Lecture 11
Stuttgart,
November 22, 1920
Let us
recall a number of things that are already quite familiar
and use them as a starting point for important
considerations. In a sense these will continue the theme
I discussed some days ago.
We know
that there are four major aspects to the human being and
that human beings may be characterized as possessing a
physical body, a life body, an astral or sentient body,
and an ego. We also know that we can only really
understand human beings if we add other aspects to these
four. Essentially the first four refer to aspects that
are fully developed at the present time. Three more have
to be added — the spirit-self, the life-spirit, and
the spirit-man. We know, however, that these three
aspects of human nature are such that we cannot consider
them to be fully developed at the present time. We can
merely refer to them as future potentials inherent in
human beings.
We may say
that we now have a physical body and so forth, going as
far as the ego, and that in time to come we shall have a
spirit-self, a life-spirit and a spirit-man. We know from
the anthroposophical literature that is already available
that those different aspects of the human being are
connected with the whole cosmos and with cosmic
evolution. In a sense we relate the physical body to the
earliest embodiment of this earth, which we call Ancient
Saturn. The life body relates to the Ancient Sun, the
astral body to the Ancient Moon, and the principle we
call our I or ego relates essentially to the earth as it
is at present.
What do we
mean when we say that we relate to the ego we bear to the
present earth? It means that inherent in the elements of
the earth, the forces of the earth that are known to us
— or perhaps not known to us — is the
principle that activates the ego. Our ego is intimately
bound up with the forces of the earth.
If you
consider the whole evolution of the human being you will
find that human nature as we know it today relates
largely to the past — the physical body to a far
distant past, to Ancient Saturn, the life body to the
time of the Ancient Sun, and so forth, and that our ego
is not yet fully developed but in its essential nature
relates to the present earth. This immediately suggests
that the elements we refer to as spirit-self, life-spirit
and spirit-man do not in fact have their basis in the
earthly realm. As human beings we have the potential to
evolve into spirit-man, life-spirit and spirit-self, and
this means that we have something in us that needs to be
developed to go beyond this earthly realm; we will have
to develop it without taking the earthly realm as our
guide. As human beings we are part of this earth and our
mission is in the first place to achieve full ego
development; to some extent we have already developed it.
The forces of the earth, the intrinsic nature of the
earth, served as our guide in developing the ego to the
extent to which we have now developed it. We shall
continue with this development for the rest of Earth
evolution, deepening and to some extent enhancing what
has developed so far, and for this we shall be indebted
to the earth and its forces. Yet we also have to say to
ourselves that if we were entirely dependent on the earth
and its forces in developing our essential human nature,
we would never be able to develop a spirit-man, a
life-spirit and a spirit-self. The earth has nothing to
give in that respect; it is only able to help us develop
the ego. With reference to human nature, therefore, the
earth must be seen as something that cannot in itself
make us into full human beings. We are on this earth and
we have to go beyond it. Anthroposophical literature
makes reference to this by showing that our evolution
depends on the earth being succeeded by Jupiter, Venus
and Vulcan periods. During those periods we will have to
achieve full development of the spirit-self, life-spirit-
and spirit-man also in outer terms.
At present,
however, we are on this earth. We have to develop on this
earth. The earth cannot give us everything we need to
develop, in order that in future times we may progress to
spirit-self, life-spirit and spirit-man. If we had to
depend on the earth for everything we have to develop in
ourselves we would have to do without spirit-self,
life-spirit-and spirit-man.
It is easy
to say such things in theory, but it is not enough to put
such thoughts forward as mere theories. They will only
really touch us as human beings if we allow them to take
hold of the whole human being; if we come to feel the
whole weight and burden of the riddle which lies in our
having to say to ourselves: ‘As human beings we are
on this earth. We look around us. None of the many things
the earth has to give — its beauty and its
ugliness, its pain and suffering — none of the ways
in which it can shape our destiny can provide what we
need to become full human being.’ There must be a
longing in us that goes beyond anything the earth can
give. This is something we must feel, something that must
bring light and warmth into all the ideals we are capable
of holding. We must be able to ask ourselves in all
seriousness and very profoundly: ‘What shall we do,
seeing that we have only the earth around us, and yet
must progress to something for which this earth cannot
serve as a guide?’ We must be able to experience,
to feel, the full gravity of this question. In a sense we
should already be able to say to ourselves that the earth
is not enough for our needs, and that as human beings we
will have to grow beyond this earthly realm.
