IV
Dornach, 15th November, 1919
We have heard
that the human soul was once endowed with a kind of primeval
wisdom, that this wisdom gradually faded away and is now no
longer accessible. Consequently in respect of their
knowledge, men feel thrown back more and more upon what is
presented to them by physical existence. By
“knowledge” I do not only mean science in the
accepted sense, but the knowledge that is consciously applied
by the soul in the ordinary affairs of life.
The question
will naturally arise: how did this ancient wisdom actually
come into being? Here I must touch upon a new aspect of
matters we have often considered from other angles.
Let us look
back to the time when man began in the real sense to be a
citizen of the earth, when as a being of soul-and-spirit he
came down to the earth, surrounded himself with its forces
and became an earthly being. If he had simply descended to
the earth with the qualities inherent in his own nature,
evolution would have taken quite a different course through
the various epochs of culture. But having made the descent,
man would have been obliged to establish relationship with
the surrounding world, to acquire earthly knowledge — I
will not say through clairvoyance in the proper sense —
but through instincts imbued with a certain measure of
clairvoyance. The acquisition of this earthly knowledge would
have been a very slow and gradual process and for long ages
men would have remained ineffectual, childish beings. By our
own time they would, it is true, have succeeded in developing
a constitution of soul and body compatible with manhood, but
they would never have reached the spiritual heights they have
actually attained. That they were able to achieve this
evolution in a way other than by passing through all the
stages of childhood, is due to the intervention in earthly
evolution of the Luciferic beings. We know from recent
lectures that the Lucifer-individuality himself incarnated in
Asia in a certain epoch of pre-Christian times, and that the
original Pagan wisdom to which many historical data bear
witness, proceeded from this Being. But the Luciferic beings
have from the very beginning been associated in some way with
the evolution of humanity.
I beg you
earnestly — although I know that such requests are of
little avail — not to adopt a philistine attitude when
mention is made of Luciferic beings. Even among
anthroposophists there is still the tendency to say:
“That is certainly Luciferic. At all costs let us avoid
it, reject it!” But these things have to be considered
in many different aspects and it must always be remembered
that the whole of the old Pagan wisdom emanated from a
Luciferic source. The subject is one that calls for deep and
serious study.
The farther
back we go in the evolution of humanity, the more do we find
certain individuals who through the qualities attained in
earlier incarnations were sufficiently mature to apprehend
the treasures of wisdom possessed by the Luciferic beings
Think, for example, of the seven Holy Rishis of ancient
India. — When an Indian interpreted the wisdom of the
Holy Rishis, he knew, if he had been initiated into these
things, that the Teachers of the Rishis were Luciferic
beings. For what the Luciferic beings brought with them into
earth-evolution was, above all, the world of thought, of
intellectualistic thought pervading culture, the world of
reason in the highest sense of the word — the world of
wisdom. And going back to the primeval origins of human
existence, we find that the sources of Pagan wisdom always
lie with Luciferic beings.
It may be
asked: How is this possible? We must realise that man would
have remained a child had he not received from the Mysteries
the constant instruction that emanated from Luciferic beings.
Those who possessed the knowledge and the inherited, primeval
wisdom wherewith to foster the progress and education of
mankind, were not — like a modern philistine —
fearful of receiving this wisdom from Luciferic sources. They
took upon themselves the obligation incumbent upon everyone
to whom Luciferic beings impart knowledge from spiritual
realms. The obligation — for so it may be called,
although such words do not always convey the exact meaning
— was to use this Luciferic, cosmic wisdom rightly, for
the good of earth-evolution. The difference between the
“good” wisdom and the purely Luciferic wisdom
— which so far as content is concerned is
exactly the same — is that the “good”
wisdom is in hands other than those of the Luciferic beings.
That is the essential point. It is not a question of there
being one wisdom that can be neatly packed away in
some chamber of the soul and make a man virtuous! The wisdom
of worlds is uniform, the only difference being whether it is
in the hands of wise men who use it for good, whether it is
in the hands of the Angeloi or Archangeloi, or whether it is
in the hands of Lucifer and his hosts. In olden times the
wisdom needed for the progress of humanity could be obtained
only from a Luciferic source; hence the Initiates were
obliged to receive it from that source and at the same time
to take upon themselves the obligation not to yield to the
aspirations of the Luciferic beings.
