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September 9th, 1945
|
No.35/36
|
14th Vol.
|
THE
SITUATION OF THE WORLD
(WAR, PEACE and the SCIENCE OF THE SPIRIT)
Lecture by Dr. RUDOLF STEINER, given in Berlin on the 12th
of
October 1905.
(From somewhat abbreviated notes not
revised by the lecturer.)
Spiritual investigation cannot meddle with the immediate
events of the day. But at the same time, one should not
believe that spiritual science floats in the clouds above
every reality and that it has nothing to do with
practical life. To-day we shall not speak of the events that
are stirring the world just now, events of the kind: described
in the daily newspapers, nor do we belong to those who prefer
to be blind and deaf to the occurrences that move the
human heart. The spiritual-scientific investigator must
always thread his way between two rocks; he never loses himself
in the ruling opinions and views of the day, and on the other
hand he never becomes involved in empty abstractions and
authoritative concepts. On many occasions I had the opportunity
to tell you that spiritual science should make us practical;
far more practical than is generally believed to be the case by
the men of daily practical life. It should make us practical,
by leading us to the deeper forces which lie at the foundation
of life and throwing light upon everything from these deeper
forces, and by guiding our actions so that they are in harmony
with the great laws of the universe. We are able to achieve
something in the world and we can influence its course of
events only if we act in accordance with the great laws of the
universe.
After these introductory words, let me begin by pointing out a
few facts for the sole purpose of calling up in your mind the
importance of present-day problems, I might say the actuality
of these problems.
One, fact which everyone may perhaps remember is that on the
24th of August 1898 the Czar's authorised representative sent a
circular to all the accredited foreign representatives at St.
Petersburg, containing among other things the following words:
The maintenance of peace and thee diminution of armaments that
weigh upon the nation constitute an ideal of modern
civilisation, an ideal upon which the governments of all
nations should turn their attention. My sovereign completely
dedicated his strength to this task. Hoping that this, may be
in keeping with the desire of most of the other lowers, the
Imperial Government holds that it is now the best moment to
ensure peace upon the basis of international discussion and to
put an end to the present uninterrupted arming.
This document also contains the following: Since the financial
means required for armaments are constantly rising, capital and
labour are deviated from their true paths and are
devoured unproductively. The armaments consequently
correspond less and less to the purpose allotted to them by the
respective governments. The document concludes by saying that a
Conference with God's aid would be a good omen for the new
century.
To
be sure, this is not exactly a new resolution, for we can go
back many centuries, and in the l6th/17th century we come
across a ruler,
Henry IVth of France,
who then advanced the
idea of holding such a universal Peace Conference. Seven of the
sixteen nations of that time had already given their consent,
when Henry IVth was murdered. No one continued his work. If
necessary, it would be possible to trace intentions and plans
having this aim and flowing from such quarters, much further
back still.
This is one sequence of facts. The other one is: the
Conference of The Hague. You all know the name of that
praiseworthy person who pursues her ideals with such rare
devotion and with such a good knowledge of the facts:
Bertha von Suttner.
One year after the Conference at The Hague she
collected the acts into a book in which she recorded speeches
which were sometimes very beautiful. She also wrote an
introduction to this book. Please bear in mind that one year
passed by since Bertha von Suttner envisaged this book about the
Peace Conference.
(At this point there is an interruption in the text.)
War
has now broken out, in diametrical opposition to these ideas,
war due to refusal of intermediation — the cruel
Transvaal war. If we now look around in the world, we find that
very noble-hearted men are lighting for the ideal of Peace and
the love for universal peace lives in the hearts of high-
minded idealists — nevertheless so much blood has never
before been shed on earth as during this short time. This is an
earnest very earnest matter for everyone who is also interested
in the great problems of the soul.
On
the one hand we have the devoted apostles of Peace and their
untiring activity, we have the excellent books of Bertha von
Suttner who knew how to set forth the terrors of war with such
rare skill — but do not let us forget the other side. Do
not let us forget that many clever men who belong to the other
side assure us again and again that war is necessary for human
progress, that it steels the forces. The strength increases by
having to face opposition. The scientific investigator who
attracted so many thinkers to his side, often said that he
desired war, that only a fierce war could advance the forces in
Nature [See the lecture of October
5th, 1905: “HAECKEL, THE RIDDLES
OF THE WORLD AND THEOSOPHY.”]. Perhaps he did not express himself so
radically, nevertheless many people harbour these thoughts.
