PART ONE THE MYSTERY OF THE TRINITY
LECTURE ONE
DORNACH, JULY 23, 1922
WE HAVE OFTEN drawn
attention to the fact that the spiritual life of the first four
Christian centuries has been completely buried, that
everything written today about the views and knowledge of human
beings living at the time of the mystery of Golgotha and during the
four centuries thereafter is based on sources which have come to us
essentially through the writings of the opponents of gnosticism.
This means that the “backward seeing” of the
spiritual researcher is necessary to create a more exact
picture of what actually took place during these first four
Christian centuries. In this sense I have recently attempted
to present a picture of Julian the Apostate.
[Note 1]
Now, we cannot say that the following
centuries, as presented in the usual historical descriptions, are
very clear to people today. What we could call the soul life of the
European population from the fifth on into the twelfth, thirteenth,
and fourteenth centuries remains completely unclear in the usual
historical portrayals. What do we find, then, basically represented
in these usual historical portrayals? And what do we find
even if we look at the writings of facile, so-called
dramatists and authors, writers such as Ernst von Wildenbruch,
[Note 2]
whose writings are, in essence, nothing more than the
family histories of Louis the Pious or other similar personages,
garnished with superficial pageantry, and then presented to
us as history?
It is extremely important to look at the
truth concerning European life during those times when so
much of the present originated. If we want to understand
anything at all concerning the deeper streams of culture, including
the culture of recent times, we must understand the soul life of
the European population in those times. Here I would like to begin
with something which will, no doubt, be somewhat remote from many
of you; we need, however, to address this subject because it can
only be seen properly today in the light of spiritual
science.
As you know there is something today
called theology. This theology — basically all our present
day European theology — actually came into being
— in its fundamental structure, in its inner nature —
during the time from the fourth and fifth centuries after Christ
through the following very dark centuries up to the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries, when it was brought to a certain
conclusion through scholasticism. From the point of view of
this theology, which was really only developed in its
essential nature in the time after Augustine, Augustine himself
could no longer be understood; or, at best, he could barely
be understood, while all that preceded him, for example, what
was said about the mystery of Golgotha, could no longer be
understood at all.
[Note 3]
Let us consider the essence of this
theology which developed precisely during the darkest times of the
Middle Ages, darkest, that is, for our external knowledge. Above
all, it becomes clear to us that this theology is something
entirely different from the theology that came before it — if
indeed what came before can be called theology. What theology
had been before was actually only transplanted like a legacy into
the times in which the theology I have just characterized arose.
And you can get an impression of what earlier theology was like if
you read the short essay on Dionysius the Areopagite in this week's
edition of the Goetheanum,
[Note 4]
There you will find a portrayal
of the way in which human beings related to the world in the first
Christian centuries, a way altogether different from that
which came to prevail by the time of the ninth, tenth, and
following centuries.
In contrast to the later, newer theology,
the old theology — the theology of which Dionysius the
Areopagite was a late product — saw everything that related
to the spiritual world from within and had a direct view of what
happens in the spiritual worlds. If we want to gain insight into
the way adherents of this old theology actually thought, into the
way the soul of this theology inwardly regarded things, then once
again we can really only do so with the methods of present-day
anthroposophical spiritual science.
We then come to the following results.
(Yesterday, from another point of view I characterized something
very similar.)
[Note 5]
In the ascent to Imagination, in the
entire process of climbing, ascending to imaginative knowledge, we
notice more and more that we are dwelling suspended in spiritual
processes. This “hovering” in spiritual processes
with our entire soul life we experience as if we were coming
into contact with beings who do not live on the physical plane.
Perceptions from our sense organs cease, and we experience that, to
a certain extent, everything that is sense perception disappears.
But during the whole process it seems as if we were being helped by
beings from a higher world. We come to understand these as the same
beings that the old theology had beheld as angels, archangels,
and archai. I could, therefore, say that the angels
help us to penetrate up into imaginative knowledge. The sense
world “breaks up,” just as clouds disperse, and we see
into what is behind the sense world. Behind the sense world a
capacity that we can call Inspiration opens up; behind this sense
world is then revealed the second hierarchy, the hierarchy of
the exusiai, dynamis, and kyriotetes.
