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IV - Cognition and Will Exercises
September 9, 1922
The
exercises I have described for attaining inspiration are
actually only preliminary exercises for further supersensible
cognition. Through them a person is indeed able to view the
course of his life in the way I have characterized it; he is
able to see the etheric world of facts unfolding in the expanse
of earth existence behind man's thinking, feeling and willing.
By discarding the picture images achieved in meditation, or in
the consciousness following meditation, he also becomes
acquainted through this empty consciousness with the etheric
substance of the cosmos and the manifestations of the
spiritual beings who rule there. When, however, a person
becomes familiar in this way with human soul life, the astral
organization of man, he realizes first of all how much the
physical organism of man owes to hereditary development,
that is to say what are the persistent factors in his physical
body that have been inherited from his ancestors. Man also
gains a glimpse of how the cosmos is active within the etheric
organism, and he sees as a consequence what is not subject to
heredity but breaks away from it and is responsible for
man's individuality. He sees what it is that within his etheric
and astral organizations sets him free from his
inheritance and ancestors who gave him his physical
body.
It
is extremely important to distinguish clearly in this way
between what is passed on in the continuing stream of physical
inheritance from ancestors to descendants, and what, by
contrast, is given to individual man by the etheric, cosmic
world, for it is this whereby he becomes personalized and
individualized and frees himself from his inherited
characteristics. It is especially important in education, in
pedagogy, to see clearly into these distinctions. Precisely
such knowledge as is indicated here can provide teachers with
some fundamental principles. I may perhaps refer here to the
booklet, which contains a summary by Albert Steffen of the
Pedagogical Course that I gave here in Dornach at Christmas a
year ago, also to what is contained in the last issue of the
English magazine Anthroposophy, (July/August), which contains
interesting educational material.
The
inspired knowledge developed by means of the exercises I
have described only acquaints man with the astral organism
within the framework of earth life. He learns to know what he
is as a soul-spiritual being developing from birth to the
present time. But this insight does not yet enable him to say
that his soul-spiritual being begins with earthly life and ends
with it. He arrives at the soul-spiritual element in his
earth life but does not come so far as to perceive this
soul-spiritual element as something eternal, as the
eternal core of man's being. For that it is necessary to
continue and broaden the exercises for eliminating the
meditative pictures from consciousness so much that in doing so
the soul becomes ever stronger and more energetic. Progress
here really consists in nothing else but continued energetic
training. One must struggle again and again with all the
strength one can muster to remove from consciousness the
pictures produced or created by imagination, so that it becomes
empty. Gradually then, through practicing the elimination
of the images, the soul's strength increases so much that
finally it is powerful enough so that one is able to
obliterate the overall picture of the course of one's
life since birth, as it has been brought before the soul
through imagination.
Mark well, it is possible to continue the exercises for
eliminating a content of soul and producing empty
consciousness, carrying them so far that the soul becomes
strong enough to leave out the course of its own life. At the
moment, when one is strong enough to do this, one lives in a
consciousness that no longer has before it the physical
organism, nor the etheric organism; moreover, one no longer
confronts anything of the world absorbed through the
physical and etheric organisms. For this consciousness, the
sense world with all its sense impressions is no longer
present, neither is the sum of all the etheric happenings in
the cosmos that one had first gained through imaginative
cognition. Everything of this kind has been removed. Thereby a
higher degree of inspiration is brought about within the
human soul.
What appears then by means of this higher level of
inspiration is the condition of soul as it existed in a
soul-spiritual world before it descended into a human physical
organism through conception, embryonic life and birth. In this
way one attains a perception of the soul's pre-earthly
existence. One looks into those worlds where the soul existed
before it received on earth, I may say, the first atom of
physical substance transmitted to it with conception. One
looks back into the development of the soul in the
soul-spiritual world and learns to know its pre-existent life.
Through this experience, a person has grasped one side of
the eternal nature of the human soul's essence. When he has
done that, he has, in fact, recognized for the first time the
true nature of the human ego, of spirit man. This latter is
accessible only to this form of inspiration that is capable of
disregarding not only its own physical body and its
impressions, but also its own etheric body and the latter's
impressions as manifested in the course of life.
