II.
THE PRESENT FROM THE VIEWPOINT OF THE PRESENT
November 30, 1918
When you consider the fundamental basis of
our anthroposophically oriented science of the spirit in
comparison with other so-called world views — and there
are many now appearing — you will note especially one
characteristic. This is the fact that spiritual science as a
view of the world and of life endeavors actually to apply to
the whole of human life, to everything that the human being
encounters in life, what it seeks to establish through
research in the spiritual worlds. Whoever has a feeling for
what is essential in the urgent problems and impelling forces
of our present time will probably be able to achieve for
himself an understanding of the fact that the tremendous need
of the present and of the immediate future is to be found
just here, that is, in connecting directly with life itself
the comprehensive ideas constituting world conceptions. Among
the causes that have brought about the present catastrophic
situation of humanity, not the least significant is the fact
that the world views held by human beings, whether rooted in
religion, science, or aesthetics, have all gradually lost
their connection with life in the course of time. There has
existed a tendency — we might call it a perverse
tendency — to separate the so-called daily practical
life, in the most comprehensive sense of the word, from what
men seek in their effort to satisfy their needs in the realm
of religion and world conceptions. Just reflect how life
during the last centuries has gradually taken on such form
that people have carried on their external activities, were
practical men as the saying goes, and conducted their lives
according to practical principles, and then applied half an
hour each day more or less, or no time at all, or Sunday, to
the satisfaction of those needs of the heart and soul that
impel them to seek for a connection with the divine spiritual
element permeating the world.
All this will
be utterly changed if an anthroposophically oriented science
of the spirit can take possession of the minds and hearts of
men. This will take on such a character that thoughts will
stream forth from this world view that will be applicable to
life itself in all its aspects, thus enabling us to judge
life with true insight. The principle of the Sunday vesper
sermon shall by no means be that of our anthroposophically
directed world conception, but the whole of life shall be
permeated on all days of the week and on Sunday forenoon as
well with what can be given to humanity by the
anthroposophical comprehension of the world. Because such has
not been the case up to the present time, the world has
gradually drifted into chaos. People have neglected to direct
their attention to what has really been happening in their
immediate vicinity and they are now surprised because the
results of this oversight are clearly manifest. They will be
still more surprised in the future as these results become
more clearly manifest.
Under no
circumstances should we fail to pay attention today to what
is spreading among people over the entire earth. With the
powers of judgment that enable us to see into the great
impulses at work in world events, we must endeavor to find
our way into what confronts human hearts and minds today, in
part in such an enigmatic way; that is, into what is
threatening to transform the social structure into a chaos.
It will not do to continue further in such a way that we
decide simply to let come what may without endeavoring to
penetrate into things with a sound power of judgment.
It is necessary
to abandon the basic maxim that says,“This is an
everyday matter, this is secular, it belongs to the external
life; we turn our backs on this and direct our attention
toward the spiritual and divine.” This must come to an
end. The time must begin in which even the most trivial
everyday matter must be brought into connection with the
spiritual and divine; that is, the time in which what is
derived from the spiritual life shall no longer be viewed
only from the most extremely abstract point of view.
In the course
of these reflections, I have stated that a favorable change
in the social movement cannot come about in any other way
than through an increase in the interest that a person feels
in another human being. A social structure is something men
create in company with one another. Its ills cannot be healed
unless the person knows that he is really within this order,
unless he is within the social structure in his attitude of
mind. The unsound element in the present epoch, which has
brought about this catastrophe, lies in the neglect of people
to acquire any sort of attitude of mind toward the way in
which a person belongs to a social community. The interest
that binds us as human beings to other human beings has come
to an end in spite of the belief frequently manifested by
people that they do have such an interest. Most certainly the
past theosophical maxim, “I love all human beings; I
have an interest in all human beings,” is not
effective; it is abstract; it does not lay hold upon real
life and laying hold upon real life is what really matters.
This must be understood in a deeper sense. A lack of
understanding of real life has been the characteristic of
recent centuries. Now, these recent centuries have brought
about the present situation without a realization of this
process on the pap of humanity, and they will cause future
situations. In the historic life of humanity, conditions
cannot be what they should be unless people accompany what is
happening, what occurs among them in the social life, with
their thinking. But the events that have occurred over a
relatively long time cannot be accompanied thus unless we
acquire a sound sense for certain phenomena.