Lucifer's
intention was to convey the wisdom to men in such a way that
it would induce them to abandon the path of earth-evolution
and take a path leading to a super-earthly sphere, a sphere
aloof from the earth. The Luciferic beings inculcated their
wisdom into man but their desire was that it would make him
turn away from the earth, without passing through earthly
evolution. Lucifer wants to abandon the earth to its fate, to
win mankind for a kingdom alien to the kingdom of Christ.
The wise men of
olden time who received the primeval wisdom from the hands of
Lucifer had, as I said, to pledge themselves not to yield to
his wishes but to use the wisdom for the good of
earth-evolution. And that, in essence, was what was
accomplished through the pre-Christian Mysteries. If it be
asked what it was that humanity received through these
Mysteries, through the influence of the Luciferic beings who,
in post-Atlantean times, still inspired certain personalities
like the Rishis of India and sent their messengers to the
earth — the answer is that man received the rudiments
of what has developed in the course of evolution into the
faculties of speech and of thinking. Speaking and thinking
are, in their origins, Luciferic, but were drawn away from
the grip of Lucifer by the wise men of old. — If you
are really intent upon fleeing from Lucifer, then you must
make up your minds to be dumb in the future, and not to think
!
These things
are part of the Initiation-science which must gradually come
within the ken of humanity, although on account of the kind
of education that has now been current for centuries in the
civilised world, men shrink from such truths. The caricatured
figure of Lucifer and Ahriman — the medieval devil
— is constantly before their minds and they have been
allowed to grow up in this philistine atmosphere for so long
that even to-day they shudder at the thought of approaching
treasures of wisdom that are intimately and deeply connected
with evolution. It is much pleasanter to say: “If I
protect myself from the devil, if I give myself to Christ
with the simple-heartedness of a child, I shall be blessed,
and my soul will find salvation.” — But in its
deep foundations, human life is by no means such a simple
matter. And it is essential for the future of human evolution
that these things we are now discussing shall not be withheld
from mankind. It must be known that the art of speaking and
the art of thinking have become part of evolution only
because they were received through the mediation of Lucifer.
The Luciferic element can still be observed in thinking.
Speech, which has for long ages been differentiated and
adapted to earthly needs, has already been assailed by
Ahriman. It is he who has brought about differentiation, who
has degraded the one, cosmic speech into the different
tongues on earth. Whereas the Luciferic tendency is always
towards unification, the fundamental tendency of the
Ahrimanic principle is differentiation. — What would
thinking be if it were not Luciferic?
If thinking
were not Luciferic, human beings on the earth would be like
one whose thought was utterly non-Luciferic, namely Goethe.
Goethe was one of those who, in a certain respect,
deliberately set out to confront and defy the Luciferic
powers. That, however, makes it essential to keep constant
hold of the concrete, individual reality. The moment you
generalise or unify — at that moment you are nearing
Luciferic thinking. If you were to contemplate each human
individual, each single plant, each single animal, each
single stone in itself alone, having in mind the one, single
object, not classifying into genera and species, not
generalising in your thought — then you would be little
prone to Luciferic thinking. But anyone who were to attempt
such a thing, even as a child, would never get beyond the
lowest class in any modern school.
The fact of the
matter is that the universal thinking implicit in Pagan
wisdom has gradually been exhausted. Man's constitution is
such that this Luciferic principle of unification can no
longer be of much real service to him on earth. This has been
counteracted by the fact that the God-created nature of man
has followed in the wake of earth-evolution, has become
related to, allied with the earth. And because this is so,
through his own inherent nature man is less allied with the
Luciferic element which always tends to draw him away from
the earth.
But woe betide
if man were simply to draw away from the Luciferic element
without putting something different in its place. That would
bring nothing but evil. For then man would grow together with
the earth, that is to say with the particular territory on
earth where he is born; and his cultural life would become
completely specialised, completely differentiated. We can
already see this tendency developing. It has taken root most
markedly since the beginning of the nineteenth century; but
the tendency to split up into smaller and smaller groups has
been all too apparent as a result of the catastrophic world
war. Chauvinism is more and more gaining the upper hand until
it will finally lead men to split up to such an extent that
at last a group will embrace only one single human being!
Things could come to the point where individual men would
again split into right and left, and be at war within
themselves; left would be at loggerheads with right. Such
tendencies are even now evident in the evolution of mankind.
To combat this, a counterweight must be created; and this
counterweight can only be created if, like the old wisdom
inherent in Paganism, a new wisdom, acquired by the
free resolve and will of man, is infused into earthly
culture. This new wisdom must again be an
Initiation-wisdom.
