V.
SPECTERS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT IN THE
NATIONALISM OF THE PRESENT
December 7, 1918
It is often difficult for a person to find
his bearings within the course of world events, especially
when they are considered from a higher point of view. People
are so very loath to view the truth without prejudice, which
often resolves certain conflicts of life only after long
periods of time. They would like only too well to be guided
by the reins of the cosmic powers, even though they do not
admit this to themselves. It becomes especially difficult for
a person to find his bearings in an unprejudiced way when he
is compelled in any single incarnation to live in such a
catastrophic time as the present. He likes then to ask why
the gods permit such things. He does not like to ask about
the necessities of life. He always has in the background a
longing to have everything as comfortable as possible.
In such a time
as ours, man must behold all sorts of things that are in
course of preparation from chaos. Chaos is necessary for the
total course of events, and he must often take up his
position in the midst of the chaotic, as well as in what has
been harmonized. Especially is our fifth post-Atlantean epoch
such a time as causes man to pass through much that is
chaotic. But this is connected with the entire
characteristic, the whole nature, of this epoch. We are
living at a time in which man must pass through those
impelling forces in the course of evolution that set him upon
his own feet and permeate him with individual consciousness.
We are living in the epoch of the consciousness soul.
Now, after all
that we have considered, in connection with which we have
brought together a great variety of things that may be suited
to make our age understandable to us, we must ask ourselves
what is the most profound characteristic of the evolution of
the consciousness soul in our epoch. The profoundest
characteristic of this epoch is that man must become
acquainted in the most profound and the most intense way with
all those forces that oppose the harmonizing of humanity as a
whole. For this reason a conscious knowledge of those
ahrimanic and luciferic powers working against man must
gradually spread. If he should not pass through these
evolutionary impulses in which the luciferic and ahrimanic
forces are participating, he would not arrive at the complete
use of his consciousness, and thus at the development of his
consciousness soul.
This
integration of the consciousness soul into human nature has
to be recognized as a strongly antisocial impulse. Thus we
have in our epoch the peculiar fact that the manifestation of
social ideals appears as a reaction against what is striving
to emerge out of the innermost nature of man, a reaction
against the evolution of individual consciousness. What I
mean to say is that the reason we have such an outcry about
the need of socializing is that the innermost nature of man,
precisely in our age, is most violently opposed to this
socializing. For this reason it is necessary that we should
obtain a view of everything in the cosmos, in the universe,
that sustains a certain relationship to man, in order that we
may become aware of the relationship existing between the
antisocial impulses streaming today out of the depths of
human souls and the clamor for social harmonizing, working
like a reaction to what streams forth from the inner nature
of the human soul. It is simply necessary that we should come
to see clearly that man represents in his life a state of
balance between conflicting powers. Every conception
characterized by the idea of mere duality — a good and
an evil principle — will always fail to illuminate
life. Life can be illuminated only when we represent it from
the point of view of a trinity, in which one element
represents a state of balance and the two others represent
the opposite poles, between which the state of balance tends
to move continually like a pendulum. This is the reason for
the Trinity we undertake to represent in our Group [Note 1] ; the Representative of Man balancing
Ahriman and Lucifer, which is to constitute the middle point
of this building.
This
consciousness of a state of balance for which one strives,
but that is always in danger of swinging toward the one or
the other side, must become the essential element in the
world conception of this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. As man
passes through the stage of the consciousness soul, he
develops toward the spirit self. This epoch of the evolution
of the consciousness soul will continue for a long time. But
within reality things do not proceed in such a way that one
always follows the other in a beautiful scheme. On the
contrary, one is telescoped in a way into the other. While we
are developing in ever stronger measure the consciousness
soul, there is always waiting in the background the spirit
self that will then develop during the sixth post-Atlantean
epoch just as strongly as the consciousness soul during this
fifth epoch. Just as strongly as the consciousness soul works
antisocially in its development, will the spirit self work
socially. Thus we may say that, during this epoch, man
develops from the innermost impelling forces of his soul what
is antisocial, but behind this something spiritually social
exerts its influence. This spiritually social element that is
exerting its influence in the background will appear in its
essential nature when the light of the spirit self shall dawn
in the sixth post-Atlantean epoch. It is not surprising
therefore, that in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch what can
enter livingly and in a well-ordered way into humanity only
during the sixth epoch appears in all sorts of abstruse,
extreme forms.