To an objective
observer it has been all too obvious that administrations and
governments have been conducted and are being conducted
according to fundamental principles that were really out of
date centuries ago, whereas life has naturally moved forward
during recent centuries. An essential element that has
entered into the evolution of humanity is modern
industrialism, which has created the whole modern
proletariat. But this genesis of the modern proletariat has
not been accompanied by thinking. The leading classes have
continued to live in the old manner, administering their
positions of leadership as they have been accustomed to do
for centuries. Without their doing anything about it, without
their having even accompanied the process of world history
with their thinking, the modern proletariat has evolved out
of the existing facts, actual occurrences, and the rise of
modern industrialism. This began essentially with the
invention of the mechanical loom and spinning machine in the
eighteenth century. Thus the destiny of world history for the
present and the immediate future depends upon what is going
on in the world in the heads of the modern proletariat
— what haunts them, you may say, like a specter. This
proletariat is striving for power through majority control
and it is to be considered in its actions just as we consider
the results of natural events and elemental occurrences. It
should not be looked upon as something to be criticized that
may please or displease us. The proletariat must be judged in
its actions somewhat as we judge an earthquake or a tidal
wave of the sea, or anything else of the kind.
We are now
seeing the preliminary stages of what takes its rise from the
modern proletariat — or, better expressed, from the
tendencies and feelings of the modern proletariat. Like the
action of an advance guard we observe what is known to us in
a certain aspect in Russian bolshevism. This Russian
bolshevism as I have often declared, is not in harmony with
the original disposition of the Russian people. It has been
introduced from without. But this is not a matter of any
consequence if we wish to face the facts since it actually
exists within the regions that formerly constituted the
Empire of the Czar. It has taken root there, and it must be
observed like a phenomenon of nature that has the tendency to
spread. In observing such a thing as Russian bolshevism it is
most important of all to disregard secondary phenomena. We
must pay attention to the matter of main importance. The fact
that bolshevism had its beginning in 1917, and that it was
accompanied by certain external phenomena, may have been
determined by certain obvious causes. I have said to you that
even the incompetence of Ludendorff and also various other
things have not been free of responsibility for the actual
outbreak of bolshevism. But all this must be eliminated if we
wish to view things in a fruitful way, and we must pay
attention to the active forces that are alive in this Russian
bolshevism. We must simply ask ourselves as a mere matter of
fact what the objective of Russian bolshevism is and how it
is related to the whole evolution of humanity. Beyond
question, it is not something ephemeral and transitory.
Rather, it is a phenomenon of far-reaching consequences in
world history. It is exceedingly important that we should
examine the basic structure as visualized by Russian
bolshevism in order to be able to reflect upon it in a
certain way as it emerges from deeper impelling forces of the
world.
If we consider
the fundamental characteristics of Russian bolshevism, we
must conclude that its first endeavor aims at the destruction
of what we have characterized in the marxian sense as the
bourgeoisie. It is a fundamental maxim, so to speak, to
destroy, root and branch, as something harmful in the
evolution of humanity according to their point of view,
everything that has taken its rise in the evolution of
history as the bourgeois class. Bolshevism is to arrive at
this objective in various ways. First, it aims at the removal
of all class distinctions. Bolshevism does not direct its
efforts toward such factual removal of the distinctions into
classes and ranks as I have presented them to you. Bolshevism
itself thinks in a wholly bourgeois manner, and what I have
introduced to you is not conceived in a bourgeois but a human
manner. Bolshevism intends to overcome the differentiation
among classes and ranks in its own way. It says to itself
that the contemporary states are constructed on the basis of
the bourgeois conception of life, so the forms of the
contemporary states must disappear. Everything that is a
subordinate outgrowth of the bourgeois social class in the
contemporary states such as the police system, the military
system, the system of justice must disappear. In other words,
what has been created by the bourgeoisie for its security and
its administration of justice must disappear with the
bourgeois class. The whole administration and organization of
the social structure must pass into the hands of the
proletariat. Through this process the state, as it has
existed until now, will die away and the proletariat will
administer the whole human structure, the whole community
life of society.
This cannot be
achieved by means of the old system of arrangements that the
bourgeois class had created for itself. It cannot be achieved
by the election of a Reichstag or any other sort of body of
representatives of the people, chosen on the basis of any
sort of suffrage, as this has been done under the conception
of life characteristic of the bourgeois class.
