Lecture I
What Does the Human Being Find in Theosophy?
Berlin
29th September, 1904
In this lecture I want to
develop the relation of the theosophical movement to the big cultural
currents in the present, and on the other side I would want to design
a picture of the theosophical world view in the talks which are entitled:
The Basic Concepts of Theosophy. Hence, I ask you to consider
this lecture absolutely as an initiating one and to accept as such.
What I have to discuss
today should be the question what, actually, the present human beings
find within the theosophical movement, which needs of the present human
being can find their satisfaction within the theosophical movement.
And in this manner I want to approach the other question: why do we
have something like a theosophical movement today? I want also to approach
the question, why that which theosophy wants, strives for is misunderstood
and misjudged by so many people.
Whoever wants to understand
the theosophical movement in its whole being has to be aware above all
which task it has to fulfil in the present. It has also to be clear
to him to whom it wants to speak today. What is then, actually, the
present human being about whom we are just talking? I consider somebody
as this present human being who has familiarised himself with the questions
occupying the present, who lives not only in the everyday, but has also
concerned himself with the cultural tasks of our time and is familiar
with it, to whom the questions which our civilisation puts are needs
of heart and mind. Briefly, I would like to understand the human being
as somebody who tries hard to tackle the questions of education and
knowledge of our time. I would like to put the question in his sense
and answer it roughly: what does he find in the theosophical movement?
Is something generally to be found within theosophy that he needs inevitably?
We have to look back to
the time in which the theosophical movement has entered the world if
we want to understand its task. We have to realise that this movement
is three decades old and that when it entered the world approximately
thirty years ago it took a shape which was determined by the relations
of that time. Who wants to understand why it took this shape has to
imagine the development of education and pedagogy of the last years.
We still stand in the currents which the 19th century has produced,
and those who brought the theosophical movement to life believed to
give something to the world that it needs. And those who teach theosophy
today believe that it is also something that leads into the future.
Today it has become almost
a phrase, and, nevertheless, it is true: what has settled down into
the souls of our contemporaries has brought a fissure in many of the
contemporaries, a conflict between knowledge and faith, which expresses
itself in a longing of the heart. This conflict is characteristic for
the second half of the 19th century. It means not only for some people,
but for a big part of the human beings generally that which separates
humanity and causes a contradiction in the individual human soul. Science
had come, up to the last third of the 19th century, to a height which
is admirable, indeed, for someone who has an overview of the centuries.
This science is something that fulfils the 19th century with just pride.
It is the big heritage which the 19th century is able to hand over to
all the coming ones. But this science has apparently thrown old traditions
out at the same time. It has apparently brought in a disturbance to
that which as old religious contents performed so big services to the
souls in former times. Above all, these were those who had looked at
science deeper who did no longer believe to be able to harmonise the
scientific knowledge with that which religion had offered to them. The
best of them believed that a quite new confession must take place and
that it has to replace the old religious contents. Thus we see a true
revolution of the human thinking gradually taking place.
The question was even put
whether it is generally still possible that the human being can be a
Christian; whether it is still possible to retain to the ideas which
gave consolation at death and which have shown to the human being for
so long time how he had to understand his determination which should
reach beyond death, beyond the limited. The big question “where
from” and “where to” should be taught in a new way
illuminated by science. One spoke of a “new faith” and thought
that it has to be the opposite of the old one. One did no longer believe
that one could form a world view from the old religious books. Yes,
there were not a few who said that there childish images are given which
are only possible at the childhood age of humanity; now, however, we
have become adults, and that is why we have also to have adult views.
Many also said that they wanted to adhere to the old religious images;
they did not want to be converted to the radical point of view of the
new ones.
But the course of the mental
development of humanity does not depend on these human beings. There
were always a few, there were always those who stood at the summit of
their time and gave the keynote of the future development. Thus it happened
that those who wanted to know nothing about the “new faith”
also thought to not take care of the conflict between faith and knowledge;
but one could also imagine and say that that would be different in the
future. David Friedrich Strauss (1808–1874, German theologian,
The Old and the New Faith, 1872) elaborated his new faith at
that time that there is nothing else in the world than what happens
between birth and death, and that the human being has to fulfil his
task here on earth. One can see that in the present the consolation
of the religious images dies down to many people, and one can suppose
that our children and grandchildren have nothing more of it. Hence,
those may have seen uneasily into the world who believed that salvation
depends on these religious images. They were the best.