Man is exposed
during the fifth post-Atlantean epoch to the preliminary
disturbing movements of what is to come during the sixth
post-Atlantean epoch. Everything will depend upon the
acquisition of an understanding of what we must pass through
during this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. The antisocial
instincts will play a tremendous role, and they can be
restrained and integrated into a true social life only in the
way that I recently explained. To assist him, man shall
employ the social science that is to be derived from a
general spiritual science.
Behind all the
many struggles, therefore, of the present time, and also of
the immediate future, the social question will remain in the
background because its time has not yet come. But we must
repeat from all possible points of view the fact that this
social formation that is demanded cannot attain to real life
unless it enters into a union with two other things. In the
sixth post-Atlantean epoch, this union will appear more or
less spontaneously. During this fifth epoch, social life must
be regulated through the fostering of spiritual science.
Every effort to regulate social life outside the sphere of
spiritual science will lead only to chaos and radicalism,
bringing about unhappiness for humanity. As regards a social
shaping of life, this fifth post-Atlantean epoch is dependent
in preeminent degree upon the science of the spirit. Just
consider what I referred to yesterday and also recently in a
public lecture in Basel. Just consider that man has mastered
a nature that is distributed over the whole animal kingdom.
He is the conqueror of the animal nature; he bears the animal
nature within him.
Naive Darwinism
maintains that human morality is only the development of the
social impulse among animals. The social impulses are inborn
in the animal, and they become, just to the extent that they
are social impulses in the animal, antisocial impulses in
man. He can awaken again to a social life only when he grows
above what has developed as an antisocial impulse in him out
of the animal nature. This is the truth. Thus, if we wish to
represent the human being schematically from this point of
view, we may say that man overcomes and develops beyond
animality. What is social in the animal becomes antisocial in
man. But he grows into spirituality and within the spiritual
he may again achieve the social for himself. At a higher
stage than the one that man has reached in the epoch of the
consciousness soul, where he has grown out of animality, he
will gain the social element. This shines amid the chaos of
this middle stage where he now is.
This must be
supplemented by two other facts. When the socializing process
becomes manifest as an elemental impulse as a demand within
humanity, this socializing alone must always bring a curse.
The socializing process can become a blessing only if it is
linked with two other things that must develop during the
entire course of our postAtlantean age, up to the seventh
post-Atlantean epoch. This may occur only when it is linked
with what may be called the free life of thought and an
insight into the spiritual nature of the world lying behind
the sensible nature. Socializing without a science of the
spirit and without freedom of thought is an impossibility.
This is simply an objective truth. But man must awaken to
freedom of thought; he must make himself ripe for freedom of
thought precisely during our epoch of the consciousness
soul.
Why must he
awake to freedom of thought?
During the
course of human evolution, man has come in a certain respect
to a decisive point in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. Up to
this fifth epoch he possessed the possibility of having the
prenatal time continue its influence into the postnatal life.
Let us grasp this quite clearly. Up to our epoch man has
borne forces within him that are not acquired by him during
the course of life but were possessed by him when, as the
expression goes, he first beheld the light of the world, when
he was born. These were imprinted upon him during the
embryonic time. These forces that were impressed upon man
during the embryonic time and that then continue to work
throughout life, were possessed by man up to the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch. Only now do we face a great crisis in
the evolution of humanity through the fact that these forces
can no longer be determinative; they can no longer work in
such an elemental manner as hitherto. In other words, during
this fifth postAtlantean epoch man will be in much greater
measure exposed to the impressions of life, because forces
opposing the impressions of life, which were acquired in the
embryonic period before birth, are losing their sustaining
power. This fact is something of enormous importance.
Only in one
respect was life even prior to this time such that man could
acquire something between birth and death, something that was
not imprinted upon him during the embryonic time. But this
was possible only because of the following facts. We
explained yesterday the peculiar phenomena of sleep in
relation to social life. When man is asleep, his ego and
astral body are outside the physical and the etheric body.
There is a different relationship between the ego and the
astral body, on the one hand, and the physical and etheric
bodies on the other hand during sleep from that existing in
the waking state. While man is asleep, he stands in a
different relationship to his physical and etheric bodies.
