LECTURE NINE
In the course of our studies I have spoken
of the events in the early development of Western
civilization. My aim was to ascertain from these enquiries
into the past what is of importance for the present, and with
this object in view I propose to pursue the matter in further
detail. Our present epoch, as we can see from a cursory
glance, is an epoch when only thoughts derived from the
Mystery teachings concerning human evolution can exercise
effective influence. Now in order to grasp the full
implication of this claim we must not only have a clear
understanding of many things, but we must also look closely
into the needs and shortcomings of contemporary thinking,
feeling and willing. We shall then begin to feel that our
present epoch has need of new impulses, new thoughts and
ideas, and especially of those impulses and thoughts which
spring from the depths of the spiritual life and which must
become the subject of spiritual-scientific study.
At the
present time there is much that fills us with sadness. We
must not allow ourselves to be depressed by this mood of
sadness, rather should it be something that can prepare us
and teach us to work and strive in our present circumstances.
I recently came across a publication which I felt would give
me the greatest pleasure. The author is one of the few who
are receptive to the ideas of Spiritual Science and the more
is the pity that he was unable to introduce into his writings
the fruits of anthroposophical endeavour. The book to which I
am referring is
The State as Organism,
by Rudolf Kjellén
(note 1),
the Swedish political
economist. After reading the book, I must confess that I was
left with a feeling of disappointment because I realized that
here was a person who, as I said, was receptive to the ideas
of Spiritual Science, but whose thoughts were still far
removed from the thoughts we stand in need of today, thoughts
which must be clearly formulated and become concrete reality,
especially today, so that they may enter into the evolution
of our time. In his book Kjellén undertook to study the
State and its organization, but at no time does one feel that
he possessed the ideas or the intellectual grasp which could
offer the slightest chance of solving his problem. It is a
melancholy experience to be disillusioned time and again
— but let us not be discouraged, let us rather brace
ourselves to meet the challenge of our time.
Before I say
a few words on these matters I should like to call your
attention once again to those ancient Mysteries which, as you
can well imagine from the statements I recently made about
the iconoclasm of the (Christian) Church, are known to
history today only in a mangled version. It is all the more
necessary therefore for our present age that Spiritual
Science should bring an understanding of these Mysteries. I
mentioned in my last lecture the unprecedented fury with
which Christianity in the first centuries destroyed the
ancient works of art and how much that was of priceless value
was swept away. One cannot take an impartial view of
Christianity unless one is prepared to see this destructive
side with complete objectivity. And bear in mind at the same
time that the various books which deal with this subject
present a particular point of view. Everyone today who has
received a minimum of education has a picture of the
spiritual development of Antiquity, of the spiritual
evolution that preceded Christianity. But how different this
picture would be if Archbishop Theophilus
(note 2)
of Alexandria had not burnt in the year 391
seven hundred thousand scrolls which contained vitally
important records of Roman, Egyptian, Indian and Greek
literature and their cultural life. Just imagine how
different would be the picture of Antiquity if these seven
hundred thousand scrolls had not been burnt. And from this
you will realize how much reliance can be placed on the
history of the past which has documentary support — or
rather how little reliance!
Let us now
follow up the train of thought which I touched on in my
lecture yesterday. I pointed out that the forms of Christian
worship were in many respects borrowed from the symbols and
ceremonies of the ancient pagan Mystery cults, that the forms
of these Mystery cults and symbols had been totally
eradicated by Christianity in order to conceal their origin.
Christianity had made a clean sweep of the pagan forms of
worship so that people had no means of knowing what had
existed prior to their time and would simply have to accept
what the Church offered. Such is the fate of human evolution.
We must be prepared to recognize without giving way to
pessimism that the course of human evolution is not one of
uninterrupted progress.
I also showed
in the course of my lecture yesterday that the rites and
rituals of the Roman Church owed much to the Eleusinian
Mysteries which had been interrupted in their development
because Julian had been unable to carry out his intentions;
his plan had failed to materialize. But the rites and
sacraments of later years owed still more to the Mithras
Mysteries. But the spirit of the Mithras Mysteries, that
which justified their existence, the source from which they
derived their spiritual content, can no longer be
investigated. The Church has been careful to remove all
traces of it and to close the door to enquiry. Knowledge of
this can only be recovered if we strive to come to an
understanding of these things through Spiritual Science.
Today I propose to touch upon only one aspect of the Mithras
Mysteries
(note 3).
I could of course speak
at greater length about the Mithras Mysteries if I had more
time at my disposal, but in order to understand them we must
first gradually become conversant with their details.
In order to
grasp the true spirit of the Mithras Mysteries whose
influence spread far into the West of Europe during the first
post-Christian centuries, we must be aware that they were
based upon a central core of belief (which was right for the
world of Antiquity and perfectly justified up to the time of
the Mystery of Golgotha), that the community or the
individual communities, for example, the folk-communities or
other groups within the folk-communities consisted not only
of the individual units or members, but that, if they were to
have any reality, communities must be imbued with a community
spirit which has a super-sensible origin. A community was
determined not only by the counting of heads, but for the
people of Antiquity it represented the external form, the
incarnation, if I may use the word in this connection, of a
genuinely existing communal spirit. The aim of those who were
received into these Mysteries was to participate in this
spirit, to share the thoughts of this group-soul; not to
insulate themselves from the community by obstinately
pursuing their own egoistic thoughts, feelings and volitional
impulses, but to live in such a way that they were receptive
to the thoughts of the group-soul. In the Mithras Mysteries
in particular the priests maintained that this union with the
group-soul cannot be achieved if one looks upon a larger
community simply as an external manifestation, for thereby
that which lies in the community spirit is in the main
obscured. The dead, they claimed, are part of our immediate
environment and the more we can commune with those who have
long been dead the better we shall order our present life.
