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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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The Mission of the Archangel Michael
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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The Mission of the Archangel Michael
Schmidt Number: S-3916
On-line since: 23rd November, 2003
The Culture of the Mysteries and the Michael Impulse. Self-knowledge and its Permeation of the Three Strata of Consciousness
IN PURSUANCE of the considerations I placed before you in the lectures
of last week I should like today to prepare the ground for what I
shall develop in detail tomorrow and the day after tomorrow. It will
be a matter of calling back to your memory, in a way different from
the one heretofore employed, of much that we shall need in order to
pursue our present theme.
If we try to make clear to ourselves the way in which Earth
evolution unfolded we can do so best by considering and arranging the
various events in relation to the central point of Earth evolution;
for through such an arrangement we arrive at a certain structure in
man's own evolution. This central point, this center of gravity is, as
you know, the Mystery of Golgotha through which the whole Earth
evolution received its meaning, its true inner content.
If we go back in the evolution of occidental humanity which received
the impulse of the Mystery of Golgotha from the orient, we must say:
approximately in the fifth century before the occurrence of the
Mystery of Golgotha there begins, out of Greek culture, a kind of
preparation for this Mystery of Golgotha. This uniform trend is
introduced through the figure of Socrates, finds its continuation in
Greek culture in its entirety also in art the same trend is
discernible it is continued by the mighty and outstanding
personality of Plato and receives a more scholarly character, as it
were, in Aristotle.
You know from various lectures I delivered before you that the Middle
Ages, mainly in the time after St. Augustine, were especially bent on
using the guidance that could be gained from the Aristotelian mode of
thinking in order to comprehend what prepared
the Mystery of Golgotha and what followed it. Greek thinking became of
such great importance precisely for the Christian evolution of the
occident up to the end of the Middle Ages through the fact that it was
used for the comprehension of the real nature of the Mystery of
Golgotha. It is well that we should realize what it was that took
place in Greece during these last centuries prior to the event of the
Mystery of Golgotha.
What took place in the thinking, feeling and willing of the Greek was
the last echo of a primeval culture of mankind no longer appreciated
today. Historical considerations can no longer see these things in
their proper light, for our historical considerations do not reach
back to those times in which a Mystery culture that extended over the
civilized earth of that age permeated all human willing and feeling.
We must go back into those millennia into which history does not reach,
we must go back with the methods which you find indicated in my book,
Occult Science, an Outline,
(Anthroposophic Press, New York)
in order to see what was the nature of this human primeval
culture. It had its origin in the ancient Mysteries into which those
human beings who were found to be objectively suited for direct
initiation were admitted by great leading personalities. The knowledge
which was thus imparted to those initiates in the Mysteries flowed,
through them, out to other human beings. One cannot understand ancient
culture in its entirety if one does not focus one's attention upon the
maternal soil of the Mysteries. If one is willing to do so, this
maternal soil of the Mysteries can be clearly discerned in the works
of Aeschylos. It can be sensed in Plato's philosophy. But the
revelations concerning the Divine which mankind received from the
Mysteries have been lost historically. Only in the most primitive
fashion are they still contained in that which has become historically
demonstrable culture. We can best judge what has happened here if we
make clear to ourselves what it is that has remained, in the
post-Socratean age of Greek civilization, of the primeval Mystery
culture in which Greek civilization was rooted. What has remained is a
certain mode of thinking, a certain way of visualizing.
As you know, outer history relates how Socrates founded dialectics,
how he was the great teacher of thinking, of that thinking which,
later on, Aristotle developed in a more scientific way. But this Greek
mode of thinking is only the last echo of the Mystery culture, for
this culture of the Mysteries was rich in content. Spiritual facts
which are the fundamental causes for our cosmic order were adopted
into man's entire view of things. These sublime and mighty contents
were gradually lost. But the way of thinking developed by the Mystery
pupils has remained and has become historical, first, in Greek
thinking, then, again, in Medieval thinking, in the thinking of the
Christian theologians who acquired this Greek thinking in order to
grasp with the thought forms, with the ideas and concepts which were a
continuation of Greek thinking, that which has flowed into the world
through the Mystery of Golgotha. Medieval philosophy, so-called
scholasticism, is a confluence of the spiritual truths of the Mystery
of Golgotha and Greek thinking. The elaboration, the
thought-penetration of the Mystery of Golgotha has been carried out
if I may use the trivial expression with the tool of
Greek thinking, of Greek dialectics. Up to the Mystery of Golgotha,
about four and one half centuries elapsed from the time when the
content of the Mysteries was lost and the merely formal element, the
mere thought element of the ancient Mysteries was retained. We may
say, approximately, four and one half centuries. Thus we have to
visualize the following: In a pre-historical age, the culture of the
Mysteries extends over the civilized earth of that time. In the course
of evolution only a distillate of it remains, namely, Greek
dialectics, Greek thinking. Then the Mystery of Golgotha takes place.