Even within our spiritual-scientific Movement some people
voiced the view that it would be a weakness, nay a sin against
the spirit of national strength, if any objection were
raised against the war which had led to national honour,
national power. In any case, the opinions in this sphere are
still strongly opposed.
But
the Conference at The Hague brought with it one thing. It
brought to our notice the views of many people who are at the
head of public life. Many representatives of Governments
at that time agreed that the Conference at The Hague should
take place. One might think that a cause which had gained the
support of such high quarters, would be highly successful.
-
In
order to. view things in the way in which they have to be
viewed from the aspect of a spiritual conception of the world
and of life, we must penetrate more deeply into the whole
subject. When we study the problem of peace as an ideal problem
and see how it developed in the course of time, but at the same
time observe the facts of battle and strife, we must say that
perhaps the way in which this ideal of peace has been pursued,
calls for a closer investigation and claims our attention.
You
see, even the hearts of many soldiers are filled with pain and
abhorrence for the consequences and effects of war. Such
things, may indeed induce us to ask: Do wars arise through
anything which can be eliminated from the world by principles
and opinions? These who look more deeply into the souls of men
know that two quite distinct and separate directions produce
that which leads to war. One direction is what we designate as
power of judgment and understanding, what we name idealism; the
other direction is human passion, the human inclinations,
man's sympathies and antipathies.
Many things would be different in the world if it were
possible, without further ado, to control desires and passions
in accordance with the principles of the heart and of the
understanding. For this is not possible, the very
opposite has so far always been the case in human life. The
understanding, the heart itself, provide in idealism the mask
for what is pursued by passion and desire. And if you study the
history of human development, you may again and again ask,
whenever you come across certain principles, whenever you see
idealism flashing up: What are the passions and desires which
lurk in the background?
You
see, if you bear this in mind, it is quite possible that with
the best principles one cannot as yet achieve anothing; perhaps
something else will be required, because the human,
passions, instincts and desires are not sufficiently
developed to follow the idealism of individual men. The problem
has, as you see, a deeper root and we must grasp it more
deeply.
If
we wish to judge the whole matter rightly, we must cast a
glance into the human soul and its fundamental forces. We do
not always survey the course of development to a sufficient
extent, generally we only survey a short space of time, —
so that an encompassing conception of the world must open our
eyes, giving us on the one hand a deep insight and on the other
a survey of larger epochs of time, in order that we may form a
judgment of the forces which are to lead us into the
future.
Let
us consider the human soul, where we can study it deeply and
thoroughly. Let us consider from another aspect something
which we mentioned eight days ago. [In the
lecture on Haeckel.] We have, a natural-scientific
theory, the so-called Darwinism. There is one idea which plays
an important part in this natural-scientific conception. It is
the idea designated as the “STRUGGLE FOR
EXISTENCE,” the “BATTLE OF LIFE.” Our whole
natural science, our whole conception of life stood under the
sign of this struggle for existence. The scientists declared:
In the world the beings that can best assert themselves in the
battle of life, that can gain the greatest advantage over their
fellow-creatures, are those who survive, whereas the others
perish! Consequently, we need not be surprised that we are
surrounded by beings, who adapted themselves best of all,
for they developed throughout millions of years. The fittest
survived and the unfit perished.
The
struggle for existence has become the watchword of scientific
research. From where did this struggle come? It has not been
taken from Nature. Darwin himself, though he sees it in a
greater style than his followers, took it from a conception of
Malthus
[Thomas Robert Malthus, 1760-1854.],
spreading over the
history of human development, a conception according to
which the earth produces food in a progression rising in a far
more reduced measure than the increase of the population. Those
who versed in these questions will know that one says:
The increase in food is in accordance with arithmetic
progression, whereas the increase in the population is in
accordance with geometrical progression. This produces a
struggle for existence, a war of all. against all.
Setting out from this idea, Darwin placed the struggle
for existence also at the beginning of the life of mature. This
conception is not only in keeping with a mere idea, but with
the modern ways of living. This battle of life has become
reality reaching as far as the conditions of individual
existence, as expressed in the form of general economic
competition. This battle of life was observed at close
quarters, it was looked upon as something natural in the
kingdom of man, and then it was taken over by natural
science.
Ernst Haeckel
set out from these ideas, and in warlike
activities, in war itself, he even saw a lever of
civilisation, Battle strengthens, the weak must go under,
— civilisation demands that the weak should perish.