If such
representative bodies continued to be elected, only the
bourgeois class would perpetuate itself in these bodies. In
other words, such representative bodies, under whatever
system of suffrage chosen, would not render possible the
attainment of the goals that are there striven for.
Therefore, the matter of importance is that such measures
shall now really be applied as have their origin in the
proletariat itself, such as cannot come to birth in any
middle class head, since a middle class head inevitably
conceives only such regulations as must be abolished. Nothing
whatever can be expected, therefore, from any kind of
national or state assembly, but something is to be expected
solely from a dictatorship of the proletariat. This means
that the entire social structure must be handed over to a
dictatorship of the proletariat. Only the proletariat will
have the inclination actually to eliminate the bourgeois
class from the world because, should persons of the bourgeois
class be members of representative bodies, they would have no
inclination to eliminate themselves from the world. That is
what is really necessary, that the whole bourgeois class
shall be deprived of its rights. Thus, the only persons who
can exercise an influence upon the social structure must be
those who belong to the proletariat in the true sense, that
is, only those who perform labor, who are useful to the
community.
Consequently,
according to this proletariat world conception, a person who
causes others to perform any sort of service for him, and
remunerates them for this, cannot have the right to vote.
That is, whoever employs persons, engages persons to serve
him and remunerates them for their service, has no right to
participate in any way in the social structure, and has no
right, therefore, to a vote. Neither does anyone possess the
right to vote who lives on income from his property or who
profits from income. Nor does a person who is engaged in
trade have the right to vote or one who is a distributor and
does not perform any practical labor. In other words, all who
live by means of income, who employ other persons and
remunerate them, who are engaged in trade or are middle men,
are excluded from being representatives of the government
when the dictatorship of the proletariat takes control.
During the continuance of this dictatorship of the
proletariat, there is no general freedom of speech, no
freedom of assembly, no freedom to organize, but only those
who are engaged in actual labor can hold meetings or form
organizations. All others are deprived of freedom of speech,
the right to assembly, and the right to organize societies or
unions. Likewise, only those enjoy the freedom of the press
who perform practical labor. The press of the bourgeois class
is suppressed, and not tolerated.
These are, in a
general way, the guiding principles, we may say, during the
transitional stage. After these principles have been dominant
for a certain length of time the proletariat world conception
expects from their operation that only men engaged in
practical labor will exist. Only the proletariat will
continue to exist. The bourgeois class will have been
exterminated.
To these
things, which have primary importance for the transitional
period, will then be added those that have permanent
significance. To these belongs, for example, the universal
obligation to work. Every person is under obligation to
produce by labor something useful to the community.
A decisive
principle of a permanent character is the termination of the
right to private ownership of real estate. Larger estates are
handed over to agricultural communes. According to this
proletariat world view, there will exist in future no private
ownership of land. Industrial establishments, establishments
of entrepreneurs are confiscated and passed under the control
of society, being administered by the centralized
administration of the workers, at the head of which is the
Supreme Soviet for the national economy. This is simply
bolshevism in Russia. Ranks are taken over by the state. A
universal system of bookkeeping is instituted, embracing the
entire community and comprising all production. All foreign
trade of this single communal entity is made communal, that
is, the establishments are taken over by the state.
These are, in a general way, the fundamental principles
constituting the ideal of Trotsky and Lenin, and you will see
clearly in them the cardinal points of what is willed by the
modern proletariat.
It does not
suffice, of course, to be informed each day by the newspapers
that a certain number of bloody deeds have been done by
bolshevism. If we compare the bloody deeds done by bolshevism
with the immense number of those done by reason of this war,
the deeds of bolshevism obviously become an insignificant
affair. The really important thing is to see what has been
hitherto overlooked and neglected in order that the evolution
of humanity may in the future be followed with our thinking.
It is really necessary that we fix our attention, first in
our hearts and then with our minds, upon these things that
are so intimately connected with the progressive evolution of
humanity. It is precisely the mission of the science of the
spirit to fix our attention upon these things with our minds
and hearts. The time must come to an end in which lazy
pastors and priests preach to the people from the pulpit
every Sunday theoretical stuff having no connection with life
for the so-called warming of their souls. On the contrary, a
condition must begin in which everyone who desires to
participate in spiritual life shall be in duty bound to look
into life, to establish an immediate connection with life. No
small share in the responsibility for the misfortune of the
present time rests upon the fact that those who have been
custodians of the religious feelings of humanity for a long
time past have preached to people from their pulpits such
things as actually have no relationship whatever with life.