When one has advanced to this knowledge of the human soul as it
existed before birth in its pure soul-spiritual existence, then
one can also gain a conception of what thinking, what the
forming of concepts really is, as we human beings experience it
in the ordinary consciousness of our earth life. Even with the
most careful self-examination of which the soul is capable we
cannot, by using only the capacities and powers of our ordinary
consciousness, grasp the real nature of thinking and the
formation of ideas.
If
now I am to make clear how the real nature of man's earthly
concepts appears to inspired consciousness, I must make use of
a picture, but this picture expresses complete reality. Bring
to mind a human corpse; it still has the form that the man had
in life. All the organs are still shaped the way they were when
the person was alive. Even so, in looking at the corpse,
we must admit that it is only the remains of what the living
man was. When we now make a study of its essential nature, we
must conclude that the corpse as it now lies before us can have
no original, independent reality. It cannot be thought of as
something that comes into being in the same condition as it is
as a corpse; it can exist only as the remains of a living
organism. The living organism must have been there first. The
forms of the corpse, its members, point not only to the corpse
itself but to what brought it into being. Anyone who rightly
views a corpse in the context of life is directed by it to the
living man who produced it. Nature, to which we surrender the
corpse, can only destroy it; it cannot build it up as such. If
we wish to see the upbuilding forces in the corpse, we must
look upon the living man.
On
another level, in a similar way, there is revealed to
inspired consciousness the essential nature of the
thinking or mental picturing that we have in ordinary
consciousness. It is actually a corpse; at least, it is
something which during earthly life is continually passing over
into the corpse-like element of soul. Living thought was
present before man came into earth-existence, but instead was a
soul-spiritual being in the soul-spiritual world. There, this
thinking and conceiving were something quite different; they
were living elements within spiritual activities. What we have
as our ordinary power of thinking is a remnant of that
living spiritual entity that we were before we descended to the
earth. It has remained just as a corpse remains of the living
physical man. As we are referred back to the living man when we
see a corpse, so, if we now look through inspired knowledge at
the dying or already dead thoughts or concepts of the soul, we
realize that we must treat this thinking as a corpse of the
true “thought being,” we see how we must trace this
earthly thinking back to a supersensible, life-filled
thinking.
It
is this that also reveals qualitatively the relationship of a
part of our soul life to our purely soul-spiritual existence
before birth. Through this, we really learn to know what our
ordinary concepts and thinking signify, if we trace them back
to their living nature, which is to be found nowhere within
earth existence. On earth, it is only expressed in a
reflection. This reflection is our ordinary thinking and
forming of ideas. Therefore, the abstract character of
this ordinary thinking is fundamentally remote from
reality, as a corpse is remote from the true human reality.
When we speak of the abstractness, of the merely intellectual
aspect of thinking, we vaguely feel that the way it appears in
ordinary consciousness is not what it should be, that it has
its source in something else, which is its true nature. This is
what is so very important, namely, that a true knowledge is
able, not only in general phrases but in concrete pictures, to
relate what man experiences here in his physical body to the
eternal core of his being, as it was just done with the
thinking and conceiving of ordinary consciousness. Then only
will the significance of imagination and inspiration be seen in
the right light. For then we comprehend that the dead or dying
thinking is basically brought to life again through the
exercises undertaken to achieve inspiration; brought to life
within physical earth-existence. To acquire inspired knowledge
is fundamentally to bring dying thoughts to life again.
Thereby we are not completely transposed into prenatal
existence, but rather, through the soul's perception, we
gain a true picture of this prenatal existence, of which we
know that it did not originate here on earth but that it
radiates out of a pre-earthly human existence into man's
existence here on earth. We recognize through the picture's
nature that it is cognitive evidence of the state of the human
soul in pre-earthly existence.
What significance this has for philosophical knowledge will be
discussed next.
