LECTURE III
Berlin. 14th September, 1919.
I
have told you how at the present epoch in the history of human
evolution men are confronted with great tests, though for the
most part what these tests bring goes on - in
subconscious experience.
Men, as I said, can know, and must know what it means “to
pass over the Threshold of the invisible world,” when
they go: through some kind of initiation and enter it
consciously; but something like it — naturally not to-day
or to-morrow but in course of a longer period of time —
happens with humanity itself, in that it has to experience
separation of the hitherto-interwoven forces of thinking,
feeling and willing, when they fall apart, just as they become
independent in the individual who passes the Threshold of the
supersensible world. All this is bound up with significant
changes in the depths of human nature, and it is one of the
tasks of our age to make these changes part of our
consciousness. The great obstacle to be overcome is the desire
for comfort in man to-day, the unwillingness to know what is
going on in humanity, the continued living in illusions and, in
fact, dreaming about life.
We
shall get the best understanding of my subject to-day by
calling to mind some of the facts of supersensible life which
have long been known to us. Let us recollect how the human ego
and astral body leave the physical and etheric bodies as we
fall asleep and return to them as we awake. That is a general
description, a sort of sketch of the process. We can say
in a general way that on waking man returns to his physical and
etheric bodies, but then this return takes place in varying
degrees. For instance, it can never be said of a little child
that the ego and the astral body plunge fully into the physical
and etheric bodies and become completely one with them as to
activity. There is always something in his astral and ego which
does not so unite. Yes, and if we look back into earlier times
of human development, to the important dividing line which
occurs in the middle of the fifteenth century, we must admit
that, until that definite point, in human life as a whole there
existed no complete immersion of the ego and astral body during
the conscious waking hours.
The
really important feature of our post-Atlantean age is
that soul and spirit — the ego and astral body —
have only recently been able to plunge entirely into the
physical and etheric, and even so, not until after the 27th or
28th year. Conditions will change again with time. This is a
significant mystery, in the evolution of mankind. What is the
meaning of this complete immersion in the physical body?
It signifies that by means of it we are able to develop
thoughts and unfold ideas of the scientific, materialistic type
prevalent since the days of Galileo and Copernicus. For these
ideas and this scientific view of the world the physical body
is the right instrument. The identification had not been
achieved in earlier centuries, therefore there was no
scientific thinking which is wholly bound up with the physical
body. With this fact is connected everything else I have
mentioned about the activity men must unfold in their
spiritual-scientific attitude in order to regain the interest
of the Beings of the three higher Hierarchies standing nearest
to mankind. We owe it to them that we have the power to plunge
completely into the physical body and therewith learn of the
dead mineral external world through natural science.
It
is man's duty to-day to become aware of these things. At our
present stage of culture, without such a consciousness men live
in a kind of sleep. That is why events happening around them do
not penetrate into their drowsy minds. We simply must let these
concrete facts work upon our souls in order to acquire a
consciousness of what forces are dominant and active in our
particular phase of evolution. In the extended span of time
which we may call “the present,” much must be made
new — above all, the aims of education. I have already
spoken of this from our own point of view. We must educate
people from childhood onwards so that they can rightly enter.
into an age marked by this complete plunging into the physical
body, educate them to be able to take the complete plunge.
Wherein will consist the success of our efforts towards a
renewal of educational methods? In giving man, who is entering
a new stage of development, preparation for the
experience it brings. Anyone observing life to-day will
know that at the present time there are a remarkable number of
“broken” natures to be met with, natures unfitted
to cope with life. Why are they not equal to it? Because, they
cannot look back, as I have described, to the experiences of
their education. Certain forces can only be developed in
childhood. Once developed they remain throughout life; we have
them, and can cope with it. If we have them not, we lack that
power. It is in this sense that we must understand the feeling
of responsibility we ought to foster with regard to
education.