These ordering and creative beings
present themselves to the inspired knowledge of the soul. And when
we ascend further still, from Inspiration to Intuition, then we
come to the first hierarchy, the thrones, cherubim,
and seraphim. Through immediate spiritual training we
can experience the realities that the older theologians actually
referred to when they used such terms as first, second, and third
hierarchy.
Now, it is just when we look at the
theology of the first Christian centuries, which has been
almost entirely stamped out, that we notice the following: in a
certain way that early theology still had an awareness that when
man directs his senses toward the usual, sensible, external world,
he may see the things in that world and he may believe in their
existence, but he does not actually know that world. There is
a very definite consciousness present in this old theology: the
consciousness that one must first have experienced something in the
spiritual world before the concepts present themselves with
which one can then approach the sense world and, so to speak,
illuminate it with ideas acquired from the spiritual
world.
In a certain way this also corresponds to
the views resulting from an older, dreamlike, atavistic
clairvoyance, under the influence of which people first
looked into a spiritual world — though only with dreamlike
perceptions — and then applied what they experienced there to
their sense perceptions. If these people had had before them only a
view of the sense world, it would have seemed to them as if they
were standing in a dark room with no light. However, if they first
had their spiritual vision, a result of pure seeing into the world
of the spirit, and then applied it to the sense world — if,
for example, they had first beheld something of the creative powers
of the animal world and then applied that vision to the outer,
physical animals — then they would feel as though they were
walking into the dark room with a lamp. They would feel that they
were walking into the world of the senses and illuminating it with
a spiritual mode of viewing. Only in this way was the sense world
truly known. This was the consciousness of these older
theologians. For this reason the entire Christology of the first
Christian centuries was actually viewed from within.
The process which took place, the
descent of Christ into the earthly world, was essentially seen not
from the outside but rather from the inside, from the spiritual
side. One first sought out Christ in spiritual worlds and then
followed him as he descended into the physical, sensible world.
That was the consciousness of the older theologians.
Then the following happened: the Roman
world, which the Christian impulse followed in its greatest
westward development, was permeated in its spiritual understanding
with an inclination, a fondness, for the abstract. The Romans
tended to translate perceptions, observations, and insights
into abstract concepts. However, the Roman world was actually
decaying and falling apart while Christianity gradually spread
toward the west. And, in addition, the northern peoples were
pushing from the eastern part of Europe into the west and the
south. Now, it is remarkable that, at the very time Rome was
decaying and the fresh peoples from the north were arriving, a
college was created on the Italian peninsula, a collegium
concerning which I spoke recently, which set for itself the task of
using all these events to completely root out the old views and
modes of seeing, to allow to survive for posterity only those
writings which this college felt comfortable with.
[Note 6]
History reports nothing concerning these
events; nevertheless, they were real. If such a history did exist,
it would point out how this college was created as a successor to
the pontifical college of ancient Rome. Everything that this
college did not allow was thoroughly swept away and what remained
was modified before being passed on to posterity. Just as Rome
invented the last will and testament as a part of its national
economic order so that the dispositions of the individual human
will could continue to work beyond the individual's life, so there
arose in this college the desire to have the essence of Rome live
on in the following ages of historical development if only as an
inheritance, as the mere sum of dogmas that had been developed over
many generations. “For as long as possible nothing new shall
be seen in the spiritual world” — so decreed this
college. “The principle of initiation shall be completely
rooted out and destroyed. Only the writings we are now modifying
are to survive for posterity.” If the facts were to be
presented in a dry, objective fashion they would be presented in
this way. Entirely different destinies would have befallen
Christianity — it would have been entirely rigidified —
had not the northern peoples come pushing into the west and the
south. These northern peoples brought with them their own natural
talent, a predisposition entirely different from that of the
southern peoples, the Greeks and the Romans — different, that
is, from that earlier southern predisposition that had originated
the older theology.
