III
CHANCE AND PRESENT-DAY CONSCIOUSNESS. AN EASTER MEDITATION
WE will begin the lecture today by thinking of what is implied by the
word chance. We say that certain happenings in the world
are comprehensible to us because they take their course in
accordance with law in them we recognise certain laws,
natural laws. Of other happenings it is said that they
seem to be governed by no law; the time at which they occur, the
sequence of circumstances connected with them ... all must be
attributed to chance. Modern science, recognising only
those abstract laws which it calls the laws of Nature,
will certainly be prone, where these laws prove inapplicable, to speak
of mere chance, of something, that is to say, in regard to
which conformity to law cannot be admitted. When modern science speaks
of chance in cases to which its laws do not apply, it
really puts a ban upon any suggestion of conformity to law. Both
generally and in particulars, there is hardly anything more intolerant
in human life than the scientific attitude. I do not, of
course, refer to scientific facts, for they are presented in a way
which does science the very highest credit, and intolerance does not
come into question here. I am speaking of the scientific
attitude which arises on the foundation of these facts. The
attitude of materialistic thought today is an example of almost the
greatest intolerance to be found in history.
If in the light of Spiritual Science, we consider chance
in relation to the life of feeling, our first question will be: How
does chance befall the human being? How does it present itself to him?
... When something happens by chance,
fortuitously, it seems as though a man could not possibly,
out of his own thoughts whatever they may be ascribe any
meaning, any inner conformity to law, to this chance
event. It looks as though reason must simply let it go at that,
without bothering to ascertain whether any conformity to law could
possibly be attributed to it. People are usually unwilling to bring
reason or intelligence to bear upon unforeseen occurrences which, as
such, are apparently quite inexplicable. Where feeling is concerned,
however, the attitude is very different, although this is not
generally realised. Feeling does not always allow itself to be
dominated by intellectual preconceptions or by the reasoning mind, but
rises out of hidden depths of the soul where man is wiser than he is
in his intellect and reason. Thus it may well happen that in his life
of feeling a man is attracted or repelled, pleased or displeased by
what his reason and intellect call pure chance. We will
take a definite example. A schoolboy is wrestling with a sum he has to
solve; he pores over it and struggles hard but still cannot get it
right. After persistent efforts he solves it, to his great delight.
But he says to himself: To be quite certain that I have got it
right and shall not be kept in and be given a bad mark, I must go
through it all again. So he makes up his mind that after supper
he will work it all out again. Then, quite by chance, and owing to
entirely unrelated circumstances, a classmate turns up at his home and
asks him what solution he has reached. They compare results and find
that they agree. In this way the boy is spared from an additional
strain; not needing to pore over the sum any longer, he is free and
can go to bed at once. Now if the father is what is called an
enlightened man, he will say: The other boy did not
call in unexpectedly just to save my boy an hour's study which might
have injured his health, but was sent by his mother to bring something
I had left behind. The father calls it chance. But
the boy has a feeling of happiness, although he will probably not go
to the length of believing that an Angel brought this school friend to
him; the reaction of his feelings, at any rate will be quite different
from that of his reason and intellect. The father will certainly not
be inclined to accept the idea that an Angel from Heaven sent the
friend to his son, yet he too will feel glad about what happened.
That is what I mean when I say that when feeling rises out of hidden
depths in the life of soul, it may well be cleverer than the intellect
and the reasoning mind which have to develop independence in the
course of the Earth's mission, to develop in such a way that they are
thrown back entirely on themselves; reason and intellect are, so to
speak, God-forsaken, and can therefore easily fall into
the error of believing that in what presents itself to them as chance,
there is no Divine-Spiritual conformity to law, nor anything like it.
Therefore we may say that what rises out of the depths of the soul
makes us as in this case cleverer in our feelings than
we are in our life of intellect and reason. This indicates quite
clearly that Spiritual Science is right when it asserts that what lies
in the depths of the soul and rises in the feelings from these depths,
originates from an epoch when the human being was not thrown back
entirely upon himself; that the element of sympathy or antipathy in
the life of soul is something that came over from the Old Moon period.