Further, we must fully realize that the Christ-Impulse entered
into humanity in the fourth post-Atlantean epoch, which began
in, the eighth century B.C. and lasted until the fifteenth
century A.D. When about a third of this period had elapsed,
there entered into human evolution what gives meaning to the
whole Earth-development — the Christ-Impulse, the
Mystery of Golgotha. Man was then in process of developing the
Rational or Mind soul, Gemut-Seele, in which human thought and
experience were more instinctive than they are to-day: this
development was superseded in the fifteenth century by that of
the Consciousness or Spiritual Soul, the period in which we
live. The way in which the Event of Golgotha appeared as an
impulse in world-history and human- evolution was suited, in
the first instance, to the instinctive conditions of the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch, and was thus understood by the men of
that time. It was natural for this instinctive understanding to
believe that in the personality of Jesus of Nazareth the Christ
Being lived, He Who had descended from cosmic heights in order
to unite Himself with that body for earthly activity. Through
feeling, everyone could realize that a great, important and
supersensible occurrence had, in the Event of
Golgotha, entered human life. With the passage of time
the capacities of the Rational Soul became less and less. The
understanding of the Event of Golgotha which existed in the
first Christian centuries could not last: it was bound to
vanish with the altered soul constitution of civilized
man. In consequence, with the uprising of the Consciousness
Soul, the Event of Golgotha itself came to be regarded more
materially. We see that the evolution of civilized mankind in
the course of the last four or five hundred years so proceeded
that the understanding of what really happened on Golgotha
— the indwelling of the Christ in Jesus of Nazareth
— became fainter and fainter. This great Mystery,
perceived instinctively through the first centuries, was
less and less understood, more and more materialistically
regarded, until in our times it has become possible to take as
a sign of progress that men no longer desire to know anything
of the supersensible, cosmic Christ, but talk of Jesus of
Nazareth simply as a man, an extraordinary man perhaps, but
constituted exactly like other men.
Here, too, we stand at a turning-point. A new understanding of
Christ must arise. It can only come if sought by the means
provided by Spiritual Science, so sought that
supersensible means may discover what can only be
accomplished within the supersensible and reveal itself in the
sensible. The new understanding of Christ must arise from
such depths in human nature that, confronted with these depths,
differences of creeds, hitherto dominant amongst civilized
mankind, will be as wreaths of vapour. These differences lie in
a part of the soul more on the surface than that which to-day,
out of the depths of Spiritual Science, must lead to a new
understanding of Christ Jesus. Nor will
understanding be complete, really satisfying the needs of
man's soul to-day, unless it can bridge the differences among
men imposed on humanity by the various creeds. Something
there is as a hope from this new Christ-Impulse, something we
must all long for if we are serious and worthy in our wishes
for humanity, something which is actually being sought in other
spheres though very unintelligently.
Nowadays men talk of the so-called “League of
Nations” and hope for something from it. It is remarkable
how they long to understand reality by means of abstractions.
Whence is to come the impulse, working through the peoples,
which can evoke a unity such as this “League of
Nations” is supposed to represent? Look at everything
which has been produced in the way of spiritual impulses
towards its establishment — nothing but a few
abstractions. Yet men sleep through such things — how
soundly, we may see from a fact like the following:
Woodrow Wilson, discoverer or at least rediscoverer of the
League, announced at a time when America was not taking part in
world-events as she does now, that the League could only be
properly established if as a result of the catastrophe of the
war there were no “victors” and no
“vanquished.” That was an essential condition.
Taken as earnest, that makes it impossible to take seriously
what is said about the League now; the two cannot be
reconciled, but that is not noticed. Here is a thing which
militates against' a healthy development of mankind; men are
willing to accept the most impossible contradictions if
only an interval of time separates them. It is as though
present-day man in no way partakes with his soul in what is
really happening.