In the occident this is, at the outset, comprehended by means of this
Greek dialectics. Anyone who wishes to familiarize himself with the
science, let us say, even of the tenth, the eleventh, the twelfth, the
thirteenth, the fourteenth century, which still comprises theology,
must employ his thinking in a way that is quite different from the
present-day natural-scientific mode of thought. Most human beings who
today pass an opinion on scholasticism cannot do it justice because
they only have a natural-scientific training, and scholasticism
requires a training of thought that is different from modern
natural-scientific training.
Now, my dear friends, today we live at a point of time in which again
four and one half centuries have elapsed since this natural-scientific
mode of thinking took hold of mankind. In the middle of the fourteenth
century, human beings of the Occident begin to think in the way we
find developed, already to the degree of brilliancy, in Galileo or in
Giordana Bruno. This, then, is carried over into our age. Indeed, my
dear friends, it is, seemingly, the same logic as that of the Greeks;
yet, in reality, it is a completely different logic. It is a logic
which is gradually derived from the nature processes in the way the
Greek logic was derived from that which the Mystery pupils beheld in
the Mysteries.
Let us now try to make clear to ourselves the difference that exists
between the four and one half centuries prior to the event of the
Mystery of Golgotha in the civilized world of that time, which was
almost limited to Greece, and the four and one half centuries in which
humanity was trained for natural-scientific thinking. It is easiest
for me to describe this to you graphically. Visualize the culture of
the Mysteries like a kind of mountain summit of human spiritual
culture in very ancient times. This culture of the Mysteries I
shall proceed step by step then becomes logic in Greece, up to
the Mystery of Golgotha. This, then, finds its continuation in the
Middle Ages through scholasticism.
During four and one half centuries prior to the Mystery of Golgotha we
have the last ramification, the echo of the ancient Mystery culture.
With the fifteenth century A.D. a new way of thinking begins which we
might call thinking in the style of Galileo. The period of time that
elapsed between this starting point and our present day is of the same
length as that which elapsed between the appearance of the Greek way
of thinking and the Mystery of Golgotha. But while the latter period
is a final echo, an evening glow, as it were, the former is a prelude,
something that has to be evolved, that has to be brought to a certain
height. Greek culture stood at an end. We stand at a beginning.
We shall only gain a complete understanding of this placing, side by
side, of an end and a beginning if we observe the evolution of mankind
from a certain spiritual-scientific point of view.
I have repeatedly stated that it is not without reason that in the
present age the attempt toward self-knowledge of mankind is made, the
tools for which are offered by the anthroposophically-oriented
spiritual science. For the large majority of mankind confronts a
significant future possibility. In this connection it is important
that we take seriously the fact that the evolving historical humanity
is an organism that develops continuously. Just as in the case of the
single organism we have puberty, and also later epochal transitions,
so likewise, in human history, we have epochal transitions. Today,
human beings still meet the doctrine of repeated earth lives with the
objection that human beings do not remember their previous earth
lives.
Anyone who, in a factual manner, conceives of the evolutionary history
of mankind as of an organism, as I have just indicated, should not be
surprised that human beings do not today, in their ordinary knowledge,
remember their former earth lives. For I ask you: what does man
remember in ordinary life? That which he first has thought.
What he has not thought he cannot remember. Just think how many events
of a day remain unobserved by you. You do not remember them because
you did not think them in spite of their having taken place in your
surroundings. You can only remember what you have thought.