Therefore, during the course of Earth-revolution, the human being has
to become as clever in his life of intellect and reason as he became
in his life of feeling during the Old Moon period of evolution. Someone
may say at this point: But I have observed that feelings
are by no means always clever; they can also be the very reverse!
The reason for this is that our feelings as men of Earth are
influenced by the intellect which works down into the feelings. If our
feelings are stupid, they have become so only because they have been
influenced by the intellect. If the life of feeling had remained
immune from this influence, despite the circumstances connected with
incarnation and the general evolution of mankind, then the feelings
would, in fact, be cleverer than the intellect and the reason.
Considered from this point of view, something of peculiar interest
concerning chance presents itself, something that is
extremely instructive. The question might indeed be raised: Is
there not also significance in the very fact that certain things can
be regarded as fortuitous, accidental? Is not that in itself
significant? The question is a natural one, for it is precisely
during Earth-evolution that the human being must develop intellect and
reason in other words, what is called the normal
consciousness. At the end of Earth-evolution man should have reached
the stage of perceiving law in those happenings and facts which today
he considers fortuitous; they seem to him to be examples of pure
chance; he can see in them no immediate evidence of the
law manifested by happenings in Nature; their conformity to law is
wholly concealed. But precisely in those things which during the
Earth-evolution conceal all evidence of law, seeming to be pure
chance, man will learn to perceive a deeper conformity to law; when
Earth-evolution has run its course but not until then
this law will present itself with the same inexorable
necessity now associated with the laws of nature. If what
are now called chance happenings appeared to be subject to
the necessity of natural law, man would learn nothing from them. He
would not be able to bring himself to say of some event: I can
either regard it as full of significance or as chance!
And so because it is given into the hands of man and is a matter of
his own free will whether he will apply intelligence and reason to
what looks like chance, he learns to find his way through
earthly incarnations, to permeate with reason and intelligence what
seems to be subject to no rule and to be brought merely by chance: so
that what cannot, by its very nature, appear to him as an evidence of
rigid conformity to law, appears, finally, as evidence of spiritual
law.
We are able, here, to glimpse a very wise provision in
world-evolution, one which, if we grasp its significance, shows us
that with extraordinary wisdom, certain things were ordained to appear
as chance. We have therefore, ourselves to unravel the
threads of the law which has, first of all, to be discovered within
them. In order that for the sake of our own development, we might be
taught self-knowledge and learn to weigh ourselves in the balance, it
was left to our own will either to be wise or foolish, either to
recognise conformity to law in so-called matters of chance, or to
acknowledge only the inflexible laws of Nature. As time goes on it
will be found that certain branches of science will refuse to apply
anything except the abstract, laws of outer Nature and will insist
upon labelling everything else as chance. These branches
of science too, of course, represent activity in the life of soul, but
if, as Goethe indicates at the end of Faust, man has turned his gaze
to a higher world and has drawn nearer to what is spoken of by all
true mysticism as the Eternal Feminine, the realm in which
the Feminine is the symbol for the eternal laws of Nature
and the sciences ... if that has come to pass, these particular
branches of science will, at the end of Earth-existence, be regarded
as the Foolish Virgins. On the other hand, Spiritual
Science and what develops from it will be able to act in accordance
with wisdom and law in those domains where the external sciences
the Foolish Virgins are incapable of doing
so. This will enable certain branches of science to be the Wise
Virgins at the end of Earth-evolution. And the beautiful parable
in the Gospel indicates what will happen to the Wise and Foolish
Virgins in due time. [e.Ed:
Matthew 25:1-13]
These things can lead us more deeply into the secrets of
world-evolution; and if we connect direct observation of the outer
world with what we learn from Spiritual Science, a very remarkable
factor comes to light. I will ask you now to accompany me in your
thoughts.
