Lecture XI
Dornach, October 26, 1921
Our last
explorations have shown us the fundamental difference between
man's whole view here, between birth and death, and in the
spiritual world, between death and a new birth. We explained
yesterday that in our present era, since the middle of the
fifteenth century, man may gain freedom between birth and
death; everything on earth that he fulfills out of the
impulse of freedom gives his being in the life between death
and a new birth weight, as it were, reality, existence. When
we emancipate ourselves from the necessities of earthly
existence, when we ascend to the point where our will is
guided by free motives — that is, when our will is not
founded on anything in earthly life — then we create
the possibility of being an independent being also between
death and a new birth. In our age this capacity to preserve
our own independent existence after death is connected with
something we may call the relationship to the Mystery of
Golgotha. This Mystery of Golgotha may be studied from the
most varied viewpoints. In the course of the past years, we
have already studied a great number of these viewpoints;
today we shall view the Mystery of Golgotha from the
standpoint arising out of the study of the value of freedom
for the human being.
Here on earth,
between birth and death, the human being really does not have
any view of himself in his ordinary consciousness. He cannot
look into himself. It is an illusion, of course, to believe,
as outer science does, that it is possible to obtain an inner
knowledge of the human organization by studying what is dead
in the human being, indeed sometimes by studying only the
corpse. This is altogether an illusion, a deception. Here,
between birth and death, the human being has only a view of
the outer world. What kind of view is this, however? It is
one that we have frequently called the view of
“appearance” (Schein) and yesterday I
again emphasized this strongly.
When our senses
are directed toward our surroundings between birth and death,
the world appears to us as appearance, as semblance. We can
take this appearance into our I — being. We can, for
example, preserve it in our memory, making it therefore in a
certain sense our own. Insofar as it stands in front of us
when we look out into the world, however, it is an appearance
that manifests itself particularly — as I already
explained to you yesterday — by disappearing with death
and reappearing in another form; that is, it is no longer
experienced in us but is experienced in front of or around
us.
If, however, in
the present age the human being between birth and death were
not to perceive the world as appearance, if he could not
perceive the appearance, he could not be free. The
development of freedom is possible only in the world of
appearance. I have mentioned this in my book,
The Riddle of Man
(vom Menschenratsel),
pointing out that in
reality the world that we experience may be compared with the
images that look out at us from a mirror. These pictures that
look out at us from a mirror cannot force us to do anything,
for they are only pictures, they are appearance. Similarly
man's world of perception is also appearance. The human being
is not completely woven into the appearance of the world. He
is woven into a world of appearance only with his perceiving,
which fills his waking consciousness. If man views his
impulses, instincts, passions, and temperament, and
everything that surges up from the human being, without being
able to bring them into clear mental images, at least into
waking mental images, then all this is not appearance; it is
reality, but a reality that does not rise up in man's present
consciousness.
Between birth
and death, the human being lives in a true world that he does
not know, one that cannot ever really give him freedom. It
may implant in him instincts that make him unfree; it may
call forth inner necessities, but it can never enable the
human being to experience freedom. Freedom can be experienced
only within a world of pictures, of appearance. When we
awaken we must enter a perceptive life of appearance, so that
freedom can develop.
This life of
appearance, which constitutes our waking life of perception,
did not always exist in this way within humanity's historical
evolution. If we go back into ancient times, to which we have
so often looked back in our lectures, to times when there
still existed a certain instinctive vision, or remnants of
this instinctive vision (which lasted until the middle of the
fifteenth century), we cannot say in the same sense that the
human being in his waking condition was surrounded only by a
world of appearance. Everything that the human being saw in
his own way as the world's spiritual background spoke through
the appearance. He also saw this appearance, but in a
different way. For him this appearance was an expression, a
manifestation, of a spiritual world. This spiritual world
then vanished behind the appearance, and only the appearance
remained. The essential thing in the progressive development
of humanity is that in more ancient times the appearance was
experienced as the manifestation of a divine-spiritual world,
but the divine-spiritual vanished from this appearance, so
that before man's eyes lies only appearance, in order that he
might discover his freedom within this world of appearance.
The human being therefore must find his freedom in a world of
appearance; he does not find freedom in the true world, which
completely withdrew to the dull experiences of his inner
being; there, he can find only a necessity. We may therefore
say that mans world of perception between birth and death
— everything that I say applies only to our age —
is a world of appearance. Man perceives the world, but he
perceives it as appearance.
