Appendix
Introductory
Comments to the Lecture Cycle
The Spiritual Guidance of the Individual and Humanity
Copenhagen, June 5, 1911
The Mission of the New Revelation of the Spirit
In the next
few days I will have the opportunity to speak here about a theosophical
subject that is important to me, namely, the spiritual guidance of the
individual and humanity. Since our friends here have asked me to, I
will preface my lecture series today with a few comments that may serve
as a kind of introduction to the subject.
Theosophists
must have as a characteristic what we may call an inherent yearning
for self-knowledge in the broadest sense. Even people only slightly
familiar with theosophy can sense that such self-knowledge will give
birth to a a comprehensive appreciation for all human feeling and thinking
as well as for all other beings. This appreciation must be an indispensable
part of our whole theosophical movement.
(*)
Often
people do not understand clearly that in our German theosophical movement
what lights up our way is the sign you know as the mark of the Cross
with Roses. It is easy to harbor misunderstandings about our spiritual,
theosophical movement that seeks to live into the spiritual life of today
— that is, into our hearts and their feelings, our will and its
deeds — under the sign of the Rose Cross. People easily misunderstand
our movement. Many people, even those with good intentions, have difficulty
realizing that our spiritual movement, working under the sign of the
Rose Cross, is inspired in all its principles — in its whole feeling
and sensitivity — to be understanding and tolerant of every human
striving and every aspiration. Though this tolerance is an inherent
characteristic of the Rosicrucian movement, it may not be obvious at first
glance, because it lies in its depths. You will find, therefore, that
people who confuse tolerance with the one-sided acceptance of their own
opinions, principles, and methods are particularly likely to misunderstand
our movement.
It is very
easy to imagine this tolerance; yet to attain it is extremely difficult.
After all, we find it easy to believe that people who disagree with
us are our opponents or enemies. Similarly, we can easily mistake our
own opinion for a generally accepted truth. For theosophy to flourish
and be fruitful for the spiritual life of the future, however, we have
to meet each other on an all-inclusive basis. Our souls must be filled
with profound understanding not only for those who share our beliefs
but also for those who, compelled by the circumstances of their own
experience, their own path through life, may perhaps advocate the opposite
of what we do. The old morality, now on the wane, taught us to love and to
be tolerant of those who share our thoughts and feelings. However, with
its truth, theosophy will more and more radiate a much more far-reaching
tolerance into people's hearts. This more profound tolerance will
enable us to meet others with understanding and encouragement and to
live in harmony with them, even when their thoughts and feelings differ
completely from our own.
This
touches upon an important issue. What do people come upon first when they
turn to the theosophical movement? What are they compelled to acknowledge
first? Normally, the general insight people encounter first when they
approach theosophy is the idea of reincarnation and karma — the
idea of the continued working of causes from one life into the next.
Of course, this is not a dogma for us. Indeed, we may have different
opinions about this basic insight. Still, the conviction of reincarnation
and karma forces itself upon us right from the start of our acquaintance
with theosophy. However, it is a long way from the day we first become
convinced of these truths to the moment when we can begin, in some way,
to see our whole life in the light of these truths. It takes a long
time for the conviction to become fully alive in our soul.
For example,
we may meet a person who mocks or even insults us. If we have immersed
ourselves in the teaching of reincarnation and karma for a long time,
we will wonder who has spoken the hurtful, insulting words our ears
have heard. Who has heaped mockery upon us — or even who has raised
the hand to hit us? We will then realize that we ourselves did this.
The hand raised for the blow only appears to belong to the other person.
Ultimately, we cause the other to raise his or her hand against us through
our own past karma.
This
merely hints at the long path from the abstract, theoretical conviction
of karma to the point where we can see our whole life in the light of this
idea. Only then do we really feel God within us and no longer experience
him only as our own higher self, which teaches us that a tiny spark
within us shares in God's divinity. Instead, we learn to be aware of
this higher self in such a way that a feeling of unlimited responsibility
fills us. We feel responsible not only for our actions, but also for
what we suffer, because what we suffer now is after all only the necessary
result of what we did in the far-distant past.