You know that during the Earth period, more and more of the content,
the data of knowledge, the achievements, the experiences of the normal
consciousness, will become an integral part of man's being. But all
evolution proceeds slowly and by degrees, and it will occasionally
happen indeed it sometimes happens now that something
which only in the future will be normal for man, projects itself into
the life of abstract reason and intellect, into the domain of the
various branches of natural science; something not derived from the
normal consciousness but connected with higher forms of consciousness
projects itself into life. It is naturally veiled from the normal
consciousness, but it points, nevertheless, to the deeper backgrounds
of existence. Hence it is to be expected that whenever there is a
projection of something which transcends the normal consciousness, it
will also, strangely enough, be too striking to be lightly put down to
chance. In other words: As long as a man lives among his
fellows with his normal consciousness only, he can speak lightly of
chance. As long as in mutual dealings among human beings
there is no question of any element other than reason and intellect
playing into their words and actions, so long will it be possible to
speak glibly of chance. For then, everything in their
intercourse with one another and in external life which does not
appear to be subject to law, will look so much like chance that it
will be difficult to realise that even in what is, apparently, quite
fortuitous, there is a connection regulated by law. But suppose
something comes into our earthly life which cuts across the ordinary
form of intercourse between human beings, based as it is, merely upon
intellect and reason something which indicates a great deal
more! So that you may see what I mean, I want to quote a special case
which is to be regarded merely as an example but from which a great
deal may be learnt if it is viewed in the light of Spiritual Science.
It is an unpleasant, disagreeable case, but one from which we can
learn, as in an experiment, what is actually in operation.
In a certain place it happened that a clergyman had alienated a
woman's affection from her husband. He had had a kind of love-affair
with this woman, causing the husband deep grief. In the same place
there lived two men, friends of each other, who were devoted to the
clergyman, not merely in their intellectual life, but in their hearts
and feelings. They were in his power, in the sense that his influence
worked not only through the life of intellect and reason but also
through the religious services and rites, through the element of
spiritual life in religion. That the rites in this case had not
produced any very good effect, is not the point here; the point is the
method adopted by the two men and the fact that the clergyman was
their spiritual pastor ... The two friends finally decided to do the
clergyman a good turn and they consulted together as to how to get rid
of the husband. The case has ugly features about it because the
spiritual element is mingled with egoistic, human interests, bringing
the whole thing near to the region of black magic. The two friends
agreed to murder the husband, and actually did so. Thus they both
incurred guilt, not merely by their intellectual decision but also
because they had come under the sway of a psychological influence
which affected the whole parish. We have therefore a curious case of
human connections in which not only reason and intellect are operating
but also something lying behind reason and intellect because
the clergyman, being what he was, was able to work with means
connected with the spiritual life. What is to be expected, in the
light of the principles of Spiritual Science known to us? Because
events are causes and, as such, bring consequences, we can expect to
find something else happening as a result of what then took place. In
most occurrences connected merely with the operations of the reason
and intellect, you will find many chance happenings, and
you will speak of them light-heartedly as such, if you know nothing of
Spiritual Science. But it will not be possible to speak of
chance when there is definite evidence of a psychic
influence having been involved in the causes of certain happenings.
Here were two friends who had co-operated in the murder. In such a
case, karma may be expected to work in a very definite way and all the
circumstances oblige us to think of something more than
chance. Something very special must have been at work, for
in this case there is evidence of an influence which might be termed
grey or black magic. And what did, in fact,
happen? The two murderers fell ill unaccountably, each with a
different illness, and both died within the same hour. Those who
insist upon speaking of chance will naturally want to do
so here too; but those less determined to attribute everything to
chance will try to reflect a little more deeply. What has been said in
connection with this striking example will be confirmed in many ways
if you are willing to probe thoroughly into incidents suggesting the
interplay of something more than belongs specifically to the
Earth-mission and Earth-consciousness; in this case, something rooted
behind the sphere of external existence is in operation, indicating by
the peculiar course of events, abnormal conditions
as common parlance would express it. But those who observe events from
the standpoint of Spiritual Science will say: Here is a direct
indication that because there is something different in the actual
causes, the karmic course taken by the consequences of those causes
will be strikingly significant.
