The Spiritual Communion of Mankind
Published in Man and the World of the Stars 1963
Lecture IV
The Relation of the Movement for Religious Renewal to the
Anthroposophical Movement.
Dornach, December 30, 1922
I HAVE often said in this place that in more ancient times in the
evolution of humanity, science, art, and religion formed a harmonious
unity. Anyone who is able in one way or another to gain knowledge of
the nature of the ancient Mysteries knows that within these
Mysteries, knowledge was sought as a revelation of the Spiritual in
picture form, in the way that was possible in those times. That way
can no longer be ours, although in this age we must again advance to
a knowledge of the spiritual nature of the world. A pictorial
knowledge of the Spiritual lay at the foundation of all ancient
conceptions of the world. This knowledge came to direct expression,
not merely by being communicated in words, but through forms which
have gradually become those of our arts bodily, plastic
presentation in the plastic arts and presentation by means of tone
and word in the arts of music and speech. But this second stage was
followed by the third stage, that of the revelation of the nature of
the world in religious cult or ritual, a revelation through which the
whole man felt himself uplifted to the divine-spiritual ground
of the world, not merely in thought, nor merely in feeling as happens
through art, but in such a way that thoughts, feelings and also the
inmost impulses of the will surrendered themselves in reverent
devotion to this divine-spiritual principle. And the sacred acts and
rites were the means whereby the external actions of mans will
were to be filled with spirit. Men felt the living unity in science
(as it was then conceived), art, and religion. The ideal of the
spiritual life of the present day must be, once more to gain
knowledge that can bring to realization what Goethe already divined:
a knowledge that raises itself to art, not symbolical
or allegorical art, but true art which means creative,
formative activity in tones and in words an art which also
deepens into direct religious experience.
Only when anthroposophical Spiritual Science is seen to contain this
impulse within it, is its true being understood. Obviously humanity
will have to take many steps in spiritual development before such an
ideal can be realized. But it is just the patient devotion to the
taking of these steps which must bring blessing to the
Anthroposophical Movement.
Now I should like, in the series of lectures now being given, to
speak from one particular aspect on this impulse in the
Anthroposophical Movement to which reference has just been made.
Perhaps, my dear friends, at the close of what I have to say, you
will understand what is really the deeper cause of my words. Let me
say in the first place that already for a long time now the
Anthroposophical Movement has not coincided with the Anthroposophical
Society, but that the Anthroposophical Society, if it would fulfill
its task, must really carry the whole impulse of the Anthroposophical
Movement. The Anthroposophical Movement has laid hold of wider
circles than merely the Anthroposophical Society. Hence it has come
about that in more recent years the way of working had necessarily to
be different for the Anthroposophical Movement from what it was when
the Anthroposophical Movement was essentially contained within the
Anthroposophical Society. But the Anthroposophical Society can only
fulfill its real nature when it feels itself as the kernel of the
Anthroposophical Movement.
Now in order not to speak merely theoretically but to make what I
have just said really intelligible, I must tell you a little about
something that has recently taken place in connection with a Movement
that is distinct from the Anthroposophical Movement, because, if I
did not do this, misunderstanding might easily arise.
I will therefore narrate briefly the manner in which a certain
Movement having a religious, cultic character has arisen, a Movement
which indeed has much to do with the Anthroposophical Movement, but
should not be confused with it: it is the religious movement which
calls itself Movement for Religious Renewal, [This
Movement was the beginning of The Christian Community as it
has since been called.] for the renewal of Christianity. The
position of this Movement with respect to the Anthroposophical
Movement will become clear if we take our start from the forms in
which this Movement for Religious Renewal has developed.
