our aim to demonstrate the
necessity for separating the spiritual life, and also the political
life or life of rights, from the economic life. Our greatest concern
is to create conditions throughout the world, or at least
— for we cannot do more at present — to convince people
of the necessity for conditions which would provide the foundation
for a free spiritual life no longer dependent upon the other
spheres of social life or as deeply entangled as it is today in the
economic life on the one side and in the political life of the state
on the other. Civilized humankind must either establish the
independence of the spiritual life or face collapse — with the
inevitable result of an Asiatic influence taking effect in the
future.
Those who still do not
recognize the gravity of the present situation in the world are also,
in a certain respect, helping to prepare for Ahriman's incarnation.
Many things in external life today bear witness to this. The
ahrimanic incarnation will be greatly furthered if people fail to
establish a free and independent spiritual life and allow it to
remain entangled in the economic or political life. For the
ahrimanic power has everything to gain by the spiritual life being
even more closely intermingled with these other spheres. To the
ahrimanic power a free spiritual life would denote a kind of
darkness, and people's interest in it, a burning, raging fire. The
establishment of this free spiritual life is essential in order that
the right attitude, the right relationship, may be adopted to
Ahriman's incarnation in the future.
But there is still a strong
tendency today to conceal the facts of which we spoke yesterday. The
vast majority of people cast a veil over these things; they refuse to
see them as they really are and allow themselves to be deceived by
words which have no connection with reality. And very often,
endeavors to shirk reality are described as “honest” and
“well-meaning.”
Take, for example, the
recently published letter of Romain Rolland, in which he says that
people should not allow themselves to be deluded by erstwhile
proclamations of the victorious powers concerning justice and
the upholding of political rights. The treatment which Russia is
receiving from the Entente has led him to speak in these terms. He
says: No matter whether it be on the part of monarchies or republics
— what has been said about rights and justice is so much phrase
mongering; the issue at bottom is one of power, and of power
alone.
Now even the apparent
approach to reality still betrays willingness to be deluded, for
Romain Rolland is just as deluded as ever; the delusion is not one
whit less. It could only be so if such people were to discard phrases
and recognize that all these things for which they aspire are
meaningless as long as they fail to realize that if the old unified
state as such — whether a democracy, a republic or a monarchy
— does not become threefold, this is simply a way of helping
Ahriman's incarnation. Hence all these things, including this recent
letter addressed to the world by Romain Rolland, amount to nothing
more than rhetorical harangues. People do not grasp the reality, for
reality can be grasped only when the necessity for spiritual
knowledge and deep penetration into the nature of things is
thoroughly understood.
You are all familiar with
the much quoted verse: “In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was a God.” Do people really
take these lines in earnest? They utter them, but so often as mere
phrases! No particular emphasis is laid on the tense: “In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God.” “Word” here must
obviously have the meaning it bore in ancient Greece. It is not
“word” as understood today — word as mere sound
— but it is the inner, spiritual reality. In either case,
however, it is the imperfect tense that is employed. The
implication therefore is: “In the beginning the Word
was; but it is no longer.” Otherwise the sentence would
run: “Now is the Word; and the Word is not with God; it
was with God, and a God was the Word but is so no
longer.” This, moreover, is what stands in the Gospel of St.
John; otherwise what would be the meaning of the words immediately
following: “And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among
us.” This indicates a further evolution of the Word.
“Word” also means anything that human beings can acquire
in the way of intellectual wisdom through their efforts and through
their intelligence. But it must be quite clear to us that what
“word” denotes here is not really the goal for which
humanity must strive at the present time or in the immediate
future. To express what is now the goal, we should have to say:
“Let human beings seek for the Spirit that reveals itself in
the Word; for the Spirit is with God, and the Spirit is a God.”
Humankind must press on from the word to the spirit, to
perception and knowledge of the spirit.
When I remind you of these
first verses of the Gospel of St. John, you will realize what little
inclination there is today to take such things in earnest and to
surmount the arbitrary interpretations so often accepted in
matters of the greatest moment. Human intelligence itself must be
quickened and illumined by what is revealed in spiritual vision
— not that actual seership is essential; what matters is that
the fruits of spiritual vision shall be understood. I have repeatedly
emphasized that today it is not the seer alone who can apprehend the
truth of clairvoyant experience; this apprehension is within the
power of everyone at the present time, because the spiritual
capacities of human beings are sufficiently mature if they will but
resolve to exercise them and are not too indolent to do so. But
if the level befitting humanity is to be achieved, such things as
were mentioned in the lecture yesterday must be taken in deep
earnestness! I used a trivial example to show you how easy it
is to be deluded by figures and numbers. Is there not a great deal of
superstition where numbers are concerned? What can in some way
be counted is accepted in science. Natural science loves to
weigh, to compute, and social science loves statistics — again
a matter of computation and reckoning. It will be difficult indeed
for people to bring themselves to admit that all knowledge of the
external world acquired through measure and number is so much
delusion.