* * *
Just as we are in a position in this way to investigate the
true nature of our ordinary thinking, we can also, by means of
the supersensible cognition referred to here, bring into view
the essential being concealed behind the will. But for this,
not only is the higher cognition of inspiration required, but
also that of intuition which I described yesterday, when I said
that in order to develop it, certain exercises of the will are
necessary. If man carries these out, he becomes capable of
releasing his own soul-spiritual nature from his physical as
well as his etheric organism. He carries it out into the
spiritual world itself. It is the ego and the astral
organization, his own being, that he carries into the spiritual
world. In this way, he learns to know what it signifies to live
outside his physical and etheric organisms. He comes to
perceive the state the human soul finds itself in when it has
cast these aside. But that means nothing less than gaining a
preview of what happens to man when he goes through death.
Through death, the physical and etheric organisms are cast off.
Thus, laid aside, they can no longer form the covering
for man as they have done during earth life. What happens
then to the actual core of man's being is something one learns
through a preview in intuitive knowledge, when, with one's
spirit being, one is outside in the world of spiritual beings
instead of within one's physical body. Man actually finds
himself in such a condition. Through intuitive knowledge
he is in a position to be within other spiritual beings, as
otherwise here in earth life he is within his physical and
etheric bodies. What he receives through intuition is an
experience in a picture of what he has to go through when
he passes through the event of death. Only in this way is it
possible to gain actual insight into what underlies the
idea of the immortal human soul. This human soul —
inspired knowledge already teaches this — is on the one
side unborn. On the other side, it is undying. Intuition
teaches this.
Having thus come to know the true nature of the eternal core of
man's being — insofar as it is to lead a life after
physical death — one also learns to perceive what
lies behind human will. We have just characterized what lies
behind human thinking; that is discernible through inspiration.
What is concealed behind human willing becomes perceptible, if,
through exercises of the will, one brings about intuition. Then
the will reveals itself so as to show that behind it something
quite different is concealed, of which the will of ordinary
consciousness is merely the reflection. It becomes evident that
behind willing there is something that in a certain sense
is a younger member of the human soul. If we speak of the
thinking and forming of ideas as of something that is dying,
indeed as something that is already dead, and we view it as the
older part of the human soul, then, by contrast, we must
speak of willing as the younger part. We can say that willing,
that is, the actual soul element behind the will, is related to
thinking as a young child is to an old man, except that in
man's constitution old age comes after childhood, while
in the soul the two exist side by side. The soul bears
continually in itself both its old age and its youth — in
fact, both its death and its birth.
In
contrast to such a knowledge of the soul based on
inspiration and intuition, which is quite definite, what
one calls philosophy today is something extremely abstract, for
this simply describes thinking and willing. Actual
knowledge of the soul, on the other hand, reveals that
when willing turns old it becomes thinking, and thinking
that has become old — indeed that has died — has
developed out of will. Thus, one truly becomes acquainted with
this life of the soul; one learns to perceive the fact that
what is revealed in this earth life as thinking was willing in
an earlier earth life, and what is now willing, something still
young in the soul, will become thinking in the following earth
life.
So,
in this way one learns to see into the soul and for the first
time to know it as it really is. The will part of the human
soul is revealed as something that leads an embryonic life.
When we pass over into the spiritual world with what we harbor
within ourselves as willing, we have a young soul, which by its
own character teaches us that it is actually a child. Even as
little as we can assume that a child does not grow on into old
age unless it is sick, so little can we assume that what we
perceive as a young soul — initiation reveals this to us
— dissolves at death, for it has only just reached its
embryonic life. Through intuition we learn to know how,
in the moment of death, it goes forth into the spiritual
world.
That means actually perceiving the eternal core of man's
being according to its unbornness and its immortality. By
contrast, modern philosophy works only with ideas taken from
ordinary consciousness. But what does that mean? As we can see
from what has been said, it means that these ideas are dead
soul entities.