In earlier times at least, the talent of
the southern peoples had been the following: Among the earlier
Romans and even more among the earlier Greeks there were always
individuals from the mass of the people who developed themselves,
who passed through an initiation and then could see into the
spiritual world. With this vision the older theology arose, the
theology that possessed a direct perception of the spiritual
world. Such vision in its last phase is preserved in the theology
of Dionysius the Areopagite. Let us consider one of the older
theologians, say from the first or second century after the mystery
of Golgotha, one of those theologians who still drew wisdom from
the old science of initiation. If he had wanted to present
the essence, I would like to say, the principles of his theology,
he would have said: In order to have any relationship to the
spiritual world, a human being must first obtain knowledge of the
spiritual world, either directly through his own initiation or as
the pupil of an initiate. Then, after acquiring ideas and concepts
in the spiritual world he could apply these ideas and concepts to
the world of the senses. Those were more or less the abstract
principles of such an older theologian. The whole tendency of the
older theological mood predisposed the soul to see the events in
the world inwardly, first to see the spiritual and then to
admit to oneself that the sensible world can only be seen if one
starts from the spiritual. Such a theology could only result as the
ripest product of an old atavistic clairvoyance, for
atavistic clairvoyance was also an inner seeing or
perception, though only of dreamlike imaginations.
But to begin with, the peoples coming down
from the north had nothing of this older theological drive, that,
as I said, was so strong in the Greeks. The natural abilities of
the Gothic peoples, the Germanic, did not allow such a theological
mood to rise up directly in the soul in an unmediated way. To
properly understand the drive that these northern peoples brought
into the development of Europe in the following ages (through
the Germanic tribes, the Goths, the Anglo-Saxons, the Franks, and
so forth) we must resort to spiritual scientific means, for
recorded history reports nothing of this. Initiates, able to see
directly into the spiritual world in order to survey from
that vantage point the sense world, could not arise from within the
ranks of these peoples storming down from the north because their
inner soul disposition was different. These peoples were themselves
still somewhat atavistically clairvoyant; they were actually still
at an earlier, more primitive stage of humanity's development.
These peoples — Goths, Lombards, and so forth — still
brought some of the old clairvoyance with them. But this old
clairvoyance was not related to inner perceptions — to spiritual
perceptions, yes — but rather to spiritual perceptions of
things outer. The northern peoples did not see the spiritual
world from the inside, so to speak, as had the southern peoples.
The Northerners saw the spiritual world from the outside.
What does it mean to say that these
peoples saw the spiritual world from the outside? Say that these people saw a brave man
die in battle. The life in which they saw this man spiritually from
the outside was not at an end for them. Now, with his
death, they could follow him — still from the
outside
spiritually speaking — on
his path into the spiritual world. They could follow not only the
way this man lived into the spiritual world but also the ways in
which he continued to be active on behalf of human beings on the
earth. And so these northern peoples could say: Someone or other
has died, after this or that significant deed, perhaps, or after
his having been the leader of this people or that tribe. We see his
soul, how it continues to live, how (if he had been a soldier) he
is received by the great soldiers in Valhalla, or how he lives on
in some other way. This soul, this man, is still here. He continues
to live and is actually present. Death is merely an event which
takes place here on the earth. Such an experience, having come with
the northern peoples, was present in the fourth and fifth on
through the twelfth and thirteenth centuries before being
essentially buried. This was the perception of the dead as
actually always present, the awareness that the souls of human
beings who were greatly venerated were still present, even for
earthly human beings. They were even still able to lead in battle.
People of that time thought of these souls as still present, as not
disappearing for the earthly. With the forces given them by the
spiritual world these souls continued, in a certain sense, the
functions of their earthly lives. The atavistic clairvoyance of the
northern peoples was such then, that, as they saw the activities of
people here on the earth, they also beheld a kind of shadow world
directly above people on earth. The dead were in this shadow world.
One needed only to look — these people felt — to see
that those from the last and next to last generation actually
continue to live. They are here, we experience community with them.
For them to be present we need only to listen up into their
realm.
This feeling, that the dead are here, was
present, was incredibly strong, in the time that followed the
fourth century, when the northern culture mixed with the Roman. You
see, the northern peoples took Christ into this way of perceiving.
They looked first at this world of the dead, who were actually the
truly living. They saw hovering above them entire populations of
the dead, and they beheld these dead as being actually more alive
than themselves. They did not seek Christ here on the earth among
people walking in the physical world; they sought Christ there
where these living dead were. There they sought him as one who is
really present above the earth. And you will only get the proper
feeling concerning the Heliand, which was supposedly written by a Saxon
priest, if you develop these ways of perceiving.
[Note 7]
The descriptions in the Heliand follow these old German customs.
You will understand the Heliand's concrete description of Christ
among living human beings only if you understand that actually the scenes
are to be transplanted half into the kingdom of shadows where the
living dead are dwelling. You will understand much more, if you
truly grasp this predisposition, this ability, which came about
through the mixing of the northern with the Roman peoples.
