Lecture 3
Stuttgart,
March 9, 1920
There are a
few things I want to add to the points we have been
considering. They may help to make some of the ideas on
which we must base our actions more real. I am looking
for ideas that are less abstract than the vast majority
of ideas by which people allow themselves to be governed
today. We really need such concrete ideas, for they are
the only ones that enter into the realm of feeling for
human beings, and therefore into real life. They are the
only ideas to fire the human will and human actions.
Looking at
the world today we should really consider the most
striking characteristic of social life in the civilized
world to be that the smaller communities of past times
have given way to quite large human communities. We need
not go far back in human evolution to find that social
communities extended only over limited territories. The
civic communities of towns formed a relative whole, and
fundamentally speaking it is only now, in quite recent
times, that large empires have arisen, that the empire of
English-speaking peoples has come about — I have
characterized this a number of times. None of us should
have any illusions concerning the consequences,
particularly in Central Europe. It needs the point of
view of spiritual science, however, to get the right
ideas about these things, ideas that fully relate to
reality. The spiritual-scientific point of view makes us
go back to earlier stages of human development to see
that then, too, people formed certain kinds of
communities, though these should not be called
‘states’ — as I have said on a number
of occasions — for that would cause tremendous
confusion. Instead, let us find some other, more neutral
term. Let us say that ‘realms’ arose. Such
realms were ruled by individuals, or by particular
groups. Subsequently states developed out of this, and
today states are taken so much for granted that no one
would think of going against them — at least in
certain areas no one would go against them.
What is
worse, they are so much taken for granted that people are
not even inclined to think about them.
Behind
this, however, lies something that unites human beings in
their inner soul life with the spiritual, the divine
principle, as it came to be called during different
stages of earth evolution.
If we go
back to prehistoric times, times that only partly extend
into historical times, we find that in those prehistoric
times the idea of a ruler of the realm, as we may call it
— whatever words we use do not really fit those
earlier ideas — was quite different from what we
take it to mean today. The idea of the ruler of an
earthly realm came very close to what people knew to be
their idea of a god. These things inevitably must seem
highly paradoxical to modern minds, though that is only
because modern minds are little inclined to take serious
consideration of things that existed during the past in
human evolution and do not fit in with the way of
thinking that has become customary in Western Europe and
in its appendage, America, over the last three or four
hundred years.
Of course
the way a ruler of the realm was introduced to his
office, at least in many empires, was very different in
those early partly prehistoric times. We need only go
back as far as ancient Egypt, meaning the earlier, partly
prehistoric times of ancient Egypt, or as far as Chaldea,
and we shall find that it was considered a matter of
course that regents were prepared for their office by the
forerunners of our present-day priests. People had quite
concrete ideas as to how a ruler should be prepared for
office by the priesthood and its institutions. They felt
that with this kind of preparation the person called to
be regent truly became what the Chinese, still having a
faint notion of this, called the Son of Heaven. There was
an awareness that someone called to rule over some region
had to be made a kind of Son of Heaven. What was in
people's minds was however something quite different from
the one and only idea we have today when we speak of
training a person or preparing them for something. You
can go to great lengths to explain that one should not
train people for some office or other in this world by
merely implanting intellectual knowledge into their
souls, but that the whole person needs to be developed;
practically all our ideas today on development, education
and so on tend to be abstract to an extreme degree.
People have the idea that only some aspect or other of
the human being should be changed or transformed to
advance him in his training, his preparation for some
office. No one thinks that development should be such
that the individual undergoes a complete change. Above
all no one thinks that something objective should enter
into the soul of that individual, something that was not
there before. No one has that idea. I could characterize
this more or less as follows: I am talking to someone who
is the product of the natural and social life of the
present day. He tells me this and that, I tell him this
or that. The person who speaks to me bears a name: he is
the product of the usual natural and social background
that people have today. The same applies to me. That is
really almost the only way in which we behave towards
each other nowadays, the way in which we look at each
other.
