Lecture XX
The Divinity Faculty and Theosophy
Berlin
11th, May, 1905
Note:
The transcript of the four “faculty” lectures are deficient.
It shows not only noticeable gaps; the author of the transcript
is also not familiar with the topic of the lectures. He often made
summaries in haste as far as he understood the lecturer. That is
why some connections shifted. Although notices of other participants
were used, the deficiencies of the text could not be essentially
corrected except for some big misunderstandings.
If the theosophical movement
has to really intervene in the whole modern culture, it cannot limit
itself unilaterally to spread any doctrine, to communicate knowledge
concerning this or that, but it has to deal with the most different
cultural factors and elements in the present. Theosophy should be no
mere doctrine, it should live. It should flow into our acting, feeling
and thinking. Now it is in the nature of things that such a movement
addressing the heart of the modern culture immediately intervenes where
we deal with the leadership in the spiritual life, if it should be capable
of surviving. Where else should we look for the leadership of the spiritual
life today than in our universities? There really all those should co-operate
who work at least if you look at the matter idealistically as bearers
of our culture, of our whole spiritual life, who work in the service
of truth and progress and in the service of the spiritual movement generally.
They should collaborate with young people who prepare for the highest
tasks of life.
This would be the big and
significant influence that the universities must have on the whole cultural
life, the significant influence which comes from them as something authoritative
because one cannot deny it, although one may also struggle against any
authority in our time: our universities work authoritatively. And it
is right in certain respect, because those who have to teach our young
people about the highest cultural problems have to be determinative
of all questions of the human existence. Thus it is really logical if
the whole nation looks at that which the members of the faculties say
in any question. That's how it is. Nevertheless, in all our faculties
one regards what the university lecturer says about a matter as authoritative.
Thus it seems to me natural
that we as theosophists ask ourselves once: how must we position ourselves
to the different branches of our university life? No criticism should
be offered to our university institutions; this should not be an object
of this talk. What will be discussed in this and the following talks
should simply give a perspective how the theosophical movement if it
is really capable of surviving, if it can really intervene in the impulses
of the spiritual movement , can possibly have a fruitful effect on our
university life.
A university has four faculties:
the divinity (in Germany theological) faculty, the faculty
of law, the medical faculty and the arts (in Germany: philosophical)
faculty. Indeed, as well as the high educational system is today, we
have to include still other colleges in the sense of our present way
of thinking and approach to life as a continuation of the university,
as it were, namely the colleges of technology, the art colleges etcetera.
That will be discussed later in the talk about philosophy. We have to
deal with that faculty which in the first times, in the midst of the
Middle Ages acquired a leading position in the modern education. In
this time, theology at the universities was the “queen of sciences.”
Everything that was otherwise done formed a group round the theological
scholarship.
The university had arisen
from that which the Church had developed in the Middle Ages: from the
monastic schools. The old schools had a kind of supplement for that
which one needed as worldly knowledge; however, the central issue was
theology. These teachers, priests and monks who had experienced the
clerical education were active until the end of the Middle Ages. Theology
was called the “queen of sciences.” Is it now not quite
natural, if you consider the matter in the abstract, ideally to call
theology the queen of sciences, and had it not to be this queen if it
fulfilled its task in the widest sense of the word? In the centre of
the world that stands certainly which we call the primal ground of the
world, the divine, in so far as the human being can grasp it. Theology
is nothing else than the teachings of this divine. All other must trace
back to divine primal forces of existence. If theology wants really
to be the teachings of the divine, you cannot imagine it as that it
is the central sun of any wisdom and knowledge, and that from it the
strength and the energy is emitted to all remaining sciences. In the
Middle Ages, it still was in such a way. What the great medieval theologians
had to say about the world basically got its light, its most significant
strength from the so-called holy science, from theology.
If we want to get an idea
of this thinking and of this philosophy of life in the Middle Ages,
we can do it with a few words. Any medieval theologian considered the
world as a big unity. The divine creativity was on top, at the summit.