Some time ago a few enthusiastic young theological students came to
me. They were about to conclude their theological studies and enter
upon the practical duties of ministers of religion. What they said to
me was to the following effect: When at the present time a student
receives with a really devoted Christian heart the theology offered
to him at the universities, he feels at last as if he had no firm
ground under his feet for the practical work of a minister that is
before him. The theology and religion of our time has gradually
assumed forms that do not really enable it to instil into its
ministers for their practical work and their care of souls the
impulse that must proceed as a living power from the Mystery of
Golgotha, from the consciousness that the Christ Being Who formerly
lived in spiritual worlds, has since united Himself with human life
on earth and now works on further in that life. I perceived
that in the souls of those who came to me there was the feeling that
if Christianity is to be kept alive, a renewal of the entire
theological impulse and of the entire religious impulse is necessary;
otherwise Christianity cannot be the really vital force for our whole
spiritual life. And it is indeed clear that the religious impulse
only assumes its true significance and meaning when it lays hold of a
man so deeply that it pervades everything he brings forth out of his
thinking, feeling, and will. I remarked first of all to those who
came to me in this way for help in what they were seeking and could
only find where anthroposophical Spiritual Science is making its way
into the world today I pointed out to them that one cannot
work from the enthusiasm of a few single individuals, but that it is
a question of gathering together, as it were, similar strivings in
wider circles, even though the striving may be more or less
unconscious. I said to these people that theirs was obviously not an
isolated striving; rather was it the case that they were feeling in
their hearts perhaps more intensely than others what
countless human beings of the present day are also feeling; and I
showed them that if it is a question of religious renewal, one must
start from a broad basis whereon can be found a large number of
persons out of whose hearts springs the impulse to strive for that
renewal.
After a while the people in question came to me again. They had fully
accepted what I had said to them and now they were able to tell me
that they had been joined by a considerable number of other young
theological students who were in the same position, that is to say,
who were dissatisfied with the present theological and religious aims
at the universities and yet were about to enter upon the practical
duties of ministers of the church; and there seemed every prospect of
the circle being increased.
I said: It is quite obvious first of all that it is not only a
question of having a band of preachers and ministers, but into such a
movement for religious renewal should be drawn not only those who can
teach and perform the duties of pastors, but above all those
and they are very numerous who possess more or less dimly in
their hearts a strong religious impulse, a specifically Christian
impulse, which, in view of the way in which theological religion has
developed, cannot be satisfied. I pointed out, therefore, that there
are circles of people in the population who are not within the
Anthroposophical Movement, and who, from the whole tenor of their
mind and heart, do not immediately find their way to the
Anthroposophical Movement.
I remarked further, that for the Anthroposophical Movement it is
ultimately a case of seeing clearly and distinctly that we are living
in an age when, simply through the worlds evolution, a number
of spiritual truths, truths regarding the actual spiritual content of
the world, can be found by men when they become spiritual
researchers. And if men do not become spiritual researchers but
strive after the truth in the way in which it must disclose itself to
man when he is conscious of his human dignity, then the truths
discovered by spiritual researchers can be understood by such persons
by means of their ordinary, sound human intellect provided it
is really sound.
I went on to say that the Anthroposophical Movement is founded upon
the principle that he who finds his way into it knows that what is
important above all is that the spiritual truths now accessible to
humanity should lay hold of mens hearts and minds as
knowledge. The essential thing is that knowledge should
enter the spiritual life of man. It is of course not the case that
one who is in the Anthroposophical Movement need be versed in the
various sciences. One may be in the Anthroposophical Movement without
possessing any impulse or any inclination towards natural science,
for the truths of Anthroposophy are perfectly comprehensible to the
human intellect if only it is healthy and unclouded by prejudice. If
already at the present time a sufficiently large number of persons
out of the natural tendencies of their heart and mind were to find
their way to the Anthroposophical Movement, then all that is
necessary for religious aims and religious ideals would also
gradually develop together with anthroposophical knowledge out of the
Anthroposophical Movement. But there are, as I have already said,
a great number of people who have the above-mentioned urge towards a
renewal of religion, that is to say towards a renewal of Christian
religion, and who, simply through being in certain circles of the
cultural life, cannot find their way into the Anthroposophical
Movement. What is necessary for these people at the present time is
that a path suited to them should be found, leading to the spiritual
life appropriate to the humanity of the present day.
I pointed out that it was a matter of forming communities; that what
is to be reached in Anthroposophy can be attained first of all in the
single individual, but that, out of the knowledge thus gained in an
individual way, there must flow by an absolute inner necessity the
ethical and religious social activity that is requisite for
the future of humanity.
It is therefore a question of giving something to those people who
are at first unable to set out directly along the path to the
Anthroposophical Movement. The spiritual path for them must be sought
by forming communities in which heart and soul and spirit work
together a path adapted to human evolution at its present
stage.