In the
times of which I have been speaking that would have been
a very alien notion. It was above all alien to people
called to hold important offices, to be leaders within
the human community. The external natural background
— family origins, father, mother, grandfather,
grandmother and so on — was of no real concern if
the people concerned had been properly prepared for their
office. The things we look for and find in present-day
individuals who have been raised to the highest spheres
were then of no account. People felt that if they spoke
to someone who had been properly trained in this respect
it was not the ordinary ego that spoke to them: i.e. an
ego born in some place or another, bearing the imprint of
some social background or other. Instead they felt that
something was speaking to them that had been made to come
down from spiritual heights to take up its abode in a
human individual thanks to the preparation and training
given in the mystery cult. This must of course sound
incredibly strange to present-day people. It is however
necessary to stop harbouring confused notions about these
things and to form ideas that have their basis in
truth.
The idea
was that education — not all training but the
training of people called to high office — should
enable spirits from the higher hierarchies to speak
through these individuals, using them as their
instruments. Those instruments were prepared by training,
so that spirits of the higher hierarchies would be able
to speak through them. There was general awareness of
this, particularly when the population at large came to
form an opinion about the identity of their ruler.
Remnants of this still survive, for instance in the title
Son of Heaven for the ruler of China. That was the level
of human awareness in earliest Egyptian and Chaldean
times. Spiritual science has established this. To the
people at large their ruler was God. Basically they had
no other concept of divinity. The preparation of the
ruler had been such that the outer physical form was
nothing, it merely made it possible for a god to move
among human beings. The earliest inhabitants of what was
later to become the kingdom of Egypt quite naturally
accepted the fact that they were ruled by gods who walked
on earth in human form. In this respect the earliest
social awareness of human beings was entirely realistic.
There was no recognition of a separate world beyond, of a
separate spiritual world. The spiritual world existed in
the same place as the world within which people moved on
earth. In this world, where human beings walked the
earth, not only ordinary human individuals were walking
about in physical form but also gods. The divine world
was right among them, made absolute and visible under the
conditions regularly created through the mystery cult.
When such a ruler wanted something, decreed something, it
was a god who wanted it. To the minds of earliest
humankind during that partly prehistoric period it would
have been pointless to question whether something decreed
by their ruler should or should not happen; it was after
all a ‘god’ who wanted it.
Earliest
humanity thus connected the spiritual hierarchies with
everything that happened on earth. Those hierarchies were
there in their midst; they were not something to which
one first has to ascend by some kind of spiritual, inner
means. No, they were present in the mysteries as the
training given to physical bodies found suitable for
preparation as dwelling places for spirits of the higher
hierarchies, so that these might walk among human beings
and be their rulers.
This may
seem strange to modern minds, but modern minds will
finally have to leave behind the narrow-minded views they
hold today, ideas only three or four hundred years old as
we know them today, and take a wider view. We cannot
develop and think ahead to the future unless we broaden
the tunnel vision which has evolved in almost every
sphere of life. We must expand the time horizons we
survey and consider larger evolutionary time spans than
present-day history normally covers.
The things
of the past, things that existed in historical and
prehistoric evolution, do of course give way to other
things as time progresses, but in certain areas they are
retained. They are often retained by becoming external,
continuing in an outer form and losing their inner
meaning. The awareness of the godlike nature of the ruler
that was a feature of earliest imperialism still comes up
here or there in the present age, except that it no
longer has any meaning, since mankind progresses and does
not stand still.
Not long
ago a Roman Catholic bishop addressed a pastoral to his
diocese [ Note 13 ] in
which he stated nothing more and nothing less than that a
Roman Catholic priest conducting an act of worship was
more powerful than Christ Jesus himself. Acting as the
celebrant, the priest coerced Christ Jesus, the god of
Christianity, to enter into the physical world as the
priest performed the act of transubstantiation. The god
might be willing or not, the act of transubstantiation
forced him to take the route prescribed by the priest. It
is really true that very recently a pastoral referred to
the sublime power of the earth-born ‘priest
god’ over the ‘inferior god’ who
descended from cosmic heights and walked on the earth in
the flesh of Jesus. Things like this have their origin in
older times and have lost their meaning in the present
age. Some people representing certain confessions know
very well, of course, why they keep throwing such things
into human minds. They have become just as meaningless as
the words modern rulers write in albums: The king's
wishes are the supreme law. [ Note 14 ] These things have
happened in our times. Humanity, fast asleep, has said
nothing at all about it and still says nothing now to
things going on that bode ill for humankind, things one
gets used to, things one does not want to see. Today we
are altogether little prepared to take note of major
events in human evolution.