Therefore the longer these souls had been discarnate, the
more beneficial they found it to commune with these souls.
And in order to be able to commune with the spirit of the
ancestor of a tribe, folk-community or family they found it
best to make contact with the ancestral soul. It was assumed
that this soul develops further after passing through the
gates of death and therefore has a deeper insight into the
future destiny of the Earth than those who are living on this
Earth in their present physical bodies. Thus the whole
purpose of these Mysteries was to establish those dramatic
representations which would put the neophyte into touch with
the souls of those who had long passed through the gates of
death.
Those who
were admitted to these Mysteries had to undergo a first stage
of initiation which was usually characterized by a term
borrowed from the bird-species; they were called
“Ravens”. A “Raven” was a
first-degree initiate. Through the particular Mystery rites,
through the potent use of symbols and especially through
dramatic performances he became aware not only of the
sensible world around him or of what one learns through
contact with one's fellow-men, but also of the thoughts
of the dead. He acquired a certain capacity which enabled him
to recall memories of the dead and the ability to develop it
further. The “Raven” was under the solemn
obligation to be conscious in the moment, to be alert and
responsive to the world around, to be aware of the needs of
his fellow-men and to familiarize himself with the phenomena
of nature. He who spends his life in day-dreaming, who has no
feeling for the indwelling spirit of man and nature was
considered to be unsuitable material for reception into the
Mysteries. For only the ability to see life around him
clearly and in its true perspective fitted him for the task
which he had to fulfil in the Mysteries. His task was to
participate as far as possible in the changing circumstances
of the world in order to widen the range of his experience,
to share in the joys and sorrows of contemporary events. He
who was unresponsive or indifferent to contemporary events
was an unsuitable candidate for initiation. For the first
task of the aspirant was to “reproduce”, to
re-enact in the Mysteries the experiences gained through
participation in the life of the world. In this way these
experiences served as a channel of communication with the
dead with whom the Initiates sought to make contact. Now you
might ask: Would not a high Initiate have been more suitable
for this purpose? By no means, for the first-degree Initiates
were eminently suited to act as intermediaries because they
still possessed all the feelings, shared all the sympathies
and antipathies which fitted them for life in the external
world, whilst the higher Initiates had more or less purged
themselves of those emotions. Therefore these first-degree
Initiates were specially suited to experience contemporary
life in terms of the ordinary man and to incorporate it into
the Mysteries. It was therefore the special task of the
“Ravens” to mediate between the external world
and those long dead. This tradition has survived in legend.
As I have often stated legends as a rule have deep
implications. The Kyffhäuser legend tells how Friedrich
Barbarossa who had long been dead is instructed by Ravens, or
how Charles the Great in the “Salzburg
Untersberg” is surrounded by Ravens that brought him
news of the outside world. These are echoes of the ancient
pagan Mysteries and especially of the Mithras Mysteries.
When the
aspirant was ready for the second degree of initiation he
became an adept or “occultist” as we should say
today. He was then able not only to incorporate into the
Mysteries his experience of the sensible world, but also to
receive clairvoyantly the communications from the dead, the
impulses which the super-sensible world (this world of
concrete reality which the dead inhabit) had to impart to the
external world. And only when he was fully integrated into
the spiritual life which originates in the super-sensible and
is related to the external, sensible world was he considered
to be adequately prepared for the third degree, and he was
now given the opportunity to give practical expression to the
impulses he had received in the Mysteries. He was now singled
out to become a “warrior”, one who mediates to
the sensible world that which must be revealed from the
super-sensible world.
But was it
not a gross injustice, you may ask, to withhold vital
information from the people and to initiate only a select
few? You will only understand the reason for this if you
accept what I stated at the outset, namely, that the people
were dependent upon a group-soul and were content for these
select few to act on behalf of the whole community. They did
not look upon themselves as separate individuals but as
members of a group. It was only possible therefore to pursue
this policy of selection at a time when the existence of a
group-soul, when the selfless identification with the group
was a living reality.
And when, as
a “warrior” the initiate had championed for a
time the cause of the super-sensible, he was considered fitted
to establish smaller groups within the framework of the
larger group, smaller communities within larger groups as the
need arose. If, in those ancient times, anyone had taken into
his head to found an association on his own initiative, he
would have been ignored. Nothing would have come of it. In
order to establish a union or association the initiate must
become a “lion”, as it was termed in the Mithras
Mysteries, for that was the fourth degree of initiation. He
must first have reinforced his spiritual life through
association with those impulses which existed not only
amongst the living, but which united the living with the
dead. From the fourth degree the initiate rose to a higher
degree of initiation which permitted him through certain
measures to take over the leadership of an already existing
group, a folk-community in which the dead also participated.
The eighth, ninth and tenth centuries before the Mystery of
Golgotha are totally different from those of today. It would
never have occurred to anyone to claim the right to choose
arbitrarily the leader of their community; such a leader had
to be an initiate of the fifth degree. Then, at the next
higher degree, the initiate attained to those insights which
the Sun Mystery (of which he had recently received
intimations) implanted in the human soul. Finally he attained
the seventh degree of initiation. I do not propose to enter
into the details of these later degrees of initiation, for I
simply wished to characterize the progressive development of
the initiate who owed to his contact with the spiritual world
his capacity to take an active part in community life.