How, then, do
matters stand between death and a new birth? In our last
studies we suggested that after death the human being does
not perceive this outer world that he sees here, between
birth and death, but between death and a new birth man
essentially perceives the human being himself, the inner
being of man. The human being is then the world for man. What
is concealed here on earth becomes manifest in the spiritual
world. Between death and a new birth, man gains insight into
the entire connection between the soul life and the organic
life of the human being, between the activity of the single
organs, and in short, everything that, symbolically speaking,
lies enclosed within the human skin.
We find,
however, that in the present age it is again the case that
the human being cannot live in appearance after death. The
life in appearance is actually valid for him only between
birth and death. The human being has come to the point today
that between death and a new birth he cannot live in
appearance. When he passes through death, he is imprisoned,
as it were, by necessity. The human being feels that he is
free in his perceiving here on earth, where he may turn his
eyes where he wishes; he may combine what he perceives into
concepts so as to experience his freedom of action in these
concepts; between death and a new birth, however, he feels
unfree regarding the world of perceptions. He is overpowered,
as it were, by the world. It is just as if the human being
perceived in the same way as he would perceive here on earth
if he were to be hypnotized by every single sense perception,
if he were to be overpowered by every single sense perception
so that he would be unable to liberate himself from them out
of free will.
This has been
the course of man's development since the middle of the
fifteenth century. The divine-spiritual worlds vanished from
the appearance of the earth, but between death and a new
birth, these divine spiritual worlds imprison him, so that he
cannot maintain his independence. I said that only if the
human being really develops freedom on earth, that is, if he
takes an interest with his entire being in the appearance in
life, is it possible for him to carry his own being through
the portal of death.
We can see what
is necessary in order to develop freedom also by looking into
yet another difference between the way of viewing things
today and more ancient human views.
Whether we
consider humanity in general or the initiates and the
mysteries in ancient times, we find that the whole view of
the world had another orientation from that of today. If the
human being remains standing by what he has acquired since
the middle of the fifteenth century, through the kind of
cognition that has arisen since that time, one finds that the
human being had mental images of the evolution of the earth,
of the evolution of the human race; he lost track, however,
of the mental images that might have given him satisfactory
indications concerning the beginning and end of the earth. We
might say that the human being was able to survey a certain
line of evolution; he looked back historically, he looked
back geologically. When he went back still further, however,
he began to construct hypotheses. He imagined that the
beginning of the world was a primordial mist, which appeared
to be a physical formation. Out of it evolved — that is
to say, not really, but people imagined that this was so
— the higher beings of the realms of nature, plants,
animals, and so on. In accordance with conceptions of modern
physics, people thought that earthly existence disintegrates
in the end (see drawing below) by
heat — again a hypothesis. Man thus saw only a segment,
as it were, between the beginning and end of the earth.
Beginning and end became a hazy, unsatisfactory picture to
present-day human beings.
This was not
the case in more ancient times. In ancient times people had
very precise notions of the beginning and end of the earth,
because they still saw the self-revelation of the
divine-spiritual in the appearance. We can call to mind the
Old Testament, for example, or other religious teachings of
the past. In the Old Testament we find conceptions that are
connected with the beginning of the world, and they are
described in a form accessible to the human being, enabling
him to grasp his own existence upon the earth. The
Kant-Laplace nebula or primordial mist does not enable anyone
to grasp human life on earth.
If you take the
wonderful cosmogonies of the various pagan peoples, you will
again find something that enabled man to grasp his earthly
existence. The human being thus directed his gaze toward the
beginning of the earth and came to conceptions that
encompassed man. Conceptions of the end of the earth remained
for a longer time in human consciousness. In Michelangelo's
“Last Judgment,” for example, and other
“Last Judgments,” we come across conceptions
about the end of the earth, which were handed down as far as
our own era and which encompass the human being; and although
the ideas of sin and atonement are difficult, these
conceptions do not do away with the human being.
Take the modern
hypothetical conception of the end of the earth, that
everything will end in a uniform heat. The entire
human essence dissolves. There is no place for man in the
world. In addition to the disappearance of divine-spiritual
existence from the appearance of perception, the human being
therefore lost, in the course of time, his conceptions of the
world's beginning and end. Within these ideas he could still
find his own value and see himself within the cosmos as a
being connected with the beginning and end of the earth.
