Lecture Six
We
will turn our attention to-day to manifestations of the life of
soul able to lead us to a kind of self-observation in which a
vista of our personal karma, our personal destiny, flashes into
life like lightning. When we reflect upon the nature of the
life of soul even with more or less superficial self-knowledge,
we realise that sense-impressions and the thoughts we form
about them are the only clear and definite experiences in the
life of soul in which, with ordinary consciousness, we are
completely awake. As well as these thoughts, sense-impressions,
sense-perceptions, we also have, of course, the life of
feeling. But just think how indeterminately our feelings
surge through us, how little we can speak of inner, wide-awake
clarity in connection with our life of feeling. Anyone who
faces these facts with an open mind will certainly admit that
as compared with thoughts, his feelings are indeterminate,
lacking in definition. True, the life of feeling concerns us in
a more intimate, personal way than does the life of thought,
but for all that there is something undefined in it and
also in the way it functions. We shall not so readily allow our
thoughts to deviate from those of other people when it is a
question of reflecting about something that is alleged to be
true. We shall feel that our thoughts, our sense-impressions
must somehow tally with those of others. With our feelings it
is different. We allow ourselves the right to feel in a more
intimate, more personal way. And if we compare feelings with
dreams, we shall say: dreams arise from the night-life,
feelings from the depths of soul into the light of
day-consciousness. But again, in respect of their pictures,
feelings are as indeterminate as dreams. Anyone who makes the
comparison, even with such dreams as enter quite distinctly
into his consciousness, will realise that their lack of
definition is just as great as that of feelings. Therefore we
can say: it is only in our sense-impressions and thoughts that
we are really awake; in our feelings we dream — even
during waking life. In ordinary waking life, too, our feelings
make us into dreamers.
And
still more so the will! When we say: ‘Now I am going to do
this, or that’ — how much of the subsequent process is
actually in our consciousness? Suppose I want to take hold of
something. The mental picture comes first, then this picture
completely fades away and in my ordinary consciousness I know
nothing of how the impulse contained in the ‘I want’ finds its
way into my nerves, into my muscles, into my bones. When I
conceive the idea, ‘I want to get hold of the clock,’ does my
ordinary consciousness know anything at all of how this impulse
penetrates into my arm which then reaches out for the clock? It
is only through another sense-impression, another mental
picture, that I perceive what has actually happened. With my
ordinary consciousness I sleep through what has happened
intermediately, just as in the night I sleep through what I
experience in the spiritual world. I am as unconscious of the
one as of the other. In waking life, therefore, there are three
different and distinct states of consciousness. In the activity
of thinking we are awake, completely awake; in the activity of
feeling we dream; in the activity of willing we are asleep. We
are in a state of perpetual sleep as far as the essential core
of the will is concerned, for it lies deep, deep down in the
region of the subconscious.
Now
there is something that in waking life too, is always rising up
from the depths of the soul, namely, remembrance, memory. When
we contact immediate reality, we have thoughts. This immediate
reality makes a definite impression upon us. But the
past of this earthly life plays all the time into
present reality in the form of thoughts and memories, of
recollected thoughts. As you know, these recollected thoughts
are much dimmer, much less distinct than the impressions of
present reality. Nevertheless they do well up and make their
way into ordinary waking life. And when we give memory free
play, letting it recall all that we have passed through in
life, we realise: here is our own life of soul, rising up once
again. We feel that in this earthly life we are that
which we can remember. Think only what becomes of a man who
cannot remember some period of his life, whose memory of that
period is completely obliterated. We may come across such cases
and I will give just one example. — There was a man in a
respectable position who while his life was pursuing its normal
course, remembered his past, what he had done in childhood and
during his education, what he had experienced as a student, and
then in his profession. But one day his memory was suddenly
blotted out. He no longer knew who he was. — I am telling
you of an actual case. — Strangely enough it was not the
reasoning faculty, not the mental grasp of immediate reality
that failed; the memory was completely blotted out. The
man no longer knew who he was as a boy, as a youth, as a
grown-up; his mind could grasp only what was making an
impression upon him at the moment. And because he no longer
knew who he was in boyhood, youth or maturity, he could not
link his present with his past life; this was impossible from
the moment his memory faded.