When philosophy, working with the ideas of ordinary
consciousness, wants to consider the thinking part of the soul
correctly in order to reach results, it will say, if it is
sufficiently free of prejudice to investigate what is actually
present in the thinking of ordinary consciousness, that thought
cannot of itself explain its own existence, just as it must be
said of a corpse that it cannot come from a corpse but must
have come from something else. Physiology indicates this
through observation. Philosophy, from what comes to light here
out of intuition, should draw the conclusion that just because
ordinary thinking and the forming of ideas have a dying
character it is permitted to deduce from this fact that
something else existed earlier. What inspiration
discovers through contemplation, philosophy can find through
logical conclusions, through dialectics, that is, through
an indirect kind of proof.
What would philosophy have to do then if it were to choose to
remain within ordinary consciousness? It would have to say,
“If I will not lift myself up to some kind of
supersensible knowledge I must at least analyze the facts of my
ordinary consciousness.” If it does so without prejudice
it fords that the thinking and ideas of ordinary consciousness
are corpse-like in character. It would have to say,
“Because that is something that does not explain its own
nature out of itself, I may conclude that its real nature comes
earlier.” Of course, this requires an unbiased attitude
in analyzing the soul so that thinking may be recognized as
possessing something corpse-like. But this impartial
attitude is possible. For only a biased attitude discerns
something alive in the thinking of ordinary
consciousness. Freedom from bias reveals this thinking as
something that in its very nature has withered away. This is
why I said in the previous lecture that it is quite feasible to
grasp the content of natural science with this deadened
thinking. That is one side of the matter.
Intellectualized philosophy therefore can only come
indirectly to a knowledge of man's eternal essence and
indeed, only through recognizing what, in regard to earth life,
must be viewed as preceding it. If then such a philosophy not
only inquires into thinking, if it desires not only to be
intellectual but also includes in its research the inner
experience of the will and the other soul forces, which, in the
cosmic scheme of things, are younger than thinking, then it can
succeed in picturing to itself the kind of interplay through
which thinking is linked to willing. Then it can come on one
hand to the logical deduction: dying thinking is connected to
pre-earthly soul existence. Even though philosophy cannot look
upon such an existence and cannot perceive its nature, it can
infer that something, although inaccessible and unknown, does
exist.
When, on the other hand, philosophy centers its attention
on willing or the feelings, and experiences the interplay
between thinking and feeling, it will eventually discover not
only something dying but incipient in willing. This you can
find even in Bergson's philosophy, if you put what he says
impartially into the appropriate words. You notice the
impulse he himself feels in the way he speaks, the way he
philosophizes, and sensing this impulse he attains an
awareness of the eternal core of the human soul. But since
Bergson
refuses to take supersensible knowledge into
consideration, he reaches only a knowledge of the soul's
essence insofar as it reveals itself in earthly life. Out of
his philosophy he cannot derive convincing indications of
unbornness and immortality. Yet, on one side, he does
characterize thinking — although he gives it a different
name — as something old which superimposes itself
over sense perceptions as a corpse-like element. On the
other side he feels — because of the living way in which
he characterizes it — the incipient,
“embryonic” quality of the will. He can vividly
enter into this and he senses that something eternal is
contained within. Nevertheless, in this manner he arrives
only at the characteristic of the soul-spiritual core of man in
earth life, not at anything beyond.
Thus, we can say that, if they are unbiased, all
philosophies using ideas based merely on ordinary
consciousness can, through analyzing thought and will, come
indirectly to the conclusion that the soul is a being unborn
and immortal, but they cannot come to a direct perception of
it. This direct perception, which would bring the philosophies
of ideas to fulfillment, this perception of the real, eternal
being of the soul, can be achieved only through imagination,
inspiration and intuition as has been described here. As a
consequence, although the subject is still discussed as part of
philosophy, it remains true that anything really substantial
concerning the soul's eternal nature must rely only on
tradition that rests upon the dreamlike knowledge of the past.