How did the
people of past eras view history? No matter in what form they
saw it, history was something that moved from the beginning
to the end of the earth, receiving its meaning through the
conceptions of the beginning and end of the earth. Take any
of the pagan cosmologies, and they will enable you to
conceive of humanity's historical development. They reach
back to ages in which earthly life arises in a
divine-spiritual weaving. History has a meaning. If we turn
to the beginning and also the end of the earth, history has a
meaning. Whereas the conception of the end of the earth, as a
pictorial view contained in religious feeling, continued to
exist even in more recent eras, the conception of the end of
the earth lived on in historical considerations, as a kind of
straggler, even in more recent times. In enlightened
historical works, such as Rotteck's history of the world,
[ Note 16 ]
you may still find
the influence of this conception of the earth's beginning,
which gives a meaning to history. Even if only a shadow
remains of this conception of the beginning of the earth in
Rotteck's history, which was written at the beginning of the
nineteenth century, it still gives historical development a
meaning. The significant, peculiar fact is that at the same
time in which the human being entered a world of perception
of appearance, perceiving outer nature, therefore, as
appearance, history began to lose its meaning and became
inaccessible to direct human knowledge, because he no longer
had any notion of the earth's beginning and end.
You must take
this matter quite seriously. Take the primordial mist at the
beginning of the earth's evolution, from which indefinite
forms first condensed themselves, and then all the beings,
ascending as far as man; and consider the death by heat at
the end of the earth's evolution, in which everything
perishes. In between lies what we tell about Moses, abut the
great individuals of ancient China, about the great
individuals of ancient India, Persia, Egypt — and
further on, of Greece and Rome, as far as our present time.
In thought we may add all that is still to come. All this
takes place on the earth, however, like an episode, with no
beginning and no end. History thus appears to have no
meaning. This must be realized.
Nature may be
surveyed, even if we cannot survey its inner being. It rises
up before the human being as appearance in that man
experiences nature between birth and death. History becomes
meaningless. Man simply lacks courage enough in our time to
admit that history has no meaning; it is meaningless, because
man has lost track of the beginning and end of the earth. Man
should really sense that humanity's historical development is
the greatest of riddles. He should say to himself that this
historical development has no meaning.
Individuals
have had inklings of this. Read what Schopenhauer wrote on
the absence of meaning in history that emerges out of
occidental beliefs. You will see, then, that Schopenhauer
really sensed this absence of meaning in history. We should
be filled with the longing to rediscover the meaning of
history in another way. Out of the world of appearance we can
develop a satisfactory knowledge of nature, particularly in
Goethe's sense, if we give up hypotheses and remain in the
phenomenology, that is, in the teachings of appearance, of
semblance. Natural science can be satisfying if we eliminate
all the disturbing hypotheses about the beginning and end of
the earth. We are then as it were imprisoned, however, in our
earthly cave, and we do not look out of it. The Kant-Laplace
theory and the end of the world by heat block our view into
the distant past and the distant future.
This is
basically the situation of present-day humanity from the
standpoint of general consciousness; consequently humanity is
threatened by a certain danger. It cannot quite enter into
the mere world of phenomena, into the world of appearance.
Above all it is unable to enter with the inner life into this
world of appearance. Humanity wishes to submit to the
necessity, the inner necessity of the instincts, drives, and
passions. Today we do not see much of everything that may be
realized on the basis of free impulses born out of pure
thinking. Just as much, however, as the human being lacks
freedom here in his life between birth and death, so he is
overcome, with the hypnotizing compulsion between death and a
new birth, by lack of freedom, by the necessity in
perception. Man is therefore threatened by the danger of
passing through the portal of death without taking with him
his own being and without entering into something free
regarding the world of perception, but rather into something
that submerges him into a state of compulsion, which makes
him grow rigid, as it were, in the outer world.
The impulse
that in the future must break into the life of humanity is
the appearance of the divine-spiritual to the human being in
a way different from the way in which it appeared to him in
ancient times. In past ages the human being could imagine a
spiritual element within the physical at the beginning and
end of the earth, with which he knew he was united and that
did not exclude him. The human being must take up this
permeation with the spiritual more and more from the center,
instead of from the beginning and end. Even as in the Old
Testament the beginning of the earth was looked upon as a
genesis of the human being, within which his existence was
ensured, even as the pagan cosmogonies spoke of humanity's
evolution out of divine-spiritual existence, even as the
contemplation of the end of the earth, which — as was
stated — was still contained in the views of the
decline of the world, which do not deprive man of his own
self, so modern times must find in a right view of the
Mystery of Golgotha, at the center of the earth's evolution,
that which again enables the human being to find divine life
and earthly life interwoven.
Man must
understand in the right way how God passed through the human
being with the Mystery of Golgotha. This will replace what we
lost regarding the beginning and end of the earth. There is
an essential difference, however, between the way in which we
should now look upon the Mystery of Golgotha and the earlier
way of looking at the beginning and end of the earth.
Try to
penetrate into the way in which a pagan cosmogony arose.