Now, in the former centuries and millennia of mankind's evolution,
human beings did not attain to any factual clarity about their own
nature. To be sure, since the appearance of Greek thinking the
know thyself exists like a longing, but this know
thyself will only be fulfilled through real spiritual cognition.
Only through the fact that human beings once employ one life in order
to comprehend in thought their own self and humanity has only
become ripe for this in our age is memory prepared for the next
earth life. For we must first have thought about that which we are to
remember later. Only those who, in earlier ages, through initiation
(which need not have been acquired in the Mysteries) could look
factually upon their own self are able in the present age to look back
upon former earth lives. And there are not so few human beings who are
able to do this. Nevertheless, the situation is such that man, also
with respect to his purely bodily evolution, undergoes a
transformation. These things cannot be observed externally in
physiology, but they can be observed spiritual-scientifically. Mankind
today does not have the same bodily constitution it had two thousand
years ago, and in two thousand years from today it will again have a
different constitution. I have talked to you about this subject
repeatedly. Human beings live toward a time in the future in which
their brains will be constructed in a way that is quite different from
the way their brains are constructed today in an external sense. The
brain will have the possibility of remembering former earth lives. But
those who have not prepared themselves today through reflection upon
their own self will sense this faculty which will be theirs
mechanically merely as an inner nervousness, if I may use the
current expression, as an inner deficiency. They will not find what
they are lacking, because mankind in the meantime will have become
ripe, in regard to its corporeality, to look back upon its previous
earth lives, but if it has not prepared this retrospect, it cannot
look back; it then will sense this faculty only as a deficiency.
Therefore, proper knowledge of the present-day powers of
transformation of mankind indicates by its very nature that human
beings are brought to self-knowledge through the
anthroposophically-oriented spiritual science. Now, it is possible,
and today I shall only indicate this, it is possible to point out the
nature of this special experience which will suggest to human beings
to take into account previous earth lives.
Today we live in an age in which those shades of feeling which will
become more and more prevalent are indicated only in a few human
beings; but still, they are indicated in these few human beings. Not
much attention is paid to them yet. I shall describe them to you in
the way in which they will appear eventually. Human beings will be
born into the world and they will say to themselves: by living with
other human beings, I am educated, consciously or unconsciously, for a
certain way of thinking. Thoughts arise in me. I am born into and
educated for a certain way of thinking, of visualizing. But at the
same time I look at my outer surroundings: my thinking, my visualizing
does not properly fit this outer surrounding world. this shade
of feeling is already present today in individual human beings. They
must think in a direction which makes it appear to them as if outer
nature said something entirely different, as if outer nature demanded
something completely different from them. Whenever such human beings
appeared that have felt this discrepancy between what they must think
and what external nature says, they have been ridiculed. Hegel, for
instance, is a classical example for this. He has expressed certain
thoughts about nature and not all of Hegel's thoughts are
foolish! and has arranged them systematically. Then the
philistines came and said: Well, these are your ideas concerning
nature; but just look at this or that process in nature: it does not
agree with your ideas. Then Hegel answered: Too bad for nature!
Naturally, this seems paradoxical; nevertheless, subjectively this
feeling is well founded. It is absolutely possible that one
surrenders, without prejudice, to one's innate thinking and says: if
nature were really to correspond to this thinking, she would have to
take on a different form. To be sure, after some time one will also
become accustomed to that which nature teaches. Most people who find
themselves in such a position do not notice that by having acquired
nature observation they really bear two souls within themselves, two
truths, as it were. Those who do notice it may suffer greatly from
this discrepancy brought into their soul life. What I am describing to
you here and which is present in some human beings today although they
are not aware of it will become ever more present. Human beings will
say to themselves more and more: through what I am by birth, my head
really forces me to form a picture about nature. But this does not
coincide with nature herself. Then, as I become more familiar with
life, I also acquire in the course of time what nature herself
teaches. I must find a way out of this.
These discordant sensations will arise in our souls when they return
again to earth. A source of inner thoughts and sensations will arise
in us which will cause us to say: you sense clearly how the world
ought to be; it is, however, different. Then, again, we shall
familiarize ourselves with this world; we shall learn to know a second
kind of law, and we shall have to seek a balance between the two.