Anthroposophy will be only be able to serve human beings
rightly if they are able to ask themselves questions like
these and really feel it; if they are aware of the
gravity of such inner questions of destiny. Being aware
of their gravity we can be guided in the right way to
return to the Mystery of Golgotha, that has been so much
part of the last two talks we have had. We may be guided
back to the Mystery of Golgotha and we may be guided to
consider again the event that is to happen in this
century, during the first half of the 20th century, and
will be like a spiritualized Mystery of Golgotha.
Whenever the Mystery of Golgotha was discussed it had to
be stressed that the Christ is definitely not of the
earth and that the Christ entered into an earthly body
from spheres beyond this earth — doing so at
exactly the right moment, as it were. In the Christ
something united with this earth that came from outside,
from beyond this earth. If we really experience the
Christ we are able to join our own essential nature to
this principle from beyond the earth, and in this way
gain an energy principle; a principle that will give
inner strength, filling us with inner warmth and light.
This will take us beyond the earthly realm because it has
not itself originated in that realm; because the Christ
has come to earth from spheres beyond the earth.
We look
with longing to the spheres beyond this earth because we
have to say to ourselves: Longing to become complete
human beings — to develop the spirit-self,
life-spirit and spirit-man which we shall have to develop
in the future — we survey the earth and say to
ourselves that the earthly realm itself does not contain
what we need to develop our own nature and take it beyond
the earth. We must turn our eyes away from the earthly
realm and look to the principle that has come into the
earthly realm from beyond the earth. We must look to the
Christ and say to ourselves: The Christ has brought to
earth the non-earthly forces that can help us to develop
aspects that the earth can never help us to develop. We
must take hold, with the whole of our being, of what to
begin with is more in form of concepts, of ideas. We must
use this to help us recognize the Christ as the One who
has come to redeem our humanity. We must come to
recognize Him as the spirit who will make it possible
that we do not need to stay united with the earthly
realm, we might say; that we will not be buried on earth,
as it were, for all eternity, with the potential of
development beyond this earth remaining undeveloped. When
we thus come to see Christ as the One who will redeem our
essential human nature, when we are able to see the way
this world is made and come to feel there must be
something within this earthly realm that will take us
beyond it, when we feel that it is He who will lead us to
become complete human beings — then we feel the
power of Christ within us. And we really must come to
realize that we cannot seriously speak of progressive
development to spirit-self, life-spirit and spirit-man
unless we are aware that there is no point in speaking of
these things unless we appeal to the Christ, for the
Christ is the principle that can take our evolution
beyond anything the earth is able to give.
Basically
this is the most important issue at the present time.
Many people today, particularly those in the civilized
world, want to shape things in a certain way on this
earth; they want the whole potential of human beings to
be achieved by creating some particular social
configuration or other in this earthly life. That,
however, can never happen. We shall never be able to
evolve a political or economic life of that kind, nor
indeed a cultural life of that kind, that would be
entirely of this earth and make us into complete human
beings. People still believe that such things are
possible at the present time. They are making attempts in
that direction but fail to realize that there is
something in us that can only be taken further by a
principle from beyond the earth.
The Christ
Jesus first appeared in a physical body at a time the
essential nature of which I have already characterized
from many different points of view. We are now living in
an age where He is to appear again to human beings and in
a form that I also spoke of on the last occasion. It is
clearly impossible for us to go exhaustively into the
renewal of the Mystery of Golgotha, but I want to refer
to it again and from a particular point of view.
The
scientific element and everything connected with it has
grown particularly strong over recent centuries, from the
beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. In a recent
public lecture I called it the ‘science-orientated
spirit of the West’. [ Note 70 ] This science-orientated
spirit of the West did not initially relate at all to the
Christ spirit. If you take an honest, unbiased look at
modern science you will find that it has no real
relationship to the Christ spirit. The best demonstration
of this is the following: As I have said before,
Christianity first entered into Earth evolution at a time
when remnants of ancient clairvoyance were still
persisting, and people grasped it with those remnants of
ancient clairvoyance. Christianity then continued as a
tradition. It gradually came to be diluted more and more
to mental concepts, but it survived as a tradition.
Finally it became mere word wisdom, but nevertheless it
survived as a tradition. Over the last three or four
centuries, however, the scientific spirit appeared on the
scene. It also addressed itself to the Gospels. Very many
people did and indeed still do today revere the Gospels
because they tell the secrets of Golgotha. The
science-orientated spirit of the modern age however
addressed itself to the Gospels — this was
particularly in the 19th century — and found them
to contain contradiction upon contradiction. Unable to
comprehend, it interpreted the Gospels in its own way.