Today we often come across conceptions stating that these
pagan cosmogonies were fabrications of the people. This
conception holds that just as today man freely joins thought
to thought and disconnects them again, so at one time people
devised their cosmogonies. This, however, is an erroneous
university view, which has no reasonable foundation. We find
instead that in the past the human being gave himself up
entirely to the contemplation of the world; he could see the
beginning of the world only in the way in which it appeared
to him in the cosmogony, in the myths. There was no freedom
in this; it was altogether something that yielded itself to
man by necessity. The human being had to look into the
beginning of the earth; he could not refrain from doing so,
he could do nothing else. Today we no longer picture in the
right way how in the past man's soul pictured the beginning
of the earth and, in a certain respect, also the end of the
earth, through an instinctive knowledge.
Today it is
impossible for the human soul to picture the Mystery of
Golgotha in this way. This constitutes the great difference
between Christianity and the ancient teachings of the gods.
If the human being wishes to fmd Christ, he must find Him in
freedom. He must freely acknowledge the Mystery of Golgotha.
The content of the ancient cosmogonies was forced upon man,
whereas the Mystery of Golgotha does not force itself upon
him. He must approach the Mystery of Golgotha in a certain
resurrection of his being, in freedom.
The human being
is led to such freedom by an activity that I have recently
designated in anthroposophical spiritual science as the
activity of knowing. If a theologian believes that he may
gain knowledge of the Akashic Chronicle in a special
illustrated edition, that is to say, without needing to exert
any inner activity to grasp what must appear before his soul
in concepts and must become images — such a theologian
would simply show that he is predisposed to grasp the world
only in a pagan way, not in a Christian way; for the human
being must come to Christ in inner freedom. Particularly the
way in which the human being must face the Mystery of
Golgotha constitutes his most intimate means of an education
toward freedom.
The human being
is in a certain sense torn away from the world by the Mystery
of Golgotha if it is experienced rightly. What arises in that
case? In the first place, the human being now can live in a
world of perception, of appearance, and in this world surges
up something that leads him to the spiritual existence that
is guaranteed in the Mystery of Golgotha. This is one thing.
The other thing, however, is that history has ceased to have
meaning, because beginning and end were lost; it receives
meaning again because it is given this meaning from the
center. We learn to recognize how everything before the
Mystery of Golgotha leads toward the Mystery of Golgotha and
how everything after the Mystery of Golgotha sets out from
this mystery.
History thus
once more acquires meaning, whereas otherwise it is an
illusory episode without beginning and without end. The outer
world of perception faces the human being as appearance for
the sake of his freedom, changing history into something it
should not be — an episode of appearance without any
center of gravity. It dissolves into fog and mist which
basically we already find theoretically in Schopenhauer's
writings.
Through the
inclination toward the Mystery of Golgotha, all that was once
otherwise historical appearance receives inner life,
historical soul, connected with everything that modern man
requires through the fact that he must develop freedom in
life. When he passes through the portal of death, he will
have developed here the great teaching of freedom. Avowal of
the Mystery of Golgotha cast into life the light that must
fall on everything that is free in the human being. The human
being has the possibility of saving himself from the danger
that he has here by virtue of the predisposition for freedom
that he has in appearance but does not develop, because he
surrenders himself to instincts and drives and therefore
falls prey to necessity after death. By accepting as his own
a religious faith that is totally different from more ancient
religious faith, in filling his entire soul only with a
religious faith living in freedom, he transforms himself for
the experience of freedom.
In today's
civilization, basically only a small number of people have
really grasped that only a knowledge gained in freedom, an
active knowledge, is able to lead us to Christ, to the
Mystery of Golgotha. The Bible gave man a historical account
so that he might have a message of the Mystery of Golgotha
for the time when he could not yet take in spiritual
science.
To be sure, the
Gospel will never lose its value. It will acquire an
ever-greater value, but to the Gospel must be added the
direct knowledge of the essence of the Mystery of Golgotha.
Christ must be able to be sensed, felt, known through one's
own human force, not only through the forces working out of
the Gospel. This is what spiritual science strives for
regarding Christianity Spiritual science seeks to explain the
Gospels, but it is not based upon the Gospels. It is able to
appreciate the Gospels so fully just because it discovered
afterward, as it were, all that lies concealed in them, all
that has already been lost in the course of humanity's outer
evolution.
The whole
modern evolution of humanity is thus connected on the one
hand with freedom, the appearance of perception, and on the
other with the Mystery of Golgotha and the meaning of
historical development. This sequence of many episodes which
constitutes history as it is generally described and accepted
today acquires its true significance only if the Mystery of
Golgotha can be inserted into historical evolution.