Let us assume the human being enters physical existence through birth.
He brings with him in his thinking and feeling the result of his
previous earth life. While he was not united with the life of the
earth, this external earth life has actually undergone a change. He
senses a discrepancy between his thinking, the effects of which he
brings from his previous life, and the things as they have developed
in the period during which he was absent from the earth. His thinking
does not harmonize with them. And now gradually he adjusts himself to
his new life, but he does by no means completely take up into this
consciousness what he may learn from his surroundings. He only takes
it up as though through a veil. He elaborates it only after death, and
then, again, carries it into his next life. Man will constantly live
in this duality of his soul life. He will always become aware of the
following: You are bringing with you something in regard to which the
world into which you have grown through birth is new. But through your
physical being you now receive something from this world which does
not completely penetrate your soul, which you will have to work over,
however, after death.
The human being of the present day ought to become thoroughly
acquainted with the way of experiencing life. For only by
familiarizing himself with such a thing does he become aware of the
forces which pulse through our existence and which otherwise remain
entirely unnoticed. We are drawn into the web of these forces. But if
we do not try to penetrate them with our consciousness, they make us
to a certain degree sick in our soul. This falling apart the human
being will perceive more and more: the falling apart of that which has
stayed with him from the previous life and that which is prepared in
the present life for the next one. And since man will sense this
duality more and more, he will be in need of an inner mediation, a
real inner mediation. And the great question will become ever more
burning: Where must we look for this inner mediation? We can only find
an answer to this question if we consider the following:
I have often told you that we human beings are completely awake only
in our thinking in the period between awaking and falling asleep of
ordinary life. The life of thought means complete wakefulness. We are
not completely awake, even in waking life, in regard to our feelings.
Our feelings are at the stage of dream consciousness, even though we
are fully awake in our conceptions and thoughts. He who is able to
make research in this field knows through direct perception that
feelings have no greater vitality than have dreams; only, the
conception through which feelings are represented makes it appear
differently. But the life of feelings as such arises out of the depths
of consciousness like the surging up of dreams. And the actual life of
will is asleep in us, even in our waking life; in regard to the will
we are asleep. Thus, also in waking life, we carry these three states
of consciousness within us. During the day, we walk around with a
waking life of thoughts; we deceive ourselves in believing that we are
awake also in our will because we have thoughts about that which the
will performs. Not the experience of the will itself, but only its
mental image is what enters our consciousness. We dream our feelings,
we sleep our willing. But if imaginative knowledge raises up what
otherwise dreams in the feelings and makes it a matter of complete,
clear world cognition, then we become aware of the fact that wisdom is
contained not only in our thoughts let us call it
wisdom although with many human beings it is
un-wisdom but that wisdom is also contained in our
feelings, and that it is also contained in our willing. In regard to
present-day human existence we can only speak clearly about that which
is contained in our thought life. In regard to the world of feelings
mankind today entertains thoughts which hardly differ from those it
entertains in regard to dream life; and yet, wisdom is also contained
in the life of feeling.
My dear friends, the person who earnestly applies to his own soul the
exercises which are described in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment
(Anthroposophic Press, New York)
will come closest to experiencing a certain inner soul-surging which takes
its course in a dreamlike manner, as it were. For most human beings it
will not contain more regularity than ordinary dreaming; but it is
possible, at a comparatively early moment, to bring so much order into
this inner experiencing that one becomes aware of the fact that,
although this inner experience is not governed by ordinary logic
indeed, it is sometimes governed by a very grotesque logic, and
the most varied fragments of thought arrange themselves and occur in a
dreamlike fashion one becomes aware of the fact that something
real takes place there. This first inner experience, which is still
very primitive, may be recognized by the one who applies, even to some
degree, to his own soul life what has been described in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment.
When the human being dives down into this surging of waking dreams, a new
reality emerges in contrast to the ordinary reality of external life.