And here we
come to a chapter that must not be withheld from the
knowledge of modern man. If, in the future, man were to do
nothing himself towards acquiring a new wisdom, then,
unconsciously to him, the whole of culture would become
Ahrimanic, and it would be easy for the influences issuing
from Ahriman's incarnation to permeate all civilisation on
the earth. Precautions must therefore be taken in regard to
the streams by which the Ahrimanic form of culture is
furthered. What would be the result if men were to follow the
strong inclination they have to-day to let things drift on as
they are, without understanding and guiding into right
channels those streams which lead to an Ahrimanic culture?
— As soon as Ahriman incarnates at the destined time in
the West, the whole of culture would be impregnated with his
forces. What else would come in his train? Through certain
stupendous arts he would bring to man all the clairvoyant
knowledge which until then can be acquired only by dint of
intense labour and effort. Men could live on as materialists,
they could eat and drink — as much as may be left after
the war! — and there would be no need, for any
spiritual efforts. The Ahrimanic streams would continue their
unimpeded course. When Ahriman incarnates in the West at the
appointed time, he would establish a great occult school for
the practice of magic arts of the greatest grandeur, and what
otherwise can be acquired only by strenuous effort would be
poured over mankind.
Let it never be
imagined that Ahriman will appear as a kind of hoaxer,
playing mischievous tricks on human beings. No, indeed !
Lovers of ease who refuse to have anything to do with
spiritual science, would fall prey to his magic, for by means
of these stupendous magic arts he would be able to make great
numbers of human beings into seers — but in such a way
that the clairvoyance of each individual would be strictly
differentiated. What one person would see, a second and a
third would not see. Confusion would prevail and in spite of
being made receptive to clairvoyant wisdom, men would
inevitably fall into strife on account of the sheer diversity
of their visions. Ultimately, however, they would all be
satisfied with their own particular vision, for each of them
would be able to see into the spiritual world. In this way
all culture on the earth would fall prey to Ahriman. Men
would succumb to Ahriman simply through not having acquired
by their own efforts what Ahriman is ready and able to give
them. No more evil advice could be given than to say:
“Stay just as you are! Ahriman will make all of you
clairvoyant if you so desire. And you will desire it
because Ahriman's power will be very great.” — But
the result would be the establishment of Ahriman's kingdom on
earth and the overthrow of everything achieved hitherto by
human culture; all the disastrous tendencies unconsciously
cherished by mankind to-day would take effect.
Our concern is
that the wisdom of the future — a clairvoyant wisdom
— shall be rescued from the clutches of Ahriman. Again
let it be repeated that there is only one book of
wisdom, not two kinds of wisdom. The issue is whether this
wisdom is in the hands of Ahriman or of Christ. It cannot
come into the hands of Christ unless men fight for it. And
they can only fight for it by telling themselves that by
their own efforts they must assimilate the content of
spiritual science before the time of Ahriman's appearance on
earth.
That, you see,
is the cosmic task of spiritual science. It consists in
preventing knowledge from becoming — or remaining
— Ahrimanic. A good way of playing into Ahriman's hands
is to exclude everything of the nature of knowledge from
denominational religion and to insist that simple faith is
enough. If a man clings to this simple faith, he condemns his
soul to stagnation and then the wisdom that must be rescued
from Ahriman cannot find entry. The point is not whether men
do or do not simply receive the wisdom of the future but
whether they work upon it; and those who do must take upon
themselves the solemn duty of saving earthly culture for
Christ, just as the ancient Rishis and Initiates pledged
themselves not to yield to Lucifer's proviso that mankind be
enticed away from the earth.
The root of the
matter is that for the wisdom of the future too, a struggle
is necessary, a struggle similar to that waged against
Lucifer by the ancient Initiates through whose intermediary
the faculties of speech and of thinking were transmitted to
men. Just as it devolved upon the Initiates of the primeval
wisdom to wrest from Lucifer that which has become human
reason, human intellect, so the insight which is to develop
in the future into the inner realities of things must be
wrested from the Ahrimanic powers. Such are the issues
— and these issues play strongly into life itself.