Below, the single forces and realms of nature existed, dispersed in
the manifoldness of the world. What one knew about the forces and realms
of nature was the object of the single sciences. What led the human
spirit to the clarification of the loftiest questions, what should lighten
what the single sciences could not recognise came from theology. Hence,
one studied philosophy first. It encompassed all worldly sciences. Then
one advanced to the science of theology. The medical faculty and that
of law stood somewhat differently in the university life. We can easily
conceive an idea how these faculties interrelate if we look at the matter
in such a way: philosophy encompassed all sciences, and the divinity
faculty considered and dealt with the big question: what is the primal
ground, and which are the single phenomena of existence?
This existence proceeds
in time. There is a development to perfection, and as human beings we
are not only put into the world order, but we ourselves co-operate in
the world order. On the one side, the philosophical and the theological
faculties consider that which is, which was, and which will be, on the
other side, the medical faculty and that of law consider the world in
its emergence, the world how it has to be led from the imperfect to
the perfect. The medical faculty addresses more the natural life in
its imperfection and asks how it should be made better. The law school
turns to the moral world and asks how it must be made better. The whole
life of the Middle Ages was one single body, and something similar must
certainly come again. Again the whole unity, the universitas has to
become a living body that has the single faculties as the members of
the common life. The modern university is more an aggregate, and the
single faculties do not deal a lot with each other. In the Middle Ages,
everybody who studied at the university had to acquire a philosophical
basic education, that which one calls a general education today, although
one has to admit that just those who leave the university today are
characterised by the absence of general education.
This was the basis of everything.
Also in Goethe's Faust one finds said: the collegium logicum
first, then metaphysics. Nevertheless, it is also correct that somebody
who generally wants to be introduced into the secrets of the world existence,
into the big questions of culture, must have a thorough education in
the different branches of knowledge at first. It is no progress that
this studium fundamentale has completely disappeared from our university
education. In a large part is that which one can know lifeless nature:
physics, chemistry, botany, zoology, mathematics etcetera. Not before
the student had been introduced into the teachings of thinking, into
the laws of logic, into the basic principles of the world or into metaphysics,
he could ascend to the other, higher faculties. For the other faculties
were called the higher ones with some right. Then he could advance to
theology.
Someone who should be taught
about the deepest questions of existence had to have learnt something
about the simple questions of existence. But also the other faculties
presuppose such an educational background. The situation of law and
medicine would be much better if such a general previous training were
maintained thoroughly, because someone who wants to intervene in the
jurisprudence must know how the laws of the human life are generally.
It must be understood lively what can lead a human being to the good
or to the bad. You must be grasped not only in such a way as you are
grasped from the dead letter of law, but you must be grasped like from
life, like from something with which you are intimately related. These
human beings must have the circumference first because the human being
is really a microcosm in which all laws are living. Hence, one has to
know the physical laws above all. Thus the university would have to
be, correctly thought, an organism of the whole human knowledge. However,
the divinity faculty would have to stimulate any other knowledge. Theology,
the teachings of the divine world order, cannot exist at all unless
it is inserted to the smallest and biggest of our existence, unless
one deepens everything into the divine world order.
But, how should anybody
be able to say anything about the divine world order who knows nothing
about the minerals, nothing about the plants, animals and human beings,
about the origin of the earth, about the nature of our planetary system?
God's revelation is everywhere, and there is nothing that does not express
the voice of the divinity. The human being has to link everything that
the human being has and is and acts to these loftiest questions which
the theological science should treat.
Now we must ask ourselves:
does the divinity faculty position itself in this way in life today?
Does it work in such a way that its strength and energy can flow from
it to all remaining life? I would like to give no criticism, but an
objective portrayal of the relations if possible. In the last time,
even theology is brought somewhat into discredit, even within the religious
movement. You have maybe heard something of the name Kalthoff (Albert
K., 1850–1906, Protestant theologian) who has written Zarathustra
sermons. He says that the religion must not suffer from the letters
of theology; we do not want theology, but religion. These are people
who are able to find the world of religious world view from their immediate
conviction.