Many people
experienced this in the right way and they used the right
images for it. They said to themselves: once upon a time, man
looked out into the heavenly expanses; he saw the sun, but
not the sun as we see it today. Today there are physicists
who believe that out there in the universe there floats a
large sphere of gaseous matter. I have frequently said that
physicists would be astonished if they could build a cosmic
balloon and reach the sun, for where they suppose the
existence of a gaseous sphere, they would find negative
space, which would transport them in a moment not only into
nothingness but beyond nothingness, far beyond the sphere of
nothingness. The modern materialistic cosmologies developed
today are pure fantasy. In more ancient times, people did not
picture the sun as a gaseous sphere floating in heavenly
space; .the sun in their view, was a spiritual being. Even
today the sun is a spiritual being to those who contemplate
the world in a real way; it is a spiritual being manifesting
itself only outwardly in the way in which the eye is able to
perceive the sun. This central spiritual being was
experienced by a more ancient humanity as one with the
Christ. When speaking of Christ, the ancients pointed to the
sun. More recent humanity must now not point away from the
earth but rather toward the earth when it speaks of the
Christ. It must search for the sun in the Man of
Golgotha.
By recognizing
the sun as a spiritual being, it was possible to connect a
conception worthy of the human being with the beginning and
end of the earth. The conception of Jesus, in whom Christ
dwelt, renders possible a conception worthy of the human
being regarding the middle of the earth's evolution; from
there will ray out toward beginning and end that which will
once more make the whole cosmos appear in a light that gives
man his place in the universe. We should therefore live
toward a time in which hypotheses concerning the world's
beginning and end will not be constructed on the basis of
materialistic, natural scientific conceptions, but which will
proceed from the knowledge of the Mystery of Golgotha. This
will also enable us to survey all of cosmic evolution. In the
outwardly luminous sun, the ancient human being sensed the
Christ of the outer world. The true knowledge of the Mystery
of Golgotha enables man to see in the historical evolution of
the earth the sun of this earthly evolution through Christ.
The sun shines outside in the world and also in history
— it shines physically outside and spiritually in
history; sun here and sun there.
This indicates
the path to the Mystery of Golgotha from the viewpoint of
freedom. Modern humanity must find it, if it wishes to
transcend the forces of decline and enter the forces of
ascent. This should be realized deeply and thoroughly. This
knowledge will not be abstract, not merely theoretical, but
one that fills the whole human being. It will be a knowledge
that must be felt, must be experienced in feeling. The
Christianity about which anthroposophy must speak will not be
a looking to Christ but a being filled with Christ.
People would
always like to know the difference between anthroposophy and
what lived as the older theosophy. Is this difference not
evident? The older theosophy has warmed up the pagan
cosmologies. In the theosophical literature you will discover
everywhere warmed-up pagan cosmologies, which are no longer
suited to modern human beings; although theosophy speaks of
the earth's beginning and end, this no longer means what it
meant in the past. What is missing in these writings? The
center is missing, the Mystery of Golgotha is missing
throughout. It is missing to an even greater extent than in
outer natural science.
Anthroposophy
has a continuing cosmology that does not extinguish the
Mystery of Golgotha but accepts it, so that this Mystery is
contained within it. The whole evolution, reaching back as
far as Saturn and forward as far as Vulcan, is seen in such a
way that this light enabling us to see will ray out from the
knowledge of the Mystery of Golgotha. If we but recognize
this principal contrast, we shall no longer have any doubt as
to the difference between the older theosophy and
anthroposophy.
Particularly
when so-called Christian theologians again and again lump
together anthroposophy and theosophy, this is due to the fact
that they do not really understand much about Christianity.
It is deeply significant that Nietzsche's friend, Overbeck,
[ Note 17 ]
the truly significant theologian of Basel, wrote a book on the
Christianity of modern theology, in which he tried to prove
that modern theology — including Christian theology
— is no longer Christian. One may therefore say that
even here outer science has already drawn attention to the
fact that modern Christian theology does not understand or
know anything about Christianity.
One should
thoroughly understand everything that is unchristian. Modern
theology, in any case, is not truly Christian; it is
unchristian. Yet people prefer to ignore these things due to
their love of ease. They should not be ignored, however, for
to the extent to which they are ignored, man will lose the
possibility of inwardly experiencing Christianity. This must
be experienced, for it is the opposite pole to the experience
of freedom, which must emerge. Freedom must be experienced,
but the experience of freedom alone would lead human beings
into the abyss. Only the Mystery of Golgotha can lead
humanity across this abyss.
We shall speak
of this more next time.
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