Comparatively soon the human being may become aware of this arising of
a new reality. And also comparatively soon may he become aware that
wisdom is contained in all this, but a wisdom he cannot take hold of,
for which he does not feel himself mature enough to become fully
conscious of it. It escapes him time and again, and he does not
understand it. But he becomes aware, or at least, may become aware of
the fact that wisdom does not only flow through the upper stratum of
his consciousness which permeates him in ordinary waking day-life, but
that below this there lies another stratum of his consciousness which
appear illogical to him for the simple reason that he himself calls it
that since he cannot yet take hold of its wisdom. We may say: the
moment we have completely acquired imaginative cognition, these
waking dreams cease to be as grotesque as they appear to ordinary
life; they then permeate themselves with a wisdom that points to
another content of reality, to a world different from the sense world
which we fathom with ordinary wisdom.
You see, my dear friends, in ordinary life only the world of feeling
surges up into our every-day consciousness out of this substratum of
our consciousness. And out of a still deeper stratum, which lies below
the one just mentioned, there surges up the world of will which is
also permeated by wisdom. We are connected with this wisdom, but we
are not at all aware of it in ordinary consciousness. Thus we may say:
We human beings are governed by three strata of consciousness. The
first is our conceptual consciousness in which we live every
day. The second is an imaginative consciousness. And the third
is an inspired consciousness which remains very deeply hidden,
which works in us, to be sure, but whose nature we do not recognize in
ordinary life. If only modern philosophy were less perplexed in its
concepts I am not referring here to people who have nothing to
do with philosophy, but philosophers should grasp such matters, yet
they refuse to do so if only modern philosophy were less
confused it would have to notice the great difference that exists
between truths that are arrived at purely upon the basis of external
observation of nature and the truths that are found in the sciences,
such as mathematics and geometry, which are employed in the endeavor
to understand external nature.
We are in a sense justified in saying that in regard to the truths
which man acquires through external observation this has so
often been stressed in the history of philosophy that a special
reference to it ought to be superfluous for the philosopher in
regard to the truths of external observation we can never speak of
actual certainty. Kant and Hume have elaborated this especially
clearly by their grotesque assertion that, although it is true that we
observe that the sun rises, we cannot, however, assert from this
observation that the sun will rise again tomorrow; we only can
conclude from the fact that the sun has risen up to now every day that
is will also rise tomorrow. This is the way with all truths which we
derive from external observation. But it is not so in the case of
mathematical truths. If we have once grasped them we know they are
valid for all future times. Whoever knows and is able to prove, out of
inner reasons, that the square above the hypotenuse equals the sum of
the square of the two other sides of the right-angled triangle knows
that it would be impossible to draw a rectangular triangle for which
this law does not hold good.
These mathematical truths are different from the truths we arrive at
through external observations; we know the facts, but with the means
of present-day research we are unable to grasp the underlying reason.
The reason is to be found in the fact that mathematical truths
originate deep down in the inner being of man, that they arise on the
third level of consciousness, in the lowest stratum and, without his
being aware of it, shoot up into man's upper consciousness, where he
then perceives them inwardly. We possess mathematical truths through
the fact that we ourselves behave mathematically in the world. We
walk, we stand, and so forth; we describe certain lines on the earth.
Through this will relationship to the external world we actually
receive the inner perception of mathematics. Mathematics arises below
in the third consciousness and shoots up from there.
Conceptual life: Complete Wakefulness: Wisdom
Feeling: Dreaming: Wisdom
Thus, although we are not conscious of its origin, we have very clear
concepts of at least one part of this lowest stratum of consciousness:
we are aware of the mathematical and geometrical concepts. The middle
stratum is of a dreamlike and confused character. And here, in
the upper story, where the day-waking conceptual life takes
place, we are clear again. What plays up from the third stratum of
consciousness is also clear in us. What lies between the two reaches
most human beings like a confused waking dreaming. It is very
significant that we should make this fact clear to ourselves. For, you
see, the Greeks, during the four and one half centuries (number one),
which they had retained as the remainder of the Mystery culture. And
this is a purely Luciferic element. I have described it to you
recently: it is the intellectualistic culture. Clarity rules in our
head. It is permeated by wisdom, generally valid wisdom. But this is
the Luciferic element in us.
And, again, that which exists here below and which is so much beloved
by modern scientists and was so much beloved by Kant that he said: in
regard to nature, science exists only in as far as it contains
mathematics this is the purely Ahrimanic element, which arises
from below through our human nature. It is the Ahrimanic element.