Thus when we know of the power of the Supersensible behind the world
of sense, the very way in which the external facts present themselves
is an indication that such happenings differ from those in which there
is no suggestion of any interplay of the Supersensible. Ordinary
science would do well to investigate matters other than the pointless
subjects which are dragged to light nowadays and which Friedrich
Theodor Vischer in some respects a very shrewd writer
ridiculed in the following way. He said: There was once a learned
scholar who went to Goethe's house and burrowed in all the dust that
had been accumulating for years, examining every scrap of paper still
lying in the wastepaper baskets; then he searched in all the corners,
turned over the dirty rubbish heaps, and finally produced a treatise
on The Connection between Frau Geheimrat von Goethe's Chilblains
and the symbolical characters in the Second Part of Faust! That
is a rather radical example but in the catalogues of the most learned
publications, similar things are to be found. It would be well if
external science, instead of occupying itself with such matters as
Vischer had in his mind, were to turn to happenings like the one
quoted, which provide striking evidence that occurrences attributed to
chance but indicating the existence of psychical elements,
clearly hint at meaning. The same thing applies, of course, to cases
where no psychical factor is in evidence and which may therefore
lightly be put down to chance, only then it is not so easy
to perceive the meaning, and spiritual observation is required to
discern the presence of law. And so if we study life, in what
confronts us as chance, as an antithesis to law, we can
see the clash of two worlds, literally the clash of two worlds.
What do I mean by this?
Man has his Earth-mission to fulfil, that is to say, he has to develop
and elaborate what is now called the normal consciousness.
A wise World-Order has made it possible for many happenings to appear
to him as chance; it therefore rests with his free will, whether or no
he will recognise in them the presence of law. But several currents,
not only one, are always in operation. Everywhere there is an inflow
of the Spiritual, the Spiritual of which man, too, is part. The
Spiritual would have been operating in an occurrence of the kind
described above, even if the central figure had not been a clergyman;
but in that case his own life of soul would not have been implicated
to anything like the same extent.
This episode provides a clear illustration of the operation of another
element, side by side with reason and intellect. Both elements play
continually into life. Do not imagine for a moment that people who
claim to be Monists, in other words, materialists, have
emancipated themselves altogether from the Spiritual, or that they
believe in nothing at all, as they pretend. Monism is
nothing but belief belief, moreover, which obscures the
Spiritual. What is all important is to see through the illusion, the
maya. Human prejudices being what they are, it is, of course,
difficult always to see through maya; when people are deeply imbedded
in maya it is by no means easy to see through it. Those who look at
history today from the standpoint of materialism, may say: The
course of evolution is such that on account of certain purely
materialistic contrasts in the social life of man, some kind of
collapse is inevitable, and out of this collapse a new order of
society will grow. This is now being taken for granted in the
domain of historical materialism. It has been prophesied
that the clash between classes and ranks will result in a collapse of
the social order, and that a new order of society will arise from the
ruins. A materialist who speaks in this sense will certainly be ready
to admit that he believes in nothing, but bases his judgment upon
historical facts; and he will refer with a kind of inner satisfaction,
even with glee, to queer fellows who spoke of an
Apocalypse, a kingdom of a thousand years, a
millenium, of a different shaping of the future brought
about by the spiritual worlds! He will look down upon them as
eccentrics. But it never once enters his head that he is merely
accepting another belief, substituting materialistic belief for belief
in the Spiritual. Those who are seekers after truth, however, must see
through such things and emancipate themselves from maya.