There is something recorded in literary
history to which people should actually give a great deal of
thought. However, people of the present age have almost entirely
given up the ability to think about such clearly startling
phenomena found in the life of humanity. But pursuing
literary history, you will find, for example, writings in
which Charlemagne (742–814) is mentioned as a leader in the
Crusades. Charlemagne is simply listed as a leader in the Crusades.
[Note 8]
Indeed, you will find Charlemagne
described as a living person again and again throughout the entire
time that followed the ninth century. People everywhere called upon
him. He is described as if he were there. And when the crusades
began, centuries after his death, poems were written
describing Charlemagne as if he were with the crusaders marching
against the infidels.
We only understand such writings properly
if we know that in the so-called dark centuries of the Middle Ages,
the true history of which is entirely obliterated, there was this
awareness of the living multitudes of the dead, who lived on as
shadows. It was only later that Charlemagne was placed in the
Untersberg. Much later, when the spirit of intellectualism had
grown strong enough for this life in the shadows to have ceased,
then Charlemagne was transplanted into the Untersberg (and, as
another example, Frederick Barbarossa, the Holy Roman
Emperor, into Kyffhaeuserberg).
[Note 9]
Until that time people knew that Charlemagne was still living among them.
But wherein did these people, who
atavistically saw the dead living above them, wherein did these
people seek their Christianity, their Christology, their
Christian way of seeing? They sought it in this way: they directed
their sight toward what results when a living dead person like
Charlemagne, who was revered in life, came before their souls with
all those who were still his followers. And so through long
ages Charlemagne was seen undertaking the first crusade against the
infidels in Spain. But he was seen in such a way that the entire
crusade was actually transplanted into the shadow world. The people
of that time saw this crusade in the shadow world after it had been
undertaken on the physical plane; they let it continue working in
the shadow world — as an image of the Christ who works in the
world. Therefore, Christ was described riding south toward Spain
among the twelve paladins, one of whom was a Judas who eventually
betrayed the entire endeavor.
[Note 10]
So we see how clairvoyant perception was directed toward the outside
of the spiritual world — not, as in earlier times, toward the
inside — but rather now toward the outside,
toward that which results when one looks at the spirits from the
outside just as one looked at them earlier from the inside. Now,
the splendor of the Christ event was reflected onto all the most
important things that took place in the world of shadows.
From the fourth to the thirteenth and
fourteenth centuries there lived in Europe the idea that people who
had died, if they had accomplished important deeds in life,
arranged their afterlife so as to enable themselves to be seen with
something like a reflected splendor, an image, of the Christ event.
One saw everywhere the continuation of the Christ event — if
I may express myself so — as shadows in the air. If people
had spoken of the things they felt, they would have said: Above us
the Christ stream still hovers; Charlemagne undertook to place
himself in this Christ stream and with his paladins he created an
image of Christ with the twelve apostles; the deeds of Christ were
continued by Charlemagne in the true spiritual world.
This was how people thought of these
things in the so-called dark time of the Middle Ages. There was the
spiritual world, seen from without, I would like to say, as if
imaged after the sense world, like a shadow picture of the sense
world (whereas in the earlier times, of which the old theology was
only a weak reflection, the spiritual world was seen from
within). For merely intellectual human beings the difference
between this physical world and the spiritual world is such that an
abyss exists between the two. This difference did not exist in the
first centuries of the Middle Ages, in the so-called Dark
Ages. The dead remained with the living. During the first period
after their death, after they had been born into the spiritual
world, especially outstanding and revered personalities underwent a
novitiate to become saints.
For the people of those times to speak of
these living dead as if they were real personalities after they had
been born into the spiritual world — this was not
unusual. And you see, a number of these living dead, especially
chosen ones, were called to become guardians of the Holy Grail.
Specially chosen living dead were designated as guardians of the
Holy Grail. And the Grail legend could never be completely
understood without the knowledge of who these guardians of the
Grail actually were. To say: “Then the guardians of the Grail
weren't real people” would have seemed laughable to the
people of that time. For they would have said: Do you who are only
shadow figures walking on the earth really believe that you are
more real than those who have died and now are gathered around the
Grail? To those who lived in those times it would have appeared
laughable for the little figures here on the earth to consider
themselves more real than the living dead. We must feel our way
into the souls of that time, and this is simply how those souls
felt. Their consciousness of this connection with the spiritual
world meant much for the world, and much for their souls. They
would have said to themselves: To begin with, the people here on
the earth consist of nothing more than what they are, right now,
directly here. But a human being of the present will only become
something proper and good if he takes into himself what one
of the living dead can give him.