Now you know
that the group-soul nature has gradually declined in
accordance with the necessary law of human evolution. It was
at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha that man first
developed ego consciousness. This had been prepared for
centuries, but the crisis, the critical moment in this
development had been reached at the time of the Mystery of
Golgotha. One could no longer assume that the individual had
the power to carry the whole community with him, to transfer
his feelings and impulses to the entire community in a spirit
of altruism.
It would be
foolish to imagine that the course of history could have been
other than it has been. But sometimes a thought such as the
following may prove fruitful: what would have happened if, at
the time when the message of Christianity first made its
impact on human evolution, the pagan traditions had not been
eradicated root and branch, but if historically a certain
knowledge (which would be transparent even to those who
relied on documents) had been transmitted to posterity? But
Christianity was opposed to such a possibility. We will
discuss later the reason for this attitude; today I wish
simply to register the fact that Christianity was opposed to
the transmission of this knowledge. Thus Christianity was
confronted by a totally different kind of humanity which was
not so much attached to the group-souls as that of former
times, a humanity in which the approach to the individual had
to be totally different from that of ancient times when the
individual was virtually ignored and when men looked to the
group-soul for guidance and acted out of the group-soul.
Through the fact that Christianity suppressed all documentary
evidence of the early centuries the people were kept in
ignorance; Christianity in fact consciously fostered
ignorance of the epoch when it had first developed. This
Christianity borrowed those aspects of the pagan teaching
which served its purpose and incorporated them in its
traditions and dogmas and especially in its cults or
religious ceremonies and then effaced all traces of the
origin of these cults. The ancient cults have a deep symbolic
meaning, but Christianity gave them a different
interpretation. The performance of cult acts or ceremonies
was still a familiar sight, but the source of the primeval
wisdom from which they derived was concealed from the
people.
Take for
example the bishop's mitre of the eighth century. This
mitre was embroidered with swastikas which were arranged in
different patterns. The swastika which was originally the
Crux Gammata dates back to the earliest Mysteries, to the
ancient times when man was able to observe the activity of
the “lotus flowers” in the human etheric and
astral organism, how that which was active in the lotus
flower was one of the chief manifestations of the etheric and
astral forces. The bishop wore the swastika as a symbol of
his authority, but its significance was lost and it had
become a dead symbol. All traces of its origin had been
eradicated. What history tells us of the origin of such
symbols is only dry bones. Only through Spiritual Science can
we rediscover the living spiritual element in these
things.
Now I said
earlier that people were consciously kept in ignorance, but
the time has now come to dispel this ignorance. And over the
years I think that I have said enough and in a variety of
ways to show that it is essential at the present time to be
alive and alert to these questions. For our epoch is an epoch
in which the necessary period of darkness has run its course
and when the light of spiritual life must dawn again. It is
devoutly to be wished that as many as possible should feel in
their hearts that this spiritual light is a necessity for our
time and that the failures and endless sufferings of our time
are connected with all these questions. We shall realize that
superficial judgements are inadequate when we come to speak
of the causes of our present situation. So long as we speak
only from a superficial standpoint we shall be unable to
develop thoughts or impulses which are sufficiently potent to
dispel the ignorance which is the source of our attendant
ills. It is indeed remarkable how mankind today — but
this need not depress us, rather should it encourage us to
observe and understand our present condition — is
unwilling to face up to the situation because, for the most
part, man is as yet unable to perceive what is really
necessary for our evolution. It is heartbreaking to see what
Nietzsche felt about the prevailing darkness and confusion of
our age, a man who suffered deeply from, and was driven to
the point of madness by the chaos and confusion of the second
half of the nineteenth century. We shall not come to terms
with a personality such as Friedrich Nietzsche if we look
upon him as someone whom one blindly follows, as so many have
done. For he answered these blind followers in the original
prelude to the “Gay Science”.
I am sufficient unto myself
I owe allegiance to none,
And I laugh at every master
Who cannot laugh at himself.
That is also the underlying mood of the
whole of “Thus spake Zarathustra”. But this did
not prevent Nietzsche from being surrounded by many who were
merely hangers-on. They, in any case, have nothing positive
to contribute to our present situation. But the other
extremists — and between these two groups can be found
every shade of opinion — are equally of no help, for
they say that although Nietzsche had many creative ideas, he
ultimately lost his reason and so can be safely ignored.
Friedrich Nietzsche is a strange phenomenon; one need not be
his willing slave, yet the fact remains that even in his
period of mental sickness he was acutely sensitive to the
darkness and chaos of the age.
Indeed the
account of the distress which Nietzsche suffered in his time
provides us with a good yardstick with which to measure the
difficulties of our own time. I propose to read two passages
from Nietzsche's posthumous writings: “The Will
to Power; the Transvaluation of all Values”
(note 4)
which was written at a time when his mind
was unhinged, passages which could have been written today
with a wholly different intent than Nietzsche's and
could have been written to expose the deeper underlying cause
of our present situation. Nietzsche wrote:
“What
I am about to relate is the history of the next two
centuries. I shall describe what is foreshadowed and from
which there is no escape — the triumph of nihilism.
This history can be written now, for necessity is already
at work here. This future is already presaged by a hundred
different omens; this destiny announces its presence
everywhere; for the music of tomorrow all ears are pricked.
The whole of European culture is slowly moving towards
catastrophe in an agony of suspense which increases from
decade to decade — restless, violent, precipitate
like a river in spate hastening to its ocean bed, and which
refuses to reflect and even dreads reflection.”
Judge then of
your own reactions in the light of these words from the pen
of a man of rare sensitivity at the end of the eighties of
the nineteenth century and compare these words with another
passage which I will now read to you and which vividly
portrays the deep distress he felt and which everyone can
experience himself.