Basically the situation is now that thanks to scientific
penetration, the Christ element in the Gospels has
dissolved, particularly in the theology of the most
recent kind. It is no longer there. If modern theologians
say that the Gospels tell us something or other about the
Christ they are not being entirely honest, not entirely
truthful, or they construe all kinds of conflicting
ideas. So we may indeed say that modern scientific
thinking has destroyed the spirit of Christianity that
consisted of remnants of ancient clairvoyance, and
persisted as a tradition based on those remnants of
ancient clairvoyance. The reason is that initially the
Christ spirit was not present in modern scientific
thinking. Science will only be filled with the Christ
spirit again when new life comes into it through vision;
through the things modern spiritual science is seeking to
achieve.
Modern
spiritual science wants to be as scientific in its
thinking as any other science. The aim is however not to
have a dead science but to let it become inner
experience, just as we have inner experience of the vital
powers we have as human beings. This newly enlivened
science will succeed in penetrating to the Christ
again.
What form
will this enlivened science take? Some things are in
preparation now, but I regret to say that they have not
attracted much interest. I think I ought to mention that
in the early nineties — well, in fact in the late
eighties — of the last century I drew attention to
a certain connection which exists between the way
Schiller developed and the way Goethe developed. [
Note 78 ] I spoke of
Schiller's attempt to solve the riddle of human evolution
in his own way, in his letters on aesthetic education. He
started with completely abstract ideas. The first was the
idea of logical necessity. He said to himself:
‘This logical necessity is compulsive for us human
beings. We have to think illogically. Freedom does not
exist when logic has to be used to analyze something, for
we are then subject to the laws of logic. Freedom does
not exist in that case.’ The second idea in
Schiller's mind was that human beings have natural needs;
this concept encompasses everything that is instinctive
and arises from the human capacity to have sensual
desires. In this respect, too, human beings are not free
but subject to necessity. In a certain way, therefore,
human beings are the slaves of the highest intellectual
achievement they are capable of, the logical necessity
their abstract intellect is able to perceive by the
process of reasoning. On the other hand, natural needs,
human instincts, also rule and enslave human beings. It
is possible, however, to find a middle position between
logical thinking and instinctive feelings. Schiller felt
that this middle state came to realization above all in
the work of creative artists and in aesthetic pleasures.
When we look at something beautiful or create something
beautiful we are not thinking logically, yet our thoughts
are at a spiritual level. We link ideas, but in doing so
we do not pursue the logical connection but rather
consider aesthetic appearance. On the other hand art
seeks to make everything it brings to revelation visual,
apparent to the senses. The object of natural necessity,
of our instincts are also visual and apparent to the
senses. Schiller therefore concluded that art and
aesthetic pleasures are on the one hand suppressing logic
to some extent, so that it can no longer enslave us but
in a way merges into the things over which we gain
personal mastery, overcoming them. On the other hand art
raises the instinctive element to the sphere of the
spirit, or in other words art enables us to feel that the
instinctive element is also spiritual. It enables us to
make logic the object of personal experience. Schiller
wanted to make this condition generally applicable to
human beings, saying that when they were in this
condition human beings were not enslaved by a higher
principle, nor by a lower one, but were indeed free. He
wanted it to be the power that also ruled
society—social life where people met face to face.
People would then find that good things were also
pleasing and that they could follow their instincts
because they had purified them and made them spiritual,
so that they could no longer drag them down. Human beings
would then also share a social life that would give rise
to a free social society. Schiller therefore considered
three human conditions, albeit in an abstract way: the
condition of ordinary physical needs, the condition of
logical necessity, and the free condition of aesthetic
experience.
Schiller
developed this view of life in the early 1890s. He put it
all into his letters on aesthetic education which he then
presented to Goethe. Goethe was quite a different type of
human being from Schiller. He felt: ‘This man
Schiller is trying to solve a certain riddle, the riddle
of the essential human nature, of human evolution and
human freedom.’ Goethe was a more complex and
profound character, however, and for him the issue could
not be simply resolved by taking three abstractions and
construing the whole essence of human evolution from
them. Instead, the ‘tale’ of the green Snake
and the beautiful Lily shone forth in his mind. Something
like twenty different figures represented the potential
capacities of the human soul, and the relations between
them reflected human evolution. Schiller attempted to
build everything up on the basis of three abstract ideas.
Goethe's way was to create a picture composed of twenty
Imaginations. The two men understood each other in a way.