In a certain sense, physical human beings
on the earth were seen as though they were merely vehicles for the
outer working of the living dead. It was a peculiarity of those
centuries that one said: If the living dead want to accomplish
something here on earth, for which hands are needed, then they
enter into a physically incarnated human being and do it
through him. Not only that, but there were, furthermore, people in
those times who said to themselves: One can do no better than to
provide a vehicle for human beings who were revered while living on
the earth and who have now become beings of such importance in the
realm of the living dead that it is granted to them to guard the
Holy Grail. And the view existed among the people of those times
that individuals could dedicate themselves to the Order of
the Swan. Those people dedicated themselves to the Order of the
Swan who wanted the knights of the Grail to be able to work through
them here in the physical world. A human being through whom a
knight of the Grail was working here in the physical world was
called a Swan.
Now,
think of the Lohengrin legend.
[Note 11]
When Elsa of Brabant is in great need, the swan comes. The swan
who appears is a member of the Knights of the Swan, who has
received into himself a companion of the circle of the Holy
Grail. One is not permitted to ask him about his secret. In
that century, and also in the following centuries, princes such as
Henry I of Saxony were happiest of all when, as in his
campaign into Hungary, he was able to have this Knight of the Swan,
this Lohengrin, in his army.
[Note 12]
But there were knights of many kinds who
regarded themselves primarily as only outer vehicles for
those from the other side of death who were still fighting in the
armies. They wanted to be united with the dead; they knew they were
united with them. The legend has actually become quite abstract
today. We can only evaluate its significance for the living if we
live into the soul life of the people alive at that time. And this
understanding, which, to begin with, looks simply and solely upon
the physical world and sees how the spiritual man arises out of the
physical man and afterward belongs to the living dead, this
understanding ruled the hearts and minds of that time and was the
most essential element in their souls. They felt that one must
first have known a human being on the earth, that only then can one
rise to his spirit. It was really the case that the whole
understanding was reversed, even in the popular conceptions of the
masses, over against the older views. In olden times people had
looked first into the spiritual world; they strove, if possible, to
see the human being as a spiritual being before his descent
to earth. Then, it was said, one can understand what the human
being is on earth. But now, the following idea emerged among
these northern peoples, after they had mixed with Roman
civilization: We understand the spiritual, if we have first
followed it in the physical world, and it has then lifted itself
out of the physical world as something spiritual. This was the
reverse of what had prevailed before.
The reflected splendor of this view then
became the theology of the Middle Ages. The old theologians had
said: First one must have the ideas, first one must know the
spiritual. The concept of faith would have been something entirely
absurd for these old theologians, for they first recognized the
spiritual before they could even begin to think of knowing the
physical, which had to be illumined by the spiritual. Now, however,
when in the world at large people were starting from the point of
view of knowing the physical, it came to this, even in theology.
Theologians began to think in this way: For knowledge one must
start with the world of sense. Then, from the things of the senses
one must extract the concepts — no longer bring the concepts
from the spiritual world to the things of sense, but now extract
the concepts from the things of sense themselves.
Now imagine the Roman world in its
decline; and then imagine, within that world, what still
remained as a struggle from the olden time: namely, the fact that
concepts were experienced in the spiritual world and then brought
to meet the things of the senses. This was felt by such a man as
Martianus Capella, who in the fifth century wrote his treatise,
De Nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii,
wherein he wrestled still to find within the spiritual world itself
that which was becoming increasingly abstract in the life of ideas.
[Note 13]
But this old view went under because the Roman
conspiracy against the spirit — in that college or
committee I have told you about — had destroyed everything
representing a direct human connection with the spirit. We see how
that direct connection gradually vanished. The old vision
ceased. Living in the old conception a human being knew: When I
reach over into the spiritual world angels accompany me. If
they were Greeks they called them “guardians.” A person
who went forth on the path of the spirit knew he was accompanied by
a guardian spirit.