Now we ask ourselves whether
this view can persist whether it can be true that religion without theology,
sermon without theology is possible. In the first times of Christianity
and also in the Middle Ages, this was not the case. Also in the first
centuries of modern times, it was not in such a way. Only today, a kind
of conflict has happened between the immediate religious effectiveness
and theology, which has apparently turned away somewhat from life. In
the first times of the Christianity, somebody was basically a theologian
who could see up to the highest summits of existence because of his
wisdom and science. Theology was something living, was something that
lived in the first Church Fathers, that animated such spirits like Clement
of Alexandria, like Origenes, like Scotus Erigena and St. Augustine;
it was theology that animated them. It was that which lived like lifeblood
in them. If the words came on their lips, they did not need to confide
any dogma, then they knew how to speak intensively to the hearts. They
found the words which were got out of any heart. The sermon was permeated
with soul and religious currents. But it would not have been in such
a way unless inside of these personalities the view of the loftiest
beings in the highest form had lived in which the human being can attain
this.
Such dogmatism is impossible
which discusses every word in the abstract that is spoken in the everyday
life. But somebody who wants to be a teacher of the people has to have
experienced the highest form of knowledge with wisdom. He must have
the resignation, the renunciation of that which is immediate to him;
he must strive and experience what introduces him into the highest form
of knowledge in loneliness, in the cell, far from the hustle and bustle
of the world where he can be alone with his God, with his thinking and
his heart. He must have the possibility to look up at the spiritual
heights of existence. Without any fanaticism, without any desire, even
without any religious desire, but in purely spiritual devotion that
is free of everything that also appears, otherwise, in the longing of
the religions. The conversation with God and the divine world order
takes place in this lonesome height, at the summit of the human thinking.
One has to develop, one
has to have attained resignation, renunciation to lead this lofty soliloquy
and to have it living in oneself and to let work it as lifeblood in
the words which are the contents of the popular doctrines. Then we have
found the right stage of theology and sermon, of science and life.
Someone who sits below feels
that this flows out of depths that it is got down from high scientific
heights of wisdom. Then it needs no external authority, then the word
itself is authority by the strength which lives in the soul of the teacher,
because it settles in the heart by this strength to work with the echo
of the heart. One achieved the harmony between religion and theology,
and at the same time one tactfully distinguished theology and religious
instruction. But anybody who has not climbed up to the theological heights
who is not informed about the deepest questions of the spiritual existence
will not slip that in his words which should live in the words of the
preacher as a result of the dialogue with the divine world order itself.
This was really the opinion
that one had in the Christian world view about the relation between
theology and sermon for centuries. A good sermon would be that if a
preacher steps only then in front of the people, after he has occupied
himself with the high teachings of the Trinity of God, of the divinity
and of the announcement of the Logos in the world, of the high metaphysical
significance of Christ's personality. One must have accepted all these
teachings that are understandable only for someone who has dealt with
them for many, many years. These teachings may establish the contents
of philosophy and other sciences at first; one has to make his thinking
ripe for this truth. Only then one can penetrate these heights of truth.
To someone who has achieved this, who knows something about the high
ideas of the Trinity, of the Logos the Bible verses become something
in his mouth that wins another liveliness than it has at first without
this preceding theological schooling. Then he freely uses the Bible
verses, then he creates that current from him to the community within
the Bible verses which causes an influence of the divine creativity
in the hearts of the crowd. Then he not only interprets the Bible but
he handles it. Then he speaks in such a way, as if he himself had participated
in the writing of the great truths which are written in this ancient
religious book. He looked into the bases from which the great truths
of the Bible originated. He knows what those have felt who were once
much more influenced by the spiritual world than he is, and what is
expressed in the Bible verses as the divine world government and human
order of salvation. He has not only the word that he has to comment
and to interpret, but behind him the great powerful writers stand whose
pupil, disciple and successor he is. He speaks out of their spirit and
he himself puts their spirit, which they have put into it, into the
writing now.