Now, there is a certain resemblance between our sleep and our
embryonic period — a resemblance, not an identity. In a
certain sense, our life during the period from sleeping to
waking is similar to the life that we live from conception
— or actually three weeks thereafter — until
birth — again similar, not identical. While we rest as
an infant in the body of our mother, our life is similar to
what we experience later during sleep, except that during
sleep we breathe the outer air. For this reason I have to say
only “similar” but not “identical.”
We do not breathe the outer air when we rest in the body of
the mother. We are stimulated to breathe the outer air when
we are born.
Thus, in this
way life during sleep is different from the embryonic life.
Now hold firmly to the fact that, while the human being is
sleeping, his life is in many respects similar to that of the
embryonic state except that something is at work that can
occur only between birth and death and not in the embryonic
life. Breathing works here. The fact that man breathes the
outer air causes his organism to be influenced in a certain
way. But everything that influences our organism affects the
totality of our life-expressions, even our psychic
expression. Because we breathe, we understand the world
otherwise than if we did not breathe.
Now, there was
a cultural element in the evolution of humanity. We touch
upon a significant mystery of human evolution when we
undertake to explain this. This was the Old Testament
cultural element, which was permeated in an especially
profound way for its initiates by the fact that man is
different, by reason of the breathing between birth and
death, from the embryonic life, which is otherwise like the
life of sleep. It was upon this inner knowledge of the nature
of breathing that the relationship between the old Jewish
initiates, the Hebrew initiates of the Old Testament, and
their Jehovah God was based. The Jehovah God manifested
himself, as we need only learn from the Bible, to his people.
Which was the people of Jehovah? It was the people who had a
peculiar relationship to this truth of breathing that I have
just explained. This is the reason why precisely this people
received the revelation that man became man when the breath
of life was given to him.
We acquire a
special understanding when this is developed on the basis of
the nature of human breathing. We acquire an understanding of
the life of abstract thinking, which was called in the Old
Testament the life of law, an understanding of the reception
of abstract thoughts. Strange as this may seem at present to
materialistic thought, it is nevertheless true that the human
power of creating abstractions is determined essentially by
the breathing process. The fact that man can abstract, that
he can conceive abstract thoughts, just as laws are abstract
thoughts, is connected with his breathing process and even
physiologically with his breathing process. The instrument of
abstract thinking is, of course, the brain. This brain is
involved in a continual rhythm synchronized with the
breathing rhythm. I have already spoken here repeatedly in
regard to this relationship of the brain rhythm with the
breathing rhythm. I have explained to you how the brain is
floating in the cerebral fluid, and how this fluid, when the
air is breathed out, flows down through the spinal column and
empties below into the abdominal cavity; how the fluid is
pressed upward again when the air is breathed in so that a
continual vibration occurs: with exhalation, a sinking of the
cerebral fluid; with inhalation, an ascent of the cerebral
fluid and the immersion of the brain in the cerebral fluid.
The capacity of the human being to form abstractions is
connected even physiologically with this rhythm of the
breathing process.
A people who
based things in special measure upon the breathing process
was likewise the people of the abstraction process. For this
reason the initiates could impart a special revelation to
their people, as they perceived things in their Jehovah
manner, because this revelation was completely adapted to the
process of abstract thinking. This is the secret of the Old
Testament revelation. Man received a wisdom that was adapted
to the abstracting capacity, the capacity of abstract
thinking. Jehovah wisdom is adapted to abstract thinking.
As regards this
Jehovah wisdom, man is asleep in the ordinary state of
consciousness. The Jehovah initiates simply received in
connection with their initiation what man experiences through
his breath from falling asleep until waking. Because of this
fact, persons who love half-truths have often designated
Jehovah as the divinity who regulates sleep. This is true
also. He imparted to man that element of wisdom that he would
experience if he should become as clairvoyant as the
initiates became, and should experience consciously the life
between falling asleep and waking. Now, this was not
experienced by the ordinary consciousness in the Old
Testament times, but was given to man as a revelation, so
that he thus received as revelation in this Jehovah wisdom
that through which they had to sleep. It was necessary to
sleep through this, since otherwise the life process could
not continue.