National economy then applied this struggle to the human
sphere. We thus have great theories in national economy, in the
conceptions of social life, theories which look upon the
struggle for existence as something quite justified which
cannot be severed from the development of humanity. With these
principles, not with prejudices, one went back to the remotest
times, and one tried to study the life of the wild barbaric
peoples; one believed that it was possible to listen to the
development of human culture and thought to discover in it the
wildest principle of war.
Huxley
said: If we survey the animals
in Nature, their struggle for existence resembles a fight of
gladiators — and this is a law of Nature. And if we turn
our attention from the higher animals to the lower species in
keeping with the course of world-development, we find that the
facts prove everywhere that we live in the midst of a general
struggle for existence,
You
see, this idea could be expressed, it could be accepted as a
general law of the universe. Those who realise that no words
can be uttered which are not deeply rooted in the human soul,
must say to themselves that the feelings, the soul-constitution
even of our best people are still based upon the
idea that war, battle, in the human race as well as in Nature,
constitutes a law, something from which we cannot escape.
Now
you can say: These scientists were perhaps very humane, perhaps
in their deepest idealism they longed for peace, for harmony.
But their profession, their science convinced them that this
was not so, and perhaps they wrote down their theories with a
bleeding heart.
This might stand as an objection, if something quite different
had not arisen. We can say that the above-mentioned theory was
universally accepted by all those who believed that they were
sound thinkers, scientifically and economically, in the sixties
and seventies of the 19th-century. generally accepted was- the
view that war and strife were, a law of Nature, from which one
could not escape. The old conception of
Rousseau
had been disposed of completely — so people thought —
for Rousseau held that only man's wickedness had brought battle
and strife into the general peace of Nature, opposition and
disharmony into its harmony. At the end of me loth century the
Rousseau atmosphere was still prevalent, according to which a
glance into the life of Nature which is still uninfluenced by
man's super-culture, reveals everywhere harmony and peace. It
is man, with his arbitrariness and culture, who brought strife
and battle into the world.
This was still Rousseau's idea and during, the last third of
the 19th century the scientists assured us: it would be fine if
this were true, but this is not the case: the facts show us a
different state of things. Nevertheless, let us ask ourselves
earnestly: Has human feeling expressed a verdict, or the facts
themselves? ... It would be difficult to raise any objection if
the f acts themselves spoke in this way.
But
a strange man appeared in the year 1880, who gave a lecture in
St. Petersburg in Russia, during the Congress of Scientists of
1880. This lecture is of profoundest significance for all who
are really interested in this problem. This man is the zoologist
Kessler.
He died soon after
[“On the principle of Mutual Help,”
lecture by Prof. Kessler, Dean of the St. Petersburg University,
given in January 1880 during the congress of Russian Scientists.
(Kessler died in 1881)].
His lecture dealt with the principle of mutual help in Nature.
All those who earnestly deal with such questions, will find in the
research and scientific maturity contained in this lecture a
completely new impulse. Nor the first time in our modern epoch
facts were collected from the whole of Nature proving
that all the former theories on the struggle for existence are
not in keeping with reality.
You
see, this lecture expounds and proves by facts that the animal
species, the groups of animals, do not develop through the
battle of life, in reality, a struggle for existence only
exists exceptionally between two different species, but not
within the same species, for the. individuals belonging to it
on the contrary help each other. Those species are the fittest,
where the individuals belonging to it are most inclined to this
mutual help. Long existence is guaranteed not by a struggle for
existence, but by mutual help.
This opened out a new aspect, by. a strange coincidence
and chain of circumstances in modern scientific research, this
subject was continued by a man who adopted the most
extraordinary standpoint, by
Prince Kropotkin:
He was able to prove in the case of animals and certain tribes,
by bringing forward innumerable sound facts, the great
significance of this principle of mutual help, both in Nature
and in human life. I would advise everyone to read his took.
(Peter Kropotkin:
MUTUAL HELP IN ‘EVOLUTION’) It
brings a number of ideas and concepts which are a good school
for an ascent to a spiritual outlook.
But
these facts can be grasped in the right way only if they are
considered in the light of a so-called esoteric
conception, if we gain insight into these facts upon the
foundation of spiritual science. I might adduce many facts
which speak very clearly, but you can read them in the
above-mentioned book. The principle of mutual help in Nature
declares that those in whom this principle is developed in the
highest measure are those who advance furthest. Consequently,
the facts speak clearly and will speak more and more clearly
for us.