They have directed discourses for the sole purpose of
providing the people with insipid stuff for their hearts and
souls that affected them in a pleasant way but never grasped
life. It is for this reason that life has remained without
spirit and has finally fallen into chaos. You may seek for
much of the responsibility, for which recompense is required
at present, precisely in the stupid discourses of those who
have been the custodians of the religious feelings of people
and who have had no relationship with life. What have they
achieved of all that must take place in the epoch during
which a whole new humanity in the form of the proletariat has
evolved? What have these people achieved who have proclaimed
useless stuff from their pulpits, such stuff that it has been
desired by people only because they wished to delude
themselves with all sorts of illusions regarding the
realities of life? This is a serious time and things must be
viewed in a serious light.
What has been
said regarding the necessity for individuals to acquire an
interest in one another must not be regarded only in a manner
harmonizing with the mood presented in the Sunday vesper
sermon. It must be considered according to the profound
indication it gives in regard to the social structure of the
present age.
Consider a
concrete example. How many people there are today who have an
abstract and confused conception of their own personal lives!
If they ask themselves, for example, “What do I live
on?” — for the most part, they do not do this,
but if they did it once, they would say to themselves,
“Why, on my money.” Among those who say to
themselves, “I live on my money,” there are many
who have inherited this money from their parents. They
suppose they live on their money, inherited from their
fathers, but we cannot live on money. Money is not something
on which we can live. Here it is necessary at last to begin
to reflect. This question is intimately connected with the
real interest that one individual has in another. Anyone who
thinks he lives on the money he has inherited, for example,
or has acquired in any way whatever except by receiving money
for work, as is the custom today — whoever lives in
this way and supposes that he can live on money has no
interest in his fellow men because no one can live on money.
We must eat, and what we eat has been produced by a human
being. We must have clothing. What we wear must be made
through the labor of people. In order that I may put on a
coat or a pair of trousers, human beings must expend their
strength in labor for hours. They work for me. It is on this
labor that I live, not on my money. My money has no value
other than that of giving me the power to make use of the
labor of others. Under the social conditions of the present
time, we do not begin to have an interest in our fellow men
until we answer that question in the proper way, until we
hold the picture in our minds of a certain number of persons
working for a certain number of hours in order that I may
live within the social structure. It is of no importance to
give ourselves a comfortable feeling by saying, “I love
people.” No one loves people if he supposes that he is
living on his money and does not in the least conceive how
people work for him in order to produce even the minimum
necessary for his life.
But the thought
that a certain number of persons labor in order that we may
possess the minimum necessities of life is inseparable from
another. It is the thought that we must recompense society,
not with money but with work in exchange for the work that
has been done for us. We feel an interest in our fellow men
only when we are led to feel obligated to recompense in some
form of labor the amount of labor that has been performed for
us. To give our money to our fellow men only signifies that
we are able to hold our fellow men on a leash as bound slaves
and that we can compel them to labor for us.
Permit me to
ask whether you cannot answer out of your experience the
question how many men realize that money is only a claim upon
human strength employed in labor, that money is only a means
for gaining power. How many persons really see clearly that
they could not even exist in this physical world but for the
labor of other persons upon which they depend for what they
demand for their lives? The feeling of obligation to the
society in which we live is the beginning of the interest
that is required for a sound social order.
It is necessary
to reflect about these things, otherwise we ascend in an
unwholesome way into spiritual abstractions and do not rise
in a wholesome way from physical reality to spiritual
reality. The lack of interest in the social structure has
characterized precisely these last centuries. During recent
centuries, men have gradually formed the habit of developing
a real interest in the matter of social impulses only with
regard to their own respected persons. In greater or lesser
degree everything has borne in a roundabout way only upon
one's personality. A wholesome social life is possible only
when interest in one's own respected personality is broadened
into a genuine social interest. In this connection the
bourgeoisie may well ask themselves what they have
neglected.