This is the
essential element of the Old Testament culture. The night
wisdom was revealed as Jehovah wisdom. To a certain extent
— but I beg you to note that I say to a certain extent
— this possibility for man was exhausted during the
period when the Mystery of Golgotha drew near because this
wisdom, which is in a sense the wisdom of sleep and
breathing, is one-seventh of all the wisdom that man must
develop in the course of his evolution. It is the wisdom of a
single one of the Elohim, that is, Jehovah. The other
six-sevenths could and can come to humanity only as the
Christ impulse flows into mankind. We may thus say that, as
Jehovah revealed himself, he revealed the wisdom of night and
breathing in anticipation. The six other Elohim, constituting
in their totality together with the seventh Elohim the Christ
impulse, reveal all other wisdom, which comes to man between
birth and death otherwise than through breathing.
Within the life
of Old Testament culture man would have been entirely
antisocial if Jehovah had not revealed the social element to
his people in that abstract law that regulated and harmonized
their life.
Now, Jehovah
was able to gain complete control for himself by thrusting
back the other Elohim, as I have explained to you, and
dethroning them in a certain way. This caused other, lower
spiritual entities to come in contact with human nature and
to take possession of it. Man was exposed to these other
entities, so that we have two conditions in the course of Old
Testament evolution: first, the harmonizing Jehovah wisdom in
what was given to the Jews as their Law, which included at
the same time their social life; second, what opposed this
social union, the lower entities coming close to human nature
because the other Elohim were not yet given access in the
time before the Mystery of Golgotha. These lower entities
directed their powerful attacks in an antisocial sense
against the Jehovah element.
It is a
peculiar fact that, in the middle of the nineteenth century,
in the fifth decade, Jehovah ceased in a certain sense to
master the opposing spirits with his influence, so that they
acquired special power. Not until the course of the
nineteenth century was it really necessary for the first time
that the Christ impulse, which had previously been only in a
preliminary stage as I have often pointed out, should really
be understood. Human culture could not progress further
without this impulse and it was the social element
particularly that stood face to face with this important
crisis. It was necessary that the Christ impulse should be
understood for the future. Without an understanding of this
Christ impulse, no social demand takes the direction leading
to any sort of wholesome objective.
The almost
twenty centuries during which Christianity has previously
been disseminated were only preparatory stages for the real
understanding of the Christ impulse because the Christ
impulse can be understood only in the spirit. Everything
happens gradually. In our critical times, when we face a
crisis in regard to just those things I have called to your
attention, the situation is as follows. The instinct leading
toward a mere Jehovah wisdom still extends into our age as a
remnant, tending toward the wisdom that depended upon what
was acquired during the embryonic life and is modified only
by the unconscious breathing process. The Jehovah wisdom
requires a revelation in order to enter our consciousness.
This sufficed up to the time when the consciousness soul had
not yet evolved to a certain degree. Now, since the
consciousness soul has evolved to this degree, humanity
cannot get along further with Jehovah wisdom that is adapted
to the breathing, but it is invariably true that an effort is
made to continue to get along with something that has become
insufficient according to inner necessities. Since, for the
life between birth and death, what is 'connected with the
breathing remains unconscious, the Jewish culture was a folk
culture, not an individualized culture of humanity. It was a
folk culture in which everything is related to the descent
from a common tribal father. Jewish revelation is, in its
essential nature, a revelation adapted to the Jewish people,
because it takes account of what is acquired during the
embryonic life and is modified only through an unconscious
element, the breathing process.
What is the
result of this fact in our critical times? The result is that
those who will not become adherents of the Christ wisdom that
brings into the human being the other element, acquired
during the life between birth and death apart from the
breathing process, wish to continue in their relationship to
the Jehovah wisdom and to have humanity established only on
the basis of folk cultures. The present clamor in favor of an
organization consisting of individuals from mere peoples is a
retarded ahrimanic demand for the establishment of such a
culture, in which all the peoples represent only folk
cultures, that is, Old Testament cultures. The peoples in all
parts of the world are to become like the Jewish Old
Testament people. This is the demand of Woodrow Wilson.
We are here
touching upon a most profound mystery, which will be unveiled
in the greatest variety of forms. A social element that is
antisocial as regards the whole of humanity and undertakes to
base the social life upon individual peoples alone is
striving to come to manifestation as an ahrimanic element.
The cultural impulse of the Old Testament is to be maintained
in an ahrimanic form.