Philosophers often do not know this and believe that they
produce it out of themselves. This content can be permeated by
logic and dialectic. But a true renewal of philosophical life
depends on the acknowledgment by our present spiritual culture
of the existence of a fully conscious imagination, a fully
conscious inspiration and a fully conscious intuition, and not
only acknowledging the methods for attaining these capacities
but putting their results to use in philosophical life. I will
try to explain in the next two parts of my lecture how this
relates to cosmology and religion.
When you consider that only through a higher form of
inspiration can one arrive at the perception of the eternal
core of man's being and how it lives in extra-terrestrial
existence, then you will say that only through this
higher inspiration and through initiation (as I have
described it) can the human being really know himself. What
plays into his own being out of the cosmos, he can know only
through higher inspiration and intuition. Since this is the
case, a genuine cosmology, that is, a picture of the cosmos
that includes man's total being, can arise only on the level of
inspired and intuitive perception. Only then does man gain
insight into what is also working in his physical and etheric
bodies during earth life.
In
these organisms, the soul-spiritual nature of man is not merely
hidden; during earth existence, it is actually
transformed, metamorphosed in regard to waking, everyday
life. As little as a root can reflect the exact form of the
plant, so little can an observation of man's physical and
etheric organisms reveal the eternal part of him. This is
attained only when we look into what lives in man before birth
and after death. Only then are we able to relate man's true
being, which must be observed outside of earth existence, to
the cosmos. This is why modern culture had no way of arriving
at a cosmology that includes man during the period when it
rejected any kind of clairvoyance. This I have indicated
before, but it becomes especially clear from what I have
described today. Nevertheless, in earlier times, even as late
as the beginning of the last century, but chiefly at the end of
the eighteenth century, a “rational cosmology,” as
it was called, was developed from the philosophical direction
as a part of philosophy.
This rational cosmology, which was supposed to be a part of
philosophy, was also formed by philosophers with the aid of
nothing but ordinary consciousness. But, if, with ordinary
philosophy, one already had the above described difficulties in
penetrating to the true nature of the soul, you will understand
that it is quite impossible to gain a real content for a
cosmology that includes man if one merely wants to stay within
the ideas of ordinary consciousness. The contents of rational
cosmology that the philosophers have developed even up to
recent times, lived therefore in fact on the traditional
cosmological ideas attained by humanity when a dreamlike
clairvoyance still existed. These ideas can be renewed only by
means of what has been described here as exact
clairvoyance. In this sphere also, philosophers have not
known that they actually borrowed from the old cosmology.
Certain ideas occurred to them. They absorbed them from
the history of cosmology and believed they had produced them
out of themselves. But what they brought forth were merely
logical connections, by means of which they assembled the old
ideas and produced a new system. In such a way
cosmologies arose in earlier times as a part of
philosophy. But since one no longer had a living relationship
to what one thus absorbed as ideas taken over from
ancient clairvoyance, the ideas of the cosmologies became more
and more abstract.
Just take a look at the chapters on cosmology in the
philosophical books of earlier times and you will find
how abstract and basically empty those ideas are that were
developed on the subjects of the origin and end of the world,
and so on. It is correct to say that they were all brought
across from ancient times when they were alive, because
man had a living relationship to what these ideas expressed.
Gradually they had become unsubstantial and abstract, and
people outlined only superficially what a cosmology should
contain, a cosmology which extends not only to outer
nature but can encompass the whole being of man, reaching
to the soul-spiritual nature of the cosmos. In this connection,
the extraordinary brilliant Emile Boutroux
[Emile Boutroux,
1845-1921; especially in his De la Contingence des Lois de la
Nature (Concerning the Contingency of Natural Laws).] gave
significant indications of how to arrive at a cosmology.
But
since he also wanted to build only upon what ordinary
consciousness could encompass, he too only arrived at an
abstract cosmology.