The
League is a nonentity, for what has to be established in
humanity must well up from the depths of man's being to the
surface. New comprehension of the Christ-Impulse alone can
develop what is needed to-day in the whole civilized world,
from human impulses suited to the times, on a basis which will
not rest on the differences between peoples. The civilized
nations, torn asunder by hatred and misunderstanding, can only
be united by the Christ-Impulse, as presented by Spiritual
Science. This f act must sink deeply, deeply as a conviction
into the soul. All else, which does not lead in this direction,
is only hindering the evolution of mankind. The needs of human
evolution must be dealt with from its depths, not by any
trivial speech. The Earth acquired its own meaning in relation
to that evolution through the Event of Golgotha, and now the
time has come when this meaning must be grasped in a different
way. Until men realize the duty of this understanding there
will be no remedy for the wounds of our times. What is designed
can no longer be brought to fruition by nations side by side,
but by nations as one. It is impossible: to establish a League
of
Nations by outside political arrangement. These things must
come from within, arising from the deepest impulse, the
Christ-Impulse in man.
Anthroposophical Spiritual Science has the duty of pointing out
what each man, merely as a personal individual being, can
awaken in himself — but which simply must be awakened.
Directly we touch on these things, the seriousness of our times
strikes us with full force. It is tragic to see how little it
is felt, how men avoid approaching the great knowledge or
recognition that must be definitely incorporated in human
consciousness. The epoch through which we have passed has
led us away from that inner urge which could bring us to the
knowledge necessary to-day. Suppose you asked a natural
scientist of the day, what the evolution of the Earth would be
if man had taken no part in it. Thinking logically on the basis
of his hypotheses and opinions, he could but reply that even if
man were absent, the Earth would develop without him, bring
forth its minerals, plants and animals: things would go on more
or less as they do now, except that man would not be there, and
no cities or houses would be built. Therefore, from the
standpoint of natural science, we should have to say that the
Earth would have developed without man, just as it has done
with him.
Yet
this is a complete error. If you put together the various
things to be found in our twenty years of lecturing, you will
feel what I am saying as a self-evident fact, but attention
must be drawn to it. The physical body of man is permeated
during his existence between birth and death by the soul;
and in this present epoch it is so interwoven in a
particular way: the ego and astral body plunge
completely into the physical. Again, when either by
cremation or burial, we give over the corpse of the physical
body to the earth, it means to present-day science no more than
that the body has consisted of various substances which at
death are added to the earth and go their way according to the
various principles established by organic and, more especially,
by inorganic, chemistry. But that is all pure nonsense. It is
emphatically not without significance, that from birth to death
this human body is inhabited by a human soul-spirit being. We
give the corpse over to the earth in a form and condition which
it has only acquired from this fact — the indwelling from
birth to death of a being, man's soul and spirit, which before
birth (or conception) lived in the spiritual world. The Earth
in its evolution would long ago have fallen into decay and
desolation if it had not received as a ferment — whether
through burial or fire-the human bodies which have been the
dwellings of souls, though now deserted by them. In olden days
when bread was baked (nowadays the thing is more artificial) a
little of the dough was kept back, to be added as yeast at the
next baking that was a necessary part of the process. In the
same way the Earth would not be able to develop unless it
received human bodies (not the animal body!) as a sort of
ferment. By their means the Earth, which would otherwise long
ago have turned to dust, is enabled to bring to completion what
lies within its evolution. Man does have a share, and
especially just now, in the whole evolution of the Earth, and
even what we relinquish to the Earth at our death is important
for it.
The
other thing which happens to man, especially at this epoch of
his evolution, is that when he passes a certain age of
maturity, 27 to 28, he is in his waking life, as regards his
physical body, in a relationship which works in a particular
way on the spiritual, super-earthly world. This is a
remarkable polarity in man's evolution. If he passes through
the gate of death and leaves his body behind him, he releases
something from the body which serves the Earth as a ferment in
its development, whereas if he lives through the period
from 28 to 35 on Earth, he gives the spiritual world something
which it needs. (Things are somewhat modified in the case of
people who die before 28 — to consider this to-day would
take us too far.) What we give to the spiritual world is the
most important thing that we come upon-again when in the
spiritual world we live our life backwards. We really do give
something to the super-earthly world, just as we relinquish our
body to the earthly world at death.