Thus you see
things are not so simple as people suppose in thinking that
it is necessary only to think out one thing or another in
order to propose ideals to men. We must be able to look into
reality. We must be able to say what really governs and
develops its powers amid these realities. Man is faced, in
fact, with the prospect of not being able any longer to base
his life upon the merely unconscious or of finding it
necessary to base his life upon the conscious element within
life between birth and death. The unconscious depends upon
the breathing process and thus inevitably upon what is
connected with the breathing process, upon the blood
circulation, that is, upon the line of descent, upon
connections by blood, upon heredity. The culture that must
come into existence cannot base the social order upon mere
blood connections because these blood connections yield only
one-seventh of what must be established in the culture of
humanity. The other six-sevenths must be added through the
Christ impulse: In the fifth epoch, one; in the sixth epoch,
the second; in the seventh epoch, the third. The rest stretch
out into the following periods of time. For this reason there
must gradually develop in humanity what is connected with the
true Christ impulse, and what is related to the mere Jehovah
impulse must be superseded.
Typically,
far-reaching endeavors of the Jehovah impulse will take
place, for the last time, in what the proletariat understands
as international socialism. In essence, this is the last
stirring of the Jehovah impulse. We face the strange
situation that every people will become a Jehovah people, and
every people will at the same time demand the right to spread
its own Jehovah cult, its own socialism, throughout the
world.
These will be
the two contending forces between which a balance must be
found. In all that comes to manifestation as objective
necessity in the course of humanity's evolution there mingles
the feeling, the sentiment, of human beings who take one
relation or another to the various national groups, and who
work disturbingly within the objectively inevitable course of
evolution. Through the Jehovah wisdom one of the seven doors
to the union of humanity has been opened. A second door will
be opened when it shall come to be known that what man bears
with him as the physical and the etheric nature becomes ill
in the course of life. Naturally, I do not refer to an acute
illness, but in our fifth epoch life is identical with a
gradual process of becoming ill. This has been true since the
fourth epoch; it is especially true in the fifth epoch. The
life process is the same thing, only gradual in its stages,
as an acute illness, except that this takes a more rapid
course. If, therefore, an acute illness must be cured by a
specific healing process, something must enter also into
human life that brings healing.
In short, the
natural life of human beings, from the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch on will be a sort of continual, gradual becoming ill.
All influences of education and of culture must be directed
to the objective of making well. In a certain way, this is
the first true activation of the Christ impulse: healing.
This is the special mission of Christ in the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch — to be the Healer, the One who
heals. The other forms of the Christ impulse must remain in
the background. For the sixth post-Atlantean epoch, the
Christ impulse must work in the direction of seership. There
the spirit self comes to development within which man cannot
live without seership. In the seventh postAtlantean epoch a
sort of prophetic nature will develop as the third element,
since it must, indeed, pass prophetically over into an
entirely new period. The other three members of the sixfold
Christ Being will do their work in the following periods.
Thus must the Christ impulse find its way into humanity, as
the element that permeates mankind with social warmth in the
course of the present and the two following cultural epochs,
that is, as the healing process, the seer process and the
prophetic process. This is the real living entrance of the
Christ impulse. This will interpenetrate other things
necessary for evolution that we have already mentioned. One
door has been opened through the Jehovah wisdom, but this
door became unusable in the middle of the nineteenth century.
If mankind should pass through this door alone, the only
result that can follow would be that all peoples would in a
way develop Hebraic cultures, each in its own form. Other
doors must be opened. Initiation wisdom, which will become
known through a second, third, and fourth door, must be added
to the wisdom that has become known through the Jehovah door.
Only in this way can man grow into other connections than
those that are regulated by the bonds of blood and
breath.
This
constitutes, in turn, the critical element of our age. It is
a fact that human beings wish to preserve a regulation of the
world order according to the bonds of blood, coming in an
ahrimanic way out of ancient times, but that an inner
necessity strives outward beyond these bonds of blood. In the
future what controls the social life cannot proceed from
anything having to do with kinship. On the contrary, only
what the soul itself in its own free decision can experience
as regulating the social order will be valid. An inner
necessity will so guide men that everything that penetrates
into the social order out of mere bonds of blood will be
eliminated. All such things enter into manifestation at first
tumultuously. In our age there must evolve spirit knowledge
and freedom of thought, especially freedom of thought in the
religious realm. The science of the spirit must develop for
the reason that man must enter into relationship with man.