The 19th century has even
produced the fruits of that which was sowed in the preceding century.
Everything has prepared during the previous centuries. This is to be
attributed, above all, to those who strove for the extension of the
human ken from the middle of the 15th to the 16th century, and also
to the popularisation of education. Look back and you will see that
the religious element formed quite differently during the past centuries.
Apparently, the world view was totally changed. The human beings have
formed wrong concepts about anything because the thinking is basically
different from that which one thought centuries ago.
However, the consciousness
that the human actions work on all human beings and all times had just
got lost to those who were the bearers of education in the last centuries
and the most significant people in the 19th century. People had designed
world views to themselves in quite different way than in former times.
Astronomy had shown them how one can collate world views from the mere
sensory observation. Copernicus taught the human beings to look out
into the worlds and to create a world view which does not contain, however,
the human being. Look back at the old world views: the human being had
a role in them; he had a place in them. Now, however, he had a system
of stars before himself which was obtained with the means of science.
But this contained the earth only as a small being. It appeared like
a dust particle under that sun which is only one among countless suns.
Under the effect of that
all it was impossible to answer the question: what about the human being,
this small inhabitant of the earth, of this dust particle in the universe?
That is why science had to investigate the world of life. It investigated
the composition of the plant, the human and the animal bodies the smallest
living beings with the microscope and found that they are built up from
the smallest structures which one calls cells. Again one had advanced
a further step of sensory knowledge, but again only something was understood
that was a sensuous view, something that made the physical existence
more explicable. But again something was eliminated a little bit that
the human being has to ask for most intimately: what is the soul and
its determination? One could not ask the new teaching where the soul
came from and where the soul goes to. Then we see how one left the old
world views and the question was answered with the means of science.
In geology one investigated
the sensuous origin of the human being. The different layers which there
are on our earth became known. Once one had spoken of the fact that
the earth developed on account of immense revolutions and went through
different states; states of particular kind, so that one could imagine
only that spiritual powers had gradually brought about what we know
today. Today one believes that the same forces, which build the earth
even today, have also built it in old past. We see the river flowing
from the mountain and picking up scree and creating thereby land and
plains. We see the wind carrying sand over open regions and covering
large parts with sand. We see the climate and also the earth's
surface gradually changing by such influence. And now the geologists
say: as well as the earth is today changed, it was also changed in former
ages; and thus one also understands how bit by bit the earth has formed.
Everything that is not perception for physical instruments, for the
calculation and for the human senses was eliminated from the explanation
of the earth. One investigated the different layers of the earth and
recognised that not only that is found in them which was deposited as
lifeless products; one also found beings which lived millions of years
ago on our earth. In the lower layers one found the most imperfect beings,
more on top one found more perfect beings and even more on top one found
the layers in which the human being appears. The human being appears
only in relatively young earth periods. If we apply this picture which
I have just outlined, if we kept to this picture, one could imagine
nothing else than that the human being has developed from below that
he has only done a little jolt and he was nothing else before than an
higher animal.
Then that came which is
called Darwinism which says that everything that lives on earth is related
with each other that something perfect develops from something imperfect
and that this development is based on certain laws which find complete
expression within the sensuous existence. The catchword of the “struggle
for existence” arose. One said that any animal and any plant are
variable. They can develop in this or that way whether the beings are
adapted or not to the external conditions of life. Those beings develop
and keep best of all which are adapted best of all to the conditions
of life. However, one could not find why the conditions of life are
better with the one than with the other. One was dependent on chance.
The being survived which was the better by chance; the less developed
one was destroyed in the struggle of all against all.