“My
friends, we had a hard time in our youth; we even suffered
from youth as if it were a serious disease. This is owing
to the age in which we are born — an age of great
internal decay and disintegration which, with all its
weakness and even with the best of its strength is opposed
to the spirit of youth. Disintegration, that is to say a
sense of insecurity, is peculiar to our age; nothing stands
on solid ground or on sound faith or belief. People live
for the morrow, because the day after tomorrow is
uncertain. Our path is slippery and dangerous and the ice
that still bears us has become precariously thin: we all
feel the mild and ominous breath of the thaw-wind. Within a
short space of time the path we are treading will never be
able to know the footsteps of man again.”
It is clear
that these sentiments were born of a profound insight into
the realities of the time. He who would understand the age in
which we live and especially the task that faces the
individual, he who can look beyond the moment and the day
will himself feel what is expressed in those passages and
will perhaps say: Nietzsche's mental derangement
prevented him from adopting a critical attitude to the ideas
which arose in him. None the less these ideas stemmed from an
acute sensitivity to the immediate realities of the present
age. Perhaps we shall one day draw a comparison between
Nietzsche's response to his age and the customary
pronouncements of “experts” which do not even
touch the fringe of the causes which lie at the root of our
present difficult times. We shall then change our attitude
and see the necessity for Spiritual Science today. People are
unwilling to listen to the teachings of Spiritual Science;
but in saying this I have no wish to imply reproach. Far be
it from me to attach blame to anyone. The people to whom I am
referring are for the most part those for whom I feel great
respect and who, in my opinion, would be the first to take to
Spiritual Science. I simply wish to point out how difficult
it is for the individual to be receptive to Spiritual Science
if he is impervious to spiritual appeal, if he succumbs
entirely to the Zeitgeist, to the superficial trends of the
time. One must be fully aware of this.
At this
juncture I can now revert to Kjellen's book,
The State as Organism.
It is a curious book because the
author strives with every fibre of his being to clarify the
question: What is the State in reality? — and because
he does not believe in the capacity of man's ideas and
concepts to understand this question. It is true that the
book contains many fine things which have been praised by
contemporary critics, but the author has not the slightest
idea of the deeper layers of understanding and knowledge
which are necessary in order to rescue mankind from its
present predicament. I have only time to refer to the central
theme of his book. Kjellen raises the question: What is the
relation of the individual to the State? And in attempting to
answer this question he immediately came up against a
difficulty. He wished to depict the State as a reality, as an
integrated whole, in other words, as an organism primarily.
Many have already described the State as an organism and are
then always faced with the question: an organism consists of
cells, what then are the cells of the State? Clearly the
individual members of the State! — And on the whole
Kjellen also shared this view: the State is an organism as
the human or animal organism is an organism, and just as the
human organism consists of individual cells, so too the State
consists of individual cells, of human beings who are the
cells of the State.
One can
hardly imagine a more misguided or misleading analogy. If we
follow up the analogy we shall never arrive at a clear
understanding of man. Why is this? The cells of the human
organism are juxtaposed, and this juxtaposition has a special
significance. The whole structure of the human organism
depends upon this juxtaposition. In the organism of the State
the individual units or members are not contiguous like the
individual cells in the human or animal organism. That is out
of the question. In the totality of the State the human
personality is something wholly different from the cells in
the organism. And even if at a pinch we compare the State
with an organism we must realize that we and the whole of
political science are sorely mistaken if we overlook the fact
that the individual is not a cell; only the productive
element in man can sustain the State, whilst the organism is
an aggregate of cells and it is they which determine its
functioning. Therefore the present State in which the
group-soul is no longer the same as in ancient times can only
progress through the endeavour or initiative of the single
individual. This cannot be compared with the function of the
cells. As a rule it is immaterial what we choose to compare,
but if we make a comparison between two objects they must be
related objects. As a rule it is accepted that analogies are
valid to some extent, but they should not be so far fetched
as Kjellén's analogy. There is no objection to his
comparing the State with an organism; one could equally well
compare it with a machine (there is no harm in that) or even
with a penknife — doubtless points of similarity can be
found here too — but, if the comparison is carried
through, it must be consistent. But people are not
sufficiently familiar with the principles of logic to be
aware of this.
Now
Kjellén is perfectly entitled to compare the State with
an organism if he so wishes. But if he wishes to make this
comparison he must look for the right cells. But they cannot
be found because the State has no cells! If we think about
the matter concretely the analogy breaks down. I simply wish
to point out that one can only carry this analogy through if
one thinks in an abstract way like Kjellen. The moment one
thinks realistically, one demurs, because the idea has no
roots in reality. We find that the State has no cells. On the
other hand we discover that the individual States can perhaps
be compared to cells and that the sum total of States on
Earth can be compared to an organism. A fruitful idea then
occurs to us. But first we must answer the question: what
kind of organism? Where can one find something comparable in
the kingdom of nature where the cells fit into each other in
the same way as the individual “State cells” fit
into the entire organism of the Earth? Pursuing this idea we
find that we can only compare the entire Earth organism with
a plant organism, not with an animal organism and still less
with a human organism. Whilst natural science is only
concerned with the inorganic, with the mineral kingdom,
political science must be founded on a higher order of ideas,
on the ideas of the plant kingdom. We must look to neither
the animal nor the human kingdom and we must free ourselves
from mineralized thinking, dead thought forms to which the
scientists are so firmly attached. They cannot rise to the
higher order of ideas embodied in the plant kingdom, but
apply laws of the mineral kingdom to the State and call it
political science.