Just consider
the following fact. There is such a thing as a spiritual
culture. There are cultural objects. To select one example,
there are works of art. Now, ask yourselves to how many
people these works of art are accessible. Or, rather ask
yourselves to how many persons these works of art are utterly
inaccessible. For how many persons do these works of art
actually not exist. But just calculate how many persons must
labor in order that these works of art may exist. One or
another work of art is in Rome. One or another bourgeois
can travel to Rome. Just add up the total of how much labor
must be performed by creative workers, etc., etc., —
these etceteras will never come to an end — in order
that this bourgeois, when he travels to Rome, may see
something that is there for him because he is a bourgeois,
but is not there for all those persons who are now beginning
to give expression to their proletariat conception of life.
This very habit has taken form among the bourgeois of looking
upon enjoyment as something self-evident. But enjoyment
should really never be accepted without repaying its
equivalent to the whole of society. It is not because of any
element in the natural or spiritual order that some part of
society should be deprived. Time and space are only
artificial hindrances. The fact that the Sistine Madonna
remains forever in Dresden, and can be seen only by those
persons who are able to go to Dresden, is only a by-product
of the bourgeois world conception. The Sistine Madonna is
movable, and can be taken to all parts of the world. This is
only one example, but the necessary steps can be taken to
make sure that whatever is enjoyed by one may also be enjoyed
by others.
Although I have
given only one example, I always choose them to exemplify and
clarify everything else. We need only to strike such a note,
as you see, in order to touch upon many matters that people
have really not thought of at all, but have simply taken as
something self-evident. Even within our own circle, where
this could so easily be understood, people do not always
reflect that everything we receive obligates us to return an
equivalent to society and not simply enjoy.
Now, from all
that I have presented to you as examples, which could be
multiplied not only a hundredfold but a thousandfold, this
question will be obvious to you. “How can the situation
be otherwise if money is really only a means for acquiring
power?” This is already answered in that fundamental
social principle I introduced last week because that is a
peculiarity of what I introduced to you as a sort of social
science taken from the spiritual world. It is just as certain
as mathematics. In connection with the things I have
presented to you, there is no question of anyone's looking
into practical life and saying, “Now then, we must
first investigate whether things really are so.” No;
what I introduced to you as a social science derived from
spiritual science is much like the theorem of Pythagoras. If
you consider Pythagoras's theorem, if you know that the
square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares
of the other two sides of a right angle triangle, it is
impossible that anything should exist within the world of
experience to contradict this. On the contrary, you must
apply this fundamental principle everywhere. So it is with
the fundamental principle I introduced to you as underlying
social science and social life. Everything that a person
acquires in such a way that it is received in exchange for
his work within the social system has an unwholesome effect.
A wholesome condition results within the social system only
when the human being has to support his life, not by his own
work, but from other sources within society. This seemingly
contradicts what I have just said, but only seemingly. What
will render work valuable will be the fact that it will no
longer be remunerated.
The goal toward
which we must work — of course, in a rational and not a
bolshevistic way — must be that of separating work from
the provision of the means of existence. I have recently
explained this. When no one is any longer recompensed for his
work, then money will lose its value as a means for acquiring
power over work. There is no other means for overcoming the
misuse that has been perpetuated with mere money than by
forming the social structure in such a way that no one be
recompensed for his work, and that the provision of the means
of existence shall be achieved from an entirely different
source. It will then naturally be impossible to use money for
the purpose of compelling anyone to work.
Most of the
questions that now arise appear in such a form that they are
confusedly understood. If they are to be lifted into a clear
light, this can happen only by means of spiritual science.
Money must never in future be the equivalent for human labor,
but only for inanimate commodities. Only inanimate
commodities will be acquired in future by means of money, not
human labor.
This is of the
utmost importance. Now, just consider the fact that in the
proletariat world conception the idea that labor is a
commodity stares us in the face in all sorts of forms.
Indeed, the fact that labor in modern industrialism has
become in the most conspicuous way a commodity is one of the
fundamental principles of marxism, one of those fundamental
principles by means of which Marx was most successful in
winning followers among the proletariat. Here you see that a
demand appears from an entirely different quarter and in a
confused and chaotic fashion, that must, nevertheless, be
fulfilled, but from an entirely different direction. This is
characteristic of social demands of the present, that, to the
extent that they appear instinctively, they are due to
entirely justified and sound instincts. They arise, however,
from a chaotic social structure. For this reason they are in
a confused form that necessarily leads to confusion. So it is
in many fields. It is necessary for this reason really to lay
hold upon a spiritual-scientific view of the world because
only this can result in true social healing.