Thus we have an astronomical
view and a view of life which science has outlined to us. But the human
being is not there and, above all, that is missing which one called
the divine determination before. The divine origin and the divine goal
are missing. A statement is characteristic which a great naturalist
made, who contributed mostly to the design of the universe: when Laplace
(Pierre Simon L., 1749–1827, French astronomer) faced Napoleon
I and explained the view of the sun and the planets to him, Napoleon
said: but in such a world view I find nothing of God. — Laplace
answered: I do not need such a hypothesis. — The astronomical
world view did not need the hypothesis of a spiritually working being,
of God. And also the other sciences do not need one. Is anything of
spiritually working forces contained in their view of life? Such a thing
is nowhere contained in the view which science has outlined and has
outlined rightly. If we look for an explanation, we find that the human
being with his mental qualities is an orphan child of sorts. Indeed,
science has found enthusiastic words how miraculous the forces are which
steer the stars how miraculous the forces are which have developed life
up to the human being. However, we see that in this sublime view science
has nothing of those ideas which were so valuable for the human beings
for so many centuries. And from whom the human being could have expected
the answer to the questions: where from do I come? where to do I go?,
unless from science? The answer to these questions was always given
by science.
Go back to the first centuries
of Christianity, take Origen and the other first church teachers. You
find there that with them not only believing, not only suspecting and
meaning held good, but that these were men who had the whole education
of their time, who answered the worldly worldly, but were able at the
same time to ascend to the spiritual. They answered the spiritual in
accordance with the science of their time. Only the last century knows
the conflict between science and faith. However, this conflict must
be resolved. The human being cannot endure it: faith on the one, knowledge
on the other side.
Those who found no other
way out than to put a new scientific faith against the old faith were,
nevertheless, significant men. We cannot call these men unscientific
or non–religious who said: the religious ideas are contradictory
to our knowledge, and, therefore, we must have a new faith. We see the
scientific materialism developing which considers the human being as
a higher disposed animal, as a member of the physical-natural creation,
as a small unimportant being, as a dust particle. You have this being
before yourselves in that which the freethinkers and those have developed
who try to solve the various riddles of the world in this sense as you
can see in the sensational book by Haeckel (Ernst H., 1834–1919),
German zoologist and philosopher) about the Wonders of Life
(1904). There you have a view developed by science which is not able
to produce harmony with the views of the previous centuries.
This was the situation at
the end of the 19th century; this was the only thing that the 19th century
could have given as a legacy to the 20th century unless another impact
had come. This impact prepared itself and came into the world in the
theosophical movement as a fruit. That was prepared which we recognise
in the theosophical movement as the essential part, by the fact that
one got to know the true physical figure of the universe and the evolution
of life on one side, because the old religious images were no longer
sufficient, and was prepared on the other side by the fact that one
subjected the spiritual development to a study. So not only the evolution
of life was subjected to a study, but also the spiritual development
itself. As well as one investigated the forces from which living beings
developed, one also investigated the spiritual forces, the spiritual
contents of humanity as we observe them in the course of the historical
and also prehistoric development. One not only turned to that which
happened before the sensory eyes, but also to that which people believed.
It was clear that modern science was something radically different from
the old religions. Only our time of investigations made the mental development
of humanity clear to the human being. One investigated ancient religious
ideas according to their true form and content, and there one found
something particular. On account of the deciphering of the documents
of the Egyptians, Persians, Indians, Babylonians, and Assyrians one
was able to penetrate into these ancient human ideas. As well as science
brought light to the natural sciences, science now brought light into
the religious ideas of ancient peoples. One recognised that something
is contained in them that, indeed, one has thought of only a little
in our age and with our freethinking being.
One had believed that humanity
went out from ignorance, from certain mythological ideas, from poetic
images which one had formed about God and soul in imperfect, primitive
way. One approximately imagined that humanity would have developed from
the imperfect to the delightfully perfect state of our time. But one
did not know the ideas of the ancient peoples, and when one got to know
them, they aroused astonishment and admiration, not only with religious
people but also with the researchers. This admiration has been expressed
over and over again, the more they were investigated. The farther we
go back in the life of the ancient Egyptians, in the life of the ancient
Indian, Babylonian and Assyrian or even Chinese spiritual world, the
more we see that there exist so sublime world views as only a human
thought can grasp and a human heart can feel. There we see human beings
who deeply have beheld, indeed, not into the appearance which natural
sciences explain to us today, but into the internal spiritual.
Confucius gave profound
moral philosophies and created commandments of the social living together.
Compare yourselves what in the present time philosophers have produced
in moral philosophy, compare Herbert Spencer (1820–1903, English
philosopher, biologist, sociologist) or the moral philosophy of Darwinism,
and compare the modern moral philosophies with those of the Egyptians,
with the ideas about ethics of Laozi (Lao Tse), of Confucius, of Zarathustra.