What exactly was it that they had done? Schiller used a
scientific approach in writing his letters on aesthetic
education. He really proceeded in exactly the scientific
spirit that later became the scientific spirit of the
19th century. He did not go as far as that 19th century
scientific spirit, however. He still remained at a
personal level, as it were. 19th century science
completely excluded the personal aspect and took pride in
being entirely impersonal. The more impersonal knowledge
can be made, the closer scientists feel they are to this
ideal. 19th century scientists said, and present-day
scientists still say: ‘We know this and we know
that about one thing or another. We know it in a way that
is the same for every individual, so that there is no
personal element in it.’ Knowledge excludes the
personal element to such an extent that modern people are
only satisfied with their science once it has been
coffined in the tombs we must come to recognize as the
‘giant's tombs’ of the life of the mind and
spirit of today, i.e. in libraries, those tombs of the
modern mind and spirit. Dead knowledge is stored in
libraries, and we go there when we need some bone or
other that we want to include in a dissertation or in a
book. Those tombs are the true ideals of the modern
scientific spirit. People walk about among all the highly
objective knowledge stored there, but their personal
interest is somewhere else; it is definitely not in
there.
Schiller
did not go as far as that in his letters on aesthetic
education. He stayed at the personal level. He wanted
personal enthusiasm, personal engagement, for every idea
he developed. This is important. His letters on aesthetic
education are certainly abstract, yet there is still the
breath of an individual spirit in them. Knowledge was
still felt to be connected with one's personal
individuality. Schiller's abstract ideas therefore still
had a personal element in them. He did not yet allow
ideas to leave that realm and enter into a totally
objective and impersonal, inhuman sphere. He did however
go as far as the development of abstract ideas. Goethe
did not find it possible to form such abstract ideas. He
continued to use images, but he was very careful about
this. He lived in an age.when spiritual science could not
yet be established. He felt some hesitation about sharply
defining the images he presented in his 'tale' of the
green Snake and the beautiful Lily. He was hinting that
he was really concerned with a social life of the future.
This comes clearly to expression in the conclusion of the
‘tale’ of the green snake and the beautiful
Lily. Goethe did not want to go as far as hard and fast
definitions. He did not say that social life should have
three aspects, like the three aspects represented by the
Golden King as the king of wisdom, the Silver King as the
king of outward show — of a life setter please note
omission of semblance, political life — and the
Brazen king who might represent life in the material
sphere, in the economic sphere. Goethe also represented
the centralized state in the figure of the King of Mixed
Metals who collapsed in a heap. He did not, however, get
to the point of making sharp definitions. It was not a
time when such delicate fairytale figures could be
converted into solid characterizations of social life. I
think you will agree that Goethe's figures were subtle
fairytale figures. The time had not yet come when ideas
that were still half fantasy and half living in
Imaginations could be applied to outer life.
Years ago
the idea came up of putting on a play in Munich and the
intention was to present the creative potential of the
essential values to be found in Goethe's
‘tale’ of the green snake and the beautiful
Lily on the stage. This proved impossible. The whole
thing had to be made much more real. The outcome was the
mystery play The Portal of Initiation. It is
more than obvious that in Goethe's day the time had not
yet come when things which had to be presented in subtle
fairy-tale images could be transformed into the real
characters that appear in The Portal of
Initiation. When The Portal of Initiation
was being written the time had indeed come when one would
soon be able to carry these things out into life. It was
not enough, therefore, merely to interpret the Golden
King, the Silver King, the Brazen King and the King of
Mixed Metals. It had to be shown that the social life of
today, where the centralized state is supposed to
encompass everything, must smash itself to pieces, and
that clear distinction must be made between the life of
mind and spirit (Golden King), the political element
(Silver King) and the economic aspect (Brazen King). My
book Towards Social Renewal is Goetheanistic, if
properly understood, but it represents the Goetheanism of
the 20th century.
What I am
saying is that Goethe and Schiller were able to reach a
certain point in their day and age, Schiller in
developing abstract ideas in his letters on aesthetic
education, and Goethe in his images. Goethe could get
pretty nasty when other people tried to interpret his
images. He had the feeling that the time had not yet come
to transform these images into concrete forms that would
apply to life. This shows very clearly that Schiller's
and Goethe's time was not the time when the modern
scientific spirit could be allowed to become inhuman and
objective; it still had to be kept at a personal level.