This was the basis of developing
authority in this or that epoch. As an ideal the human being had it
in mind, it was often carried out. However, our time has also brought
about a big reversal here. Let us consider the big reversal once again,
which took place from the Middle Ages to the modern times. What happened
at that time? What made it possible that Copernicus, Galilei, Giordano
Bruno could announce a new world view? This new movement became possible
because the human being approached nature immediately that he himself
wanted to see that he did not rest on old documents as in the Middle
Ages, but went straight to the natural existence. It was different in
the medieval science. There the basic sciences were not derived from
an unbiased consideration of nature, but from that which the Greek philosopher
Aristoteles had schemed. Aristoteles was the authority during the whole
Middle Ages.
One taught referring to
him. The lecturer of metaphysics and logic had his books. He interpreted
them. Aristoteles was an authority.
This changed with the reversal
from the Middle Ages to the modern times. Copernicus himself wanted
to scheme what is given by the immediate view. Galilei shone on the
world of the immediate existence. Kepler found the big world law according
to which the planets orbit the sun.
That's how it was in the
past centuries. One wanted to see independently. One also told in anecdotes
what occurred to Galilei: there was a scholar who knew his Aristoteles.
One said something to him that Galilei had said. He answered that this
must be different: I must have a look at Aristoteles, because he said
it differently, and, nevertheless, Aristoteles is right. The authority
was more important to him than the immediate view. But the time was
ripe, one wanted now to know something independently. This does not
require that everybody is immediately able to acquire this view fairly
quickly, but it only requires that people are there who are able to
approach nature that they are equipped with the instruments and tools
and with the methods, which are necessary to observe nature. Progress
thereby became possible. One can interpret what Aristoteles wrote; but
one cannot progress thereby. Somebody can progress only if he himself
progresses if he himself sees the things.
The past four centuries
applied this principle of self-knowledge to all external knowledge,
to everything that spreads out before our senses. First in physics,
then in chemistry, then in the science of life, then in the historical
sciences.
Everything was included
in this self-observation, in the external looking of the sensory world.
One withdrew from the principle of authority. What has not been included
in this principle of own knowledge was the view of the spiritually effective
in the world, the immediate knowledge of that which is there not for
the senses, but only for the mind. Hence, something appears during the
last centuries, concerning this science and wisdom of the mind that
one could once not speak of. Now we could go back to the oldest times.
We want to do it, however, only to the first times of Christianity.
There we have a science of the divine, then a great doctrine of the
world origin which reaches down to our immediate sensuous surroundings.
If you look at the great sages of former centuries, you can see everywhere
how this way is taken from the highest point down to the lowest existence,
so that no gap is between that which is said by the divine world order
in theology and what we say about the sensory world. One had a comprehensive
view of the origin of the planets and our earth. But one does no longer
need to inform this today. However, someone who observes the development
in the course of time can also accept that one goes beyond our wisdom.
Time goes beyond the form of our science as we have gone beyond the
former forms.
What existed at that time
was a uniform world edifice that stood before the soul, and the basis
of the soul was the spirit. One saw the primal ground of existence in
the spirit. That comes from the spirit which is not spirit. The world
is the reflection of the infinite spirit of God. And then that comes
from the spirit of God which we find as higher spiritual beings in the
different religious systems and also that which is the most powerful
on this world: the human being, then the animals, the plants and the
minerals. One had a uniform world view of the origin of a solar system
up to the formation of the mineral. The atom was chained together with
God himself although one never dared to recognise God himself. One sought
the divine in the world. The spiritual was its expression. Those who
wanted to know something about the highest heights of existence strove
for educating themselves in such a way that they could recognise the
sensory world. They wanted to conceive ideas of that which is above
the sensory world, of the spiritual world order. They could ascend from
the simple sensory knowledge to the comprehensive knowledge of the spiritual
that way. If we look at the ancient cosmologies, we find no interruption
between the teachings of theology and what the single worldly sciences
say about the things of our existence. Link is attached to link continuously.