Thus, cosmologies became more and more devoid of real content,
becoming merely a sum of abstract ideas and
characteristics. No wonder then that gradually this
rational cosmology was discredited. The natural
scientists appeared who could investigate nature in the manner
that led in recent times to so many scientific triumphs. They
could formulate natural laws, postulating an inner ordering of
nature from observation and experiment, and from this they put
together a naturalistic cosmology. What was thus assembled from
the ideas concerning outer nature as a naturalistic cosmology,
had, to be sure, a content, the external sensory content. In
the face of this, the empty, rational cosmology constructed by
the philosophers could not maintain itself. It fell into
disrepute and was gradually abandoned. One therefore no
longer speaks of a rational cosmology, arrived at merely by
logic; one is satisfied now with naturalistic cosmology, which,
however, does not encompass man. One can say, then, that it is
cosmology in particular that teaches, more than ordinary
philosophy, how one must have recourse again to imagination,
inspiration and intuition.
Philosophy can at least observe the human soul, and, through
unbiased observation of thinking whose dying nature refers to
something other than its present state, it discovers that
something lies outside all human existence on earth that
includes man inwardly; in the same way, philosophy can
point beyond death. Therefore, out of conclusions drawn from
the soul's rich life of thinking, feeling and will, philosophy
can at least make its abstractions rich and varied. This is
still possible. But cosmology as a spiritual science can only
be established if it is given its content also from spiritual
perception. Here one can no longer arrive at a content by
deduction. To attain a content, one must borrow it from the old
clairvoyant perceptions, as was the case in the ideas adopted
from tradition, or one must attain it again by a new method
such as has now been presented.
If,
therefore, philosophy is still in a position to carry on in
accordance with logic, cosmology can no longer do so. As a
rational cosmology based only on ordinary consciousness, it has
therefore lost its content and with it its standing. If we wish
to advance beyond a naturalistic cosmology to a new one that
embraces man's totality, we must learn to perceive with the aid
of inspiration and intuition that element in man in which the
spiritual cosmos is reflected. In other words, cosmology even
more than philosophy is dependent upon the acknowledgement by
modern culture of the methods employed by spiritual science for
attaining fully conscious imagination, inspiration and
intuition — and not only acknowledging them but
making use of their results to construct with their aid a
genuinely real cosmology. What can be said concerning religion
from this standpoint will be described in conclusion.
If
our religious life is to be founded on knowledge the
experience of the spiritual human being among other
spirit beings must be brought back to earth and described. In
these experiences we are dealing with something that is
entirely unlike life on earth; it is utterly different. In them
man stands wholly outside this life; therefore, these
experiences can only be undergone by those human powers that
are entirely independent of his physical and etheric
organisms and for this reason certainly cannot lie within
ordinary consciousness. Only when this ordinary consciousness
advances and develops clairvoyant capacities can it give
descriptions of those experiences that a human being has in the
purely spiritual world. Therefore, a “rational
theology,” a theology that wants to rely upon ordinary
consciousness, is in an even worse position than a
“rational cosmology.”
Rational cosmology still possesses something, after all, that
at least sheds a certain amount of light on man's earthly
existence. The reason for this is that in a round-about way, to
be sure, the form and life of physical and etheric man are to
an extent brought about by spiritual beings. But the
experiences that the human being has in the purely
spiritual worlds and which exact intuition gets to know, can in
no way be discovered with the ordinary consciousness, as is the
case of philosophy. They cannot even be guessed at. Today, when
people want to arrive at all human knowledge by means of
ordinary consciousness, these experiences can only be adopted
— this is even more true than in the case of
cosmological ideas — from ancient traditions dating
from those times when men found their way in dreamlike
clairvoyance into the spiritual worlds and carried across into
the earthly world what they experienced.
If
someone fancies that he could state something about man's
experiences in the divine world in the form of ideas based only
on ordinary consciousness, he is very much mistaken.
Therefore, theology has come increasingly to a point of forming
a kind of historic theology, adopting, even more than does
cosmology, merely the old ideas of the kingdom of God acquired
in earlier clairvoyant vision. These ideas then are made into a
system by logic and dialectic. Men believe that here they have
something fundamental and original, whereas it is only a
subjective system of those who worked on this theology. It is a
product of history, poured at times into new forms. But
everything that is of real content is borrowed — by
those who want only to draw from ordinary consciousness
— from tradition, or from history. But for this reason,
the formulations of various philosophers — who in earlier
times created a rational cosmology and wanted to create a
rational theology as well — were through this
procedure discredited more than ever. On the one hand,
rational cosmology as against naturalistic cosmology fell
into discredit. On the other, in the field of religion,
rational theology as against purely historic theology was
discredited — the historic theology that renounced pure
reality — both the direct formulation of ideas about the
spiritual world and the experience of it.