What I then had to say out of the needs of our human evolution to
those persons who came to me may be summed up approximately in the
words: it is necessary for the evolution of humanity at the present
time that the Anthroposophical Movement should grow more and more, in
accordance with the conditions which underlie it, and which consist
especially in this that the spiritual truths which want to
come to us from the spiritual world should first of all enter the
hearts of men directly, so that men may be strengthened by these
spiritual truths. They will then find the way, which will be on the
one hand an artistic way, and on the other a religious, ethical, and
social way. The Anthroposophical Movement has gone along this path
since its inception, and for the Anthroposophical Movement no
other path is necessary, if only this path be rightly understood.
The need for another path arises for those who cannot directly take
this one, but who through community-building and corporate endeavor
within the community, must follow a different path, one which only
later will join the anthroposophical path.
In this way the prospect was opened for two movements to travel side
by side. There is the Anthroposophical Movement, which attains its
true aims when it adheres with intelligence and vigor to the meaning
and purpose originally contained in it and is not led astray by any
special fields of work that are bound to open up as time goes on.
Even the field of scientific work, for example, must not encroach
upon the impulse of the general Anthroposophical Movement. We most
clearly understand that it is the anthroposophical impulse which
constitutes the Anthroposophical Movement, and although various
fields of scientific work have recently been started within the
Anthroposophical Movement it is absolutely necessary that the power
and energy of the general anthroposophical impulse should not be
weakened. In particular, the anthroposophical impulse must not he
drawn into the forms of thinking and ideation prevailing in various
fields of science which ought actually to be vitalized by it
and be colored by them to such an extent that Anthroposophy
becomes, let us say, chemical as Chemistry is today, physical as
Physics is today, or biological as Biology is today. That must not
happen on any account; it would strike at the very heart of the
Anthroposophical Movement. What is essential is that the
Anthroposophical Movement shall preserve its spiritual purity, but
also its spiritual energy. To this end it must embody the essential
nature of the anthroposophical spirituality, must live and move in it
and bring forth out of the spiritual revelations of the present day
everything that seeks to penetrate also into the life of science.
Side by side with this so I said at that time there
might be such a movement for religious renewal, which of course has
no significance for those who find the way into Anthroposophy, but is
intended for those who, to begin with, cannot find this way. And as
there are numbers of such people, a movement such as this is not only
justified, but also necessary.
Taking for granted therefore that the Anthroposophical Movement will
remain what it was and what it ought to be, I gave something,
quite independently of the Anthroposophical Movement, to a number of
persons who, from their own impulse, not mine, wished to work
for the Movement for Religious Renewal; I gave what I was in a
position to give in respect of what a future theology needs; and I
also gave the contents of the ceremonial and ritual required by this
new community.
What I have been able to give to these people out of the conditions
pertaining to spiritual knowledge at the present time, I have given
as a man to other men. What I have given them has nothing to do
with the Anthroposophical Movement. I have given it to them as a
private individual, and in such a way that I have emphasized with the
necessary firmness that the Anthroposophical Movement must not have
anything to do with this Movement for Religious Renewal; above all
that I am not the founder of this Movement, and I rely upon
this being made quite clear to the world; to individuals who wished
to found this Movement for Religious Renewal I have given the
necessary counsels which are consonant with the practice of
an authentic and inwardly vital cult, filled with spiritual content,
to be celebrated in a right way with the forces out of the spiritual
world. When I gave this advice I never performed a ritualistic act
myself; I only showed, step by step, to those who wished to enact the
ceremonies, how they have to be performed. That was necessary. And
today it is also necessary that within the Anthroposophical Society
this should be correctly understood.
The Movement for Religious Renewal, therefore, was founded
independently of me, independently of the Anthroposophical Society. I
only gave advice. The one who started it, the one who performed the
very first ceremony in this Movement, performed it under my guidance,
but I had no part whatever in the founding of this Movement. It is a
Movement which originated of itself but received counsel from me
because, when advice is justifiably asked in any particular sphere of
work, it is a human duty, if one can give the advice, to do so.
Thus it must be understood, in the strictest sense of the word, that
alongside the Anthroposophical Movement another Movement has started,
founded out of itself (not out of the Anthroposophical
Movement), for the reason that outside the Anthroposophical Society
there are numbers of people who cannot find their way into the
Anthroposophical Movement itself, but who will be able to come to it
later on. Therefore strict distinctions must be made between the
Anthroposophical Movement, the Anthroposophical Society, and the
Movement for Religious Renewal. And it is important that
Anthroposophy should not be looked upon as the founder of this
Movement for Religious Renewal.