It does not suffice, my dear friends, to know of something that it is
correct. We know that the things we comprehend intellectually through
our head are correct; but this is a gift of the Luciferic element. And
we know that mathematics is correct; but this sovereign correctness of
mathematics we owe to Ahriman who sits in us. The most uncertain
element is in the middle. It consists of seemingly illogical,
billowing dreams.
I will describe to you another symptom so that you may grasp the full
significance of this matter. In reality, the whole mathematical
conception of the world as it arose with Galileo and Giordano Bruno
stems from this deepest stratum of consciousness. Four and one half
centuries have elapsed since we have begun to acquire this world
conception, since we have begun to introduce this Ahrimanic element
into our human thinking and sensing. Whereas in Greek thinking the
last echo of the Mystery culture shone into the clearest brightness of
consciousness, there arises in our deepest, darkest strata of
consciousness that which only in the future will reach its climax.
This is beginning to arise down there.
I. Conceptual Life (Lucifer)
II. Imaginations (consciousness)
III. Inspirations (Ahriman)
Our soul life is like a scale beam which has to try to establish
equilibrium, on one hand the Luciferic, on the other the Ahrimanic
element. The Luciferic element lies in our clear head, the Ahrimanic
element below in the wisdom which permeates our will. Between the two,
we have to try to establish a state of balance in an element which at
first does not seem to be permeated by anything.
How does wisdom enter this middle part of man? Man is placed in the
world at present in such a way that his head is supported by Lucifer,
his metabolic wisdom, his limb-wisdom by Ahriman. That which we have
described as the middle state of consciousness is dependent upon our
heart organization and the human rhythmical system (read what I saw
concerning this fact in my book,
Von Seelenraetseln).
[Not yet translated into English. (Tr.)]
[Yes it is: Riddles of the Soul.
e.Ed]
This sphere of our existence must
gradually become just as ordered as the head wisdom became ordered
through logic and the Ahrimanic wisdom through mathematics, geometry,
through external rational nature observation. What will bring inner
logic, inner wisdom, inner power of orientation into this middle part
of our human nature? The Christ impulse, that which passed over
into the earth culture through the Mystery of Golgotha.
Thus you see, we have a spiritual-scientific anatomy which shows us
what is culture of the head, what is culture of metabolism, which also
shows us the nature and needs of that sphere of our organism which
lies between the two. That man permeates himself with the Christ
impulse is a requisite part of his nature.
Let us for a moment hypothetically assume that the Mystery of Golgotha
had not entered Earth evolution: the human being would have his
head wisdom. He also would have what has arisen since the fifteenth century
A.D. But in regard to his central being he would be
desolate and void. He would feel more and more the disagreement between the
two inner spheres mentioned above. He would be unable to bring about the
state of equilibrium. We can only bring about this state of equilibrium
by permeating ourselves more and more with the Christ impulse which
calls forth the state of balance between the Luciferic and Ahrimanic
element.
From this you will see that we may say: In the pre-Christian four and
one half centuries there was bestowed upon the human being, like a
preparation for the Mystery of Golgotha, the last ramification of the
ancient Mystery culture, which has settled like a head-memory of this
ancient culture. And in our modern age, the human being passed through
four and one half centuries of preparation for a new spirit direction,
for a new kind of Mystery culture. But in order that these two might
be connected in the historical evolution of mankind, the Mystery of
Golgotha had to take place as an objective fact in mankind's
evolution. Internally, however, this evolution takes its course in
such a way that human beings grow and develop until, beginning with
the fifteenth century A.D. they receive the new impulse which I have
characterized as an Ahrimanic impulse, and through which they will
feel more and more: we need the possibility of building a bridge
between the two periods.
In this way we may inwardly comprehend the threefold human being. And
we shall comprehend him still more accurately if we join to what I
have said today something which I have repeatedly mentioned. It was
impossible for the ancient Greeks who retained the remnants of ancient
Mystery culture to be an atheist although it happened in a few
abnormal cases, but not to the degree it occurs today. Atheism has
only arisen in more recent times, at least in its radical form. For
the Greek who was really imbued with dialectics felt the Divine
holding sway in thinking, even in thinking void of content.