Then you must say to yourselves that the new conceptions are commensurate,
indeed, with our time that we look up, however, admiring to the sublime
moral philosophies of the ancient peoples which cannot be compared with
our science. Max Müller (1823–1900, German Orientalist and
language scholar) says about the Tibetan moral philosophy: if this people
may be ever so far from the so-called cultures of our time, in front
of the sublime moral of Tibet I bend my head in reverence! The Orientalist
and objective scientist Max Müller spoke approximately that way.
He could no longer believe that humanity went out from ignorance. His
researches rather supplied to him the result which can be summarised
in the words that, indeed, this wisdom cannot be understood with the
reason, not with the senses that, however, humanity must have gone out
from such wisdom. Then the researcher gradually learnt to speak of “primal
revelation”, of “primal wisdom”. This was the one,
the positive side.
The other side was that
which the criticism, the investigation of these religious images made
its task. Then it became obvious that the most important documents did
not withstand to the scientific criticism if one takes them in such
a way as one was used to take these documents since centuries. I want
to refrain from everything else, and also not to deal with a criticism
of the Old Testament, but only to point with a few words to that which
this criticism has performed concerning the Gospels. The historical
criticism now asked concerning the Gospels in which one had still read
hundred years ago with quite different eyes: when did they come into
being, and how did they originate? Science had to take away piece by
piece from the old authority of the Gospels. It has shown that they
came into being much later than one had believed; it had to show that
they are human work and cannot claim the authority one ascribed to them.
Let us take together these
three matters: on one side the progressive natural sciences, on the
other side the knowledge of the miraculous contents of all ancient religious
images and at the same time the criticism which relentlessly tackled
what one thought once about the history of the religious documents.
This brought the human being in a fairway that he became uncertain and
could hardly move his ship forward in the old way. Someone who wanted
to consult science from all sides lost his faith in the spirit. The
cognition of the human beings was that way at the end of the 19th century.
There came the theosophical
movement, just with the intention to give something to those who were
in this uncertainty, to bring a new message to those who could not harmonise
their new knowledge with the old faith. They should get answer to the
question why this Gospel has such a deep content, and why it lets its
moral philosophy speak to the human beings in such a divine-lofty way.
This theosophical movement
was much misjudged, because it speaks a language that has developed
in the last century. In the first time when the theosophical movement
entered, the world could hardly understand it. What did the theosophical
movement give to humanity? I only note something: on account of certain
studies two books, Esoteric Buddhism by A. P. Sinnett (1840–1921)
and Isis Unveiled by Helena Petrowna Blavatsky (1831–1891)
appeared. Then a 2-volume work, the Secret Doctrine by H. P.
Blavatsky was published. These were books which designed another world
view than science had done it up to now, also another world view than
the world views of the religions were. This world view had a characteristic.
Just the scientific person, who approached these books with good will
who did not take them with arrogance without denying and criticising
them from the start, found that he got something that could satisfy
his needs. There were not few people who received the books with great
interest immediately after their publication. People who were able to
academically think but had just lost their belief in the scientific
progress in the course of time, just in that which science could offer.
Now these saw in the new works Esoteric Buddhism, Isis
Unveiled, Secret Doctrine something that satisfied the
deepest needs of their hearts, of their knowledge and of their scientific
conscience. Where did this phenomenon come from and who were those who
felt such a satisfaction in the new theosophical works? If we want to
understand these few people, we must have a closer look at the further
progress of the scientific development.
Science had designed an
astronomical world view, a view of the life on earth up to the understanding
of the physical human being. At the same time, it had worked out the
method to investigate the physical realm with all miraculous tools which
the recent time has created. It investigated not only the smallest living
beings with the microscope, no, this science has done more. It has contrived
to calculate the planet Neptune, long before it was seen! Today science
is also able to take a photo of heavenly bodies which we cannot see.
It can give a scheme of the conditions of the heavenly bodies with the
help of spectral analysis, and it has shown in extremely interesting
way how the heavenly bodies hurry through space at a speed of which
we had no idea before. If the heavenly bodies pass us, we can see the
movement. If they move, however, away from us or to us, they seem to
rest. Science has contrived to measure the movement of these heavenly
bodies with an especially interesting method. This is an argument where
this knowledge can lead us. We are thereby also enabled to closer study
the physical nature gradually. There something resulted that is still
more important for the human mind than that which he had put as new
science to the place of the old one.