One had started from the core of spirit up to the circumference of our
earthly existence.
One took another path in
modern times. One simply directed the senses and what is regarded to
be arms of the senses, as strengthening instruments of sense-perception,
to the world. In brilliant, tremendous way one developed the world view
that teaches us something about the external sensory world. Everything
is not yet explained, but one can get an idea already today how this
science of the sensuous things advances. However, something was thereby
interrupted, namely the immediate connection between the world science
and the divine science.
The picture of the world
origin, of cosmology which is the most usual even today even if it is
disputed, is found in the so-called Kant-Laplace world view. In order
to orient ourselves, we want to say a few words about it to see then
what signifies such a Kant-Laplace world view to us. It says: once there
was a big world nebula, rather thin. If we could sit on chairs in space
and watch, and if it were somewhat visible for finer eyes, this world
nebula is organised perhaps because it cooled down. It establishes a
centre in itself, rotates, pushes off rings which form to planets, and
in this way you know this hypothesis such a solar system forms, which
has the sun as a spring of life and heat. However, what is developed
that way must find an end in such a way, as it develops. Kant and others
admit that again new worlds form et etcetera.
What is now such a world
view that the modern researcher tries to compose from the scientific
experiences of physics, chemistry etcetera? This is something that would
have to be sense-perceptible in all stages. Now try once to really imagine
this world view. What is absent in it? The spirit is absent. It is a
material process, a process which can happen in microcosm with an oil
drop in water at which you can look with your eyes. The process of world
origin is made sense-perceptible. The spirit was not involved in the
origin of such a solar system. Hence, it is not surprising that the
question is raised: how does life originate, and how does the spirit
originate? Because one originally imagined the lifeless matter only
which moves according to its own principles.
What one has not experienced
one can get out impossibly of the concepts. One can only get out what
has been put in. If one imagines a world system which is empty which
is devoid of spirit, then it must remain inconceivable how spirit and
life can exist in this world. The question can never be answered out
of the Kant-Laplace theory how life and spirit can originate. The science
of modern times is just a sensuous science. Hence, it has taken up that
part of the world in its theory of world origin which is a section of
the whole world. Your body represents you in your entirety as little
as matter is the whole world.
Just as it is true that
life, feelings, thoughts, impulses are in your body which one cannot
see if one looks at your body with sensuous eyes, it is true that the
spirit is also in the world. However, it is also true that the Kant-Laplace
theory shows the body only. As little as the anatomist who shows the
structure of the human body is able to say how a thought can arise from
the blood and the nerves if he thinks only materially, just as little
anybody who thinks the world system according to Kant-Laplace can get
to the spirit one day. As little as somebody who is blind and cannot
see the light can say anything about our sensory world, as little as
anybody who does not have the immediate view of the spirit can explain
that something spiritual exists besides the physical body. The modern
science lacks in the view of the spiritual. The progress is based on
its one-sidedness, just in this way the human being can reach the unilaterally
highest height. Because science confines itself to the sensuous, it
reaches its high development. However, it becomes an oppressive authority,
because this science has founded ways of thinking. These are stronger
than all theories, stronger than even all dogmas.
One gets used to searching
science in the sensuous, and thereby the fact creeps into the ways of
thinking of the modern human being since four centuries that the sensuous
became the only real to him. Hence, one generally believes that the
sensory world is the only real one. Something that is justified as a
theory became way of thinking, and someone who looks deeper into this
thinking knows which infinitely suggestive strength such an active way
of thinking has on the human beings for centuries. It worked on all
circles. Like a human being who is exposed to suggestion, the whole
modern educated humanity is exposed to the suggestion that only that
which one perceives with the senses, can grasp with the hands is the
only real. Humanity has given up from regarding the spirit as something
real. But this has nothing to do with a theory, but only with the accustomed
forms of thinking. These sit much, much deeper than any understanding.