I recently read
some notes written shortly before his death by one who was a
friend of the Anthroposophical Movement. He had been wounded
in the war and lay for a long time in hospital where, in the
course of the operations performed on him, he had many a
glimpse into the spiritual world. The last lines he wrote
contain a remarkable passage, describing a vision which came
to him not long before his death. In this last experience,
the atmosphere around him became, as he expresses it, like
dense granite, weighing upon his soul. Such an impression can
be understood in the light of the knowledge that we have to
battle for the wisdom of the future; for the Ahrimanic powers
do not allow this wisdom to be wrested from them without a
struggle. Let it not be thought that wisdom can be attained
through blissful visions. Real wisdom has to be acquired
“in travail and suffering”. What I have just told
you about the dying man is a very good picture of such
suffering, for in this struggle for the wisdom of the future,
one of the most frequent experiences is that the world is
pressing in upon us, as though the air had suddenly frozen
into granite. It is possible to know why this is so. We have
only to remember that it is the endeavour of the Ahrimanic
powers to reduce the earth to a state of complete
rigidification. Their victory would be won if they succeeded
in bringing earth, water and air into this rigidified state.
Were that to happen, the earth could not again acquire the
Saturn-warmth from which it proceeded and which must be
regained in the Vulcan epoch; and to prevent this is the aim
of the Ahrimanic powers. A trend which has an important
bearing on this is the lack of enthusiasm in human souls at
the present time for the content of spiritual science. If
this lack of enthusiasm were to persist, the first impulse
towards the rigidification of the earth would emanate from
the souls of men themselves, from their apathy, their
indolence and love of ease. If you reflect that this
rigidification is the aim of the Ahrimanic powers, you will
not be surprised that compression, the feeling that life is
becoming granite-like, is one of the experiences that must be
undergone in the struggle for the wisdom of the future.
But remember
that men to-day can prepare themselves to look into the
spiritual world by apprehending with their healthy human
reason what spiritual science has to offer. The effort
applied in study that lets itself be guided by healthy human
reason can be part of the struggle which leads eventually to
vision of the spiritual world. Many tendencies will have to
be overcome, but for men of to-day the fundamental difficulty
is that when they want to understand spiritual science they
have to battle against their own granite-like skulls. If the
human skull were less hard, less granite-like, spiritual
science would be far more widely accepted at the present
time. Infinitely more effective than any philistine avoidance
of the Ahrimanic powers would be to battle against Ahriman
through sincere, genuine study of the content of spiritual
science. For then man would gradually come to perceive
spiritually the danger that must otherwise befall the earth
physically, of being rigidified into granite-like
density.
And so it must
be emphasised that the wisdom of the future can be attained
only through privations, travail and pain; it must be
attained by enduring the attendant sufferings of body and
soul for the sake of the salvation of human evolution.
Therefore the unwavering principle should be, never to let
oneself be deterred by suffering from the pursuit of this
wisdom. So far as the external life of mankind is concerned,
what is needed is that in the future the danger of the frozen
rigidification — which, to begin with, would manifest
in the moral sphere — shall be removed from the earth.
But this can happen only if men envisage spiritually, feel
inwardly and counter with their will, what would otherwise
become physical reality.
At bottom, it
is simply due to faint-heartedness that men to-day are
unwilling to approach spiritual science. They are not
conscious of this, but it is so, nevertheless; they are
fearful of the difficulties that will have to be encountered
on every hand. When people come to spiritual science they so
often speak of the need for “upliftment”. By this
they usually mean a sense of comfort and inner well-being.
But that cannot be offered, for it would simply lull them
into stupor and draw them away from the light they need. What
is essential is that from now onwards, knowledge of the
driving forces of evolution must not be withheld from
mankind. It must be realised that in very truth the human
being is balanced as it were between the Luciferic and the
Ahrimanic powers, and that the Christ has become a companion
of men, leading them, first, away from the battle with
Lucifer, and then into the battle with Ahriman.
The evolution
of humanity must be understood in the light of these facts.
One who presents secrets of cosmic existence in the way that
must be done in spiritual science, is often laughed to scorn,
for example about the use of the principle of the number
seven — as you will find in my book
Theosophy.
But you will notice that people do not
laugh when the rainbow is described as sevenfold, or the
scale — tonic, second, third and so on, up to the
octave which is a repetition of the tonic. In the physical
world these things are accepted, but not when it comes to the
spiritual. What must be regained here is something that was
implicit in the old Pagan wisdom. A last glimmer of this
Pagan wisdom in regard to a matter like the principle of the
number seven, is to be found in the Pythagorean
School — which was actually a Mystery-school. You can
read about Pythagoras to-day in any text-book; but you will
never find any understanding of the reason why he based the
World-Order on number. The reason was because in the ancient
wisdom everything was based on number. And a last glimmer of
insight into the wisdom contained in numbers still survived
when Pythagoras founded his School. Other branches of the
ancient wisdom survived much longer, some indeed until the
sixth and seventh centuries of the Christian era. Up to that
time many true things about the higher worlds are said in the
sphere of what is called natural philosophy. And then,
gradually, this primeval intelligence in mankind ran dry
— if I may use this expression.