That was a
first stage in the evolution of human empires: when the
ruler was the god. This way of looking at it was still
very much alive in Roman times. Whichever way you may
look at Nero, as a fool or a bloodhound, for the large
majority of the Roman people Nero's dreadful tyranny
merely made them marvel that a god could walk on earth in
such a guise. Many of the citizens of imperial Rome never
doubted that the figure of Nero was that of a god.
A second
stage in the evolution of empires came with the
transition from a ruler who was a god to one who ruled by
the grace of God. During the earliest times of human
evolution on the civilized earth the ruler was God. At
the second stage the ruler stood for God; he was not
indwelt by the god himself but inspired by God, given
special grace. Everything he did would succeed because
divine power — now no longer within him but in a
realm close to the earthly realm — flowed into him,
inspired him, filled him, and guided him in all he
did.
To describe
the essential nature of such a second stage ruler we have
to say that the ruler was a symbol. At the first stage
the ruler was a divine spirit walking on earth. At the
second stage he represented what that spirit signified;
he was the sign, the symbol in which the spirit came to
expression. The ruler became the image of God.
The
principles governing those external social relationships
also came to expression in the institutions which became
established. In earliest times empires were so
constituted that a number of people were governed by a
divine spirit. This god would be similar to them in
external appearance but utterly different inside. At the
second stage we find empires where the leader or leaders
represent the god or gods and are symbols for them.
At the
early stage of human empires discussion as the whether
the ruler, the god, was acting rightly or wrongly was
beside the point. At the second stage it began to be
possible to think whether something he had done was right
or wrong. At the early stage everything the ruler did,
thought or said was right, for he was the god. Then, at
the second stage, some other spiritual sphere was felt to
exist side be side with the earthly realm, one that has
the god, the ruler given the grace of God, within it. The
power streaming into the earthly realm, giving direction
and orientation, was felt to come from that other realm.
The institutions and human individuals in the earthly
realm were the reflection of something streaming in from
the realm of the higher hierarchies.
It is
interesting to find out, for example, that Dionysius the
Areopagite, [ Note 15 ]
also called the pseudo-Dionysius, who was much more
genuine than orthodox science imagines, presented the
right theory concerning the way human empires were ruled
by divine empires so that the conditions and institutions
created among humans were a symbol of what existed in the
divine realm. Dionysius the Areopagite wrote that there
were heavenly hierarchies behind the human hierarchies on
this earth. He stated very clearly that the social
structure of the priestly hierarchy here on earth, from
deacons and archdeacons all the way up to bishops, ought
to show that the relationship of deacon to archdeacon is
the same as that of angel to archangel, and so on. The
earthly hierarchy should truly reflect the heavenly
hierarchy. This refers to the second stage of empires.
Something was able to evolve that was to govern human
ideas until quite recent times. After all there existed
in Central Europe until 1806 an institution that in its
title gave expression to the way the heavenly and the
earthly principle were seen to be one: the Holy Roman
Empire, an empire seen to be based on the power of
heaven. The words ‘of German nationality’
were added [to the German title] to show that the empire
was also of earthly origin. The way the title evolved it
is evident that a whole empire was formed in such a way
that it should be seen to be the image of a heavenly
institution.
Such were
also the ideas behind St Augustine's City of God
and Dante's work On the Monarchy [ Note 16 ] . If only people were
not so limited in their ideas they could take a wider
view when reading something like Dante's work and realize
that Dante, who after all must be considered a great
thinker, still had ideas in the 13th and 14th centuries
that are radically different from our modern ideas. If we
were to take such things in historical evolution
seriously we would give up those narrow ideas that do not
even go back as far as Dante but are just a few hundred
years old. The ideas used by people nowadays to fill
their heads with illusions, wanting to understand history
by merely going back as far as ancient Greece, are
limited ideas. Yet it is only possible to understand the
whole structure of ancient Egypt, for instance, if we
know that the ancient gods still walked on earth. In the
times that followed gods no longer walked on the earth,
but the institutions created on earth had to be an image,
a symbol, of the divine world order.