One can prove this by epistemology and philosophy which are not sufficiently
developed in us, unfortunately. The whole modern science is influenced
by these modern ways of thinking. With somebody who speaks today about
the origin of the animals and about the origin of the world this way
of thinking sits in the background, and he can't help giving such a
colouring to his words and concepts that they make the powerful impression
by themselves that it is real.
It is different with that
which one merely thinks. One has to advance so far today to recognise
the deeper reality in that which one only thinks. One has to become
capable to behold the spirit. This is not to be attained with books
and talks, not with theories and new dogmas, but with intimate self-education,
which intervenes in the customs of the soul of the modern human being.
The human being has to recognise first that it is not absolutely necessary
to regard the sensuous-real as the only real, but he has to realise
that he exercises something that was stimulated for centuries. One thinks
this way. It flows into the original feeling of the human beings. These
are not aware that they have illusions because they got them from the
beginning. This impression works too strong, even on an idealist, so
that he emphasises and lets flow the things into the souls of his fellow
men that only the sensuous-real is the real.
With this transformation
of the ways of thinking the development of theology took place. What
is theology? It is the science of the divine as it is handed down since
millenniums. It scoops from the Bible as the science of the Middle Ages
scooped from Aristoteles. But it is just the teaching of theology that
no revelation continues forever, but that the world and the words of
the old revelations change. In the doctrine of the Catholic Church,
the immediate spiritual life does no longer flow; it depends there on
whether there are persons from who the spiritual life can still flow.
If we grasp it this way, we have to say that also theology is subject
to the materialistic thinking.
Once one did not understand
the Six-day Work in such a way, as if it had happened purely materially
in six days. One did not have the odd idea that one has not to study
Christ to understand Him, but one has only pointed to the fact that
the Logos was incarnated once in the human being Jesus. Unless one advanced
so far, one did not arrogate a judgement to recognise what lived there
from 1 to 33 A.D. Today one sees in Jesus – he is also called
the “simple man from Nazareth” only a man like anyone, only
nobler and more idealised. Theology has also become materialistic. These
are the essentials that the theological world view does no longer look
up to the summits of spirit, but wants to understand purely rationally,
materialistically what happened historically. Nobody can understand
the life work of Christ who looks at it only as history who only wants
to know how that looked and spoke who strolled in Palestine from 1 up
to 33 A.D. And nobody can make a claim to say that in him anything else
did not live than in other human beings. Or is anybody able to argue
away what he says: to me all power is given in heaven and on earth?
But one wants to understand the matters historically today.
What was spoken in a speech
on the 31st May, 1904 with a pastoral conference in Alsace-Lorraine
is very typical. There a professor Lobstein from Strassburg held a talk
Truth and Poetry in our Religion; a speech which is deeply
likeable and shows how the materialistic theologian wants to find the
way with the external research. Someone who approaches the Gospels with
materialistic ways of thinking tries to understand first of all, when
they were written. There he can rely only on the external documents,
on that which the external history delivers as material. However, what
was handed down comes basically from a much later time than it is normally
assumed. If one takes the external word, one gets around to saying:
the Gospels are inconsistent with each another. One has put together
the three Synoptics who can be reconciled; one has to consider the St.
John's Gospel separately. Hence, it has become for many something like
a poem. One has also examined the epistles of Paul and has found that
only this or that part is authentic. These facts constituted the basis
of the religious research.
Hence, the religious history
or dogma history became the most important science. Not the experience
of the dogmatic truth is important today, but the religious history,
the external representation of the events at that time. One wants to
investigate this. However, it should not depend on this at all. This
may be important to a materialistic history. but it is not theology.
Theology does not have to investigate, when the dogma of Trinity originated,
when it was pronounced first or was written down, but what it means,
what it announces to us, what it may offer as living, as fertile to
the inner life.
Thus it has come that one
talks as a professor of theology about truth and poetry in our religion.