Now, you will
ask whether this will bring about a change. For example, if a
person inherits his money, he will still continue to purchase
commodities with the money he inherited, and the labor of
other persons is surely concealed in these commodities. So
nothing is changed, you will say. Certainly, if you think
abstractly, nothing is changed. But, if you will look into
the whole effect that comes about when the provision of the
means of existence is separated from labor, you will form a
different opinion. In the sphere of reality, the situation is
not such that we simply draw abstract conclusions, but there
things produce their actual results. If it actually comes
about that the provision of the means of existence is
separated from the performance of labor, inheritances will no
longer exist. This will produce such a modification of the
social structure that people will not come into possession of
money in any other way than for the acquisition of
commodities. When something is conceived as a reality, it has
all sorts of effects. Among other things this separation of
the provision of the means of existence from labor has one
quite peculiar effect. Indeed, when we speak of realities, we
cannot so express ourselves as to say, “But I do not
see why this should be so.” You might just as well say,
“But I do not see why morphine should cause
sleep.” This also does not come to you as a conclusion
out of a mere interrelationship of concepts. It becomes
manifest only when you actually trace the effect.
There is
something extremely unnatural today in the social order. This
consists in the fact that money increases when a person
simply possesses it. It is put in a bank and interest is paid
on it. This is the most unnatural thing that could possibly
exist. It is really utterly nonsensical. The person does
nothing whatever. He simply banks the money, which he may not
even have acquired by labor but may have inherited, and he
receives interest on it. This is utter nonsense. But it will
become a matter of necessity when the provision of the means
of existence is separated from labor that money shall be used
when it exists, when it is produced as the equivalent of
commodities that exist. It must be used. It must be put into
circulation and the actual effect will be that money does not
increase but that it diminishes. If at the present time a
person possesses a certain sum of money, he will have
approximately twice that amount in fourteen years under a
normal rate of interest, and he will have done nothing except
merely to wait. If you think thus of the transformation of
the social order, as this must occur under the influence of
this one fundamental principle that I have presented to you,
then money will not increase but will diminish. After a
certain number of years, the bank notes I acquired before the
beginning of those years will no longer have any value. They
will have matured and become valueless.
In this way the
trend will become natural in the social structure toward
bringing about such conditions that mere money, which is
nothing more than a note, an indication that a person
possesses a certain power over the labor of human beings,
will lose its value after a certain length of time if it has
not been put into circulation. In other words, it will not
increase, but will progressively diminish and, after fourteen
years or perhaps a somewhat longer time, will reach the zero
point. If you are millionaires today, you will not be double
millionaires after fourteen years but you will be broke
unless you have earned something additional in the
meantime.
Of course, I am
aware that people wriggle as if they had been bitten by fleas
when this is mentioned at the present time — if you
will permit such a comparison. I know this, and I would not
have employed this comparison but for the extraordinary
movements I observed in the audience!
Since, however,
the situation is such that this matter causes people to feel
as if fleas had bitten them, we have bolshevism. Just search
for the true causes and there they are. You will never be
able to free the world of what is coming to the surface
unless you determine really to penetrate into the truth.
The fact that
the truth is unpleasant makes no difference. An essential
part of the education of humanity today and in the immediate
future will consist in putting an end to the belief that
truths can be controlled according to subjective estimates,
subjective sympathies and antipathies. But spiritual science,
if it is grasped with a sound human intelligence, can solve
this problem of money because it can also be considered
spiritually.
Nothing is
accomplished by that vague way of talking I have heard even
among anthroposophists who hold money in their hands and say,
“This is Ahriman.” At present money signifies an
equivalent for commodities and labor. It constitutes a claim
upon something that actually occurs. If we pass over from
mere abstractions to realities, if we reflect, then, when a
person has ten one hundred mark notes and pays these to
someone, he causes the labor of a certain number of persons
to pass as an equivalent from hand to hand. Because these
notes possess the power to cause a certain number of persons
to work, he then actually stands within life with all its
branches and impulses. He will no longer continue to be
satisfied with the mere abstraction, the unthinking
abstraction, of the payment of money, but he will ask
himself, “What is the significance of the fact that I
cause ten one hundred mark notes to pass from hand to hand,
thus bringing it about that a certain number of persons
endowed with head, heart and mind must perform labor? What is
the significance of that?”