This is one of the secrets bound up with evolution, and
nowadays it is essential that men should absorb them into their
consciousness. These are certainly not sensational bits
of knowledge — much more than that. To take them
seriously and experience them in, the soul with full import
brings an unusual earnestness of outlook on life, a deepened
seriousness which is necessary to-day. The external
understanding of what is included in our idea of the Threefold
Commonwealth can and must be given to the outer, exoteric
world, but the real, fundamental understanding which will lead
to conscious co-operation in social evolution must begin with
the seriousness based on the view of life gained through
anthroposophical spiritual science. Otherwise we do not
understand things deeply enough. All that is connected , with
the Threefold Commonwealth must be proclaimed in the external
world. In our movement we should awaken the needful enthusiasm
and fire, so that the necessary understanding may be given to
others through the personal conviction of those who can attain
the right; comprehension from the standpoint of spiritual
science. The ordinary superficial knowledge possessed by people
in the external world, of the kind which leads, for instance,
to the belief that the Earth could evolve even if man were not
concerned in it, cannot produce the necessary
understanding for our time. So it is that as we pass through
our cities our heart bleeds when we realize the complete lack
of contact with what is really going on in the evolution of
humanity.
The
immediate culmination, led up to by all these facts, was what
we called the World War, that whirlpool into which were poured
all the results of the superficial views which had begun to
gather force. To-day it is man's duty to reach the triple
deepening of which I spoke in the last lecture, concerning the
beings of the three Hierarchies next above us. We must learn to
see that we live and move among such a complex of facts.
Humanity, and we as part of it, must go through the epoch in
which, the ego and astral body plunge their deepest into the
physical and etheric bodies and are exposed to the strongest
temptations, which have their origin in the fact that as human
beings we are so closely united with the physical. There are
two forms in which this temptation can arise; one I would call
the “Western,” the other the “Eastern.”
We carry the Western form with peculiar strength in our own
nature, but we see it more and more definitely the further West
we turn our gaze. It lies in the fact that, as we plunge more
and more deeply into the physical body, we come into inner
connection with the earth forces with which it is associated.
Our physical body is connected with these forces, and is only
released from them when we consciously overcome the force of
gravity and all the kindred forces which bind it to the Earth.
People do not really know how, through their organization, they
overcome the forces which are active in them. I once mentioned
an illustration of this in the human brain, which is so heavy
that if it exerted its full weight it would crush the
blood-vessels immediately below it : there is,
however, a remarkable arrangement in the human
organization whereby the brain floats in the cerebral fluid.
Now according to the principle of Archimedes, a body
floating in water loses as much weight as that of the water it
displaces; therefore the pressure on the blood-vessels is
reduced, because the brain floats in the brain water and the
weight of the brain is overcome. Thus we overcome much.
The
same thing may be noticed in other parts of the body. Forces
which are but little noticed show, even in the physical frame,
what a cosmic wonder exists in the organization of man. We are
necessarily connected with the forces of the earth, but we must
not come into immediate contact with them. The temptation
to make too close a connection with these forces is to be found
in the Western world, in all the Western attitude towards life.
This temptation is an Ahrimanic one. We can only combat it by
gradually so deepening our knowledge as to become able to
survey humanity's historical development and understand
the Event of Golgotha as a real fact in the centre of it
— just as we comprehend the position of Caesar Augustus
or Socrates in history. For the Western world the only
safeguard against this temptation and its consequences is to
take the Christ into its scientific, exact view of things, that
He should penetrate the entire Western view of the world. The
Eastern view is exactly the opposite. The Oriental remains, in
a sense, at the level of childhood, not allowing his astral
body and ego to plunge down into the physical and etheric
bodies although at the present epoch it is fore-ordained that
humanity should do so. The Oriental shuns this immersion. It is
interesting to see the most important features of the day from
this point of view. A number of Rabindranath Tagore's beautiful
speeches have been translated. Read them and you will find in
them an atmosphere quite different from anything spoken by a
Westerner. An entirely different spirit speaks. Just as the
perspective in an Eastern drawing or painting differs from a
Western one, so the entire soul-mood of Rabindranath
Tagore differs from that of a European or an American. This is
due to the fact that even the educated Easterner of to-day, if
rooted in Eastern culture, shuns the connection with the
physical body. In this case the temptation is Luciferic —
not to make proper use of the physical body, but to leave it
unused. While the American strives to use the body to excess,
the Oriental strives to make as little use of it as
possible.
