FOREWORD by Marie Steiner
THE wealth of ideas and spiritual treasure bestowed upon us by Rudolf
Steiner in his lectures often makes it difficult to arrange certain
series of lectures under one category and heading. They are like
concentrated foci of energy from which sparks shoot out in every
direction, lighting up the near and the far, piercing their way to the
primal beginnings and again into infinitudes of space and time then
giving sharp definition to details which may seem unessential but are
of great symptomatic importance. Out of the cumulative mass of details
the necessities of storm-charged destiny arise but also a sustaining
power of the Spirit. We discern the play of forces which preceded the
sufferings of our present time, discharged itself with unparalleled
fury in the world war and its aftermath and will burst out in tempests
yet to come. We understand why this had to be, what failings will be
forgiven, what demands made of us. A great and impressive tableau of
history unrolls from the precision given to details otherwise ignored
and from the vast cosmic-human background against which the life of
man stands out in bold relief.
These vistas of primordial cosmic happenings, of ages of grey
antiquity in human history which, nevertheless, shed clearest light
upon our present time, are opened up with particular vividness in the
lectures given to members of the Anthroposophical Society with
certain interruptions, but in constantly recurring rhythm in
places where Rudolf Steiner made his home between continual
travelling: Berlin and Dornach. The lectures were given in order that
the conscience of a small group of human beings at least might be made
alive to the tasks of the time, to the vital significance of the hour
in which we were living before the world war, and are still living
today.
Rudolf Steiner spoke gravely and impressively, like the voice of
destiny itself, like the awakened human conscience, linking his
arguments with factual details in every sphere. And then, when in the
world outside, all supports hitherto thought secure tottered for every
eye to see, as the forces burst upon one another with elemental might,
it was he who tried ever and again to formulate the thoughts of
deliverance and recovery without which chaos cannot be overcome.
Although an unfledged humanity could not understand this voice, a
light must somehow be brought into the chaos even though it might
reach only a small group of immature, but eager-hearted people. An
attempt had also to be made to penetrate here and there into the field
of concrete, practical life. To be sure, the representatives of this
practical side of life as they are pleased to call it,
scornfully and with vicious measures of sabotage, rejected everything
that seemed to them so remote from reality in that it spoke of
spiritual worlds. Yet the living thought has the power to outlast the
moment and to rise up again in a new form. Its duty is to work even
where there is no prospect of success; in all its purity it has to
find its way to souls who, through constant testing, gradually become
open to receive it. Out of the concrete realities of existence from
which his spiritual vision was never willing to withdraw, Rudolf
Steiner created a science of knowledge embracing every domain of life
and able to pour vitalising, creative impulses into the manifold
branches of science and art, philosophy and religious activity.
To live through this was, and remains, an intense upliftment, like
climbing up steep mountain crests in snow-cleansed, sun-pierced air.
Deep, refreshing breaths can be drawn in this region of the higher
cosmic realities which imbue human life with meaning and even now
shape the picture of destiny in those future times, when, out of a
quickened consciousness, thought will encompass higher and higher
spheres of existence.
Treasures of the Spirit of well-nigh frightening brilliance have been
bequeathed to us, demonstrating through their very existence that the
might of the Dark Age, of Kaliyuga, has been broken and conquered.
True, the darkness is within us still, but the Light is there and may
not be withheld not even from a humanity living in shadow.
The Light of which Rudolf Steiner says that it is the Christ
Impulse had first to prepare and shape the vessel of human
consciousness into which it can flow; it will bring to men that
re-awakening by which alone they can wrest themselves from downfall.
Neither the powers of the Sentient Soul, nor the fervent passion of
religious experience known to the Middle Ages, to the saints and the
mystics along the path of the Christian Initiation, are competent to
overcome the obstructions brought by the age of rationalism. But wise
Providence, guide and leader of human existence, inaugurated, even
before the dawn of the modern age, a second path of Christian
Initiation along which souls were gradually to be made ready for the
demands of a later future.
The call of this, the Christian-Rosicrucian path, went out above all
to the powers of the Consciousness Soul, the Spiritual Soul. Hence its
mission was also to establish the human being firmly within the
personality, to allow him to experience to the full the significance
of the single life. Through study, through imagination and
contemplation, it led the human being out into the macrocosm
which was discovered again, in image, within his own being. But the
full development of the forces of the personality, whereby the
I could be led to conscious realisation of the Spirit, made it
necessary that the knowledge of repeated earth-lives should, to begin
with, be hidden for a time from the portion of humanity destined to
unfold these forces of personality.
What the new age needs is not a return to the past through a revival
of the methods of Yoga, nor of the Gnostic or Rosicrucian paths in the
form in which they served the spiritual weal of men in days gone by.
In accordance with the demands of the modern age, a new impulse must
be given to the rigorous path of Rosicrucian knowledge which in its
true form has nothing whatever to do with the charlatanry that has
usurped its name a new impulse, in the form of the revelation
of the great truths of Reincarnation and Karma.
Until the task of proclaiming these truths devolved upon Rudolf
Steiner, Rosicrucianism concealed them, kept silence about them. But
it came about that with the passage of the centuries, these truths
were able to flash into the consciousness of minds in Europe, as the
result of rigorous and strenuous ways of thought, and as a fruit of
knowledge born of alert reason; as a concern, too, of mankind, through
which the evolution of human history receives meaning and
significance, not as a concern of the single individual whose goal, as
in Buddhism, is liberation from the wheel of rebirth. We need only
mention the names of Goethe and Lessing.
The salvation of the individuality passing onwards and unfolding
through the recurrent earthly lives, the rebirth of the Divine
I in man this is the deed wrought by Christ, and with
the stupendous power of knowledge at his command Rudolf Steiner
brought this deed ever and again before our eyes.