Let us
experience this feeling pouring into our souls as the warm, spiritual
life blood of a new culture. Let us feel how new concepts of responsibility
and of love arise and take hold of our souls through theosophy. Let us
recognize that is no empty phrase to claim that the theosophical movement
arose in our time because human beings need new moral, intellectual, and
spiritual impulses. And let us be aware that a new spiritual revelation is
about to pour itself forth into our hearts and our convictions through
theosophy, not arbitrarily, but because the new moral impulses and the
new concepts of responsibility — and, indeed, the destiny of humanity
— require such a new spiritual revelation. Then we can know in an
immediate, living way that it has a coherent meaning for the world that
the same souls present here now repeatedly lived on earth in the past. We
have to ask what this meaning is — why are we incarnated again
and again?
We find
this meaning when we learn through theosophy that every time we see
all the wonders of this world with new eyes in a new body, we get a
glimpse of the divine revelations veiled by the sensory world. Or, with
our newly formed ears, we can listen to the divine revelation in the
world of sound. Thus, we learn that in every new incarnation we can
and should experience something new on earth. We understand that some
people are destined by karma to announce prophetically what all of humanity
will gradually, bit by bit, accept as the meaning of an epoch.
What
people in the Theosophical Society — and in the theosophical movement
in general — know because of these revelations from the spiritual
world has to flow into all aspects of human culture. The souls living
in this world now in their physical bodies feel drawn to theosophy because
they know that this new element must be added to what human beings have
already gained for themselves from the spiritual world in the past.
We must keep in mind, however, that in every epoch the whole meaning
of the mystery of the universe must be understood anew. Thus, in every
epoch we have to meet anew what is revealed to us out of the spiritual
worlds.
Our epoch
is unique; though people often carelessly characterize every age as one
of transition, this term — which is often just an empty phrase
— applies in its truest sense to our time. Indeed, an epoch is
dawning when we will have to witness many new developments in the
evolution of the earth. We will have to think in a new way about many
things. In fact, many people still conceive many new things in the old
style and the old sense, finding it impossible to grasp the new in a new
way. Our old concepts often lag far behind the new revelations.
Let me
point out only one example of this. It is often emphasized — and
rightly so — that human thinking has made tremendous progress in
the last four centuries because it has been able to fathom the physical
structure of the universe. Of course, it is only proper to highlight
the great achievements of Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Bruno, and others.
Nevertheless, this has led to an argument that sounds rather clever
and goes roughly as follows. Copernicus's ideas have led us beyond the
earth into space. In the process, what Giordano Bruno suspected has
turned out to be true: our earth is only a small celestial body among
countless others. And in spite of this, so the argument goes, we are
supposed to believe that the greatest drama ever, the central event
of evolution, took place on this earth and that the life of Christ Jesus
is at the center of evolution. Why would an event of such great importance
for the whole universe have been played out here on this small planet
earth, which — as we have learned — is only one tiny planet
among countless others?
This
argument seems plausible — so much so that to our intellect it looks
clever and intelligent. However, this argument does not consider the
depth of spiritual perception revealed in the simple fact that the starting
point of Christianity, the beginning of the greatest event on earth,
is set neither in a royal palace nor any other glamorous place, but
in a manger with poor shepherds. Clearly, spiritual perception did not
content itself with locating this great event on our earth, but also
moved it to a remote corner of the earth. It is small wonder, then,
that this perception strikes us as odd and peculiar next to the claim
that we cannot possibly continue to “have the greatest drama of
world evolution take place in a provincial theater.” (These words
have indeed been used.) However, it is in the nature of Christianity
to have the greatest drama of the universe take place in a provincial
theater as well as elsewhere.
We can see
from all this how difficult it is for us to respond to events with the
proper, true perception. We have to learn a lot before we will understand
what the right thoughts and feelings about human evolution are. Turbulent
times are ahead of us — both for the present and for the near future.
Much of the old is used up and worn out, and the new is being poured into
humanity from the spiritual world. People familiar with human evolution
predict — not because they want to but because history compells them
— that our whole soul life will change during the coming centuries
and that this change will have to begin with a theosophical movement
that has a correct understanding of itself. But the theosophical movement
must fill its role in this change with humility and with a true
understanding of what has to happen for humanity in the coming
centuries.
