LECTURE SIX
FAITH AND KNOWLEDGE
Notes from a lecture given in Prague,
April 17, 1914
Given the
large amount of literature available, it is always possible to learn
about the findings of spiritual science, particularly when
anthroposophical groups work together. Since we are together now, I
would like to discuss some guiding ideas out of spiritual impulses,
ideas that continue in a more esoteric way what we spoke about more
generally in yesterday's public lecture.
[ Note 1 ]
Many people today still
believe in the contrast between faith and knowledge, faith and
cognition. They say science can tell us about the world outside us,
the only one we can know of with certainty. However, concerning the
spiritual world, we must have faith. This attitude appears to
contradict spiritual science, which strives to give us real knowledge
of and insight into the spiritual world. In fact, it has to enter
souls in our time in just this form, as insight and knowledge. In
earlier incarnations our souls were in a completely different
condition than now. They were more primitive, but in those times
there were great individuals and many people connected with them.
Those individuals conveyed ideas of the spiritual world, which we can
still find in certain tribes and peoples and trace to individuals
such as Hermes, Zarathustra, Moses, Buddha, and Krishna.
[ Note 2 ]
Spiritual ideas had to be poured into people's souls.
In the physical world life
is not just toil and work, but slaving and drudgery. Most of this
toil and work is not in the sense of “it's been a hard day's
work,” but in the sense of unconscious occurrences caused by
our thinking — in fact, our whole soul life as it takes its
course.
We are all much more alike
when we are born than we think. We do not resemble each other in our
appearance, but in our structure. The forces at work in a child are
active at an unconscious level. The spirit takes hold of the body and
structures it. Only then does the sculpting and elaborating of the
nerves begin. This happens independently of our mind, at a time when
we are not yet able to use it. Then we become aware of ourselves as
an I. That is when the wisdom we have brought with us from the gods,
from the spiritual world, ceases.
In the first period after
birth, we have only life forces, so to speak; our life then is
nothing but a continuation of the spiritual world. Death in infancy
is due to external bodily causes, and the child's soul plays no part
in it.
Then we begin to deplete
our physical bodies with every thought, every feeling. We must sleep
to make up for what we have depleted during the day. If we did not
thus eat away at our physical organization, we would have a budding
and burgeoning life. Our etheric body always wants to bud and to
sprout, but the astral body needs to consume what the etheric body
builds up, and thus suppresses it. When we are sleeping, compensation
for what has been eaten away and killed off flows into us from the
spiritual world to reestablish the balance. The normal amount of
sleep replaces exactly as much as has been depleted. If we decided to
sleep more, as some retired people do, we would sleep too much. Of
course, that is no objection to sleeping a lot. Since intellectual
work takes a lot out of our physical organization, people doing that
kind of work need much sleep. But if we sleep too much, we have too
many new life forces and these then begin to proliferate; the human
being then abounds with life forces. This surplus of life forces
leads to illness. So if we want to do more than merely make up for
what we depleted through our daily work and advance spiritually, we
have to consciously take what we need from the spiritual world.
The founders of our
religions believed it was their task to lead their people, to use up
life forces, which will then be compensated for. However, what has to
develop within us for the progress of humanity must be consciously
drawn from the spiritual world so that it will not die in our
physical existence.
That is why the founders of
our religions provided ideas they had received from the spiritual
world. These truly spiritual thoughts nourish our soul and maintain
it. It would be the death of our soul if it always had to live in
thoughts taken only from the physical world. In earlier times,
religious beliefs were such spiritual thoughts human souls need. That
phase of our development has been completed, and we live now in a
time when we on earth will gradually lose the ability to take in what
speaks only to our emotions, our faith. We can still preserve this
faith for a time, galvanizing it, so to speak, but we cannot keep it
for the future. The principle “I believe” has to be
replaced with “I believe what I know.” People will begin
to feel that this new principle must be applied. Otherwise we deny
ourselves any possibility of knowing something about the life between
death and a new birth. Then we would return to pitiful conditions in
our next incarnation. Enthusiasm for other ideals, all clearly
justified, is certainly a good thing and has to exist. However, in
comparison with the foundations of spiritual science, these ideals
cannot be put into practice directly. Lacking its knowledge, they can
only be precursors of spiritual science.