A
case like this makes it easy for us to realise just why
we do one thing or another at a particular time; it is not
because of the pressure of immediate circumstances but because
of certain experiences we have had in the past —
primarily in the past of our earthly life. Just think of all
that you might do or leave undone if memory played no part in
your actions! Man is dependent upon memory to a far greater
extent than he imagines. The misfortune that befell the man of
whom I told you, was that after the sudden obliteration of his
memory he was guided only by the impulses of the present
moment, not by any promptings of memory. He put on his outdoor
clothes and left his home and family. He was tied to them only
through memory — and now this memory was blotted out.
Impulses worked in him that had nothing whatever to do
with memories of his family. His reason and intelligence
remained; and so — because it would have been senseless
to do these things while other people were there — he
waited until they happened to be absent. He had lived with his
family as a sensible, rational individual, but his memory had
gone. He went to the railway station and took a ticket for a
place a long way off. His mind was absolutely clear in a matter
where reason came into play. He got into the train and went
off; but the memory of what had happened, even the
memory of having taken the ticket was blotted out. He was aware
only of the immediate present. The extinction of memory was a
pathological condition. But he was so intensely engrossed with
the present that he knew when he had arrived at his
destination; he could compare this with the timetable. The
ability to read — something that had already become habit
and was therefore no longer a matter of memory — that too
had remained. He alighted and took another ticket to a distant
destination. And so he went on, travelling about the world
without knowing who he was. One day his memory returned, but he
knew nothing of what he had been doing since buying the first
railway ticket. When his memory returned and he was himself
again, he found himself in a Casual Ward in Berlin. It was only
the things that had happened in the trains and the places where
he had been that were blotted out, for they did not belong to
the present. Just think what a state of confusion! How utterly
uncertain of himself such a man must be! You will realise from
this how closely our ‘I,’ our Ego, is bound up with our store
of memories. We know nothing of the self within us if we are
bereft of the store of memories.
What is the nature of these memories? Memories are of the
nature of soul. But in the whole range of man's life and
being they are present in another form as well. They work
purely as soul-forces only in a human being who has
reached the age of twenty one or twenty two, and continues
living. Before then the memories do not work purely as forces
of soul. We must be very conscious of what I have said in these
lectures, namely that during the first seven years of earthly
existence our physical corporality is an inheritance from our
parents. At the change of teeth it is not only the first, milk
teeth that are expelled — that is only the final act; the
whole of the first body is discarded. We build up the second
body — the body we bear until the onset of puberty
— out of the soul-and-spirit we brought with us when we
came down from the spiritual world to physical existence on the
Earth. But from birth until the change of teeth we have
received a host of impressions from the environment; Our being
was absorbed in what flowed into us through having learnt to
speak. Think of all the wonders that stream into us
together with the power of speech! Any unprejudiced observer
will agree in this respect with the statement made by Jean Paul
to the effect that he had learnt more in the first three years
of his life than in the three academic years. The meaning of
this is clear. For even if the academic years are extended to
five or six — not, presumably, because one learns too
much but because one learns too little — even if this
period is considerably extended we learn only the merest
trifle in comparison with what we assimilate during the
first three years of life, and thereafter through the years
following the first three until the change of teeth. After a
certain time all this remains in the form of hazy, indefinite
memory. But just think how pale and indistinct are these
memories of our first seven years compared with the events of
later life. Just try to make the comparison. The memories often
seem to loom up like erratic boulders without any obvious
connection. And why? What we take in during the first seven
years of life and what we take in later on have entirely
different tasks to fulfil. What we take in during the first
seven years works with intense activity at the plastic moulding
of the brain, passes into the very organism. There is a great
difference between the relatively undeveloped brain we possess
when we come into earthly existence and the beautifully
developed brain that is ours by the time of the change of
teeth. And the result of this work penetrates from the brain
into the whole of the rest of the body. This inner artist we
bring with us from pre-earthly existence works in a most
wonderful way upon our physical body during the first seven
years of life. It is miraculous to see the facial expression,
the look, the mobility of the features, the purposeful
movements of arms and limbs beginning to appear in a child
after the lack of definition characterising early babyhood. We
see how spirit begins to permeate the child's being and the
impressions he absorbs. The way in which spirit permeates the
child during the first seven years of life is one of the most
wonderful sights imaginable. When we observe how the
physiognomy and gestures of the child develop from birth until
the change of teeth, when we read and decipher it all just as
we decipher something in a book from the single letters, when
we know how to connect the forms of the gestures and the facial
expressions appearing in succession just as we can connect the
letters of a word and so read the word — then we
are gazing at the workings of the brain which has been kindled
into activity by the impressions received; these can form
themselves only into sparse and scattered memories, because the
plastic development of the brain and therewith of the
physiognomy has primarily to be provided for.