One has found that there are contradictions in the writings. One has
shown that some matters do not agree with the natural sciences; these
are the miracles. One does not try to understand them, but one simply
says that they are not possible. Thus one got around to introducing
the concept of poetry in the Holy Scripture. One says that it does not
lose any value, but that the story is a kind of myth or poetry. One
must not be under the illusion that everything is fact, but one must
come to recognise that our Holy Scripture is composed of poetry and
truth.
This is based on a lack
of knowledge about the nature of poetry. Poetry is something else than
what the human beings imagine as poetry today. Poetry arose from the
spirit. Poetry itself has a religious origin. Before there was poetry,
there were already events like the Greek dramas to which the Greeks
pilgrimaged like to the Eleusinian mysteries. This is the original drama.
If it was practised, it was science for the Greeks, but also spiritual
reality at the same time. It was beauty and art at the same time, however,
also religious edification. Poetry was nothing else than the external
form which should express truth of the higher plane, not only symbolically,
but really. This forms the basis of every true poetry. Therefore, Goethe
says: poetry is not art, but an interpretation of the secret physical
principles that would never have become obvious without it. That is
why Goethe calls only someone “poet” who is anxious to recognise
truth and to express it in beauty. Truth, beauty and goodness are the
forms to express the divine.
Hence, we cannot speak about
poetry and truth in religion. Our time does no longer have correct concepts
of poetry. It does not know how poetry streams from the spring of truth.
Hence, every word wins something from it. We have to get again to the
correct concept of poetry. We have to understand what poetry was originally
and apply it to that which theology has to investigate. We probably
say: ye shall know them by their fruits. Where to has theology got ?
In a book which made a great stir in the last time, and which the people
have accepted because a modern theologian has written it I mean What
is Christianity? (1901) by Harnack (Adolf H.,1851–1930, Protestant
theologian) there is a place, and this place reads: “the Easter
message tells of the miraculous event in the garden of Joseph of Arimathea
that, nevertheless, no eye has seen, of the empty grave into which some
women and disciples looked, of the phenomena of the transfigured Lord
glorified so much that his followers could not recognise him immediately
, then also of speeches and actions of the risen Christ; the reports
became more and more complete and confident. However, the faith in Easter
is the conviction of the victory of the crucified over death, of God's
strength and justice and of the life of that who is the first-born among
many brothers. As to St. Paul, the basis of his faith in Easter was
the certainty that “the second Adam” had come from heaven,
and the experience that God revealed his son as a living one to him
on the way to Damascus.”
The theosophical world view
tries to lead the human beings upwards to understand this great mystery.
The theologian says: Today we do no longer know what happened, actually,
in the Garden of Gethsemane. We also do not know the quality of the
messages about the events that the disciples deliver to us. We also
do not know how to estimate the value of the words about the risen Christ
in the epistles of Paul. We cannot cope with it. But one thing is certain:
the faith in the risen Saviour started from these events, and we want
to keep to the faith and do not care about its basis. You find a concept
in the modern dogmatism that is strange for someone who looks for reasons
of truth. One says: one cannot explain it metaphysically. No contradiction
is possible, but also no explanation. There remains only the third,
the religious truth.
In Trier, they once put
up the Holy Robe of Jesus in the belief that the robe can work miracles.
This belief has disappeared, because every belief can be held only by
the fact that it is confirmed by experience. However, there remains
the fact that some have experienced this; there remains the subjective
religious experience.
Those who say this are allegedly
no materialists. In their theory, they are not, but in their ways of
thinking, in the way as they want to investigate the spiritual. This
is the basis of the spiritual life of our idealists and spiritists.
They all have accepted the materialistic ways of thinking. Also those
are materialists who want to sit together in a meeting room and want
to look at materialised ghosts. Spiritism has become possible because
of our materialistic ways of thinking. Today, one visits the spirit
materialistically. All idealistic theories are of no avail, as long
as the knowledge of the spirit remains a mere theory, as long as it
does not become life.