Within us there is a clash of two worlds: one is connected merely with
the operations of intellect and reason, resulting from the mission of
the Earth as such; the other is connected with spiritual happenings
which even in their apparent fortuitousness, speak an eloquent
language (as in the instance given and in innumerable other cases).
What is it, then, that can help us, while adhering to the purpose and
mission of Earth-existence, to seek for the working of law in
chance, recognising the wisdom with which world-evolution
has made it possible for certain things to appear as
chance, in order that when we ourselves become a little
wiser, we shall wish to discover the operation of law in them? Without
exonerating the weaknesses of the times, let us face the facts
clearly.
With dauntless scientific daring, men of the present age place their
reliance upon the laws of Nature and are not afraid to bring the facts
and happenings of Nature into the framework of these laws. In this
respect men are truly courageous And why? It may sound harsh but in a
certain sense it is true to say that they are courageous because after
that there is nothing more to do! No special courage is needed to
recognise natural laws or to anticipate laws where external phenomena
themselves speak so forcibly. In these days, as a matter of fact,
there would be an inclination to pay greater respect to those who are
bold enough to deny natural laws than to those who recognise them If
someone were to say: People maintain that natural law exists,
but after all, it, too, may well be only chance ...
this might evoke greater respect because it would be a radical and
audacious step to admit the possibility of chance in the sphere of
natural law. Nietzsche was one who came very near to the point of
regarding everything as chance. Again, someone might say: Even
if hitherto the sun has risen every morning, that might likewise be a
matter of chance; the daily sunrise may be regarded as chance as
justifiably as other happenings. Such a statement might be
forcible and audacious but it would be false! In their
recognition of natural laws operating in chemical and physical
processes men are undoubtedly courageous the courage is
certainly there ... but it is cheap! The facts of Nature do not
readily lend themselves to being regarded as chance. Courage
evaporates in the face of things generally designated as
chance, Just where it is most needed and when man ought to
say to himself: Although the happenings confronting me here seem
to group themselves together quite haphazardly, I shall try to find a
deeper meaning and purpose in them! To see meaning and purpose
in external chance means that the outer facts are being confronted
with a strength of soul which also endures in the face of seemingly
quite fortuitous happenings. The modern weavings of phantasy in regard
to chance are the outcome of inner weakness, because men do not trust
themselves to recognise law in the things which seem to be fortuitous.
It is really cowardice on the part of science to accept the factor of
chance and to be chary of introducing law into what presents itself as
disordered chaos simply because law does not make itself immediately
apparent. Hence the science of today which really lacks courage and is
willing only to concern itself with natural laws, must be counteracted
by the forcible and courageous science of the Spirit which makes the
soul strong enough to perceive law and order in apparently fortuitous
happenings. This is the side of Spiritual Science which must make the
human being strong enough not merely to recognise law where the
external circumstances themselves compel him to be courageous, but
where he must call upon all his inner forces and let them speak with
the same compelling power with which Nature happenings speak to him.
Nature confronts the human being as a finished work. Within Nature and
by the side of Nature, chance presents itself. Man himself
is involved in this chance and much of what he calls his
destiny is rooted in the laws underlying it. What is it, then, that is
needed? We will now try to answer this question.
Something must take place of which the exoteric world has absolutely
no idea. What is needed is an invigoration of the impulse which has
led to the scientific method and attitude of today an
invigoration which cannot possibly be drawn from the domain of science
alone. External science must receive an impulse deriving from
spiritual research. For since external science allows itself to be
coerced into accepting natural laws, it will be incapable of unfolding
the courage that is necessary for the perception of spiritual law in
the realm of the seemingly fortuitous. Spiritual Science must
constitute a new impulse which calls for the steeling of courage in
the souls of men, an impulse which leads to something absolutely new
in the world, even though this amounts merely to a new understanding
of what has already been imparted to mankind but remains more or less
unconscious; from our time onwards men must become conscious of it.