As
life continues its course from the time of the change of teeth
to the onset of puberty, the forces working in this way are
more or less lost to sight. As I said, until the beginning of
the twenty-first year, work continues upon the shaping and
elaboration of the organism; but from the seventh year onwards
this work is less concerned with the bodily nature
— and still less from puberty until the beginning of the
twenties. But something else comes to our help. If we have any
aptitude for this kind of observation and mellow it by
contemplating the marvellous phenomenon of the child's
physiognomy which reveals itself month by month, year by year
in greater clarity, above all if we can perceive what the
child's gestures reveal, how the awkward, unskilful movements
of the limbs turn in a most wonderful way into movements filled
with intelligence and purpose — this sensitive perception
can be deepened and finer organs of sense will develop. Then,
when we have before us a child between the ages of seven and
fourteen, that is to say between the second dentition and
puberty, when the changes in the physiognomy and the gestures
are less marked and the development less obvious, it is
possible through inner feeling which has all the certainty of
an eye of soul to perceive how the child's development is
proceeding in a more hidden way. And from this delicate,
intimate observation of the bodily development of a child
between the seventh and fourteenth years, there can arise the
faculty to gaze into the life preceding the descent to earthly
existence, the life between death and a new birth.
These things must again be within our reach, enabling us to
affirm of a child between the ages of seven and fourteen:
around you there is not only the sense-world of nature; in
everything that is revealed in sense-perceptions, in colours,
in forms, lives the spirit! It is truly wonderful to see the
spirit becoming articulate in all things and then, as it were
in a mirror-image, to perceive a reflection of this in the way
in which spirituality reveals itself more and more distinctly
in the physiognomy of a child. If we feel this deeply and
inwardly and with a certain reverence make the experience a
living power in the soul, then, as we observe the child between
the ages of seven and fourteen, this reverence will lead to an
understanding of how the pre-earthly existence of a human being
between death and a new birth works into him here on Earth. And
we shall feel that this bodily development is governed,
not by the forces of the earthly environment but by the
second physical organism which we ourselves mould according to
the model provided by the first.
This can be of great importance in life. Humanity will have to
learn to perceive the essential nature of Man. Life will then
undergo the deepening without which the further progress of
civilisation is simply no longer possible. Our civilisation has
become totally abstract! In our ordinary consciousness we are
no longer able to think in the real sense; we can only think
what has been inculcated into us. We are no longer capable of
perceptions as delicate as those of which I have been speaking.
Hence men to-day pass each other by in ignorance. They learn a
great deal about animals, plants, minerals, but nothing
whatever about the subtle, impalpable processes of the
development of the human being. The whole life of soul must
become more intimate, more delicate, purer, and then we shall
again perceive something of the real nature of human
development itself; and this will lead us eventually to a vista
of pre-earthly existence.
Next comes the period immediately following puberty, the period
between the onset of puberty and the twenty-first or
twenty-second year. Just think of all that a human being
reveals to us in this phase of his life! Even with our ordinary
consciousness we see evidence of a complete change in his life,
but it takes a crude form. We speak of the hobbledehoy years,
of the ‘awkward’ years and this in itself indicates our
awareness that a change is taking place. What is actually
happening is that the inner being is now emerging more
clearly. But if we can acquire sensitive perception of the
first two life-periods, what emerges after puberty will appear
as a ‘second man,’ actually as a second man, who becomes
visible through the physical man standing there before us. And
what expresses itself in the awkwardness, but also in very much
that is admirable, appears like a second, cloudlike man within
the physical man. It is important to detect this second,
shadowy being, for questions on the subject are being asked on
all sides to-day. But our civilisation gives no answer.
The
turn of the nineteenth/twentieth century was accompanied
by momentous changes in the spiritual and physical evolution of
the Earth. Men of the ancient East had divined this and said
that Kali Yuga, the Age of Darkness, would come to an end at
the close of the nineteenth century when an Age of Light would
begin. This Age of Light has begun in very truth but men are
still unaware of it because in their minds they are still
living in the nineteenth century and their ideas flow on
lethargically. Nevertheless around us there is clear, radiant
light and if we pay heed to what will reveal itself from the
spiritual world, we can become aware of this light. And because
youth is peculiarly sensitive, with the turn of the century an
undefined longing arose in the hearts of the young for a more
intimate knowledge, a much more intimate perception of Man.