As we progress in our
spiritual research, we will feel the need to remain silent rather
than to speak. If we speak nevertheless, it is out of insight into
the conditions necessary for our time. Knowledge alone will make us
free, and it is the task of the future to win the freedom of the
human soul.
Thoughts of great spiritual
power came from the founders of our religions. They were thoughts of
faith that could wonderfully illuminate the region beyond death.
These ideas were transformed into a true, spiritual light that
revealed the environment beyond death to human beings. But the time
will come when we will have to live in freedom. And even if new
religious leaders were still to proclaim the old teachings of faith
with the voice and the power of the gods, we would no longer
understand them. We are experiencing this now. The sciences concerned
with the outer world have arrived, as they had to. A great
contemporary scientist, Max Müller, said that if an angel were
to come down and proclaim news of the spiritual world, people would
not understand or believe him.
[ Note 3 ]
That is the development of
humanity. It seems to lead inevitably to the loss of our ability to
imbue ourselves with thoughts related to the spiritual worlds. That
would mean we would have less light after death to illuminate our
spiritual environment by ourselves. After all, no sun will shine from
the outside on the world around us then, the light has to come from
us. We then take the place of the sun and illuminate our surroundings
after death. People unable to do this will have to return and repeat
life on earth to assimilate thoughts and ideas that are fruitful for
their existence after death. When we understand this, more than the
usual enthusiasm for spreading spiritual science will loosen our
tongue and prompt us to speak. Believing in what we know — that
will be the need of humanity in the future.
In ancient times, religious
ideas, myths, and fairy tales gave souls light for the spiritual
world. It is easy to say that myths and fairy tales developed in the
childhood stages of the human race. Of course, people did not
physically meet the angels that myths and fairy tales speak about.
But thinking based on philosophy will be of little use in the
spiritual world where such knowledge has no meaning. It is easy to
say fairy tales are not based on truth. Spiritual researchers are not
so naive, and know that fiery dragons do not really fly through the
air. However, they always knew it was necessary to form the
Imagination of the fiery dragon, for when it lives in the soul, it
casts light on the spiritual world. These are powerful Imaginations.
That is the principle behind all myths; they are not intended to
reflect external reality accurately, but to enable us to live in the
spiritual world.
Materialists say myths and
fairy tales originated in the childhood stage of the human race. But
in its childhood, humanity was taught by the gods. In the process of
our evolution, myths and fairy tales are gradually lost, but children
should not grow up without them. It makes a tremendous difference
whether or not children are allowed to grow up with fairy tales. The
power of the fairy tale images, which give wings to the soul, becomes
apparent only at a later age. Growing up without fairy tales leads
later to boredom, to world-weariness. Indeed, it can even cause
physical symptoms — fairy tales can help to prevent illnesses.
The qualities that seep into our soul from fairy tales later emerge
as a zest for life, enthusiasm for being alive, and an ability to
cope with life, all of which can be seen even in old age. Children
have to experience the power of the content of fairy tales while they
are young and can still do so. People who cannot live with ideas that
have no reality on the physical plane will be dead to the spiritual
world. Philosophies based only on the material world are the death of
our soul. Physical evolution leads to the death of the spiritual
world. We must reach a view of the world based not on appearances,
but resting solidly on its own inherent structure. We have to move
toward the principle: I believe what I know.
We have to learn to pay
attention to the symptoms of our cultural life. For example, I once
gave a lecture in a town in southern Germany, and afterward two
Catholic priests came up to me and said that I was only speaking to
educated people, while they spoke so everyone could understand them.
In reality, the opposite is the case. Anthroposophy can reach
everyone provided we find the way to the simple, ordinary people. The
farmer would understand it much better than the so-called educated
person if only the way were not blocked by social conventions. In
these matters, we must be able to leave ourselves completely out of
the picture and not ask what we think best. Instead, we must ask what
human souls require in a given era. So I replied to the priests that
while their feeling tells them they speak to everyone, the facts will
tell them they do not, because not everyone comes to hear them. And
it is to those who do not come to them that I speak.
On earth we gain knowledge
and insight through our physical and etheric bodies. Let us examine
carefully how much of what is in our soul comes from the physical
world. Light, for example, reaches us through the eyes. The process
of seeing is one of deterioration right from its start in the eyes.
The deterioration starts directly at the retina. The process detaches
itself from life. In the morning, after sleep, our eyes have been
restored and are filled with pure life. However, as we perceive,
something forms in the living tissue that is no longer alive but only
mineral. And we perceive the outer world, which is mirrored in us,
because this process continues in the nerve tissue. Thus, insofar as
the physical body is the bearer of these processes, it is not alive.