The need for a new impulse is everywhere apparent even to those
who resist it. They themselves realise the need quite clearly but they
often proceed in a very strange way. They do not directly admit it,
but lacking the courage to adopt the attitude of which we have spoken,
they are willing, strangely enough, to be reconciled to all sorts of
philosophical opinions concerning the spiritual world which make some
slight compromise with the prevailing scientific mentality. Here and
there you will find that commendable tolerance is extended
to teachings concerning a spiritual world although it is not difficult
to attribute this tolerance to likes and predilections which have a
habit of persisting in sincere and scientifically-minded people ...
but you may be quite sure that somewhere or other there will be
exceptions. Those who think they have an unconditional right to judge,
may say: Yes, it is possible to come to terms with advocates of
idealistic philosophy when they base their acceptance of a spiritual
world upon reason. But when they hear about Spiritual Science or
Theosophy, these people adopt a curious attitude and act very
strangely, for it makes them uneasy! They cannot altogether account
for it, but one thing they know, namely, that they do not want to have
anything to do with this kind of thing! On that point they are
unyielding and then they are not quite so tolerant; they abuse
Spiritual Science, say that it is fantastic and has no reasoned
foundations. Even those who from superior heights occasionally extend
tolerance to other forms of idealistic thought, adopt an attitude to
Spiritual Science which almost confounds the saying of Goethe:
The little fellows never notice the devil, even when he has them
by the collar! ... for Theosophy seems to them to be the very
embodiment of the devil. They do not usually say as much, but that is
how things are.
There has lately been a striking example of this among our own ranks;
attention may be drawn to it for it is mentioned in the current German
periodicals. For his Doctorate at a northern University, one of our
members submitted a thesis on The Relation of the Ego to
Thinking. If the man in question had been in the position in
which I was lucky enough to be when I wrote my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity which was before I was presenting,
under the name of Theosophy, the world-conception I now
hold nobody would have any idea, any false idea,
that this thesis on the relation of the Ego to Thinking has any
connection with Theosophy; for there is absolutely nothing about
Theosophy in it, any more than there is in my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity, or in my Truth and Science. People
had no inkling of what was behind these two works and from time to
time remarkably favourable opinions were expressed. I can give another
example too. One day, because of my publications on Goethe, I was
commissioned to write a chapter on Goethe's relation to natural
science. The manuscript lay in the hands of the editor for a long
time and the work did not appear. In those days it was practically a
foregone conclusion that this particular section would have been trusted to
me and not one of the persons concerned had any doubt about it. But
you see, I had begun to use the word Theosophy and at the
time I actually held an official position in the Theosophical
Movement. The treatise was returned to me as unusable! You
can see what was going on behind the scenes then, and also in the
present case. If our friend had not been a theosophist, nobody would
have failed to recognise that here was a logical, dialectical thesis
on The Relation of the Ego to Thinking ... but the university town
where this episode took place is not very big. The writer was known to
be a theosophist and so the professors had no use for his work. As the
professors themselves happened also to be engaged in experimental
psychology, their attitude was: We recognise law only where external
compulsion holds sway. If any body recognises law where there is no
external compulsion, as is the case in the relation of the Ego to
Thinking, his thesis is rejected as a matter of course! And so the
thesis was turned down. But something else transpired. The thesis is
written in a northern language with which very few people are
conversant, and it was sent to an old German professor who by
chance I say this advisedly understands this
language. He gave his verdict quite objectively and it was an
extremely favourable one.
I mention these incidents there are many others as well so that
you may know how things are, and form your own judgments. Among
theosophists too there are people who are ready to admit: Here or
there spiritual teaching is to be found ... although they ought to
realise that it is not a question of looking for a really new impulse
here or there, but in Spiritual Science itself. The
impulses leading to progress in the world can only flourish when they
are grasped in their full force. The human being, too, must lay hold
of all the forces within him if he is to realise that apparent
fortuity in the world is permeated with meaning and divine purpose.