Human beings born about this time — at the turn of the
nineteenth century — have the instinctive feeling: we
need to know a great deal more about Man than people are able
to tell us. Nobody tells us what we long to know! There was
this striving, this urgent, insistent striving for an
understanding of Man. Children and young people were ill at
ease with their elders for they longed to hear from them
something about Man, and these elders knew nothing. Modern
civilisation can say nothing, knows nothing about the spirit of
Man. But in earlier epochs people were able, speaking with real
warmth of heart, to tell the young very much about Man. When
thoughts were still quick with life, the old had a very great
deal to say — but now they knew nothing. And so there
came an urge to run, run no matter where, in order to learn
something about Man. The young became wanderers, path-finders;
they ran away from people who had nothing to tell them, seeking
here, there and everywhere for something that could tell them
something about Man.
There you have the real origin of the Youth Movement of the
twentieth century. What is this Youth Movement really seeking?
It is seeking to find the reality of this second,
cloudlike man who comes into evidence after puberty and
who is actually there within the human being. The Youth
Movement wants to be educated in a way that will enable
it to apprehend this second man. — But who is this second
man? What does he actually represent? What is it that emerges
as it were from this human body in which one has observed the
gradual maturing of physiognomy and gesture, in connection with
which one is also able to feel how in the second period of life
from the change of teeth to puberty, pre-earthly existence is
coming to definite expression? What is making its appearance
here, like a stranger? What is it that now comes forth when,
after puberty, the human being begins to be conscious of his
own freedom, when he turns to other individuals, seeking to
form bonds with them out of an inner impulse which neither he
nor the others can explain but which underlies this very
definite urge. Who is this ‘second man?’ He is the being who
lived in the earlier incarnation and is now making his way like
a shadow, into this present earthly life. From what breaks in
upon human life so mysteriously at about the age of puberty,
mankind will gradually learn to take account of karma. At the
time of life when a human being becomes capable of propagating
his kind, impulses to which he gave expression in earlier
earthly lives also make their appearance in him. But a great
deal must happen in human hearts and feelings before there can
be any clear recognition, any clear perception of what I have
just been describing to you.
Think of the great difference there is in the ordinary
consciousness between self-love and love of others. People know
well what self-love is, for every individual holds
himself in high esteem — of that there is no doubt!
Self-love is present even in those who imagine that they are
entirely free from it. There are very few indeed — and a
close investigation of karma would be called for in such
cases — who would dream of saying that they have no
self-love in them. Love of others is rather more difficult to
fathom. Such love may of course be absolutely genuine,
but it is very often coloured by an element of self-love. We
may love another human being because he does something for us,
because he is by our side; we love him for many reasons closely
connected with self-love. Nevertheless there is
such a thing as selfless love and it is within our reach. We
can learn little by little to expel from love every vestige of
self-interest, and then we come to know what it means to give
ourselves to others in the true and real sense. It is from this
self-giving, this giving of ourselves to others, this selfless
love, that we can kindle the feeling that must arise if we are
to glimpse earlier earthly lives. Suppose you are a person who
was born, let us say, in the year 1881; you are alive now; once
upon a time, in an earlier earthly life, you were born, say, in
the year 737 and died in 799. The man, personality B, is
living, now, in the nineteenth/twentieth century; formerly this
personality — you yourself — lived in the eighth
century. The two personalities are linked by the life
stretching between death and the new birth. But before even so
much as an inkling can come to you of the personality who lived
in the eighth century, you must be capable of loving your own
self exactly as if you were loving another human being. For
although the being who lived in the eighth century is there
within you, he is really a stranger, exactly as another person
may be a stranger to you now. You must be able to relate
yourself to your preceding incarnation in the way you
relate yourself now to some other human being; otherwise no
inkling of the earlier incarnation is possible. Neither will
you be able to form an objective conception of what appears in
a human being after puberty as a second, shadowy man. But love
that is truly selfless becomes a power of knowledge, and when
love of self becomes so completely objective that a man can
observe himself exactly as he observes other human beings, this
is the means whereby a vista of earlier earthly lives will
disclose itself — at first as a kind of dim inkling. This
experience must be combined with the kind of observation I have
been describing, whereby we become aware of the essential,
fundamental nature of man. The urge to apprehend the truth of
repeated earthly lives has been present in humanity since the
end of Kali Yuga and is already unmistakably evident. The only
reason why people do not speak about it is because it is not
sufficiently clear or defined. But let us suppose that a
thoroughly sincere member of the modern Youth Movement were to
wake up one morning and for a quarter of an hour be vividly
conscious of what he had experienced during sleep — and
suppose one were to ask him during this quarter of an hour:
what is it that you are really seeking? — he would
answer: ‘I am striving to apprehend the whole man, the
being who has passed through many earthly lives. I am striving
to know what it is within me that has come from earlier stages
of existence. But you know nothing about it; you have nothing
to tell me!’