This has nothing to do with the fact that the advice which makes this
religious Movement into a real spiritual community in a form suited
to the present stage of human evolution, was given in all love and
also in all devotion to the spiritual Powers who are able to place
such a Movement in the world today. So that this Movement has only
originated in the right way when it considers what is within the
Anthroposophical Movement as something that gives it a sure ground
and when it puts its trust in the Anthroposophical Movement, and
seeks help and counsel from those who are within the Anthroposophical
Movement, and so on. Taking into account the fact that the opponents
of the Anthroposophical Movement today consider every method of
attack justifiable, points such as these must be made quite clear,
and I must here declare that everyone who is honest and sincere with
respect to the Anthroposophical Movement would be obliged to deny any
statement to the effect that the Movement for Religious Renewal was
founded at Dornach in the Goetheanum and by the Goetheanum. For that
is not the case, the facts are as I have just presented them.
Thus in view of the way in which I myself have helped this Movement
for Religious Renewal to find its feet, I have necessarily had to
picture to myself that this Movement which puts its trust in
the Anthroposophical Movement and regards the Anthroposophical
Movement as its forerunner will look for adherents outside
the Anthroposophical Society, and that it would consider it a grave
mistake to carry into the Anthroposophical Society the work and aims
which are indeed necessary outside that Society. For the
Anthroposophical Society is not understood by one who belongs to it
unless his attitude is that he can be a counsellor and helper of this
religious Movement, but cannot directly immerse himself in it. If he
were to do so, he would be working for two ends: firstly, for the
ruin and destruction of the Anthroposophical Society; secondly, to
make fruitless the Movement for Religious Renewal. All the movements
which arise among humanity in a justifiable way must indeed work
together as in one organic whole, but this working together must take
place in the right way. In the human organism it is quite
impossible for the blood system to become nervous system, or for the
nervous system to become blood system. The several systems have to
work in the human organism distinct and separate from one another; it
is precisely then that they will work together in the right way. It
is therefore necessary that the Anthroposophical Society, with its
content Anthroposophy, shall remain unweakened in any way by the
other Movement; and that one who understands what the
Anthroposophical Movement is, should not in any presumptuous,
arrogant sense, but as one who reckons with the tasks of the age
be able to see that those who have once found their way into the
Anthroposophical Society do not need a religious renewal. For
what would the Anthroposophical Society be if it first needed
religious renewal!
But religious renewal is needed in the world, and because it
is needed, because it is a profound necessity, a hand was extended to
aid in founding it. Matters will therefore go on in the right way if
the Anthroposophical Society remains as it is, if those who wish to
understand it grasp its essential nature and do not think that it is
necessary for them to belong to another movement which has taken what
it possesses from Anthroposophy although it is true in a real
sense that Anthroposophy has not founded this Movement for Religious
Renewal but that it has founded itself.
Anyone therefore who does not clearly distinguish these things and
keep them apart, is actually by becoming lax as regards the
essential impulse of the Anthroposophical Movement working
for the destruction of the Anthroposophical Movement and for the
removal of the ground and backbone of the Movement for Religious
Renewal. If anyone who stands on the ground of the Movement for
Religious Renewal thinks he must extend this Movement to the
Anthroposophical Movement, he removes the ground from under his own
feet. For everything of the nature of cult and ritual is finally
bound to dissolve away when the backbone of knowledge
is broken.
For the welfare of both Movements it is essential that they should be
held clearly apart. Therefore in the beginning, since everything
depends on our developing the strength to carry out what we have set
our will to do, it is absolutely necessary in these early days that
the Movement for Religious Renewal should work in all directions in
circles outside the Anthroposophical Movement; that therefore,
neither as regards the acquisition of material means in order
that the matter be clearly understood I must also speak about these
things should it encroach on sources which in any event only
flow with great difficulty for the Anthroposophical Movement, nor,
because it does not at once succeed in finding adherents among
non-Anthroposophists, should it, for example, make proselytes within
the ranks of the Anthroposophists. Were it to do so, it would be
doing something that would inevitably lead to the destruction of both
Movements. It is really not a matter today of going forward with a
certain fanaticism, but of being conscious that we can do what is
necessary for man only when we work out of the necessity of
the thing itself.