We will have to return to that level, and we can only do
so with the help of spiritual science. Spiritual science
must guide us to find the reality of what Schiller
attempted to express in abstract ideas in his letters on
aesthetic education and what Goethe, trying to solve the
same riddle, hinted at in his ‘tale’ of the
green Snake and the beautiful Lily.
The
scientific spirit has to become personal again. The earth
cannot help us with this. Science itself has to become
Christ filled. By bringing the Christ idea into science
we create the first beginnings for an evolution of the
spirit-self.
Let us be
clear about this: The earth has encouraged us to develop
the ego. In its decline it will still be encouraging us
to develop the ego yet further. This earth is something
we shall have to leave behind in order to continue
evolution on Jupiter and so on. We cannot connect the
concept of ourselves as complete human beings with this
earth. We have to take our human beingness back from the
earth, as it were. If we were to develop only the
earth-related science towards which Schiller and Goethe
did not want to go — Schiller by keeping his
abstract ideas personal, Goethe by not going beyond
half-developed Imaginations — if we were to take
our cues only from the ingredients of the earth, we could
never develop the spirit-self. All we could develop would
be a dead science. We would therefore be adding more and
more to the field strewn with corpses to be found in our
libraries, in our books, where everything human is
excluded. We would walk about among these
'thought-corpses', they would cast their spell upon us,
and we would thus live up to Ahriman's ideal. One of the
things Ahriman wants for us is that we produce lots of
libraries, storing lots of dead knowledge all around us.
The ancient Egyptians walked among their tombs, even the
early Christians walked about among dead bodies, and
Ahriman wants us to do the same. He wants human nature to
slide back more and more into mere instinct, into
egotistical instincts, and he wants all the thoughts we
are able to muster to be stored in libraries. It is
possible to imagine that a time will come when a young
gentleman or even a young lady, aged somewhere around
twenty or twenty-three, cannot think of a way of
progressing in the world of the Silver King — in
external terms we call that taking one's doctor's degree.
Little rises from below in the human being; if one wanted
to write a doctorate thesis on what arises out of one's
human nature — I am of course assuming that a time
may come when Ahriman has won the day! — such a
thesis would be rejected as being subjective and
personal. The young person would therefore visit
libraries, taking up one book after another and probably
basing his or her choice on catalogues listing all
references to one particular key word. A new key word
would mean taking out yet another book. The whole thing
would then be put together to make a thesis. Only the
outer physical individual would actually be involved in
all this, however. The young man or woman would be
sitting at a desk piled with books. Personal involvement
would consist in getting hungry when one has been at it
for a few hours, and this hunger would be felt to be
something that effects one personally. Personal
involvement might also come in because one had human
relationships with certain commitments that would have to
be met when they came to mind after those few hours. The
books would then be shut and all personal connection with
them would cease. The thesis made up from what one has
found in various books would then be yet another book, a
small one or a large tome; it would go to join the others
on the library shelves and wait for someone to come and
use it. I am not sure if this stage has already been
reached somewhere today, but if Ahriman's ideal ever
comes to realization that is exactly how it will be. It
would be a terrible situation. Human individuality would
wither away in such a terrible objective, non-human and
impersonal situation.
To combat
this, knowledge has to become a personal matter.
Libraries should shrink if possible, and people should
carry the things that are written in books in their
souls. Spirit-self can only develop out of knowledge made
personal, and that cannot happen unless people learn
about the things that are not of this earth. The earth
has passed the mid-point of its evolution. It is dying.
Knowledge is dying in our libraries. It is also dying in
our books, for they are the coffins of knowledge. We must
take this element of knowledge back into our
individuality. We must carry it in us. Help will come
above all from the renewal of the Mystery of Golgotha.
This will help people who have knowledge; it will help
the followers of the Golden King.
New life
must also come in another sphere, the sphere of rights.
Human beings have as little personal connection with the
legal system nowadays as they have with the sphere of
knowledge. I have presented a small but definite proof of
this in a recent public lecture. [ Note 79 ] I said that the German
Empire had free and equal general suffrage. You could not
have asked for anything better. But did those voting
rights relate to life? Did people cast their votes in a
way that was in accord with this franchise? Was there
something alive in the configuration of the German Empire
that arose because of this franchise? Absolutely not. The
franchise was merely written in the Constitution. It was
not alive in people's hearts. A time must come when
people will no longer need to lay down as an objective
Constitution how one human being should relate to
another; then living relationships between people will
give rise to law that is also alive. What need is there
for written constitutions when people have the right
feeling for their relationship as one human being to
another and when this relationship comes to be a personal
matter? In the last three decades of the 19th century
human relations grew impersonal, and they have remained
impersonal under the strong materialism of the 20th
century. The law will only come alive when human beings
have the Christ spirit within them.