During the last years science
has lost its faith in its own preconditions. Just because it has become
so perfect, it has overcome itself, it has undermined its own foundation
in certain way. It stated that the struggle for existence has caused
the perfection of the living beings. Now probably, the naturalists have
investigated the matters, and just because they have investigated them,
it became obvious that all the conceptions, which they had formed about
them, could not be maintained. Now one speaks of a “powerlessness
of the struggle for existence.” Thus the natural sciences have
undermined their knowledge foundation with their own methods. And thus
it went on bit by bit. When in the last decades the human being became
more and more attentive to the way how he has developed on our earth,
one came to the idea at the end that the human being has developed from
the advanced animals. That is why it happened in the last decades that
careful and more reasonable naturalists have spoken of the impossibility
to understand the spiritual world, which must be behind our sensory
world, with the scientific means. The famous address of Du Bois-Reymond
(1818–1896, German physiologist)) gave the first impulse in Leipzig
(1872) in which he expressed that the natural sciences are not able
to solve the most important riddles of the world and to answer questions
regarding this. Science stops where the issues of the origin of substance
and of the origin of consciousness begin. We will not be able to know
anything with scientific means: “ignorabimus.” Ostwald (Wilhelm
O., 1853–1932, German chemist), a good disciple of Haeckel, who
already spoke on the naturalists' congress in Lübeck of overcoming
the scientific materialism, has openly expressed in a presentation at
the last naturalists' meeting that the methods with which one
wanted to come behind the riddles of the world are to be regarded as
failed. Natural Sciences and World View is the title of his
book. Just the natural sciences want to go beyond themselves and to
have a higher observation point of the world view.
As well as these naturalists
stand today before the whole objective research, few people stood already
with the beginning of the theosophical movement. It was clear to them
that that which natural sciences say is something indestructible, is
something which we must rely on. But at the same time it was clear to
them also that these natural sciences themselves must lead to a development
where they can no longer give answer to the higher questions with their
means. They found this answer, however, in the mentioned theosophical
writings. They found it, not making profession to a faith, but by the
way of thinking and feeling which express itself in the theosophical
movement. This is the significance of the theosophical movement for
the modern human beings that it can fully satisfy those who look for
the harmony of knowledge and faith in science who do not want to live
in struggle against science, but to live with science.
One still believed few years
ago that science were contradictory to the old religious images. One
spoke of a new faith in contrast to the old faith. The theosophical
movement has taught us that, indeed, the old times expressed themselves
differently than modern science, that, however, that which the ancient
peoples taught about the spiritual forces, about what is not to be seen
with eyes what is not to be heard with ears, is for us something that
can satisfy the religious need just as the need of the most modern science.
Indeed, you have to become absorbed without prejudice, with good will
and impartially in the old images; you have to really believe that the
farther you penetrate into them, the more you can also gain from it.
Then something appears.
Natural sciences still taught something else to us in the course of
the 19th century. They showed us the structures and functions of our
own organs. They showed us how the eyes must be arranged, so that they
see light and colours; they showed us that the eye is a physical apparatus
which transforms that which proceeds outside round us into the coloured
world which we have before us. One has said that it depends on the nature
of the eye, as well as on the world itself. Imagine that the world would
be inhabited by not sighted beings. Then the world would be without
colours! The 19th century developed physiology in all directions. We
realise that the world would be dark and silent around us if we had
no eyes and ears. Unless we had our senses, the world, which we do not
see and hear, would not be there in its causes which have an effect
on us through the senses. There cannot be effects on a human being for
whom the organs are missing under usual circumstances. Or may there
be effects, nevertheless, on a human being for whom the organs are missing
under usual circumstances? This was the question which natural sciences
had to put to themselves! This question is really scientific.
Also in this field the theosophical
movement produced works of basic significance. It not only delivered
a world view, but it also produced works which gave instructions for
the development of higher organs, of higher capacities. If the human
being develops these higher capacities in himself, he faces the world
in a new way. Transport yourselves just a moment into a dark world in
which a bright light shines, and imagine that you unlocked an eye: suddenly
the world has a new quality! The world also existed when it was dark
and you saw no light. Now, however, you can perceive it. If you were
able to develop higher organs, you would experience that even higher
worlds are there, are effective because you can perceive them now.