But man is spirit. Man can enter into relationship with man
only when the approach is from the spirit. The relationship
into which men entered at earlier stages had its origin in
the unconscious spirit vibrating in the blood, in accordance
with Jehovah wisdom, which leads only to abstraction. That to
which the men must next be led must be something grasped
within the soul. The heathen peoples had their myths in
pictorial form, created through atavism in ancient cultural
forms. The Jewish people had its abstractions, not myths, but
abstractions: the Law. This has continued its existence. This
was the first elevation of the human being to the conceptual
force and into the force of thought. But from humanity's
present view of the matter, which is only the revival of the
command, “Thou shalt make unto thyself no image,”
man must revert to the capacity of the soul that can once
more, and this time consciously, form images. It is only in
images, in imaginations, that the social life also can be
rightly established in the future. The social life could be
regulated only as regards a single people in abstractions,
and the regulation for a people in social relationships was
that of the Old Testament. The next form of regulation of the
social life will depend upon the capacity to exercise in a
conscious way the same force that once existed atavistically,
in unconscious or half-conscious form, in man's myth building
capacity. Men would be completely filled with antisocial
instincts if they should endeavor to continue disseminating
mere abstract laws. They must come again by way of their
world conception, to the pictorial. Out of this conscious
myth creation there will arise also the possibility for the
development of the social element in the intercourse of man
with man.
You may look at
such a sculptural form as that of our Group: the
Representative of Man, Lucifer and Ahriman. There you
confront for the first time what is working in the whole
human being, because man is the state of balance between the
luciferic and the ahrimanic. If you permeate yourself in
actual life with the impulse to confront every person in such
a way that you correctly see this trinity in him, then do you
begin to understand him. This is an essential capacity,
bearing within itself the impulse to evolve in this fifth
post-Atlantean epoch. Thus we shall no longer pass by one
another as one specter passes another, so that we form no
picture of each other but merely define the other person with
our abstract concepts. The truth is that we do nothing more
at the present time We pass by each other as if we were
specters. One specter forms the conception, “That is a
nice fellow,” and the other, “That is not such a
nice fellow” ... “That is a bad man” . .
. “That is a good man,” — all sorts of such
abstract concepts. In the intercourse of man with man we have
nothing but a bundle of abstract concepts. This is the
essential thing that has entered into humanity out of the Old
Testament form of life: “Make unto thyself no
image.” It must inevitably lead to an antisocial life
if we should continue it further. What is flowing out from
the innermost nature of man, striving toward realization, is
that, when one individual confronts another, a picture shall
stream forth in a certain way from the other person, a
picture of that special form of balance manifested
individually by everyone. But this requires, of course, the
heightened interest that I have often described to you as the
foundation of social life, which each person should take in
the other person. At present we have not yet any intense
interest in another person. It is for this reason that we
criticize him, that we pass judgment upon him, that we form
our judgments according to sympathies and antipathies and not
according to the objective picture that leaps to meet us from
the other.
This capacity
to be mystically stimulated in a certain way as we confront
another person will come to realization. It will enter as a
special social impulse into human life. On the one hand, the
consciousness soul is striving to come in an antisocial way
to complete domination in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. On
the other hand, something else is striving outward from the
nature of man, that is, a capacity to form pictures of the
human beings with whom we live. It is here that the social
impulses arise, the social instincts. The simple fact is that
these things lie at a far greater depth than is ordinarily
supposed when people talk about the social and the
antisocial.
Now the
question may arise in your minds as to how we shall gradually
attain to the capacity of causing the picture of the other
person to leap to meet us. It is in life that we must gain
this capacity. Jehovah capacities are given to us at birth;
we evolve them in the embryonic life. The culture of the
future will not make things so comfortable for people. The
capacities a person must manifest will have to be developed
during the course of his life. Far more concrete and definite
principles must enter into education than those that are now
being brought into dominance in such an utterly confused
manner in today's pedagogy. It is most important of all that
the instinct shall be implanted in people to look back more
frequently during this life, but in the right way. What
people develop at present as memories of earlier experience
is marked as yet for the most part by a selfish character. If
a person looks back in a more unselfish way to what he has
experienced in childhood, youth, etc. — according to
the age he has reached — there emerges as if out of the
gray depths of the spirit various persons who have had
something to do with his life in all sorts of
relationships.