In
human hearts to-day there is a longing to understand karma.
Therefore this is the time when the impulse must be given to
study history in the way I have illustrated by certain
examples; it is this kind of study which, if earnestly and
actively pursued, will lead human beings to an
understanding of their own lives in the light of
reincarnation and karma. That is why in these lectures I am
combining studies of historical personages with indications
that will gradually lead to perception of man's own individual
karma. By the time we come to the last lecture we shall have
gained a clear idea of how man can begin to glimpse his own
karma. But the only way to achieve this is to observe things
first of all in the great setting and structure of
world-history. The primary aim of this lecture was to shed
light on the inner nature and being of man and it has also been
possible to elucidate the inner aspect of the strivings of a
promising Movement of the times. — And now let me
conclude with a picture drawn from world-history.
Study of history in the future must be concerned with the
whole man, must realise that man himself carries over
from one epoch into the next the impulses that work in history,
in the development of world-history. Let us think of the days
when Charlemagne was reigning in Europe — it was from 768
to 814 a.d. Just
recall for a moment everything you know about Charlemagne and
what he accomplished. As so much about him is taught in school,
I am sure that countless details will come into the minds of my
listeners! At the same time as Charlemagne, a very important
personage was living in the East, namely, Haroun al Raschid. He
was a product of the scholarship associated in those days with
Mohammedanism and he was fired with the will to foster
and promote this oriental scholarship at a centre of learning
and culture. Extraordinary results were achieved at his Court,
for the highest attainments of the physical sciences, of
astronomy, alchemy, chemistry, geography, as they were in those
days, converged, so to speak, in him. Art, literature, history,
pedagogy — all these branches of culture flourished at
the Court of Haroun al Raschid. When one can perceive what was
actually accomplished at this Court, the spectacle is far
grander, far more impressive than that of the
achievements of Charlemagne's Court, above all in respect
of spiritual culture. Moreover there is a great deal in the
campaigns of Charlemagne that the modern mind will not exactly
admire! Living at the Court of Haroun al Raschid was another
personality, one who in those days was simply a very wise man,
but who in a much earlier incarnation, a long time previously,
had been an Initiate. I have told you that the results of
Initiation in an earlier incarnation may recede into the
background in a later epoch. A most wonderful academy was
established over in the East at that time and this other
personality of whom I am speaking possessed real genius as an
organiser. Scholarship, art, poetry, architecture, sculpture,
the sciences — all were organised and brought
together by this man at the Court of Haroun al Raschid. Both
Haroun al Raschid and his wise Counsellor passed in due course
through the gate of death and their evolution proceeded. This
was the time when Arabism was spreading over Europe. The spread
of Arabism came to a halt, but Haroun al Raschid himself, as
well as his Counsellor, continued to be associated with its
influence. Whereas the gaze of Haroun al Raschid in his life
between death and rebirth was directed to Arabism as it swept
through the North of Africa, across to Spain and further
upwards to Western Europe, the attention of the other, the wise
Counsellor, was directed from the East across the regions
North of the Black Sea and from thence towards Middle Europe.
It is strange that in following the life of a man between death
and a new birth, one can also follow those things upon which
his gaze is directed as he looks downwards. As I have told you,
what he is actually beholding are the deeds of the Seraphim,
Cherubim and Thrones whose workings are connected with what is
happening on the Earth. In the life between death and a new
birth we look downwards to the Earth, just as on the Earth we
look upwards to the Heavens. The work of these two souls
continued long after the close of their physical lives.
Outwardly, they were reborn as men of very different
characters. Haroun al Raschid appeared again as Lord Bacon
of Verulam, the originator of the modern scientific
mentality. Those who are capable of unprejudiced observation
can see in everything that was forced upon the world by Bacon,
a new edition of what was once cultivated over in the East. In
the East men had turned away from Christianity. Bacon was
outwardly a Christian, but inwardly, in his real aims,
unchristian. The other man, the one who had once been the wise
Counsellor, followed the path which led across to Middle Europe
via the regions North of the Black Sea. It was he who as
Amos Comenius brought Arabism over in a quite different
form — a much deeper, more inward form than that in which
it was introduced by Bacon — but who did,
nevertheless, bear Arabism into the modern age.