This is the impulse that must be given by Spiritual Science. Men must
recognise that in the course of human evolution a point was once
reached which must now be understood in a new sense, and in full
consciousness. Significant allusion is made to it in the First Chapter
of the Gospel of St. Mark, in the words: The time is fulfilled
and the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand; know yourselves, pay heed to the
new message. And then, a few verses further on, a remarkable
statement occurs concerning Christ Jesus.
(Note 1)
In our Movement it is not a question of advocating orthodoxy or dogma
but of indicating, in the evolutionary process of mankind, the coming
of the impulse which leads to the strengthening of those inner forces
whereby the human I attains self-knowledge, learning
also to behold itself in the world and to draw into its own realm of
law, what otherwise appears as blind chance. Why is it
that the phenomena of Nature give no suggestion of chance? Why does
man speak of law in the phenomena of Nature? It is for this reason.
After the expiration of the Saturn-, Sun- and Moon-periods of
evolution, the Exusiai, the Spirits of Form, the
Spirits of Revelation, began their operations; and the
manifested laws of Nature are not abstract laws but, in a spiritual
sense, the Deeds of the Exusiai, of the Spirits of Form! When man
observes the course of Nature-happenings he beholds, in the laws of
Nature, the Deeds of the Exusiai. But his courage has failed. And
where the Exusiai are not articulate, where they do not palpably
indicate what they have laid into the facts and happenings of Nature,
man has no longer any inkling that there, too, the Spiritual is in
operation, in the shape of Law. But he must strive to reach the stage
where he speaks of those happenings which today he still ascribes to
chance, as the Exusiai speak in the facts of Nature. Human
courage has broken down. How does man speak of destiny, of destiny in
humanity? He speaks just like the grammarians who have eyes only for
the words and are not interested in the connections between the words,
thinking, often enough, that there is no active, living power within
them. Man must learn not only to see connective purpose in the facts
of Nature, in the Deeds of the Exusiai, but out of an inner impulse he
must learn to speak of events in the life of humanity as though the
Exusiai were being made manifest in what today seems to he pure
chance. In order that this might be, there came One Who spoke very
differently from those who are ignorant of what lies behind apparently
fortuitous happenings. The One Who came, spoke not as the grammarians
but as the Exusiai speak out of the facts of Nature. Thus did Christ
speak out of the mouth of Jesus! The Gospel indicates this in a
wonderful way in that to the abstract words: And they were
amazed at His teaching ... it immediately adds: For He
taught as the Exusiai teach! Where do the Exusiai teach? In the
facts of Nature! And with this same Nature-necessity, Christ spoke out
of the mouth of Jesus concerning those realms of existence over which
the laws of Nature seem to exercise no sway.
Such is the impulse that must enter into men. Then, in the
chance happenings of today they will find the courage to
recognise the kingdom of spiritual law and gradually to learn to speak
of it as the Exusiai, the Spirits of Form, speak in the facts of
Nature.
The great Easter-Impulse given to humanity consisted in this: There
dwelt in Jesus of Nazareth the Power of a Being Who spoke with the
same inner necessity with which the laws of Nature speak in the facts
of Nature, from the mineral kingdom of Earth, up and beyond the realm
of the clouds, to the very Realm of the stars. Thus did Christ speak
in Jesus of Nazareth! And when man is able to fire his courage with
this impulse he will recognise conformity to law in all the facts of
world-existence, in the realm of Nature and also in the realm of the
Spirit, where chance is thought to operate. There must
come to men free from all preconceived thoughts a new
understanding of where the might of the Christ-Impulse lies, and of
the heights to which the Christ-Impulse can raise them.
With such thoughts we pass towards the Festival held as a memorial
that this Impulse was vouchsafed to mankind. Much of what has been said
in this lecture may well serve as a kind of Easter Meditation, and you
will then find that such thoughts can help to promote the true mood of
soul in which to celebrate the Festival.
- Note 1:
- See: The Gospel of St. Mark, by Rudolf Steiner.
|