That
which in ancient times had been a real spiritual being, the guardian,
was grammatica, the first stage of the seven liberal
arts, at the time when Capella wrote. In olden times men had known
that which lives in grammar, in words and syntax, can lead up into
imagination. They knew that the angel, the guardian, was working in
the relationships between words. If we read the old descriptions,
nowhere would we ever find an abstract definition. It is
interesting that Capella does not describe grammar as the later
Renaissance did. To him grammar is still a real person. So, too,
rhetoric at the second stage is still a real person. For the later
Renaissance such figures became mere allegories — straw
figures for intellectual concepts. In earlier times they had also
been spiritual perceptions that did not merely edify as they
did in Capella's writings. They had been creative beings, and the
entry that they had initiated into the spirit was felt as a
penetration into a realm of creative beings. Now with Capella they
had become allegories; but nevertheless, at least they were still
allegorical. Though they were no longer stately, though they had
become very pale and thin, they were still ladies:
grammatica, rhetorica, dialectica.
They were very thin and weak. All that
was left of them, as it were, was the bones of spiritual effort and
the skin of concepts; nevertheless, they were still quite
respectable ladies who carried Capella, the earliest to write on
the seven liberal arts, into the spiritual world. One by one he
made the acquaintance of these seven ladies: first the lady
grammatica, then the lady rhetorica, the lady
dialectica, the lady arithmetica, the lady
geometria, the lady musica, and finally the heavenly lady
astrologia, who towered over them all. These
were certainly ladies, and as I said, there were seven of them. The
sevenfold feminine leads us onward and upward, so might Capella
have concluded when describing his path to wisdom. But think of
what became of it in the monastery schools of the later Middle
Ages. When these later writers labored at grammar and rhetoric they
no longer felt that “the eternal feminine leads us onward and
upward.” And that is really what happened: Out of the living
being there first came the allegorical and then the merely
intellectual abstraction.
Homer, who in olden times had sought the
way from the humanly spoken word to the cosmic word, so that the
cosmic word might pass through him, had to say: “Sing me, O
muse, of Peleus' son, Achilles.” From the stage when a
spiritual being led a person on to the point in the spiritual world
at which it was no longer he himself but the muse who sang of the
wrath of Achilles, from that stage to the stage when rhetoric
herself was speaking in the Roman way, and then to the mingling of
the Roman with the life that came downward from the north —
was a long, long way. Finally, everything became abstract,
conceptual, and intellectual. The farther we go toward the east and
into olden times the more we find everything immersed in concrete
spiritual life: the theologian of old had gone to the
spiritual beings for his concepts, which he then applied to this
world. But the theologian who grew out of what arose from the
merging of the northern peoples with the Roman said: Knowledge must
be sought here in the sense world; here we gain our concepts. But
he could not rise into the spiritual world with these concepts. For
the Roman college had thoroughly seen to it that although men might
angle around down here in the world of sense, they could not get
beyond this world. Formerly men had also had the world of the
senses, but they had sought and found their concepts and ideas in
the spiritual world; and these concepts then, helped them to
illuminate the physical world. But now they extracted their
concepts out of the physical world itself, and they did not get far
— they only arrived at an interpretation of the physical
world. They could no longer reach upward by an independent path of
knowledge. But they still had a legacy from the past. It was
written down or preserved in traditions embodied and
rigidified in dogmas. It was preserved in the creed. Whatever could
be said about the spirit was contained therein. It was there. They
increasingly arrived at a consciousness that all that had been said
concerning the realms above as a result of higher revelation must
remain untouched. The revelations could no longer be checked. The
kind of knowledge that can be checked now remained down below
— our conceptual life must be obtained here in the physical
world.
So in the course of time what had still
been present in the first dark centuries of the Middle Ages
persisted merely as a written legacy. For it had become quite
another time when the medieval, atavistic clairvoyance of the Saxon
“peasant,” as he is called (though, as the
Heliand
shows, he was, in any case, a
priest, born of the peasantry) still existed in Europe. Simply
looking at the human beings around him this Saxon peasant-priest
had the faculty to see how the soul and spirit goes forth at
death and becomes the dead and yet alive, living human being. Thus,
in the train of those that hover over the earthly realm, he
describes his vision of the Christ event in the poem, the
Heliand.