To measure — what
does it mean, in reality? It means to compare something with a given
dimension, be it length or volume. I can measure a line if I
compare it with a line twice, three times, four times, etc.,
smaller:
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
In such measurements, no
matter whether of lengths or surfaces or weights, the
qualitative element is entirely lacking. The number three
always remains the same, whether one is counting sheep, human beings,
or politicians.
It is not a matter of the
qualitative, but only of the quantum, the quantitative. The essential
principle of volume and number is that the qualitative is left out of
account. But for that very reason, all knowledge derived from the
principles of volume and measure is illusion; and the fact which must
be taken in all seriousness is that the moment we enter the world
that can be weighed and measured, the world of space and time, we
enter a world of illusion, a world that is nothing but a fata morgana
as long as we take it to be reality. It is the ideal of present-day
thinking to experience in connection with all the things of the
external world of space and time, their spatial and temporal
significance; whereas, in truth, what things signify in space and
time is their external aspect only, and we must transcend space and
time, penetrating to much deeper levels, if we are to reach the
innermost truth, the innermost being of things. And so a
future must come when people will be able to say: “Yes, with my
intelligence I can apprehend the external world in the way that is
the ideal of natural science. But the vista thus presented to
me is wholly ahrimanic.” This does not mean that natural
science is to be ignored or put aside; it is a matter of realizing
that this natural science leads only to the ahrimanic illusion. Why,
then, must people have natural science, in spite of the fact that it
leads only to illusion? It is because in earth existence they
are already on the descending curve of evolution. Of the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch, the Greco-Latin epoch, it may be said that with
respect to knowledge, humanity was, relatively speaking, at the
zenith. But now, in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, human beings are
on the path of decline, they are a being growing physically weaker,
and to perceive the world in the way the Greeks perceived it would be
too much for their strength.
That is something we are
not told in history! Just imagine what modern historians would have
to say about it — those worthy historians who describe Greece
as if they were describing some region of their own time
because they do not know that the Greeks looked out into nature with
different eyes, listened with different ears from those of
modern people. These historians do not tell us that modern human
beings would suffer from constant headache or migraine if they
were to see and hear in the outer world all that the Greeks saw and
heard. The Greeks lived with infinitely greater intensity in the
world of the senses. Our own apprehension of this world has already
weakened. To be able to bear it, a fata morgana has to be and
is presented to us. And not only what we perceive with the
senses but on account of our scientific conceptions we
“dream” about the external world — that, most
emphatically of all, is a fata morgana. The greatest dreamers where
the external world is concerned are precisely those who pride
themselves on being realistic in their thinking. Darwin and John
Stuart Mill are fundamentally dreamers. The dreamers are the
very people who claim to be thoroughgoing realists.
But neither must we give
ourselves up entirely to our own inner life and impulses. From the
way things have developed in the movement represented by the
“Theosophical Society,” many of you will have realized
that cultivation of the inner life alone, as attempted by numbers of
people today, does not lead to the goal befitting humanity in the
present age. For the all too prevalent tendency is to make no free
resolve to transcend ordinary life and attain higher vision but
rather to bring into prominence that in us which is not free.
All kinds of hallucinatory tendencies, all kinds of faculties fraught
with illusion come into play.
It should be realized that
just as external science becomes ahrimanic, the higher development of
our inner nature becomes luciferic if we give ourselves up to
mystical experiences. The luciferic tendency wakens and becomes
especially powerful in everyone who, without the self-training
described in the book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
sets about any mystical deepening of the impulses
already inherent in their nature. The luciferic tendency shows itself
in everyone who begins to brood over experiences of their inner life,
and it is extremely powerful in present-day humanity. It takes effect
in egoism of which most people are entirely unaware. One comes across
so many today who are quite satisfied when they can say of
something they have done that they have no cause for self-reproach,
that they did it to the best of their knowledge and according to
their conscience. That is an entirely luciferic attitude. For in what
we do in life the point is not whether or not we have cause to
reproach ourselves; what really matters is that we shall take
things objectively, with complete detachment, and in accordance
with the course of objective facts. And the majority of people today
make no effort to achieve this objective understanding or to acquire
knowledge of what is necessary for world evolution.