In the
sphere of rights, then, people must become followers of
the Silver King. In economic life, on the other hand,
they must become followers of the Brazen King. This means
no more and no less than that the abstract ideal of
brotherhood or companionship must become something real.
How can companionship become real? By associating, by
truly uniting with the other person, by no longer
fighting people with different interests but instead
combining those different interests. Associations are the
living embodiment of companionship. The life-spirit must
be alive in the sphere of rights, and with the Christ
spirit brought into economic life, spirit-man will come
to life in its first beginnings through associations. The
earth, however, yields none of this. Human beings will
only come to this if they let the Christ, who is now
approaching in the ether, enter into their hearts and
minds and souls.
You see,
therefore, that the spiritual renewal of the Mystery of
Golgotha, as we might call it, relates to what
anthroposophical cosmology teaches. We come to see this
when we are able to say to ourselves that we have the
potential to develop spirit-self, life-spirit and
spirit-man. Our thinking has grown so abstract, however,
that is seems terribly dry and prosaic to hear that
something as sublime and spiritual as the spirit-man,
must first of all show itself in associations formed in
economic life — in that ‘low’ economic
life which has to do with material things. Surely a
spiritual scientist cannot refer to economic life without
'lowering' himself? A spiritual scientist has to unite
people in conventicles where no one speaks of anything
connected with food and drink and one lives entirely in
‘the spirit’, which in fact means in abstract
ideas.
The fact is
however that when these people have been sitting in their
conventicles or sects for long enough and have found
their inner gratification they will finally emerge and of
course take bread and — well, let us say
‘water’ lest we really offend. As a rule
terribly little of all the principles they have
established to gratify their souls in those conventicles
will find application in life outside.
The true
life of the spirit exists only where it is strong enough
to overcome material life — and not leave it to one
side as something that enslaves and compels us. This is
something you really must come to realize.
I think
when we come to consider things like these we realize
that we must be serious in our approach to present-day
life. Yet this seriousness can only come to full
realization if we enter into things as deeply as
spiritual science enables us to do. You see, the
spiritual can only be brought close to human individuals
through spiritual science. In a way Schiller and Goethe
were the last who could still keep to the personal level,
and this was due to something still accessible to them
from the past. Schiller did not allow abstract ideas to
develop the icy coldness of modern ideas. Goethe kept his
Imaginations at a personal level and did not let them
break through entirely into outer life.
Today we
must go beyond this point. In the rough and tumble of
present-day reality we cannot do anything with aesthetic
letters — except maybe at aesthetic tea parties
— nor with ‘fairy-tales’. At most one
might perhaps have beautiful conversations about them in
the salons; even in those caricatures of salons that have
now become lecture theatres for modern literature and are
competing with the old-established professorial chairs.
What is needed today is that we break through into life
with the things that Goethe and Schiller still kept at
the personal level. This will need powerful ideas and on
the other hand also powerful Imaginations; a true
spiritual understanding of the outer world must arise. To
achieve this, we must fill ourselves with the Christ
spirit. We will all need to believe in the Christ spirit
in its true sense, believe that the Christ principle is
something we have to unite with the part in us, as human
beings, that will take us beyond this and make us into
complete human beings by helping us to develop
spirit-self, life-spirit and spirit-man.
All the
things we encounter through spiritual science have an
inner connection. Seeing through these inner connections
we shall be able to see spiritual science in the right
light and know that it belongs to the present age. We
shall also know that in the present age spiritual science
must be made to have a very real influence in all spheres
of practical life.
This means,
however, that spiritual science must take the whole of
life extremely seriously. A true spiritual scientist
would feel that it is inner frivolity to fail to be
extremely serious, to fail to do more than fashion
beautiful abstract ideas that are gratifying to the soul
but are in no way able to break through into life.
This is
something which has been weighing heavily on spiritual
science for more than a year; it has been weighing
heavily on those of us who are working here in Stuttgart.