The answer to
such a question can be afforded, in the last analysis, only
by a spiritual observation of the matter. Let us take the
most extreme example. Suppose someone who has never put forth
an effort in behalf of humanity has money. There are such
cases. I will consider this extreme instance. Someone who has
never put forth an effort in behalf of humanity has money. He
buys something for himself with this money. Indeed, he is
enabled to fashion for himself an altogether pleasant life by
reason of the fact that he possesses this money, which is a
claim upon human labor. Fine! This person is not necessarily
a bad human being. He may even be a good man; indeed, he may
be an industrious person. People frequently simply fail to
see into the social structure. They do not possess an
interest in their fellow men, that is, in the real social
structure. People suppose that they love human beings when
they buy something for themselves with their inherited money,
for example, or when they even give it away. When it is given
away, the only result is that we cause a certain number of
persons to work for those to whom the money is given. It is
simply a means for acquiring power. The fact that it is a
claim upon labor makes it the means for acquiring power.
But this
situation has simply come into existence and developed to
this stage. This is a reflection of something else. It is a
reflection of what I mentioned in the preceding lecture. I
there called your attention to the fact that the Jehovah
divinity has controlled the world for a certain length of
time through the fact that he won a complete victory over the
other Elohim, and that he can no longer save himself from the
spirits thus aroused. He drove his companions, the other six
Elohim, from the field. Because of this, what the human being
experiences even in the embryo has acquired complete
dominance in human consciousness. The six other forces, which
are not experienced by man in the embryo, have thereby been
rendered inactive. They have thereby come under the influence
of lower spiritual entities. In the fifth decade of the last
century, as I have said, Jehovah could no longer save
himself. Since the Jehovah wisdom acquired in the embryonic
state renders it possible to grasp the conception of
providence only in external nature, crass atheistic natural
science has invaded the world. The reflection of this, the
fact that money simply passes from one person to another
without any transfer of commodities, consists in the
circulation of money apart from the circulation of
commodities.
No matter with
what energy a person may exert himself in any field, the
ahrimanic power lives in what seems to be produced by money
as money. You cannot inherit without having a certain amount
of ahrimanic power transferred with the money. There is no
other possibility of possessing money within the social
structure in a wholesome way than by possessing it in a
Christian way; that is, by acquiring money only by means of
what one develops between birth and death. In other words,
the way in which a person comes into possession of money must
not be a reflection of what is related to Jehovah even though
the fact that we are born, that we pass from the embryo into
the external life, is something that pertains to him. The
reflection of this, I say, is the fact that we inherit money.
Those characteristics that we inherit with the blood are
inherited through the laws of nature. Money that we inherit
and do not earn would be a reflection of this.
The fact that
Christian consciousness has not yet taken its place in the
world, that the social structure is still brought about by
means of the ancient Jehovah wisdom or its specter, the Roman
conception of the state, has brought about everything that
has led to one aspect of the present unfortunate
situation.
I said that the
matter must not be considered so abstractly when money
produces money, but we must view it in its reality. Whenever
money produces money it is something that occurs only on the
physical plane, whereas what constitutes the human being is
always connected with the spiritual world.
What are you
doing, then, when you perform no labor but you have money
that people must work to get? The human being then has to
bring to market what constitutes his heavenly share and you
give him only what is earthly. You pay him with the merely
earthly, the purely ahrimanic. You see, this is the spiritual
aspect of the matter. Wherever Ahriman is at work, only
destruction can come about.
This, again, is
an unpleasant truth. But it does not help at all when a
person says to himself, “Now, really, I am otherwise a
respectable individual and I am doing nothing wrong,
therefore, when I use my income to pay for this or
that.” The actual fact is that you give Ahriman in
exchange for God. Of course, we are frequently compelled to
do this within the present social structure, but we should
not play the ostrich game and conceal this fact from
ourselves. Rather should we face the truth because what the
future is to bring depends upon our doing so. Much of what
has broken in upon humanity with such calamitous results has
occurred for the reason that people close their eyes and the
eyes of their souls in the presence of the truth. They have
fabricated for themselves abstract concepts of right and
wrong, and have been unwilling to deal with the real and the
concrete. In regard to this we shall speak further tomorrow,
when we shall lift our discussion into spiritual heights.
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