In order to
arrive at this fruitful conception mentioned above our whole
thinking must be rooted in Spiritual Science. We shall then
be able to satisfy ourselves that the whole being of man by
virtue of his individuality is far superior to the State, he
penetrates into the spiritual world where the State cannot
enter. If therefore you compare the State with an organism
and the individual member of the State with the cells, then,
if you think realistically, you will arrive at the idea of an
organism consisting of individual cells, but the cells would
everywhere extend beyond the epidermis. You would have an
organism with its cells which extends beyond the epidermis;
the cells would develop independently of the organism and
would be self-contained. You would therefore have to picture
the organism as if “living bristles” which felt
themselves to be individuals were everywhere projecting
beyond the epidermis. Living thinking thus brings us into
touch with reality, and shows us the impossible difficulties
that must face us if we wish to grasp any idea that is to be
fruitful. It is not surprising therefore that ideas which are
not impregnated with Spiritual Science have not the capacity
to sustain us in coping with our present situation. For how
can one reduce to order the chaos in the world if one has no
idea of its cause? No matter how many Wilsonian manifestos
are issued by all kinds of international organizations or
associations and the like, so long as they have no roots in
reality, they are so much empty talk. Hence the many
proposals which are put forward today are a sheer waste of
time.
Here is an
example which demonstrates how imperative it is that our
present age should be permeated with the impulses of
Spiritual Science. It is the tragedy of our time that it is
powerless to develop ideas which could reconcile and control
the organic life of the State. Hence everything is in a state
of chaos. But it must now be clear to you where the deeper
causes of this chaos are to be sought. And it is not
surprising therefore that books such as Kjellen's
The State as Organism
conclude in the most
remarkable manner. We are now living in an age when everybody
is wondering what is to be done so that men may once again
live in harmony, when with every week they are increasingly
determined to live in enmity and to slaughter each other. How
are they to be brought together again? But the science which
deals with the question of how men are once again to develop
social relationships within the State concludes in
Kjellen's case with these words: “This must be
the conclusion of our enquiry into the State as organism. We
have seen that for compelling reasons the State of today had
made little progress in this direction and has not yet become
fully aware that this is its function. None the less we
believe in a higher form of State which recognizes a more
clearly defined rational purpose and which will make
determined efforts to achieve this goal.”
That is the
concluding passage in his book; but we do not know, we have
no idea what will come of it. Such are the findings of a
painstaking and conscientious thinking that is so caught up
in the stream of contemporary thought that it overlooks the
essentials. One must face these problems squarely; for the
impulse, the desire to gain insight into these problems only
arises when we face them squarely, when we know what are the
driving forces in our present age.
Even without
looking far beneath the surface we perceive today an urge
towards a kind of “socialization”, I do not mean
towards socialism, but towards “socialization” of
the Earth organism. But socialization — because it must
be conscious, and not proceed from the unconscious as in the
last two thousand years — socialization, reorientation
or reorganization, is only possible if we understand the
nature of man, if we learn to know once again the being of
man — for that was the object of the ancient Mysteries.
Socialization applies to the physical plane. But it is
impossible to establish a social order if one ignores the
fact that on the physical plane are to be found not only
physical men, but men endowed with soul and spirit. Nothing
can be achieved if we think of man only in physical terms.
You may socialize, you may order social life in accordance
with contemporary ideas, and within twenty years everything
will be in chaos again if you ignore the fact that man is not
only the physical being known to natural science, but a being
endowed with soul and spirit. For soul and spirit are active
agents and exercise a powerful influence. We may ignore their
existence in our ideas and representations, but we cannot
abolish them. If the soul is to inhabit a physical body which
participates in a social order appropriate to our time it
must have freedom of thought and opinion. Socialization
cannot be realized without freedom of thought. And
socialization and freedom of thought cannot be realized
unless the spirit is rooted in the spiritual world
itself.
Freedom of
thought as an attitude of mind or way of thinking,
pneumatology, spiritual maturity and spiritual science
— as scientific foundation of all ordinances and
directives — these are inseparably linked. We can only
discover through spiritual science how these things are
related to man and how they can he realized practically in
the social order. Freedom of thought, that is, an attitude to
one's neighbour that fully recognizes his right to
freedom of thought, cannot be realized unless we accept the
principle of reincarnation, for otherwise we look upon man as
an abstraction. We shall never see him in the right light
unless we look upon him as the result of repeated lives on
Earth. The whole question of reincarnation must be examined
in connection with the question of freedom of thought and
opinion. The life of man will be impossible in the future
unless the inner life of the individual can be rooted in the
life of the spirit. I am not suggesting that he must become
clairvoyant, though this will certainly occur in individual
cases, but I maintain that he must be firmly rooted in the
life of the spirit. I have often explained that this is
perfectly possible without becoming clairvoyant. If we look
around a little we shall find where the major hindrances lie
and in what direction we must look for the source of these
obstacles. It is not that people are unwilling to search for
the truth — and as I have said, I do not wish to
reprove or to criticize — but they erect psychic
barriers and are the victims of their many inhibitions.
Often an
isolated instance is so instructive that we are able to gain
a real understanding of many contemporary phenomena from
these symptoms. There is one symptom peculiar to our own time
which is most remarkable. It is curious how people who are
normally so brave and courageous today, are terrified when
they hear that the claims of spiritual knowledge are to be
recognized. They are bewildered. I have often told you that I
noticed that many who had attended one or two lectures were
not seen again for some time. Meeting them in the street I
asked why they had never turned up again. “I dare
not”, came the reply. “I am afraid you might
convince me.” They find such a possibility dangerous
and disturbing and are not prepared to expose themselves to
the risk. I could cite many other examples of a similar kind
from my own experience, but I prefer to give examples from
the wider field of public life.