Then
something arose for example like the possibility to
reflect on the lawfulness of things, to reflect on such
things as the fact that the human intellect can arrive at
a judgement as to what is lawful and what is not —
all this only became possible during the second stage of
imperial development. During the earliest stage it was
pointless to reflect on what was lawful and what was not.
People had to look to what the ruler said, for the god
lived in him, he was the god. In the second stage, human
judgement could be used to determine that there is
something in a spiritual realm next to our own realm that
we cannot reach as physical human beings but only as
human beings of soul and spirit. Then people no longer
believed, as they had believed in earlier times, that the
divine could unite with the whole physical human being,
that a human being could indeed become a god. At most
— using mystical language to define the living
truth about public institutions — people believed
that the human soul element could unite with the god.
Basically
it is true to say that no one nowadays is able to
understand the way things were said in works written and
published as late as the 13th and 14th centuries unless
one knows that the people of that time had quite a
different awareness, a feeling that some degree of divine
inspiration was alive in those who were called and
trained to hold special office. Oddly enough things
referring to something rather serious will often become
derisory expressions at a later point in time when the
evolution of humankind has progressed. Someone saying
‘God shapes the back for the burthen’
nowadays would say this more or less as a joke. Yet
though it may be said today partly as a joke, in the
times when empires were at their second stage of
development it certainly held true and was to the
forefront of people's minds. It applied not only to
people but within certain limits also to what was being
done. Rituals were made to be such that the actions
performed in them reflected what went on in the spiritual
realms. The rituals performed were spiritual events
reaching across into what went on in the physical world.
People very much believed the spiritual realm to be
adjoining the physical realm, but they also thought that
it extended across into the earthly realm and that the
symbol or sign of the spiritual realm was to be found in
the earthly realm.
Very
gradually people ceased to believe in the validity of
this. An age was to follow where this awareness of the
connection between earthly and spiritual things was to
fade. In the days of Wycliffe, of Huss, [ Note 17 ] people began to dispute
things which it would have been unthinkable to dispute
before. They were in disagreement on the significance of
transubstantiation: whether this ritual act had anything
to do with what went on in spiritual worlds. When people
begin to disagree about such things, old ideas are coming
to an end. People no longer know what to think; yet for
centuries, indeed millennia, they had known exactly what
to think. It always happens that certain things normal to
a particular age continue to play a role in later ages.
They are then out of place, anachronistic, luciferic.
That is what has happened to the great, far-reaching
symbols relating to a particular age when they showed how
ritual acts and the like performed on earth Were
connected with divine and spiritual happenings in the
world. Those symbols persisted during later ages and
certain secret societies preserved them in a luciferic
way. Western secret societies in particular have been
preserving such ancient symbols. They are traditional in
those societies, though they have lost their real
content. On the one hand, then, we see certain secret
societies — Freemasons, Jesuit organizations and
denominational groups have arisen from these —
preserving, in a way, those symbols which only had
meaning in an earlier age. On the other hand we see how
words preserve ideas that belonged to an earlier age in a
basically luciferic way. Words used In everyday life have
also lost their original substance, lost the context of a
way of thinking when those words were symbols of
spiritual things. For the spiritual content is gradually
lost and words become empty symbols, signs without
meaning.