What I am now stating as consequences, were also equally the
preliminary conditions for lending my assistance in the
founding of the Movement for Religious Renewal, for only under these
conditions could I assist it. If these preliminary conditions had not
been there, the Movement for Religious Renewal would never have
originated through my advice.
Therefore I beg you to understand that it is necessary for the
Movement for Religious Renewal to know that it must adhere to its
starting point, that it has promised to look for its adherents
outside the sphere of the Anthroposophical Movements, for it is there
that they can be found in the natural way, and there they must be
sought.
What I have said to you has not been said because of any anxiety lest
something might be dug away from the Anthroposophical Movement, and
it has certainly not been said out of any personal motive, but solely
out of the necessity of the case itself. And it is also important to
understand in what way alone it is possible to work rightly in
each of these spheres of activity. It is indeed necessary that with
regard to important matters we should state quite clearly how the
case stands, for there is at the present time far too great a
tendency to blur things and not to see them clearly. But clarity is
essential today in every sphere.
If therefore someone were to exclaim: The very one who himself put
this Movement for Religious Renewal into the world now speaks like
this!! ... well, my dear friends, the whole point is that if I had at
any time spoken differently about these things, I should not have
lent a hand towards founding this Movement for Religious Renewal. It
must remain at its starting point. What I am now saying, I am of
course saying merely in order that these things may be correctly
understood in the Anthroposophical Society and so that it shall not
be said (as is reported to have happened already): The
Anthroposophical Movement did not get on very well, and so now they
have founded the Movement for Religious Renewal as the right thing.
I am quite sure that the very excellent and outstanding individuals
who have founded the Movement for Religious Renewal will oppose any
such legend most vigorously, and will also sternly refuse to make
proselytes within the Anthroposophical Movement. But, as has
been said, the matter must be rightly understood within the
Anthroposophical Movement itself.
I know, my dear friends, that there are always some who find it
unpleasant to hear explanations such as these which are
necessary from time to time, not in order to complain in one
direction or another, nor for the sake of criticism, but solely in
order to present something once and for all in its true light. I know
there are always some who dislike it when clarity is substituted for
nebulous obscurity. But this is absolutely essential for the welfare
and growth of the Anthroposophical Movement as well as of the
Movement for Religious Renewal. The Movement for Religious Renewal
cannot flourish if it in any way damages the Anthroposophical
Movement.
This must be thoroughly understood, especially by Anthroposophists,
so that whenever it is necessary to stand up for the rights of the
matter, they may really be able to do so. When, therefore, there is
any question about an anthroposophists attitude towards
religious renewal, he must be clear that his attitude can only be that
of an adviser, that he gives what he can give in the way of spiritual
possessions, and when it is a case of participating in the
ceremonies, that he is conscious of doing so in order to help these
ceremonies on their way. He alone can be a spiritual helper of the
Movement for Religious Renewal who is himself first a good
anthroposophist. But this Movement for Religious Renewal must be
sustained, in every direction, by persons who, because of the
particular configuration and tendencies of their spiritual life,
cannot yet find their way into the Anthroposophical Society itself.
I hope that none of you will now go to someone who is doing active
work in the Movement for Religious Renewal and say: This or that has
been said against it in Dornach. Nothing has been said
against it. In love and in devotion to the spiritual world the
Movement for Religious Renewal has been given counsel from out of the
spiritual world, in order that it might rightly found itself. But the
fact must be known by Anthroposophists that it has founded itself out
of itself, that it has formed not, it is true, the content of
its ritual, but the fact of its ritual, out of its own force
and its own initiative, and that the essential core of the
Anthroposophical Movement has nothing to do with the Movement for
Religious Renewal.
Certainly no wish could be stronger than mine that the Movement for
Religious Renewal shall grow and flourish more and more, but always
in adherence to the original intentions. Anthroposophical Groups must
not be changed into communities for religious renewal, either in a
material or in a spiritual sense.
I was obliged to say this today, for, as you know, counsel and advice
had to be given for a Cult, a Cult whose growth in our present time
is earnestly desired by me. In order that no misunderstanding should
arise in regard to this Cult when I speak tomorrow of the
conditions of the life of Cult in the spiritual world, I felt it
necessary to insert these words today as an episode in our course of
lectures.
(The following night the first Goetheanum was destroyed by fire.)
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