Let us picture
some orthodox representative of modern learning sitting in a
corner and saying: “What nonsense these
anthroposophists talk! What do they mean by asserting that
the primeval wisdom has run dry? Wonderful, epoch-making
results have been achieved, above all during the last few
centuries, and are still being achieved. There may have been
a temporary halt in 1914, but at any rate up to then marvels
were accomplished!” — But if you look candidly
and without bias at what has been achieved most recently, you
will arrive at the following conclusion. — Admittedly,
masses of notes have been collected — masses of
scientific and historical data. This kind of collecting has
become the fashion. Countless experiments have been made and
described. But now ask yourselves: Are there any
fundamentally new ideas in all that this modern age
has produced? New ideas, new conceptions were given
by individual spirits like Goethe — but Goethe has not
been understood. If you study recent findings of natural
science or historical research, it will be clear to you that,
in respect of ideas, there is nothing new.
Certainly, Darwin made journeys, described many things he saw
on these journeys and gathered it all into an idea. But if
you grasp the idea of evolution in its details, as
idea, you will find it in the Greek philosopher
Anaxagoras. So too you will find the fundamental principles
of modern natural science in Aristotle — that is to say
in the pre-Christian era. These ideas are treasures of the
primeval wisdom — springing from a Luciferic source.
But the primeval wisdom has run dry, and something new in the
form of insight into the spiritual world must be attained. A
certain willingness on the part of man is necessary to
undertake the labour entailed by really new ideas. And
mankind to-day is sorely in need of new ideas, especially
concerning the realm and the life of the soul. Fundamentally,
all that science tells us in regard to the soul amounts to
nothing more than a collection of words. What is taught in
the lecture-halls about thinking, feeling and willing, is
simply a matter of words thrown out spasmodically. It amounts
to little more than the sounds of the words. There is hardly
the beginning of an attempt to take seriously anything that
is really new.
In this
connection one may have curious experiences! Some time ago I
was invited to speak to a “Schopenhauer Society”
in Dresden. I thought to myself: Yes — a Schopenhauer
Society — that must surely be something out of the
ordinary! So I tried to show how the contrast between
sleeping and waking, between waking up and going to sleep is
to be understood in the psychological sense, how the
soul is involved. I spoke of something I have
recently mentioned to you, namely, that a zero-point is there
at the moments of falling asleep and waking up, that sleep is
not merely a cessation of the waking state, but bears the
same relation to the waking state as debts bear to
assets.
If you were to
search through modern psychology you would not find the
slightest trace of any attempt to get to the root of these
far-reaching matters. — After the lecture, in a
“discussion” as it was called, certain learned
members of the audience got up to speak. One of these
philosophers made a really splendid statement, to the
following effect. He said: “What we have been hearing
could not possibly be a concern of serious science. Serious
science has other, very different matters with which to
occupy itself. Man can know nothing of what has just been put
before us so plausibly; none of it is a concern of human
cognition. Moreover we have known it all for a long
time.” — In other words, therefore: what we
cannot know is something with which we have long been
familiar!
Now
contradictions do exist, but contradictions of this kind
exist only in the heads of present-day scholars! If someone
says that certain things cannot be known, that they are not
objects of human cognition — well and good, that is his
opinion. But if he says in the same breath that he has known
all about them for a long time, then there is an obvious
contradiction. Erudite scholars of to-day often have a habit
of placing two diametrically opposite opinions side by side
in this way.
This kind of
thinking has a great deal to do with the present situation.
An individual — thanks to the Divine Powers and also,
be it remembered, to Lucifer and Ahriman — is often
able to form a fairly sound judgment of these things; but
when it comes to presenting them to the world — that is
a different matter altogether. Many people are willing to
embark upon the study of spiritual science provided they find
a society of rather sectarian tendencies in which they can
take refuge. But when they have to face the world and present
something of which the world itself possesses evidence,
everything is apt to go up in smoke and they become veritable
philistines. — And then Ahriman's progress is greatly
furthered.
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