This work at Stuttgart has now made it our responsibility
to bring spiritual science to bear in the practical life
that immediately surrounds us on all sides. Principles
that Goethe presented in fairy-tale images of a Golden, a
Silver and a Brazen King, and a King of Mixed Metals who
collapsed in a heap, must now be brought to bear in life
and must become the threefold social order. You will
remember that the King of Mixed Metals collapsed in a
heap in the tale and certain persons came and licked up
all the gold. If you take a good look at the world around
us today you will see this phenomenon. In November 1918
Central Europe's King of Mixed Metals collapsed, and
don't you see now how the various ministers who have held
office since that time, the various leaders, are licking
away and will go on licking until they have removed all
the gold? Then the whole form of the Mixed King, a form
empty of all spirit, will collapse, and people will be
horrified. So we really ought to be serious — not
about fairy-tale images of a Golden, a Silver, and a
Brazen King, but with firm understanding for the three
elements of the social organism: the cultural and
spiritual element, the element of the political sphere,
i.e. the state, and the economic element.
It has to
be said, however, that when one comes to speak of these
things two thoughts immediately come to mind. One of
these I want to talk about today, for the longer we have
to go on working like this in Stuttgart the more obvious
it becomes that, for the time being at least, it is
simply impossible to find time to talk to the friends who
have got used to coming and asking my advice in earlier
years. For a long time now I have had to put people off,
when they wanted to discuss things that it certainly has
previously been possible to discuss in private, promising
to try again later on. Although my visits have been
getting longer and longer, all efforts have had to be
concentrated on the great task. I feel it really has to
be said that, this time in particular, it has been quite
impossible to consider personal requests. This is as
painful for me as it is for you and I know that we cannot
go on like this in the long run, for that would deprive
the Anthroposophical Movement of its foundations. We
would be building on shifting grounds in that case.
On the
other hand it also has to be realized that people always
like to cling to the old ways. Yet we are doing something
entirely new in really getting to grips with the Golden,
the Silver and the Brazen King, as I would like to call
it. It is an extremely serious matter. Spiritual science
cannot do such a thing as licking the gold away from the
King of Mixed Metals who is collapsing in a heap, and
some people take this amiss. I know I am poking around in
a hornets' nest, but I shall have to poke around in quite
a few hornets' nests, for example by characterizing a
person such as Hermann Keyserling [ Note 80 ] who is simply not
telling the truth and is a liar.
Some people
say there is too much criticism within the
Anthroposophical Movement today. But let me repeat once
again what I have said many times before: These people
see what we have to do in order to defend ourselves
— and they take exception to this. Exception is
even taken by people who are sitting in this room and
listening to the things that are being said. And they
never say a word to give the lie to the people who throw
mud at us from the outside — for that would mean
becoming argumentative oneself. It is considered unkind
for an anthroposophist to call someone a liar, when that
is in fact the truth. Yet anyone who wants to tell lies
about the Anthroposophical Movement is allowed to fling
any kind of lie at us. The journal of our movement for a
threefold order is often considered too polemical. You
should turn against those whom we are simply forced to
argue against; you should have the courage to address
your words to them and not to us, for we are simply
forced to defend ourselves. But that is a familiar bad
habit. It shows that people are more interested in an
Anthroposophy that provides self-gratification and not in
a serious Anthroposophy that is considering the great
problems of the present age.
Now and
then it is really necessary to speak very seriously about
these things. The things I said with reference to Count
Keyserling in my public lecture, for instance, relate not
only to the things said about Anthroposophy in that
quarter; they relate to the whole inner insincerity of
that kind of intellectual life. Read the chapter entitled
‘What we need. What I want’ in his most
recent book. [ Note 81 ]
It does not say anything about Anthroposophy, but you
will find there the whole schematism of unsubstantial
ideas that is wholly without content; yet you get stuffed
shirts who will say that they get such a lot out of it.
That of course is the great evil in our time, that people
reject the things that take their substance from the
spirit — the living spirit — and want only to
have the empty words, mere shells of words.
If people
go on wanting things like this they will destroy
humanity. The hollow phrases coming from that source
— even if they are called the Diary of a
Philosopher [ Note 82
] — undermine the whole of human culture. What are
they, these hollow phrases? They are the phrases one
produces if one licks the King of Mixed Metals. You may
be fairly brutal in your licking, like some of the
socialist leaders today, or you may be wearing elegant
patent-leather boots like Count Keyserling — it
really makes no difference.
I may be
putting these things sharply, but please do not think
this reflects an emotional involvement. They are put
sharply because it has to be said, unfortunately, that
there are some who want to be counted among the
anthroposophists but whose hearts are not really in it.