But what was living here on the earth was
drawn further and further down into the realm of the merely
lifeless. Atavistic clairvoyant abilities came to an end, and
people now only sought for concepts in the sense world. What kind
of a view and attitude resulted? It was this: There is no need to
pay heed to the super-sensible when it comes to knowledge.
What we need is contained in the sacred writings and traditions. We
need only refer to the old books and look into the old traditions.
Everything we should know about the super-sensible is contained
there. And now in the environment of the sense world, we are not
confused if for knowledge we take into account only the concepts
contained in the sense world itself.
More and more this consciousness came to
life: The super-sensible is preserved for us and will so
remain. If we want to do research we must limit ourselves to the
sense world. Someone who remained entirely within this habit of
mind, who continued, as it were, in the nineteenth century this
activity of extracting concepts out of the sense world that the
Saxon peasant-priest who wrote the Heliand had practiced, was
Gregor Mendel.
[Note 14]
Why should we concern ourselves with
investigations of the olden times into matters of heredity? They
are all recorded in the Old Testament. Let us look, rather, down
into the world of sense and see how the red and the white sweet
peas will cross with one another, giving rise to red, white, and
speckled flowers and so forth. Thus you can become a mighty
scientist without coming into conflict or disharmony with what is
said about the super-sensible, which remains untouched. It was
precisely our modern theology, evolved out of the old
theology along the lines I have characterized, that impelled people
to investigate nature in the manner of Gregor Mendel, whose
approach was that of a genuine Catholic priest.
And then what happened? Natural
scientists, whose science is so “free from bias,”
subsequently canonized Gregor Mendel as a saint. Although this is
not their way of speaking, we can describe Mendel's fate in these
terms. At first they treated him without respect; now they canonize
him after their fashion, proclaiming him a great scientist in all
their academies. All this is not without its inner connections. The
science of the present time is only possible inasmuch as it
is constituted in such a way as to regard as a great scientist
precisely one who stands so thoroughly upon the standpoint of
medieval theology! The natural science of our time is through and
through the continuation of the essence of scholastic
theology — its subsequent proliferation, its diversification.
It is the continuation into our time of the scholastic era. Hence
it is quite proper for Johann Gregor Mendel to be subsequently
recognized as a great scientist; that he is, but in the good
Catholic sense. It made good Catholic sense for Mendel to look only
at sweet peas as they cross with one another, it was following
Catholic principle, because all that is super-sensible is
contained in the sacred traditions and books. But we see that this
does not make sense for natural scientists, none in the least
— only if they are bent on stopping short at the stage of
ignoramuses and giving themselves up to complete agnosticism would
it make any sense to limit research to the sense world.
This is the fundamental contradiction of
our time. This contradiction is what we must be attentive to.
For if we fail to look at these spiritual realities we shall never
understand the source of all the confusion, of all the
contradictions and inconsistencies, in the endeavors of the present
day. But the easygoing comfort of our time does not allow people to
awaken and really to look into these contradictory
tendencies.
Think what will happen when all that is
said about today's world events becomes history. Posterity will get
this history. Do you think they will get much truth? Certainly not.
Yet history for us has been made in this very way. These puppets of
history, which are described in the usual textbooks, do not
represent what has really happened in human evolution. We have
arrived at a time when it is absolutely necessary for people to
learn to know what the real events are. It is not enough for all
the legends to be recorded as they are in our current histories
— the legends about Attila and Charlemagne, or Louis the
Pious, where history begins to be altogether fabulous. The most
important things of all are overlooked in these writings; for it is
really only the histories of the soul that make the present time
intelligible.
Anthroposophical spiritual science must
throw light into the evolving souls of human beings.
Because we have forgotten
how to look into the spiritual, we no longer have any
history. Anyone of
sensibility can see that in Martianus Capella the old guides and
guardians who used to lead people into the spiritual world have
become very thin, very lean ladies. But those whom historians teach
us to know as Henry I, Otto I, Otto II, Henry II, and so on —
they appear as mere puppets of history, formed after the pattern of
those who had grown into the thin and pale ladies, after grammar,
rhetoric, dialectic, and the others. When all is said and done the
personalities who are enumerated in succession in our histories
have no more fat on them than those ladies.
Things must be seen as they really are.
Actually the people of today should be yearning to see things as
they are. Therefore, it is a duty to describe these things wherever
possible, and they can be described today within the
Anthroposophical Society. I hope that this society, at least, may
some day wake up.
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