Therefore spiritual science
must emphasize the following: That Ahriman is actually preparing for
his incarnation; where we can recognize how he is preparing for it;
and with what attitude it must be confronted. In such questions
the point is not to say: We do this or that in order that we may have
no cause for self-reproach — but to learn to recognize the
objective facts. We must come to know what is at work in the world,
and act accordingly — for the world's sake.
It all amounts to this,
that modern people only speak truly of themselves when they say that
they hover perpetually between two extremes: between the ahrimanic on
the one side, where they are presented with an outer delusion, a fata
morgana, and, on the other, the luciferic element within them
which induces the tendency to illusions, hallucinations and the like.
The ahrimanic tendencies in people today live themselves out in
science, the luciferic tendencies, in religion, while in art they
swing between the one extreme and the other. In recent times the
tendencies of some artists have been more luciferic — they are
the expressionists; the tendencies of the others have been more
ahrimanic — they are the impressionists. And then,
vacillating between all this, there are the people who want to be
neither the one nor the other, who do not rightly assess either the
luciferic or the ahrimanic but want to avoid both. “Ahriman
— no! — that I must not, will not do, for it would take
me into the realm of the ahrimanic; that I must not, will not do, for
it would take me into the realm of the luciferic!” They want to
be virtuous, avoiding both the ahrimanic and the luciferic.
But the truth of the matter
is that Lucifer and Ahriman must be regarded as two scales of a
balance and it is we who must hold the beam in equipoise.
And how can we train
ourselves to do this? By permeating what takes ahrimanic form within
us with a strongly luciferic element. What is it that arises in
modern people in an Ahrimanic form? It is his knowledge of the
outer world. There is nothing more ahrimanic than this knowledge of
the material world, for it is sheer illusion. Nevertheless if the
fata morgana that arises out of chemistry, out of physics, out of
astronomy and the like can fill us with fiery enthusiasm and
interest, then through our interest — which is itself luciferic
— we can wrest from Ahriman what is his own.
That, however, is just what
human beings have no desire to do; they find it irksome. And many
people who flee from external, materialistic knowledge are
misconceiving their task and preparing the best possible incarnation
for Ahriman in earth existence. Again, what wells up in our inmost
being today is very strongly luciferic. How can we train ourselves
rightly in this direction? By diving into it with our ahrimanic
nature, that is to say, by trying to avoid all illusions about our
own inner life and impulses and observing ourselves just as we
observe the outer world. Modern people must realize how urgent it is
to educate themselves in this way. Anyone who has an observant eye in
these matters will often come across circumstances of which the
following is an example.
A man tells someone how
indignant he is with countless human beings. He describes minutely
how this or that in a, in b, in c, and so on, angers
him. He has not an inkling that he is simply talking about his own
characteristics. This peculiarity in human beings was never so
widespread as it is today. And those who believe they are free of it,
are the greatest culprits. The essential is that people should
approach their own inner nature with ahrimanic cold-bloodedness and
dispassion. Their inner nature is still fiery enough even when cooled
down in this way! There is no need to fear that it will be
overcooled.
If the right stand is to be
taken to Ahriman's future incarnation, people must become more
objective where their own impulses are concerned, and far, far more
subjective where the external world is concerned — not by
introducing pictures of fantasy but by bringing interest, alert
attention, and devotion to the things of immediate life.
When people find one thing
or another in outer life tedious, possibly because of the education
they have received or because of other circumstances, the path which
Ahriman wants to take for the benefit of his incarnation is greatly
smoothed. Tedium is so widespread nowadays! I have known numbers of
people who find it irksome to acquaint themselves for example with
banking procedure, or the stock exchange, or single or double entry
bookkeeping. But that is never the right attitude. It simply means
that the point has not been discovered where a thing burns with
interest. Once this point is reached, even a dry cashbook can become
just as interesting as Schiller's
Maid of Orleans,
or Shakespeare's
Hamlet,
or anything else — even Raphael's
Sistine Madonna.
It is only a question of finding the point at which every single thing
in life becomes interesting.
What I have just said may
make you think that all these matters are very paradoxical. But in
reality they are not. It is we who are paradoxical in our
relationship to truth. What we must realize — and this is a
dire necessity today — is that we, not the world, are at
fault. Nothing does more to prepare the path for Ahriman's
incarnation than to find this or that tedious, to consider oneself
superior to one thing or another and refuse to enter into it. Again
it is the same question of finding the point where everything is of
interest. It is never a matter of a subjective rejection or
acceptance of things, but of an objective recognition of the extent
to which things are either luciferic or ahrimanic, with the result
that the scales are overweighted on the one side or the other.