Light on the Path
(1885 by Mabel Collins, theosophical author, 1851–1927) is such
a work which was produced by the theosophical movement, too. It is an
instruction how the human being can develop spiritual eyes and ears
to behold and to hear spiritually. Thus the theosophical movement claimed
to solve the riddles of the world in a quite new way. Not only because
it makes the capacities accessible to the human being which he already
has but also because it wakes up those which are slumbering in him.
We perfect ourselves this way, as this has happened since primeval times;
we penetrate only into the secrets of the worlds around us. The life
that remains concealed to the external senses is revealed to us that
way. Even if natural sciences could penetrate ever so far, even if they
could achieve the most marvellous things, nevertheless, they would have
to admit that there is yet something with that they do not get to grips.
However, science may teach humanity this using the methods theosophy
has given. Because humanity could scientifically investigate the world
extensively but never in its deepness, theosophy provides assistance
to modern science. This science has been enlarged; however, the theosophical
world movement has to deepen it.
It became now clear and
understandable why the human being must stand admiring also as a scholar
before the ancient religions. It became clear that always perfect beings
lived beside imperfect ones in the world. It became also clear why the
idea of revelation was academically destroyed and was given back to
the human being, on the other side, in a brighter light. It became also
clear that the Gospels and other old religious documents have not come
from lack of wisdom, but from wisdom. They have come from forces that
rest in every human breast, that were already developed in single human
beings at that time and that revealed that world showing us the determination
of the soul and the eternity of the human life. What had been recognised
by such spiritual eyes is kept to us in the religious documents. What
you cannot find if you look at the world you can really find in these
religious documents.
We understand now why the
answer of Laplace had to be as it had been. What had Laplace observed?
The external sensory world! He had no longer understood the spiritual
world in which the earth is embedded. Hence, he was right answering
that he could not find the divine in the world with his instruments.
One had taught once to use the spiritual senses in order to observe
the spiritual world. What you read in the scientific documents was not
got from the stars. But what is written in the biblical documents was
from those who beheld with spiritual eyes. One needs spiritual eyes
to behold into the spiritual world as well as one needs the senses to
look at the sensory world.
Even if anybody lost his
faith in science a sure support was now won. One recognised the big
spiritual connections which are clear before the soul of the human being
if he only tries to find the ways there. The theosophical movement tries
to provide the adequate ways.
Now you will understand
above all what this theosophical movement wants and why it was misunderstood
at first. It must be misunderstood. This is connected with the development
of the age. Let me touch the deepest reason of misunderstanding in modern
science. People believed that the “struggle for existence”
brought the human beings on a lofty level of development. But it is
characteristic that this world view has already appeared in the beginning
of the 19th century as Lamarckism: Philosophie zoologique (1809)
by Antoine de Lamarck, 1744–1829. Darwin taught nothing substantially
new. But only since Darwin this view spread farther. This is connected
with the living conditions of the 19th century. Life had changed. The
social life itself had become a struggle for existence. When Darwin's
theory spread generally, the “struggle for existence” was
reality, and still today it is reality. It was struggle for existence
at that time when the Indian tribes were eradicated in America and it
is also a struggle for existence today with those who try hard to achieve
external prosperity. Nobody thought of anything else than: how can “welfare”
be achieved best of all? “If the rose decorates itself, it also
decorates the garden” by the contentment of every human being
the contentment of all should be achieved.
Then one came to the strange
doctrine of Malthus (Thomas Robert M., 1766–1834, Essay on
the Principles of Population, 1798), to that doctrine which says
that the number of human beings increases much more than the necessary
quantity of food, so that it must come bit by bit to such a struggle
for existence in the human realm itself. One believed that the struggle
is necessary because the foodstuffs do not suffice. One might consider
as sad that it is in such a way, but one believed that it has to go
this way. Malthusianism was the starting point of Darwin's doctrine.
Because people believed that the human being must struggle for existence,
they believed that the struggle also has to go in the whole nature that
way. The human being has brought his social struggle for existence to
the realm of life, to the heavenly realm.