This requires a renewal,
a renaissance of theology. It is necessary that not only faith exists,
but that the immediate intuition flows in it with those who have to
announce the word of the divine world order. The theosophical world
view also wants to lead from the belief in the documents, in books and
stories to an observation of the spirit by self-education. The same
way which our science has taken shall be taken in the spiritual life,
in the spiritual wisdom. We have to arrive at the experience of the
spiritual again. Science, even wisdom, decides nothing here. Not by
logic, not by contemplation you can investigate anything. The logic
of your soul invents a sensuous world system. However, spiritual experience
fills our understanding with real contents. It is the higher spiritual
experience that has to fill our concepts with spiritual contents. That
is why a renaissance of theology takes place only if one understands
the word of the apostle Paul: all wisdom of the human beings is not
able to understand the divine wisdom. Science itself is not able to
do it. Just as little the external life can grasp this spiritual world.
Any reflection cannot lead to the spirit; as little as anybody who sits
on a distant island finds great physical truths without instruments
and without scientific methods one day.
To the human beings something
must occur that goes beyond wisdom that leads to the immediate life.
As well as our eyes and ears inform us about the sensuous reality, we
must experience the spiritual reality directly. Then our wisdom can
reach it. Paul did never say: wisdom is the precondition to reach the
divine. Not before we have found the whole world wisdom, we are able
again to bring together the whole. Not before we have a spiritual system
of world evolution again as we have a materialistic one on the other
side we must not have the old faith, but behold, here and there , then
the sensuous and the spiritual unite in a chain, and one will be able
to descend again from the spirit to the teachings of the sensuous science.
The theosophical world view
wants to bring that. It does not want to be theology, not a bookish
knowledge and also not the interpretation of any book, but it wants
experience of the spiritual life, it wants to give communications of
the experiences of this spiritual life. The same spiritual strength
also speaks to us today that once spoke with the announcement of the
religious systems. It has to be the task of that who wants to teach
something of the divine world order that he looks for the rise where
he can speak again lonely in the heart with the spiritual heart of the
world. Then the reversal takes place in our faculty which took place
from the Middle Ages to the modern times in the fields of the external
natural sciences. Then it occurs that if anybody announces anything
of the spirit, and someone faces him with the words: however, one reads
that differently in the scriptures, he eventually convinces him or not.
Perhaps, he also says to him: however, I believe more in the scriptures
than in that which quite a few people may tell about the immediate experience.
But the course of the spiritual life cannot be impeded. May there be
many inhibitions, may those be ever so reluctant who work for theology
in the sense of the mentioned medieval follower of Aristotle today,
the reversal which must take place here cannot be impeded. As knowledge
has risen from faith up to watching, we also ascend from faith to the
watching in the spiritual realm, and behold in theosophy. Then there
is no belief in letters, no theology, then there will be lively life.
The spirit of life will let those participate who can hear it. The word
will forge ahead and find the popular expression. The spirit speaks
of the spirit. Life will be there, and theology will be the soul of
this religious life.
Theosophy has this vocation
concerning the divinity faculty. If theosophy represents a movement
that wants to be capable of surviving, that can make life and lifeblood
flow into the letters of the scholarship, then we have a certain mission.
Who understands the matter in such a way does not regard us as adversaries
of those who have to announce the word. If the theologians seriously
dealt with the intentions of the theosophical movement, if they got
involved in our intentions, they would see something in theosophy that
could inspire and animate them. Not fragmentation, but the deepest peace
could be between the theologically and theosophically striving human
beings. One will recognise this in the course of time. One will overcome
the prejudices against the theosophical movement and understand how
true it is what Goethe said:
Who has science and art,
Has religion too;
Who doesn't have both,
Shall have religion.
Theosophy does not fight
against any religion in any way. Somebody is a right theosophist who
wishes that wisdom may flow into those who are appointed to speak to
humanity, so that it should not be necessary that there are theosophists
who tell something about the immediate religious view. Theosophy can
welcome the day with pleasure when one speaks of wisdom in the sites
from which religion should be announced. If the theologians announce
the right religion that way, one does no longer need theosophy.
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