Look back into
your life and pay less attention to what interests you in
your own respectable person and much more to those figures
that have come into contact with you, educating you,
befriending you, assisting you, perhaps also injuring you
— often injuring you in a helpful way. One thing will
then become evident to you and that is how little reason a
person really has to ascribe to himself what he has become.
Often something important in us is due to the fact that one
person or another came into contact with us at a certain age,
and — perhaps, without knowing it himself, or perhaps,
being fully aware of the fact — drew our attention to
something or other. In a comprehensive sense, a really
unselfishly conducted survey of our lives is made up of all
sorts of things that do not give us occasion to immerse
ourselves selfishly in our own being, to brood over ourselves
egotistically, but lead us to broaden our views to include
those figures who came into contact with us. Let us immerse
ourselves with real love in what has come into our life. We
shall often discover that what evoked an antipathy in us at a
certain period is no longer so disagreeable to us when a
sufficient length of time has passed because we begin to see
an inner connection. The fact that we had to be affected in
an unpleasant way at a certain time by one person or another
might have been useful to us. We often gain more from the
harm that a person does to us than from the furtherance
afforded us by another. It would be advantageous to a person
if he more frequently exercised such a survey of his life,
and should permeate his life with the convictions flowing
from his self observation. “How little occasion I
really have to occupy myself with myself! How immeasurably
richer my life becomes when I look back to all those who have
entered my life!” In this way we free ourselves from
ourselves when we carry out such an unselfish survey. We then
escape from that terrible evil of our times, to which so many
fall victims, of brooding over ourselves. It is so extremely
necessary that we should free ourselves from this brooding
over ourselves. Anyone who has once felt the power of such
self-observation as I have just described will find himself
far too uninteresting to spend much time brooding over his
own life. Unlimited illumination is cast over this life of
ours when we see it irradiated with what enters into it from
the gray depths of the spirit.
But this has
such a germinating power over us that we really acquire the
imaginative forces necessary to confront the contemporary
human being in such a way that in him the thing is manifest
that appears to us only after many years in our backward
survey of those figures with whom we have lived together. We
thus acquire such a capacity that pictures actually come to
meet us from the individuals we confront.
The cultivation of the social life, which in earlier times
had its source only in the bonds of blood, does not depend so
much upon any sort of socialistic programs, but upon man's
becoming a spiritual-social being. He will become such a
being by awakening within himself, in the manner I have
described, the deeper forces that can bring to birth within
him the capacity for conceiving pictorially the other human
being. Otherwise, we shall always remain antisocial beings,
capable of approaching others only according to our
sympathies and antipathies, incapable of approaching them
according to the picture that may stream forth from each
person if we only develop the picture-forming forces in our
intercourse with them. Precisely in the social life of
humanity must the principle come into existence, “Thou
shalt make for thyself an image of thy fellow man.”
Then, when we form a picture of our fellow man, we enrich our
own soul life; then do we bestow a treasure upon our own
inner soul life with each human acquaintanceship. Then we no
longer so live that A lives there, B there, C there, but A, B
and C live in D; A, B and D live in C; C, D and E live in A;
etc. We gain the capacity to have other human beings live in
us.
But this must
be acquired; it is not born in us. If we should continue
simply to cultivate those characteristics that are born in
us, we should continue within the limits of a mere blood
culture, not the culture to which could be ascribed in the
true sense of the word human brotherhood. Only when we carry
the other human being within us can we really speak of human
brotherhood, which has appeared thus far only in an abstract
word. When we form a picture of the other person, which is
implanted as a treasure in our souls, then we carry within
the realm of our soul life something from him just as in the
case of a bodily brother we carry around something through
the common blood. This elective affinity as the basis of
social life must take the place in this concrete way of the
mere blood affinity. This is something that really must
evolve. It must depend upon the human will to determine how
brotherhood shall be awakened among men.
Human beings
have hitherto been separated. They ought to become socialized
in brotherhood. In order that the manifoldness shall not be
lost, the innermost element in man, thought, must be able to
take form individually in every single person. With Jehovah
the whole folk stood in a relationship. With Christ each
individual person must stand in relationship. But the fact
that brotherhood will thus awaken requires that there shall
be a compensation in an entirely different field, that is,
through freedom of thought.
Notes
Note 1. Three
figures in heroic size carved in wood by Rudolf Steiner.
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