Only
gradually and over time did people learn to study the structure of the
universe with their intellect as Copernicus, Giordano Bruno, Kepler, and
Galileo did. It was only in recent centuries that people learned to
interpret the world intellectually — in earlier times, they attained
knowledge in a very different way. In the same way, new spiritual insights
are to supersede intellectual knowledge today. Even now, human souls in
their bodies are already yearning to look at the world not just
intellectually. If materialism had not done so much to suppress these
spiritual impulses, such souls, in whom we can virtually sense the
passionate yearning for spiritual contents, could appear even more.
These spiritual impulses could then make themselves felt more strongly
in people who are only waiting for an opportunity to look at the universe
and existence in a different way than they did up to now.
Privileged
people, endowed with what we usually call “grace,” can often
see in their minds' eyes what becomes the general vision of all humanity
centuries later. As I have pointed out frequently, the experience of
the impulse of the Christ event that Paul, an individual filled with
grace, had on the road to Damascus will eventually become the common
property of all human beings. As Paul knew through a spiritual revelation
who Christ was and what he had done, so all people will eventually receive
this knowledge, this vision. We are at the threshold of the age when
many people will experience a renewal of the Christ event of St. Paul.
It is an intrinsic part of the evolution of our earth that many people
will experience for themselves the spiritual vision, the spiritual eye,
that opened up for Paul on the road to Damascus. This spiritual eye
looks into the spiritual world, bringing us the truth about Christ, which
Paul had not believed when he had heard it in Jerusalem. The occurrence
of this event is a historical necessity. This is what has been called the
second advent of Christ in the twentieth century. Christ will be recognized
as an individuality. People will realize that Christ has continually
revealed himself by coming ever closer to the physical plane — from
the moment when he appeared to Moses, as though in a reflection, in
the burning bush to the time when he lived for three years in a human
body. Seeing this, people will understand that Christ is at the center
of earthly evolution.
A body has
only one center of gravity; a scale has only one suspension point.If you
support the scale beam in more than one place, you interfere with the
effects of the law of gravity. A body needs only one center of gravity.
That is why, concerning the central or pivotal point of evolution,
occultists from antiquity to the present have acknowledged that evolution
was headed toward one point, namely, the Mystery of Golgotha, and that
human evolution began its ascent at this point. Still, it is very
difficult to understand what the Christ event, the Mystery of Golgotha,
really means for the spiritual guidance of humanity. To understand this
rightly, we have to silence all the feelings and opinions from this
or that denomination within us. We have to be as impartial and objective
in regard to the Christian methods of education, which have prevailed
for many centuries in the west, as we are regarding other religious
methods of education. Only then can we really come to know the spiritual
center of the earth's evolution. Nevertheless, in the coming centuries
those who proclaim the spiritual central point of human evolution most
fervently will be seen as “bad Christians” — or even
as unworthy of being called Christian at all.
Many
people find even the idea that Christ could incarnate in a human body
only once, and only temporarily — for three years — difficult
to understand. People who have familiarized themselves in more detail with
what Rosicrucian theosophy has to say about this know that the physical
body of Jesus of Nazareth had to be very complicated to accommodate
the powerful individuality of Christ. As we know, one human being would
not have been sufficient for this, and therefore two persons had to
be born. The Gospel of St. Matthew tells the story of one of them, the
Gospel of St. Luke follows the life of the other. We know, too, that the
individuality who incarnated into the Jesus child we meet in the Gospel
of St. Matthew had completed tremendous achievements in its development
in earlier earth lives. At the age of twelve, in order to develop further
capacities, this “Matthew-Jesus” individuality left its body
to dwell in another earthly body — that of the
“Luke-Jesus” — until its thirtieth year.
Thus, everything humanity had ever experienced that
was noble and great, as well as everything that was humble, worked together
on the personality of Jesus of Nazareth so as to enable his body to
take in the being we call Christ. We will have to develop a profound
understanding to grasp what occultists mean when they say that there
can be only one event on Golgotha — as in mechanics a body has only
one center of gravity.
An epoch
that faces great soul events, such as the ones we have briefly outlined
here, is particularly suited to lead us to search our souls. Indeed,
searching our own souls and hearts is now one of the many tasks of all
true theosophists in the theosophical movement. We need to search our own
hearts and souls — return within ourselves — to help us
realize that it requires sacrifice to follow the path to the understanding
of that singular truth of which the occultism of all times has
unambiguously spoken.