When after long reluctance he had made up his mind to comply with the
request of German Theosophists to lead their work, he was able to
accept the proposal because of the avowed task of the Theosophical
Society: to establish knowledge of Reincarnation and Karma in the
world. The lectures leading to the request that he should become the
leader of this Movement in Germany were those on Mysticism at the Dawn
of Modern Spiritual Life, and Christianity as Mystical Fact.
Therewith, the impulse which he was to bring to
the Movement had been clearly indicated, and he was assured of
absolute freedom to teach as he would. He himself acted in line with
the spirit of true occultists of all ages who make a link with the
store of spiritual knowledge already existing in order to preserve its
life and lead it forward. He still saw hope of being able, through the
new impulse, to rescue the Theosophical Society, too, from lapsing
into the rigidity of dogma, to imbue it with fresh forces and enrich
its very defective understanding of the Mysteries of Christianity.
Without overthrowing anything at all, gradually laying stone upon
stone, he created the basis for this understanding. For the new
insight must be acquired by the listeners only through knowledge
consciously put to the test of reason. And so, to begin with, he
adopted the terminology current among the Theosophists, gradually
widening the ideas and giving them life so that they might conform to
the more alert consciousness of the modern mind. The basis once
created, wider and wider perspectives could be opened out, until, from
the side of the super-sensible, there broke the light which reveals the
mission of the earth and the tasks of mankind.
Not only from the point of view of their content, but also from that
of chronology, the opportunity of studying every such series of
lectures given by Rudolf Steiner seems to us to be of great importance
for newcomers to Spiritual Science, for only so is it possible to
realise the living, organic growth of the work. Remarks interpolated
here and there in the lectures about contemporary happenings seeming
to have little bearing at a later time, have such moral and
educational value that they are of lasting significance.
There can be no concealment of the firm stand Rudolf Steiner was
compelled to take against the attempts that were clouding objective
truth and corrupting the Theosophical Society by the introduction of
pet projects and personal ambitions. The warnings given in this
connection may not always be understood by the reader today. In the
main they were connected with the occult despotism for so
indeed it may be called which took the form of the announcement
of the coming of a World-Saviour in the flesh to whom they
dared to give the name of Christ. The Indian boy Krishnamurti was
chosen for this role and the Order of the Star in the East
founded with a flourish of trumpets. The Theosophical Society was
expected to place itself in the service of this new aim. By these
crude means it was hoped to win souls who were open to listen to the
explanations of Christian Esotericism given by Rudolf Steiner. But a
campaign, fought with all the arms of calumny, was launched against
him. The International Theosophical Congress which was to have been
held in Genoa in the year 1911 and in which Rudolf Steiner was to have
given two lectures on Buddhism in the twentieth century
and Christ in the twentieth century, was cancelled at the
last minute for inadequate reasons but in reality because of
fear that the influence of Dr. Steiner's words might be too strong.
In the lectures that year, many references had to be made to this
affair which to very many people was absolutely incomprehensible.
It had become necessary to make it clear that methods so grievously
degrading the level of the Theosophical Society, could not be
countenanced. Dr. Steiner stated this firmly, but with pain, and
pouring his very heart's blood into the words, he spoke repeatedly of
his one great wish that the Society led by him might not
succumb to the failings into which occult societies so easily lapse
when they fall short of the demands of strict truthfulness and drift
into vanity and ambition.
The words should live like cleansing flames in the souls of those who
represent his work and over and over again arise before them as an
exhortation and warning.
The lectures given in Berlin in the year 1912, contain many references
to the struggles Rudolf Steiner was obliged to face in order that in
spite of hidden attacks, the spirit of such a Movement might be
rescued in its purity, for Spiritual Science. The lapse in the
Theosophical Society made it necessary to lay sharp emphasis upon the
autonomy of the anthroposophical work in Middle Europe vis-à-vis
the Anglo-Indian Theosophical Society, and during the last days of
December, 1912, the Anthroposophical League (Bund) was
officially founded. The rhythms of the years recall such days vividly
to the memory.
Thirty years ago, on the 20th October, 1902, in Berlin, Rudolf Steiner
gave his first lecture on Anthroposophy, and on the 21st translated
into German the theosophical lecture delivered by Annie Besant who at
that time had not come under the sway of the unhealthy influences to
which she afterwards fell victim. Twenty years ago, Rudolf Steiner was
obliged to protect the anthroposophical Movement inaugurated by him
from the despotic attacks going out from Adyar, and to speak the words
which are like a heritage left by the lectures and are now being made
available to us once again as a memorial of those days. They rang out
in power during the last days of December of that same year, in
Cologne, when in Rudolf Steiner's lectures on
The Bhagavad Gita and the Epistles of St. Paul,
the purest oriental wisdom was presented to
the listeners with unprecedented grandeur, in the light of Christian
knowledge.
Again his concluding words were an impressive appeal for
self-knowledge and humility in those belonging to the Movement
inaugurated by him. But the opposing powers were not slumbering. Ten
years ago, on New Year's night, 1922-23, the Goetheanum was in flames.
Only the Group, sculptured in wood, portraying the Representative of
Humanity between the vanquished Adversaries, was saved. We are hoping
that by Christmas of this year, this Group will stand in a space
worthy of it, in the new Goetheanum. There is a moving description of
the Representative of Humanity, of the Christ Figure, at the end of
one of the lectures of 1912, [e.Ed: See
Lecture VI (final pages).]
when there was no thought even of the
possibility of its execution in sculpture. It came before us
then in words, and now it stands before our eyes as a work of Art.
MARIE STEINER.
December, 1932.
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