A short time
ago I spoke here of Hermann Bahr
(note 5)
who recently gave a lecture here in Berlin entitled
“The Ideas of 1914”. I pointed out how he
attempted — you need only read his last novel
Himmelfahrt — not only to move a little in the
direction of Spiritual Science, but he even tried in his
later years to arrive at an inner understanding of Goethe,
that is, to follow the path which I would recommend to those
who wish to provide themselves with a sound background for
their introduction to Spiritual Science. There are very many
today who would like to speak of the spirit once again, who
would welcome any and every opportunity to revive knowledge
of the spirit. I do not wish to lecture or criticize, least
of all a person such as Hermann Bahr for whom I feel great
affection. Even if it is far from our intention to sermonize,
we none the less have the strange feeling that an outlook
such as that of Hermann Bahr has contributed to the
corruption of thought and has infected human thinking with
original sin.
Now in his
Berlin lecture Hermann Bahr expressed many fine and admirable
sentiments; but many astonishing things come to light. He
began by saying that this war had taught us something
completely new. It had taught us to integrate the individual
once again into the community in the right way, to sacrifice
our individualism, our ego centricity for the benefit of the
whole. This war has taught us, he said, to make a clean sweep
of the past with its antiquated ideas and to fill our inner
life with something completely new. And he proceeded to
describe the inestimable benefits this war has brought us. I
have no wish to criticize, quite the reverse. But after a
lengthy disquisition on how the war has transformed us all,
how we shall be completely` changed through the war, it is
strange to come upon the concluding passage: “Man
always cherishes hope of a better future, but himself remains
incorrigible. Even the war will leave us much as we
are.” As I said before, I have no wish to criticize,
but I cannot help being touched by these high hopes. These
people are motivated by the best of intentions; they wish to
find once again the path to the spiritual. And Bahr therefore
emphasized that we had relied too much upon the individual;
we had practised the cult of individualism far too long. We
must learn once again to surrender to the whole. Those who
belong to a nation have learned to merge with the nation, to
sacrifice their separativeness. And nations too, he believes,
are only totalities of individual characteristics, parts of a
greater whole which will later emerge. Thus Bahr sometimes
betrays, and especially in this lecture, the paths he none
the less follows in order to arrive at the spirit. Sometimes
he gives only vague indications, but these indications are
most revealing. Ring out the old, the past is dead, is his
motto. The Aufklärung wished to found everything on a
basis of reason; but all to no purpose, everything has ended
in chaos. We must find something that brings us in touch with
Reality and saves us from chaos. And in this context Bahr
once again makes astonishing revelations:
“Perhaps nations and individuals would then have
learned what is most difficult for them to learn — to
grant to others the right to individuality that each
individual claims for himself, for, in the final analysis,
the individuality of others is the precondition of
one's own. If we were all alike there would be no
distinguishing features. And they would have learned that
just as each individual with his distinctive gifts in his
own particular field is necessary to the nation, in order
through his self-fulfilment to sustain the nation and thus
at the same time to be self-sufficient and also to serve
the nation, so too the universality of mankind, the common
membership of all mankind that reaches to the Divine grows
out of nations and transcends nations.”
That is a
hint, if not a broad hint, at least it is a clear hint.
People are striving to find the way to God, but are unwilling
to follow the path that is appropriate to our time. They are
looking therefore for a different path which already exists,
but it never occurs to them that this traditional path was
indeed effective up to 1914 and now, in order to obviate its
consequences, they want to return to it again!
The symptoms
manifested here are, I think, deserving of quiet examination,
for these are the views not of a single individual, but of a
vast number of people who feel and think in this way. A book
by Max Scheler
(note 6)
recently appeared with the title
Der Genius des Krieges and der deutsche Krieg.
It is a good book and I can safely recommend it.
Bahr too thinks highly of it. He is a man of taste and well
informed and has every reason to commend it. But he also
wishes to publicize the book and proposes to write a highly
favourable review, a puff to boost Scheler. He wonders how
best to proceed. To scandalize the public is not the right
approach; some other way must be found to attract their
attention. What was he to do? Now Hermann Bahr is a very
sincere and honest man and leaves no doubt as to what he
would do in such a case. In his article on Scheler he begins
by saying: Scheler has written many articles to show how we
could escape from our present predicament. Scheler caught the
public eye. But, says Bahr, people today do not approve of
being told whom to read; it goes against the grain. And so
Hermann Bahr characterizes Scheler in the following way:
“People were curious about him and yet rather
suspicious of him; we Germans want to know above all where we
stand in relation to an author. We do not like
indefinition.”
Let us have
therefore a clear picture. This is not achieved by reading
books and accepting their arguments; something more is
needed. Bahr now gives a further hint: “Even the
Catholics preferred to reserve judgement (on Scheler) lest
they should be disappointed. His idiom displeased them. For
every mental climate creates in the course of time its own
native idiom which gives a particular flavour and meaning to
words of common usage. In this way one recognizes who
`belongs’, with the result that ultimately one pays
less attention to what is said than to how it is
said.”
Hermann Bahr
decided to announce Scheler with a flourish of trumpets. Now,
like Bahr himself, Scheler hints at those remarkable
catholicizing endeavours — always tentatively at first,
he never commits himself immediately. Now according to Bahr,
Scheler does not speak like a genuine Catholic. But Catholics
want to know where they stand in relation to Scheler, and
especially Bahr himself since he intends to puff Scheler in
the Catholic periodical “Hochland”. After all,
people must know that Scheler can be safely recommended to
Catholics. They do not like to be left in the dark, they want
to know the truth.