People were very proud saying
to themselves that the new human being has become modest. He should
be nothing more than a small being on the dust particle earth, while
he once strove for redemption. However, the human being has not become
modest! Projecting that social struggle in humanity into the world he
has made the world the image of the human being. If the human being
once considered his soul, he explored it from all sides to recognise
the world–soul from there. He has now investigated the physical
world and has imagined it in such a way that he sees an image of humanity
with its struggle for existence in it. If the theosophical movement
wanted to achieve anything, it had to understand this fact. If the human
being rediscovers the divine really in himself, so that he finds God
in his inside, then he can say to himself: God who is working in my
inside is the God of the universe, is that who is working within and
without me. I recognise Him and I am allowed to imagine the world in
such a way as I am, because I know that I imagine it as something divine,
because I know how I can attain this new knowledge from new depths of
my soul and new feelings of my heart.
Thus one could also investigate
the different religious systems with their profound truths. The religious
researchers like Max Müller and his great colleagues initiated
this theology, and theosophy had to continue it. The human being has
to see with spiritual eyes and hear with spiritual ears what no physical
eye can see and no physical ear can hear. The theosophical movement
had paved the way for this. It would have been impossible to achieve
anything in these two points really unless in the centre of this whole
movement one thing had been pushed which is suitable to bear the new
knowledge, the new science and the new faith from the human soul. The
human being believed in the middle of the 19th century to get to perfection
only through struggle and made thereby the struggle the big world principle.
Now we have to learn to develop the opposite of struggle in our souls:
love which cannot separate the happiness and the well-being of the individual
from the happiness and the well-being of the fellow man. Love does not
regard the fellow man as anybody on whose expenses we can make progress,
but whom we have to help. If love is born in the soul, the human being
is also able to see the creative love in the outside world. As the human
being created a view of nature in the 19th century which went out from
his idea of struggle, he will create a world view of love because he
develops the seeds of love.
A reflection of that which
has love in the soul will be the new world view again. The human being
may imagine the divine again how he finds his own soul but love should
live in this soul. Then he recognises that not struggle is the quality
of the force system working in the world, but that love is the primal
force of the world. If the human being wants to recognise God, creating
love and pouring out love, he has to develop love in his soul. This
is the most important principle which the theosophical movement made
its own: forming the core of a general human brotherhood which is built
on human love. The theosophical movement thereby prepares the human
beings in comprehensive way for a world view in which not struggle,
but love creates and forms. The sighted human mind will see the creative
love approaching him. The creation of love in him leads to the knowledge
that love created the world. And the Goethean thought is fulfilled:
The human being,
May he be noble,
Helpful and good!
For this only
Distinguishes him
From all beings
We know.
This legacy of the great
poet is the impulse of our theosophical movement. The modern human being
should develop the most significant factor of the advanced development
in him through the theosophical movement. He should aim at the cooperation
in the social life. Thereby he would become able to progress in wisdom
and with energy, imbued with wisdom also in the spiritual worlds. Then
the human being recognises his eternal being and determination more
and more. He knows how he works on the “whirring loom of the time”
(Earth Spirit in Faust I, verse 508), as a member in a spiritual
not only sensuous world chain. He knows that he does his everyday job
and that this work does not only consist of itself, but that it is a
small link in a big human progress. He will know that every human being
is a seed which needs a force to its blossoming and prospering, which
pushes the germ out of the dark earth. What the soul creates must be
got out of the spiritual earth as the plant sprout must be got out of
the physical earth. As the physical sprout is got out by the sun to
the sun, the blossoming and prospering human plant will be got out by
a spiritual solar force, which theosophy wants to mediate and to teach
the human beings. It will lead him to the marvellous and immense spiritual
sun which one needs not only to express, but also to recognise and to
understand. This is the spiritual sun which lives outside in the spiritual
world which lives, however, inside the human being, too.
The theosophical movement
has as its first principle that those who unite to this society develop
the capacity in themselves to behold this spiritual sun which lives
inside of the human being and in the big spiritual outside world. It
is the propelling force in the spiritual realm and is really a force,
like all the other physical forces, only a higher one and this is the
force of creative love. A new divine knowledge will come to the fore.
Then the human being recognises the creative love in the outside world
if he allows this love in himself to become bigger and bigger. Then
theosophy will deliver not only knowledge, but will also bring about
the spiritual future with the growing and prospering love.
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