If we know this and then look upon the appearance of atheism, upon the
complete denial of the Divine, we shall find the reason for this
atheism. Only those human beings, my dear friends naturally, we
need the methods of spiritual science in order to recognize this
only those human beings are atheists in whose organism
something is organically disturbed. To be sure, this may lie in very
delicate structural conditions, but it is a fact that atheism is in
reality a disease.
This is the first thing we have to hold fast: atheism is a disease.
For, if our organism is completely healthy, the harmonious functioning
of its various members will bring it about that we ourselves sense our
origin from the Divine ex deo nascimur.
The second point, to be sure, is something different. Man may sense
the Divine but may have no possibility to sense the Christ. In this
respect we do not differentiate carefully enough today. We are
satisfied with words, also in other spheres. For, if we test today the
actual spiritual content of the view of many human beings of the
occident and are not influenced by their words they say they
agree with Christian precepts, they believe in the freedom of the
will, and so forth we shall find that the whole configuration
of their thinking contradicts what they thus express. Only through
their participation in cultural life have they become accustomed to
speak of Christ, of freedom, and so forth. In reality, my dear
friends, a great number of human beings living among us are nothing
but Turks; for the content of their faith is the same as the
fatalistic content of faith of the Mohammedans although this
fatalism is often described as a necessity of nature. Mohammedanism is
much more prevalent than we think. If we do not focus our attention
upon the words but upon the spirit-soul content, we shall find that
many Christians are Turks. They call themselves Christians
even though they cannot find the transition from the God they sense to
the Christ.
I only need to draw your attention to the classical example of a
modern theologian, Adolf Harnack, who wrote the book,
Wesen des Christentums.
(Essence of Christianity.) Please, make the
following test: scratch out in this book the name of Christ wherever
it occurs and replace it by the name of God, this will change nothing
in the content of this book. There is no necessity that what this man
states should refer to the Christ. What he states refers to the
general Father god who lies at the foundation of the world. There is
no need at all that he should refer to the Christ with what he states.
Wherever he proves something it is externally and internally untrue as
he borrows the various communications from the Gospels. In the way he
elaborates these communications there can be seen no reason whatsoever
for connecting them with the Christ. We must acquire the possibility
of conceiving of the Christ in such a way that we do not identify Him
with the Father god. Many of the modern evangelical theologians are no
longer able to differentiate between the general concept of God and
the concept of the Christ. To be unable to find the Christ in life is
a different matter from being unable to find the Father God You
know that it is not here a matter of doubting the Divinity of the
Christ. It is a matter of clear differentiation, in the sphere of the
Divine, between the Father God and the Christ God. This comes to
expression in the soul of man. Not to find God the Father is a
disease; not to find the Christ is a misfortune. For the human being
is so connected with the Christ as to be inwardly dependent upon this
connection. He is, however, also dependent upon that which has taken
place as a historical event. He must find a connection with the Christ
here upon earth, in external life. If he does not find it is a
misfortune. Not to find the Father god, to be an atheist, is an
illness. Not to find the Son God, the Christ, is a misfortune.
And what does it mean if we do not find the Spirit? To be unable to
take hold of one's own spirituality in order to find the connection of
one's own spirituality with the spirituality of the world signifies
mental debility; not to acknowledge the Spirit is a deficiency of
mind, a psychic imbecility.
Please remember these three deficiencies of the human soul
constitution. Then we shall be able to continue tomorrow in the right
way. Remember what I have told you today about the three kinds of
consciousness; remember that it is a disease if we are an atheist, if
we do not find the God out of whom we are born and whom we must find
if we possess a completely sound organism; that it is a misfortune if
we do not find the Christ; that it is a psychic deficiency if we do
not find the Spirit.
This is also the way in which the paths that lead man to the Trinity
differ from one another. It will become more and more necessary for
mankind to enter into these concrete facts of soul life and not to
remain stuck in general, nebulous notions. People are specially
inclined today toward these nebulous notions. To replace this
inclination by the inclination to enter into concrete facts of soul
life is an essential task of our age.
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Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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