And this is
the crux of the matter. People will know where they stand if
they are told that it is perfectly safe for Catholics to read
Scheler! The fact that he is exceptionally clever and witty
is of no consequence; Catholics have no objection to that.
Bahr, however, proposes to hold up Scheler as an outstanding
personality in order to boost his importance, but at the same
time he does not wish to offend people. First of all he
bewails the fact that mankind has become empty and vapid,
that man has lost all connection with the spirit; but he must
find his way back to the spirit once again. I quote a few
passages from Hermann Bahr on Scheler which touch upon this
subject:
“Reason
broke away from the Church and arrogantly assumed that of
itself it could understand, determine, order, command, shape
and direct life.”
Hermann Bahr
lacks the courage to say: reason must now seek contact with
the spiritual world. He therefore says: reason must look to
the Church once again.
“Reason
bloke away from the Church and arrogantly assumed that of
itself it could understand, determine, order, command, shape
and direct life. It (reason) had scarcely begun to take the
first steps in this direction than it took fright and lost
confidence in itself. This self-awareness of reason, the
consciousness of its boundaries, of the limitations of its
own power when bereft of the divine afflatus, began with
Kant. He recognized that reason of itself cannot achieve that
which by its very nature it is constrained to will; it cannot
achieve the goal it has set itself. He called a halt to
reason at the very moment where it promised to be fruitful.
Kant set boundaries to reason, but his disciples extended
these boundaries and each went his own way. Ultimately
godless reason had no other choice but to abdicate. It
realized finally that it can know nothing. It searched for
truth so long until it discovered that either truth was
non-existent or that there was no truth to which man could
attain.”
Enough has
now been said in defence of the modern outlook and all those
fine sentiments about the “boundaries of
knowledge.”
“Since
that time we have lived without truth, believing there is no
truth. We continued to live however as if truth must none the
less exist. In fact, in order to live we had to live by
denying our reason. And so we preferred to abandon reason
completely. We committed intellectual suicide. Soon man was
regarded simply as a bundle of impulses. He was proud of his
dehumanisation. And the consequence was 1914.”
And so
Hermann Bahr praises Scheler because of his Catholicizing
bent. Then he proceeds to give a somewhat distorted picture
of Goethe, for he had been at pains for some time to depict
him as a dyed-in-the-wool Catholic. And then goes on to
say:
“The
modern scientist denied his spiritual birthright. Science
abandoned presuppositions. Reason no longer derived from the
divine the ‘impulse’ which is imperative for its
effectiveness. What other path was open to it? None, save the
appeal to the instincts. The man without established values
was suspended over an abyss. And the result was —
1914.”
“If we
are to build afresh it must be from totally new foundations.
If we are to bring about a spiritual renewal we must make a
complete break with the past. It would be presumptuous to aim
at the immediate spiritual rehabilitation of Europe. We must
first rehabilitate man and restore his lost innocence; he
must become aware once again that he is a member of the
spiritual world. Freedom, individuality, dignity, morality,
science and art have vanished from the world since faith,
hope and love are no more. And only faith, hope and love can
restore them. We have no other choice, either the end of the
world or — omnia instaurare in Christo” (to renew
all things in Christ).
But this
“omnia instaurare in Christo” does not imply a
search for the spirit, a move towards the investigation or
exploration of the spirit, but the inclusion of the nations
in the Catholic fold. How is it, Bahr asks, that men are able
to think for themselves and yet are able to remain good
Catholics? We must look to those who are suited to the
present age. And Scheler fits the bill for he is not such a
fool as to speak for example of an evolution into the
spiritual world, or to specify a particular spiritual
teaching. He is not such a fool as to commit himself openly,
as is the case with those who speak of the spirit and then
suggest: the rest will he added unto you if you enter the
Church, i.e. the Catholic Church — for that is implied
both by Bahr and Schelerwhich in their opinion is
sufficiently all-embracing. In this way conflicting opinions
can be reconciled under the umbrella of the Church. None the
less people today want to think for themselves and Scheler
adapts himself to their thoughts. Indeed, Bahr believes that
Scheler in this respect is a master of giving people what
they want:
“Scheler attracts attention because he does not
gesticulate or raise his voice. Involuntarily people ask
who can it be who appears to be so sure of his influence
that he does not feel it necessary to raise his voice. It
is a favourite device of seasoned orators to open on a
quiet note and thus command the silent attention of the
audience; the orator must also have the power to hold them
spellbound. Scheler can do this in masterly fashion. He so
captivates his listener that the listener is unaware
whither he is being led and suddenly finds himself at a
destination that was wholly unforeseen. Starting from
unexpected propositions which the listener innocently
accepts, Scheler forces him imperceptibly to conclusions
which he would have actively resisted had he been in any
way forewarned. In this respect Scheler's art of
persuasion is unrivalled. He is a born educator; I know of
no one who can lead us so easily but firmly to the
truth.”
Indeed it is
a special art to be able to take people by surprise in this
way. First one makes statements that are unexceptionable;
then the argument proceeds slowly and leads to a conclusion
at which the audience would have demurred had they been aware
of it from the start. How does one account for this, Bahr
asks, and what must be done in order to act with the right
intentions? In this review of Scheler Bahr gives his honest
and candid opinion:
“The
question now is whether the average German can grasp the
magnitude of the moment and all that it portends. He is
animated by the best of intentions, but still fondly
imagines that belief is no longer possible for modern man
since it has been scientifically refuted. He does not
suspect that this `science or dogma of unbelief’ has
itself long been refuted scientifically. He knows nothing
of the quiet preparatory work in this direction of the
outstanding German philosophers of our time — Lotze,
Franz Brentano, Dilthey, Eucken, and Husserl.”