In
this sense we must come to understand race-psychology. In the
same sense, too, we ought for decades to have perceived the
relation between the Eastern and Western peoples of Europe if
the World War was to be avoided. It was not for nothing, but of
purpose, that in 1910 I lectured in Christiania on the
Folk-spirits. If you read those lectures you will find many
indications of what has happened in the catastrophe of the last
five years. The great thing in all these things is to prepare,
earnestly and fully, not to shun reality, but to comprehend it
in such a way that men can take their place in the development
of the world, not selfishly subsisting alone, or bounded by
their own immediate interests. We cannot fulfil our task to-day
unless we develop the good will to take part in the whole
development of humanity — at least in our consciousness.
None of this is intended as a criticism of the past, for I have
often said that such criticism is useless from the point of
view of spiritual science. What matters is that we should act
and think differently in the future from the past and be
prepared to transfer into the future what we have gained
from spiritual knowledge.
I
have shown you during these few days how man should regard his
entire life between birth and death. At birth we take over the
forces of the supersensible world from our supersensible
existence into the physical sense-world. These forces continue
their effect — a fact which is very hard for men of
to-day to understand. How do they work? They work in all that
man develops as spiritual life in this, world. There
would be no possibility of poets being born among us, of
philosophy or science, or of impulses towards the education of
men — in fact, no possibility of developing any spiritual
life at all, if we did not carry with us through birth those
impulses which come from our pre-natal life. All that belongs
to our spiritual life is of pre-natal origin. On the other
hand, what we ourselves develop within the economic life,
through our will-impulses, brotherliness love for humanity,
thought and work for others, rather than for ourselves, what in
a sense we do “on our own” because we are part of
the economic life, all that provides the most important
impulses, for what we carry over into the spiritual world. Just
as we carry with us out of that world the forces which above
all build our spiritual life here, so we take the forces
developed in the economic life by human love and brotherliness
back into the spiritual world at death.. There they accompany
us and are our most important impulses. Looking at what emerges
in a child's life from year to year, we see the inheritance of
what is given from the spiritual world to enable man to unfold
all that is spiritual on earth; and looking, in the economic
life, at the results of our will to work for others, there
presents itself the fruit we carry through the gate of death
into the spiritual world. To the view of one who can see the
spiritual world, these are the two opposite poles of
development. In my book Theosophy, in the account of the
soul-land and spirit-land, you will find this expressed in
ideas which spring entirely from a living view of these
conditions. We build up our own spiritual life with forces
derived before birth or conception; the economic life we
develop so that we can convey the forces belonging to it into
the spiritual world; but the State, what constitutes the sphere
of “rights” is the opposite of the impulses
existing between death and a new birth; what is developed here
on earth and belongs to the earth only is the life of polities,
law, the State. That has no relation to the spiritual
world.
We
simplify matters by interpreting things of this kind as we find
convenient. There are plenty of people who apply to the present
day (perhaps with the idea of showing a little monarchical
tendency in these republican times) the Biblical saying,
“Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and unto
God the things that are God's” — but it is a
misapplication. The saying cannot be understood apart from the
circumstances belonging to it. In those days the Roman Caesar
was held to be “God” and demanded divine honours.
Caligula enacted such worship for the statues of the Greek Gods
which he transported to Rome, beheaded, and adorned with
his own head in exchange, as he deemed fit and proper. (The
Zeus statue alone escaped this fate.) Even at the time when
Jesus of Nazareth spoke them, these words meant “render
unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and reserve something
for the God Whom you must seek in another being than
Caesar.” In many passages of the Gospels it is necessary
in our time that they are correctly interpreted, and not as
they usually are; so that we may be able thereby to struggle
nearer to the conception of reality needed by our times.