Such times
in which the shining lights of truth and the warm gifts of love are to be
poured out over humanity also bring events confirming the truth of the
proverb that “strong lights cast deep shadows.” The deep,
black shadows that enter together with the gifts we have just spoken of
consist of the potential for error. The human heart's susceptibility
to error is inseparably bound up with the great gifts of wisdom that
are to flow into human evolution. Let us not delude ourselves, therefore,
into believing that the erring human soul will be less fallible in times
to come than it has been in the past. On the contrary, our souls will be
even more susceptible to errors in the future than ever before. Occultists
have prophesied this since the dawn of time. In the coming times of
enlightenment, to which I could only allude here, the slightest potential
for error as well as the greatest aberrations can gain ground. Therefore,
it is all the more necessary that we squarely face this potential for
error and realize that because we are to expect great things, error
can all the more easily creep into our weak human hearts.
Regarding
the spiritual guidance of humanity, we have to draw the following lesson
from this potential for error and from the age-old warnings of occultists:
We must exercise the great tolerance we spoke of in the beginning, and
we must give up our habit of blindly believing in authority. Such a
blind belief in authority can be a powerful temptation and can lead
to error. Instead, we must keep our hearts open and receptive to everything
that wants to flow out of the spiritual worlds into humanity in a new
way. Accordingly, to be good theosophists, we must realize that if we
wish to cultivate and foster in our movement the light that is to stream
into human evolution, we must guard against all the errors that can
creep in with the light.
Let us
feel the full extent of this responsibility and open our hearts wide
to see that there has never been a movement on this planet earth that
fostered such open, loving hearts. Let us realize that it is better to
be opposed by those who believe their opinion is the only true one, than
to fight them. It is a long way from one of these extremes to the other.
Nevertheless, those who take up the theosophical movement spiritually
will be able to live with something that has run through all history as
a seed sentence, a motto for all spirituality — and rightly so.
Upon
realizing that though there is much light, the potential for error is
great, you may have doubts and wonder how we weak human beings can find our
way in this confusion. How are we to distinguish between truth and error?
When such thoughts arise within you, you will find comfort and strength
in the motto: The truth is what leads to the highest and noblest impulses
for human evolution, the truth should be dearer to us than we are to
ourselves. If our relationship to truth is guided by these words and
we still make a mistake in this life, the truth will be strong enough
to draw us to itself in the next incarnation. Honest mistakes we make
in this incarnation will be compensated and redeemed in the next. It
is better to make an honest mistake than to adhere to dogmas dishonestly.
After all, our path will be lit by the promise that truth will ultimately
prevail, not by our will, but by its own inherent divine power.
However,
if our circumstances in this incarnation propel us into error instead
of into truth, and if we are too weak to obey when truth pulls us toward
itself, then it will be good if what we believe in disappears. For then
it does not, and should not, have the strength to live. If we are honestly
striving for truth, truth will be the victorious impulse in the world.
And if what we have now is a part of the truth, it will be victorious,
not because of what we can do for it, but because of the power inherent
in it. If what we have is error, however, then let us be strong enough
to say that this error should perish.
If we
take this as our guiding motto, we will find the standpoint that enables
us to realize that, under any circumstances, we can find what we need,
namely, confidence. If this confidence imbues us with truth, then the
truth will prevail, regardless of how much its opponents fight it. This
feeling can live in the soul of every theosophist. And if we are to
impart to others what flows down to us from the spiritual world, evoking
feelings in human hearts that give us certainty and strength for life,
then the mission of the new spiritual revelation will be fulfilled —
the revelation that has come to humanity through what we call theosophy
to lead human souls gradually into a more spiritual future.
Note *
For the sake of historical accuracy and to indicate
the tone of the original, we have not substituted or added
“anthroposophy” where Steiner speaks of
“Theosophy” or “anthroposophical movement”
where he speaks of “Theosophical movement.” Nevertheless,
the continuity between Rudolf Steiner's theosophy and anthroposophy
should always be kept in mind.
(See note 1)
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