(note 7).
I now beg you
to give special attention to the following:
“The
ordinary person still hears in the last faint echo of the
Münchausen posthorn, the latest aberration which,
unbeknown to him, has already been refuted. Amidst this
confusion a calm clear voice will soon be heard which gives
no suspicion of the sentimental day dreaming, romanticism
or mysticism which fills the ordinary person with unholy
dread. And precisely because Scheler pleads the cause of a
recovery of faith straightforwardly and unemotionally and
in the customary jargon of the ’cultivated man of our
time’, he is the man we need today.”
So now we
know! Now we know why Bahr approves of Scheler. He (Scheler)
cannot be accused of being a visionary or a mystic, for the
average German is mortally afraid of them. And woe betide
anyone who does not respect this fear, for if he were take it
into his head to banish this fear or recognize the need to
struggle against it, it would need more than a little courage
to venture on such an undertaking.
Because I
have great respect and affection for Hermann Bahr I would
like to show that he is typical of those who find great
difficulty in accepting a spiritual teaching of which our
time stands in need. But there is promise of hope only if we
overcome that terrible fear, if we have the courage to
acknowledge that Spiritual Science is not an idle fancy, that
the greatest clarity of thought is called for if we wish to
make the right approach to Spiritual Science, for there is
little evidence of clear thinking in the few examples which I
have quoted to you today from Hermann Bahr and other
contemporary writers. Spiritual courage is called for if we
wish to develop ideas that are strong and effective. We need
not go all the way with Nietzsche, nor need we wholly share
the view he expresses in a passage which none the less may
attract our attention; but when this sensitive spirit,
stimulated perhaps by his illness, expresses his boldest and
most courageous opinions we must nevertheless go along with
him. The fear of being misunderstood must not deter us. It
would he the greatest calamity that could befall us today if
we were to be afraid of being misunderstood. We must
sometimes perhaps pass judgements like the following
judgement of Nietzsche, even though it may not be sound in
every detail; that is not important. In his treatise
“On the History of Christianity” he wrote:
“Christianity as a historical reality must not be
confused with that one root which its name recalls: the other
roots from which it has sprung are by far the more important.
It is an unprecedented abuse of language to associate such
manifestations of decay and such monstrosities as the
‘Christian Church’, ‘Christian
belief’ and ‘Christian life’ with that Holy
Name. What did Christ deny? — Everything which today is
called Christian!”
Although this
is perhaps an extreme view, Nietzsche nevertheless touched
upon something which has a certain truth; but he expressed it
somewhat radically. It is true to the extent that one could
say: What would Christ most vigorously condemn if He were to
appear in our midst today? Most probably what the majority of
people call “Christian” today, and much else
besides, which I will discuss in our lecture on Tuesday
next.
NOTES BY
TRANSLATOR
Note 1.
Rudolf Kjellen (1864–1922), Swedish historian,
professor at Upsala. Belonged to the school of
“geopolitics”, the doctrine of the interaction
of geographical and political factors in the constitution
and development of States.
Note 2.
Theophilus. Patriarch of Alexandria 385–412. He
condemned Origen at the Synod of Alexandria 408. “He
deprived the pagans of Alexandria of a temple ... and
apparently destroyed other temples. A riot ensued and a
number of Christians were slain. With Theophilus at their
head the Christians retaliated by destroying the celebrated
temple of Serapis on the ruins of which the patriarch
erected a church.” (Quotation from the Catholic
Encyclopedia, vol. XIV, 1913.)
Note 3.
Mithras Initiation. According to R. J. Vermaseren, in
Mithras, the Secret God
(Chatto & Windus,
1963) he who had acquired sufficient knowledge “could
gain successively the title of Raven (Corax), Bride
(Nymphus), Soldier (Miles), Lion (Leo), Persian (Perses),
Courier of the Sun (Heliodromus) and Father (Pater)”.
This book is a classic in the study of Mithraism. There are
figures in the text and illustrations.
Note 4.
Nietzsche. “The Will to Power and the Transvaluation
of all Values.” According to P. Tillich
“will” here means “the universal dynamics
of all life processes and ‘power’ the
affirmation of one's own individual existence. It is
the power of the best.” The transvaluation of all
values implies that since “God is dead”, i.e.
that traditional and ethical values no longer stem from
belief in a transcendent authority, man himself must
re-create them. The “Übermensch” must be
developed. He is the “superior” man physically,
mentally and spiritually, the man of self-discipline who
has learned to command and obey, to accept responsibility,
whose watchword is duty and honour. It is an aristocratic
ideal. According to Nietzsche his antitype is mass man, the
“herd man” who has succumbed to ideologies that
promise happiness and well-being. He is timid, bored,
conformist, opposed to tradition and culture. This
“slave morality” is utilitarian and keeps only
its own advantage in view and prepares the ochlocracy, the
“nihilism” towards which we are moving (p. 13
in the English text).
Note 5.
Hermann Bahr (1863–1934). Austrian dramatist,
novelist and essayist. In his later years he returned to
the Church and represented the Catholic school of thought,
cf. his novel Himmelfahrt.
Note 6.
Max Scheler (1874–1928). Professor of Philosophy at
Cologne, 1920–21. His writings have a strong theistic
flavour and he was a subtle advocate of Catholicism.
Note 7.
Lotze (1817–81), Dilthey (1833–1911), R. Eucken
(1846–1929), Husserl (1859–1938) were philosophers of
idealism. They were opposed to the mechanistic scientific
philosophy of the age and pleaded the cause of ethical
idealism.
|