The etheric body is the
bearer of thoughts that are also mirror images. People could easily
discover that our thoughts reflect the super-sensible. Thoughts will
never lend themselves to inspection under the microscope because in
reality they live in the etheric body. They are formed by our
thinking, which is mirrored in the physical body. We can see from
this that understanding and knowledge are dependent on the physical
and etheric bodies, which are affected only by the impressions of the
physical world. Completely different thoughts have to take hold in
our soul, in our astral body, and all our feeling, willing, and
thinking not limited to the physical plane. Otherwise we will remain
inwardly dead. All thoughts that represent objects are meaningful
only on the physical plane. This is implied in the very question,
“Are thoughts that do not represent objects justified?”
Only with the thoughts living freely in the spirit, living freely in
the astral body and the I can we gain insight, only with those
thoughts can we live. These thoughts not only represent things, but
are also inwardly active and alive; they create something out of
themselves and out of us.
In modern art, naturalism
predominates these days. In ancient times the soul was filled with
images that brought activity into the thoughts of the astral body.
Everything depicting only outer things is meaningless in the
spiritual world. We must imbue ourselves with new images that can
once again meaningfully permeate our soul. Often we take hold of
something we believe to exist only in our imagination, to be only
fantasy. This is frequently only a memory of something originating on
the physical plane. We can revitalize what would otherwise die in our
soul only by enlivening our images with thoughts that do not
originate on the physical level and are not created by that kind of
imagination.
People increasingly misuse
the phrase: A beautiful soul in a beautiful body, a healthy soul in a
healthy body. This phrase was appropriate for the understanding of
earlier times. Unfortunately, today it is seen as a statement of
cause; if someone has a healthy body, people conclude that a healthy
soul lives in it. Whatever makes the body healthy will do the same
for the soul.
If people do not develop
thoughts that keep the astral body inwardly agile, they will suffer
from mineral deposits even in childhood and as a result become ill
later in life. And the world they enter after death will remain dark,
because they do not radiate any light themselves. The rays of the sun
strike a surface and that is how we see things. But in the spiritual
world we are the source of light; we illuminate the surroundings we
are supposed to see. Souls feeling the need to pursue spiritual
science may not be aware of these circumstances, but they live in the
depths of the soul. Just as in the physical world sunlight comes from
the outside, so we must make ourselves sunlike in the spiritual
world. We have to light in ourselves the spiritual fuel, the inner
flame, to illuminate the realm of the spirit.
Physicists imagine the red
of a rose can be traced to oscillation, to variations in wavelength.
People say there is really no sound, only vibrations of air. They
claim what we hear as sound exists only in our ears. Well, a simple
experiment can teach us otherwise, namely, if we have someone wake us
up by knocking on the door. We will notice that we were not conscious
during the night when we were asleep, but that on waking up we were
already living in the knocking. We ourselves have to enter into the
knocking sound. We use the other person to do the knocking because
our soul itself cannot do it. If we resolved firmly to wake up, we
could do so, but this way we are only using the other person as a
tool.
If materialist views
continue to persist for several generations more, the red of roses
will really disappear. People will actually see little gray atoms
vibrating as an atomic whirl, not because they have to see them or
because they exist, but because they will have trained themselves to
see them. That is why it is necessary to spread spiritual science, to
prevent having to live in a future filled with nothing other than
physical atoms swirling around.
We are not talking about
the physical ether but the one that is living thought. We must
realize first of all that a rose is not a mass of whirling atoms, but
that behind it there are real living and interweaving elemental
beings. The theory of the spiritual world is secondary; the main
thing is to concentrate our feeling, to feel ourselves living and
weaving in our new perception of the reality of the spiritual world.
This is the resurrection of the spiritual world in our souls, the
truly ecumenical Easter event.
Our ancestors required a
different event that was connected to the time when the sun reaches
its zenith. When everything in nature was budding and blossoming,
they experienced an ecstasy that reaffirmed for them the existence of
the spiritual world. What they experienced then at St. John's Tide we
now have to experience in the spring, at Easter. We have to be able
to celebrate the awakening of the soul, the resurrection of the soul,
when spiritual science speaks to us not merely as a theory, but as
living knowledge.
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