To be interested in
something does not mean that one considers it justifiable. It
means simply that one develops an inner energy to get to grips with
it and steer it into the right channel.
As some of you may know
— it is a long time ago now — a number of friends bought
themselves books on mathematics. A kind of “sporting
spirit” had crept into them! They bought the works of Lubsen
[Heinrich Borchert Lubsen (1801-64).]
but it was not long before most of the volumes found their way to library
shelves and the mathematical knowledge was not much in evidence!
This, of course, is not meant as a hint to tackle the matter again
— I am making no such suggestion. But to come to grips with
something in which; to begin with, one is not interested at all, in
order that .a new understanding of world existence may arise —
that is of untold significance. For such things as I want to bring
home to you in these lectures — how Lucifer and Ahriman
intervene in the evolution of humankind side by side with the Christ
impulse — these things must be taken in all earnestness and
their consequences rightly assessed.
Had there been no luciferic
wisdom, no understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha could have been
acquired through the gnosis in the early centuries of Christendom.
Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha diminished with the fading
of the luciferic wisdom. And where is there any evidence today of
such understanding? The fact that understanding cannot be found
through external, ahrimanic science is perceived by those who to some
extent recognize its characteristics. Take, for example, a man like
Cardinal Newman — a very significant figure in the sphere
of religion during the second half of the nineteenth century. At his
investiture as Cardinal in Rome, he declared that he could see no
salvation for the religious development of humankind other than a new
revelation!
[See his speech in Rome, May 12, 1879,
when he had been raised to the rank of Cardinal. “... Hitherto
the civil power has been Christian. Even in countries separated from
the Church, as in my own, the dictum was in force, when I was
young, that ‘Christianity was the law of the land.’ Now,
everywhere that goodly framework of society, which is the creation of
Christianity, is throwing off Christianity. The dictum to which
I have referred, with a hundred others which followed upon it, is gone,
or is going everywhere; and by the end of the century, unless the Almighty
interferes, it will be forgotten.” (The Life of John Henry
Newman, by Wilfrid Ward, Vol. 2, p. 460.)]
But there it remained. He
himself showed no special inclination to receive anything of the new
spiritual life that can now stream into humanity out of the spiritual
worlds. What he said remained in the sphere of abstraction.
In very truth humanity
needs a new revelation. Of this there is evidence on all sides. There
have been discussions recently about the deterioration in morals and
in the general attitude toward morality during the last four or five
years. The conclusion reached is that denominational religious
instruction must be introduced more intensively into the schools. But
it cannot be emphasized often enough that this instruction was
already being given and the times are supposed to have come under its
influence. If the old denominational instruction is again to be
introduced we shall simply be beginning the whole process over again.
In a short time we shall be back where we were in 1914. It is in the
highest degree important to realize that in the subconsciousness of
human beings there are longings quite different in character from
what comes to expression on the surface.
When we founded the Waldorf
School in Stuttgart earlier this year, we were obliged to arrange for
the religious instruction to be divided among the various clergy. A
particular hour is devoted to religious instruction, which is given
by a Catholic priest for the Catholic children and by an Evangelical
pastor for the Evangelicals. I shall not speak of the difficulties
that came from the side of the priests — that is a chapter by
itself. What I do want to say, however, is that an immediate desire
was expressed for religious teaching apart from any denomination. At
first I thought that the attendance would be insignificant in
comparison with the numbers attending the denominational instruction.
But in spite of the fact that soon there will not be a single pulpit
in Stuttgart from which invectives are not poured on Anthroposophy, a
large number of children — five times as many as we expected
— have asked for a kind of anthroposophical instruction
in religion, and the class has had to be divided into two.
Subjectively this may not be altogether welcome, for it may prove to
be a rod for our own backs. But of that I do not want to speak. I
want only to show that there is a longing for progress in human
beings but that they are asleep and do not perceive that forces are
keeping these longings in subjection. And moreover the courage to
bring these longings to the surface is very largely
lacking.
Just think what the effect
could be of knowledge such as that of the future incarnation of
Ahriman, who is preparing for it by means I have been describing both
yesterday and today. It is essential to inform ourselves objectively
about these things in order that we may take the right stand toward
what is going on around us in the way of preparation for the Ahriman
incarnation. Only if you apply deep and mature reflection to
what has been said in these lectures about the ahrimanic currents
will you be able to apprehend the gravity of the present
situation.
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