During a
third period, at a third level of empire development,
there was no longer any awareness of individuals being
given the grace of God, of divine elements entering into
earthly events, earthly speech. The spiritual realm was
now entirely in the beyond. The opposite of what had
existed at the first stage of empire development now held
true. During the first stage the god lived on earth, went
about in human form. During the third stage one can only
think of the god being present in an invisible world that
is not perceptible to the senses. Everything people were
able to use to express their relationship with the realm
of divine spirits lost its meaning. The word
‘god’ continues to be used. When the word
‘god’ was spoken in the distant past people
were looking for something that appeared in human form,
walking among human beings. It is not that human beings
in those very early times were materialists. Materialists
only became possible once the spiritual realm had been
banished beyond the sense-perceptible world. During the
earliest period of human evolution the spiritual world
was right there among human beings. There would have been
no need for someone living in ancient Egypt during its
earliest times to say: The kingdom of the divine is at
hand. He would take that to be self-evident. At the time
when Christ Jesus appeared among men people first had to
be told: ‘The Kingdom of the gods cometh not with
observation… for, behold, it is within you. [
Note 18 ]
We are now
living in an age when it would be a nonsense to look to a
person for anything but a straightforward development of
what he was as a child, a development based on cause and
effect. We live in an age when it would be sheer madness
for someone to consider himself more than the
straightforward further development of what was also
there in his childhood. Eight thousand years ago, let us
say, something was taken as a matter of course, was the
general way of thinking; yet if anyone were to say the
same thing today this would merely indicate that they are
mad. The realities of those distant times have been
reinterpreted in the modern way of thinking into that
fictitious tale we call ‘history’. This
spreads a veil over the radical metamorphosis we are able
to discover when we consider human evolution in the light
of truth. The things we often say today, things we reveal
in our external life, exist because they once had
relevance and were considered to be the truth. We still
say things like ‘by the grace of God’ —
people have more or less tried to get out of the habit in
recent years, but they have not succeeded very well with
this — but we do not know, or pay no attention to
the fact, that there was a time when this was a reality
to human minds, when it was taken as a matter of
course.
Here I am
drawing your attention to things that give our public
life its meaningless, conventional character. Things we
put forward in the words we use, in our customs and
indeed the way we judge issues in public life, relate to
times when those words, even if they only became part of
the vocabulary at a later date — they were modelled
on the original language — were formed and used on
quite a different basis. The words we use in public life
today have been squeezed dry. With some it is immediately
apparent, with others it was not apparent for a long
time. In the distant past a token was hung upon a human
body in magical body in magical rites, transforming it
into an important magical aspect of the god walking on
earth. This has become something trivial in the
decorations given to people today. That is the kind of
history humankind is unlikely to pursue. Not only words
can become empty phrases and lose all meaning, as is the
case with the most important words used in public life
today; the objects hung around people's necks or pinned
to their chests can show similar character in their
relation to reality, like a word that is meaningless
today but once had sacred meaning and substance to
it.
We must
realize that initially our evolution was such that an
older awareness lost its substance and became empty and
conventional. There can be no real new growth in our
devastated public life of today unless we do so. We must
look for new well-springs that will give real substance
again to public life. We have no awareness of gods
walking the earth in human form. We must therefore
acquire the ability to recognise the spirit not in human
form but in the form it has when we rise to spiritual
vision. For us the gods no longer descend to sit on
physical thrones. We must acquire the spiritual faculties
that enable us to ascend in our vision to the thrones
where gods are to be found who can only be alive to us in
the spirit. We must learn to fill the abstract formulas
we use with spiritual contents of our own experience. We
must become able to face truths that are deeply
disturbing to those who grasp them rightly. We must
become able to see things as they are. Sometimes we fail
to do so for periods extending over decades.
As Central
Europeans we believe ourselves to be part of European
civilization. What we should ask ourselves is what it is
that has made our inner life, the life of our soul, so
full of discord over the last fifty years or even longer.
Let me say just one thing. When you look to the West you
see in the first instance — we'll leave aside the
rest — a nation falling into decadence, the French
nation. One thing is important, however, among the
French. When a member of this nation said: I am a
Frenchman — this is what they have said to
themselves for centuries—he said something that was
in accord with the external facts; a permissible,
truthful declaration made with reference to external
life. Any of us who have ever talked to people who were
young and German in the first half of the 19th century
will be able to confirm the following. Herman Grimm [
Note 19 ] for instance has
repeatedly described what it meant, to people who were
young when he was young in Germany, for someone to
profess himself to be German in public life, not as an
empty phrase but in reality. It would have been treason.
People were Bavarians, Wurttembergians, Prussians, but to
say ‘I am German’ would make them criminals.
In the West there was a point to saying ‘I am a
Frenchman’, people were permitted to be that in
external life. It would have meant going to prison or
being put beyond the pale in some other way if one had
taken it into one's mind to say one was German, i.e.
belonged to a united nation. People have forgotten about
this now, but those are facts. And it is important to
face up to these things. We shall not develop the right
enthusiasm for such things, however, unless we fertilize
our inner life by considering the great events of world
history, seeing them in the right light—not that
fabricated tale written in our handbooks and taught in
our schools today, but the true history of the world that
can be found by looking at things in the light of the
spirit.