They cannot be sufficiently serious, they do not want to
be sufficiently serious, they do not want their hearts to
be involved. It is not being unkind to speak the truth
when it is necessary to do so. But let me ask you if it
is kind of anyone, who wants to be one of us, to allow
others to sling mud at us and then call us unkind when we
have to defend ourselves? It may seem regrettable that we
have to use sharp words to defend ourselves, but just
because of this you ought to uphold those sharp words and
not indulge in feelings and the like and somehow or other
start repeating the rubbish literary hacks have been
producing — saying that polemics are not
justifiable and are unkind.
The
difficulty is that within the movement that is to develop
as the Anthroposophical Movement we find so few people
who are wholeheartedly with us. When it is necessary to
achieve the kind of thing that we are supposed to achieve
through the Anthroposophical Movement we need many such
individuals today. We have found dedicated people in many
different fields, above all the Waldorf School teachers
in the educational field. We have also found dedicated
individuals in some other fields — but it is simply
not enough. The number of those who simply do not want to
become completely involved is extremely large, right here
in our own ranks, and yet we need people to be fully
dedicated to our cause. That is why we are making so
little progress. As time went on we found again and again
that when we really got down to it, many of the people
who had put their names down so that they would be able
to hear the things that are said within the movement were
in a way embarrassed to declare themselves openly for us
on the outside. We have heard it said again and again
that it would be better not to use the name Anthroposophy
in public; that one should leave the name out and 'slip
things in here and there' with reference to
Anthroposophy. That is the delightful way people who do
not want to take Anthroposophy seriously like to put it.
So the gentleman, or particularly the lady, intends to
‘slip something in’ here and there by way of
Anthroposophy, because she or he feels ashamed to speak
openly about Anthroposophy. So they ‘slip things
in'! You won't have to be all that valiant, then, and you
won't create any awkwardness — just let it slip
in’.
Now is not
the time to let things slip in, however. It is time to be
open and honest and to use words that tell the truth
about things. The people who are against us do not let
things slip in, they put things bluntly. And it should be
considered an outrage by all who have joined our ranks
that someone like Count Keyserling has the cheek to say
that this spiritual science of ours is materializing the
life of the spirit, that it is a physical science of the
spirit. We know that this man used sneaky ways to get
hold of our lecture courses from a large number of
people, in order to find out what is said in them, and
all one can say is that in writing the things he is
writing today he is quite deliberately writing untruths.
We call it lying. Anyone who objects to our saying this
is a lover of lies. Anyone who says that we are too
argumentative when we are rightly speaking the truth has
no feeling for the truth and is a lover of lies. The love
of lies should not be our business in the
Anthroposophical Movement, for we must love the truth.
You must feel the whole weight of these words: to love
the truth; not to love lies for the sake of convention,
for the sake of a pleasant social life. To be easygoing
when it comes to lies is just as bad as loving them. In
the immediate future the world will not progress through
frivolous indifference where lies are concerned, but only
if we freely and openly profess ourselves for the truth.
Anthroposophy has to consider serious and sublime
spiritual matters, and we have never failed in this.
Anyone who says that it is spiritual materialism to speak
of Saturn, Sun and Moon when he is free to open my
Occult Science and read what it says about
Saturn, Sun and Moon, is indeed lying. It does not say
anything about making the spirit into something material.
People cannot be aware of the true seriousness of the
situation if they ask that we use polite untruthful terms
to address mud-slinging opponents.
These are
the very things that reflect real love. Real love demands
enthusiasm for the truth. The world will only progress if
we show enthusiasm for the truth.
There are
profound spiritual reasons why I have to say these things
today, as I am about to leave you again for a while. I am
very sorry that I am quite unable to talk to individuals
at present, because there simply is not the time.
Yesterday the friends of our movement for a threefold
order and of the Kommende Tag [ Note 39 ] were again in session
until 3 o'clock in the morning, and that is how it goes
on, more or less day after day. I regret that many things
have to be left aside, things that people have come to
love. On the other hand there may be hope after all that,
in view of the efforts now being made on a large scale,
the Anthroposophical Movement will gain the rightful
place in this world that it must gain, because it has the
strength and the will to use the truth to move ahead. If
we are to work in the truth, then we can do no other
today than show untruthfulness up in its true light when
it gets as blatant as this.
It has been
necessary to remind you of our commitment to the truth.
It is most necessary for all of us, dear friends, to let
this spirit of longing for the truth fill our hearts and
souls and minds. If it is still within the bounds of
human capabilities, then this spirit in which we long for
the truth will be the only thing that can prevent the
barbarism that otherwise must come upon the human race.
It will be the only spirit in which we shall make progress
in a new culture which will be of the spirit.
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