This direct relationship, these living connections with
experience in the spiritual world, vanished for more recent
humanity when, in the Middle Ages, the question arose of proof
for the existence of God. As long as a direct relation to
experience of the kingdom of God existed, one did not speak of
dialectic or logical proofs for divinity. Such proofs, when
they were put forward, were in themselves proof that the living
relationship to the kingdom of God had died away.
Fundamentally, what Scholastic theology said was correct:
ordinary reason is not in a position to make pronouncements
about the kingdom of God. It can only elucidate the ideas
already there, systematize them. It can contribute only
something toward making doctrine readily acceptable.
We
can observe how in recent times this incapacity of
ordinary consciousness to determine anything about the
kingdom of God has given rise to two errors. On the one
side are the scientists who want to talk about religion, about
God, but feel the incapacity of their ordinary consciousness
and so formulate merely a history of religion. A religious
content cannot at the present time be obtained in this way.
Therefore, the existing, or once existing religions are
considered historically. What is in fact considered? It is the
religious content once provided by the old dreamlike, intuitive
clairvoyance. Or, people consider that aspect of the
religious life of the present time that has survived as a
residue of the old clairvoyant state. This is then called
“History of Religion,” and people do completely
without producing any genuinely religious life of their
own.
Still other people realize that man's clear day
consciousness is powerless to determine anything about
experiences in the purely spiritual kingdom of God. Therefore,
they turn to the more subconscious regions of the human soul,
to the world of feeling, to certain mystical faculties, and
speak of an immediate, elemental experience of God. This is
quite widespread today. It is just the advocates of this kind
of experience who are especially characteristic of the
spiritual state of mind at the present time. With all their
might they shun the possibility of bringing their awareness of
God into clear ideas that are logically formed. They give long
explanations as to why this instinctive experience of God
which, according to their interpretation, is the true religious
experience, cannot be logically proved. They conclude
therefore that the idea of expressing any religious content in
intellectual form must be abandoned. But it must be said
that these proponents of a direct awareness of God are the
victims of illusions, because what is experienced in any
region of the soul can in fact also be expressed in clear
ideas. If we were to follow their example and put forward the
theory that the religious content is weakened when it is
expressed in clear ideas, this would prove nothing but that we
should have abandoned all our truly substantial ideas in favor
of a series of dreamed-up notions. It is a characteristic
feature of present-day religious life that people rely on
something which, as soon as it has to be made clear, at once
falls into error.
From this it is quite evident that we can succeed in
renewing religious life on a basis of knowledge only if
we do not reject a method of cognition that can guide us into
having a living experience of the spiritual human being and
other spiritual beings. We have special need of this method of
cognition precisely so that religious knowledge can be placed
on a firm foundation. In the realm of religion, ordinary
consciousness can at most systematize perceptions,
clarify them, or formulate them into a doctrine, but it cannot
find them. Without these perceptions, religion is limited to
the traditional acceptance of what is derived from quite
different soul conditions of humanity in earlier times. It is
therefore limited to what would never satisfy a mind trained in
modern science.
Therefore, if we are to base our religion upon knowledge, I
must repeat for the third time something that I have already
expressed today in regard to other areas of culture, but that
must be expressed specifically for each separate area. If, out
of the spiritual needs of the present time, religious life is
to be renewed and undergo vital stimulation, the spiritual life
of our age must acknowledge fully conscious imaginative,
inspired, and intuitive cognition. Especially for the religious
area must this not only be acknowledged but, for a living
religious content, our modern spiritual life must also apply
these spiritual-scientific results in appropriate ways.
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