It is quite
unthinkable for a present-day protestant Christian to
consider that people once felt it to be true to say
‘the god walked on the earth and the ruler was the
god’ and ‘there is no kingdom on this earth
where gods are still to be found, for the ways in which
one is made a god are in the realm where the
supersensible dwells, within the Mystery’. In the
early times of Egyptian history, which in part was still
prehistoric, the Mystery was indeed something
supersensible. It was only when the mysteries were made
into churches that the church became the symbol for the
supersensible.
Present-day
humanity has no wish to look to the points of origin of
its historical development. It lives like someone who has
reached the age of forty-five and has forgotten what life
was like as a boy or a girl, at most remembering back as
far as his or her twenty-fifth year. Try and visualize
what it would mean for the inner soul life of someone of
forty-five to remember nothing that happened before the
age of twenty-five. Yet that is the state of mind
humankind is in now, it is the state of mind in which the
people arise who are to be the leaders of humanity. Out
of this state of mind something is attempted that is to
give the orientation for a social system. The most
important thing is that human beings come to see humanity
as a living organism with a memory that should not be
trodden to death, a memory reaching back to things that
still have their effect in the present day, and because
of the way they do take effect, literally ask for
something new to be poured into them.
We merely
need to strike this note a few times and we shall see
that there is need for something in the present time that
makes all the empty words that are flashing up all around
come to nothing. It would be good if a sufficiently large
number of of people were to realize how serious the
present situation is, and out of this realization were to
arrive at something that is really new. The sad thing is
that People today have been given great tasks and yet
would most of all like to sleep through those tasks. The
particular task given to the anthroposophical movement
for decades now has basically been to shake humanity out
of its sleep, to point out that humanity needs to be
given something today that truly changes the present
state of soul to the same extent as the dreamer's state
of soul changes to being fully awake and alive for the
day, when he wakes in the morning.
This I
intend to be the conclusion to the two aspects of history
seen in the light of spiritual science I discussed during
my present stay in this city. If only something could
emerge from our anthroposophical movement that would
truly fire our social ideas, filling them with warmth and
energy. Social impulses are needed in the present age,
that is so obvious when we look at events that we really
should not fail to see it. These social impulses can only
come to fruition if a new spirit is poured into human
evolution. This should be realized particularly by the
people who from one side or another come to join the
anthroposophical movement. On the soil of this
anthroposophical movement truthfulness and alertness are
necessary, real alertness. Modern civilized society has
got into the habit of being asleep in public life. Today
people are so much asleep one might fall into severe
doubt on seeing the external course followed by people in
the pursuit of their affairs — were it not for the
fact that one stands within spiritual life and perceives
the course taken by spiritual affairs behind the Physical
world. The external course people pursue in their events
clearly spells it out that people fight shy of having any
part in the search for truth in the phenomenal world.
They are so glad they do not have to look at the events
that are happening. You can see that when people are told
of something happening somewhere today, they stand there
on their two feet and give no indication of having heard
something that is of profound significance for the way
events will go. People hear of deeply significant things
that must inevitably lead to ruin, to decline and fall,
and they do not even feel indignation. Things are going
on in the world, intentions are alive in German lands
that should horrify people — yet they do not.
Anyone incapable of being horrified at these things also
lacks the power to develop a sense of truth.
It has to
be pointed out that healthy indignation over things that
are not healthy should be the source and origin of
enthusiasm, of the new truths that are needed. It is
actually less important to convey truths to people than
it is to bring fiery energy into their lethargic nervous
systems. Fiery energy is needed today, not mystical
sleep. Longing for mystical peace and quiet is not of the
essence today but rather dedication to the spirit. Union
with the divine has to be actively sought today and not
in mystical indolence and comfort.
This has to
be pointed out. We must find a way of making it possible
again for our minds to connect a divine principle with
our outer reality. We shall only be able to do this if we
consider without bias how people found their gods walking
the earth in the earliest empires. We must find a way in
which our human souls can walk in the spirit in spiritual
worlds, that we may find gods again.
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