And
so at the dawn of modern spiritual life, two streams
intermingled. We can perceive this development of history quite
clearly — it is a phase when Christianity is temporarily
forgotten, when on the one side scientific culture is
externalised, but on the other becomes all the more
inward. In his incarnation which had its roots in the East and
then ran its course amid the deeper spiritual life of Middle
Europe, much of the Eastern element persisted. It is not by
casually opening some book ... in a certain dialect there is an
expression ‘ochsen’ (to ‘swot’) and I can think
of no other word at the moment ... and then swotting up Bacon
and Amos Comenius, that we can discern the inner evolution of
the human race; we must rather begin to perceive how the
development of the several epochs is brought about by men
themselves, how the impulses are carried over from earlier
into later times. Try for a moment to picture quite clearly
what happened here. Christianity has spread, has taken a
certain hold in the regions of Middle and Northern Europe. But
through men like Bacon of Verulam, the reincarnated Haroun al
Raschid, and Amos Comenius, the reincarnated Counsellor,
something creeps in that is not genuine Christianity, but
merges nevertheless with all that is working like so many
spiritual streams in world-evolution. Only in this way is it
possible to grasp what is really happening and to understand
the great world-processes in which man is rooted.
If
we go back to the time preceding Haroun al Raschid, to a man
who was an immediate disciple of Mohammed, we must be quite
clear about what it was that had been indoctrinated into
oriental spiritual life through Mohammedanism. Study of
original Christianity reveals the deep significance of the fact
that it has the Trinity. When we think of the Spiritual
in nature, the Spiritual Power which places us in the world as
physical human beings and operates in the laws of nature,
namely, the Father Being, we may ask ourselves:
What should we be if the Father Being alone worked in us?
Through the whole of life from birth till death, we should be
under the same sway of necessity as prevails in the world
around us. But in point of fact, at a certain age in life we
become free beings, not in any way losing our manhood but
awakening to a higher form of it. The principle that is
working in us when we attain our freedom, when we release
ourselves altogether from the sway of nature, this principle is
the Son Being, the Christ — the Second Form of the
Godhead. But it is the Power of the Holy Spirit that quickens
within us the recognition that we live not in the body alone
but having been associated with the body through its phases of
development, we awaken, we are awakened as beings of Spirit.
Man in the fullness of his being can be understood only through
the Trinity; it is there that we perceive the concrete reality.
But over against the Trinity, Mohammedanism proclaims an
abstraction: There is no other Divine Being save the Father
God, the one and only God. The Father is all; it is not lawful
to speak of a threefold Godhead. In Mohammed himself, and in
his followers, this doctrine of the one Father God was
personified.
In
an epoch when the highest human faculty capable of development
was that of thinking in cold, barren abstractions, when
men knew only the one, abstract God, they began more and more
to identify this God with thinking, to deify the life of
thought and the human intellect — forgetting that real
thinking has an essentially altruistic tendency. In
Mohammed's followers, this talent for thinking about the world
in pure abstractions was expressed with a certain originality
and grandeur. One of these followers was Muawija. I wish you
could look him up in history. You would find there a strange
mental configuration, the prototype, as it were, of men who
think in pure abstractions, who want to shape the world
according to tenets contained in a few simple paragraphs.
Muawija, one of Mohammed's followers, appeared again in our
time as Woodrow Wilson. A revival of the abstract
thinking of Mohammedanism gave rise to the view that it is
possible to shape a whole world by applying the principles set
forth in fourteen prosaic, abstract paragraphs, void of any
real substance. Truth to tell, there has been no greater
illusion than this in all world-history; no other illusion has
proved such a pitfall for well-nigh the whole of mankind.
Before the war, when I spoke in the Helsingfors Lecture Course
[The Occult Foundations of the Bhagavad Gita.
28th May–5th June, 1913.]
of Woodrow Wilson's shortcomings
— his fame was then just beginning — people were
unwilling to understand when over and over again, wherever I
had the opportunity of speaking, I indicated that the calamity
looming ahead was by no means unconnected with the idolisation
of Woodrow Wilson then going on in the world. Now, since the
impulse of our Christmas Foundation, the time has come when
such things will be spoken of openly and without reserve, when
our studies of history will also be connected with matters that
are potent impulses at this very time. Esotericism must
permeate the whole Anthroposophical Movement in order that what
lies hidden beneath the shroud of external history may be
brought into the light of day. Men will not be equal to the
task of coping with world-events nor of doing what needs to be
done until they begin to study karma and until individuals
learn to observe their own being, as well as world-history, in
the light of karma.
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