During these few days it has been my task to show you, from
various points of view, that the problem confronting mankind
to-day is how to conduct this struggle, how to reach this view
of reality, which can only be attained by grasping spiritual
reality as something concrete, as concrete as
sense-reality. Nothing does so much harm in the present day as
shutting our eyes to reality. Men have gone on long enough with
the policy of ignoring the truth, shutting their eyes to it.
Anthroposophical spiritual science aims in seriousness at
opening eyes to reality. To-day they are all but closed. Man's
defective sense of reality is witnessed by the amazing things
that are given out. I am obliged to draw attention to such
things because they throw light on our times. A number of
people, closely associated with the events which have brought
such misery over Mid-Europe (misery not at its end, but only
just beginning) have only disclosed their real countenances
when the awful events of the summer, and particularly the
autumn, of 1918, occurred. It was then that many men showed
themselves in their true colours. They had arrived at
remarkable positions, remarkable because so very
different from their earlier ones. I have known people who look
with a sort of pity at personalities bearing such
responsibility and yet never ask whether millions in the world
are not worse off, in body and soul, than these responsible men
who now hold a position so different from their former one. In
these things it is important to have our eyes open and to have
a sense of reality in our knowledge of the present. It is
perverse fantasy to cling to our own pet ideas because they
please us, without listening to the voice of truth. It is not
pleasant to speak the truth about these things, but when we see
with bitterness of soul how, these things have developed, how
perverted fantasy appears where one hoped for practical help
for life; how this fantasy asserted itself with shattering
force while those who faced reality were called Utopian
idealists, we are compelled to speak. No pity should prevent
us, now that things are clear and we have their own
confessions, from speaking our mind about such fanatics, in
this tormented Central Europe, who have never deigned to see
reality as it is but wish to mould it according to their own
comfortable ideas. In this sphere, also, reality must be seen
in the true light, for it is no small reckoning we have to
make. All the miserable endeavours to justify themselves before
the world are the strongest accusations against them. There
will be no healing, no peace, until the necessity for
earnestness is realized and for a serious recognition of
reality. I did not come here to say these things from any
desire to be clever: rather, as being associated with a serious
spiritual movement, I feel it a duty — a necessity
— to speak. We have seen (but could not talk of what we
saw, for our lips were sealed) that men of absolute
incompetence were called to positions of authority —
standing like shadows beside the great truths destined to
stream through mankind. I know many people still feel offended
when told the truth, but this shutting of the eyes to facts
must have an end; it is only by looking honestly at these
things that the force can arise which is needed for human
progress.
We
need such a force. We must grasp something essentially
different from the mental outfit of the men to whom we owe our
present position. We must have the courage to lay hold of
something new.
It
is with a view to preparing this new outlook, even in
outer reality, that I have spoken here and in other gatherings
of the Anthroposophical Movement, not to give a kind of
superior Sunday-evening sermon, but to emphasize the gravity of
the times. He alone is an Anthroposophist, in the real sense of
the word, who is gripped by the central purpose of his time and
wills the truth, rejecting the lies which have entangled
us so terribly in the conditions of to-day. I could wish that
the few words in which I have given an outline of what is
necessary might penetrate your hearts — it is not your
minds only that I would reach, for it is from hearts that must
arise the deep understanding so necessary for the times. We
have to discover the impulse which will set humanity upright
again, and to do that we must first of all learn how thoroughly
we are ensnared by mere phrases and by untruth in all
directions. From the spirit the truth will come. Wisdom lies in
truth and truth alone — that should be graven deeply into
our souls.
I
have said a little about what is characteristic of our epoch of
evolution from a spiritual standpoint. I have laid these
matters before you because I believe that through them the most
essential need of the present can be brought near to the human
heart — the mood of soul from which that earnestness
comes which is necessary in order to live in the service of
humanity to-day. My aim this time has been to arouse such
earnestness.
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