When we speak of a single animal-species in the theosophical
conception, we speak of it in the same way in which we speak of
man's single individuality. An animal species is upon a lower
sphere the same as the single human individuality upon a higher
sphere. I already explained before that there is one fact
which, we must clearly envisage in. order to grasp the
difference which exists between man and the whole animal
kingdom. This contrasting difference may be expressed in the
words: Man has a biography, but the animal has no biography. In
the case of an animal it suffices to describe its species.
lather, grandfather, grandson and son — these
distinctions do not count in the case of a lion; we do not need
to describe each one in particular. Certainly I knew that many
objections can be raised: I know that those who. love a dog or
a monkey think that they can write a biography of the dog
or of the monkey. But a biography should not contain what
another person knows of the being that is the subject of a
biography, but what that being himself knew.
Self-consciousness is essential for a biography, and in
this meaning, only the HUMAN BEING has a biography. This would
correspond to a description of a whole animal-species.
That each group of animals has a group-soul, is the external
expression for the fact that each individual human being bears
a soul within him.
I
was able to explain to you here that a hidden world is
immediately connected with our physical world; it is the astral
world which does not consist of the objects and beings that can
be perceived through the senses, but which are woven of the
same substance of which our passions and desires are woven. If
you examine the human being you can see that he led down his
soul as far as the physical world, the physical plane. But the
animal has no individual soul upon the physical plane, —
you find instead the animal's individual soul upon the
so-called astral plane, in the astral world that lies concealed
behind our physical world. The groups of animals have
individual souls in the astral world.
You
see, here you have the difference between man and the animal
kingdom. If we now ask ourselves: What is really waging battle,
when we observe the struggle for existence in the animal
kingdom? — we must reply: In truth, the astral battle of
the soul's passions and instincts stands behind this struggle
of the different species in the animal kingdom, the battle of
soul-passions and instincts which is rooted in the double
souls, or in sex. But if we were to speak of a struggle for
existence WITHIN the same species in the animal kingdom, this
would be the same as if the human soul were to wage war upon
itself in its different parts. This is a very important
truth«, We cannot accept the rule that a struggle
exists within the same animal species, but a struggle for
existence can only take place between DIFFERENT SPECIES; for
the soul of one whole species is the same for all the animals
belonging to it ... and because of this it must control the
single members. In the animal species we can observe mutual
help and assistance, which is simply the expression for the
uniform activity of the species or of the group-soul. And if
you consider all the examples mentioned in the. above-named
interesting book, you will obtain a beautiful insight into the
way in which these group-souls work. We find, for example, that
when a specimen of a certain species of crab has accidentally
fallen on its back, so that it cannot turn around alone, a
number of animals in its neighbourhood come along and help it
to get on its legs again. This mutual support comes from the
soul-organ which the animals have in common. Follow the way in
which beetles help each other when they have to protect a
brood, or tackle a dead mouse, etc., how they unite and carry
out their work together, there you can observe the activity of
the group-soul. It is possible to observe this right up to the
highest animal-species. Indeed, those who have some
understanding for this mutual support and assistance among
animals, also obtain insight into the activity of the group-
souls and an idea of how they work — and just there they
can develop a spiritual vision. The eye acquires sun-like
qualities.
In
the case of man, we have an individualized group-soul. Such a
group-soul dwells in each single human being. We must
therefore apply to the human beings what must be applied
to the different animal species, so that in the case of man it
is possible that one human being fights, against another human
being; an individual strife is possible.
But
let us now consider the purpose of strife, whether battle
exists in the development of the world for the sake of battle.
For what has become of the struggle of existence among the
species? The species that supported each other most of all
survived, and those who fought against each other perished.
This is a law of Nature. Consequently, we must say that in
external Nature development progresses through the fact that
peace replaces the struggle. Where Nature reached a definite
point, where it arrives at the great turning point, we really
find harmony; the peace which is the final outcome of the whole
struggle, can really be found there. Consider, for instance,
that the plants, as species, are also engaged in a
struggle for existence. But consider at the same time how
wonderfully the vegetable kingdom and the animal kingdom
support each other in their common process of development: for
the animal breathes in oxygen and breathes out nitrogen,
whereas the plant breathes in nitrogen and breathes out oxygen.
Thus peace is possible in the universe.
What Nature thus produces through its forces, is destined to be
produced by man consciously, out of his individual nature. Man
progressed gradually and what we designate as the
self-consciousness of our individual soul unfolded little by
little. We must look upon the present situation of the world as
the result of a course of development, and then follow its
tendency towards the future. Go back into the past; there you
will find group-souls at the beginning of human development.
These group-souls were active within small tribes and families,
so that we also come across group-souls in the human beings.
The further back you look into the development of the world,
the more compact you will find the structure of human life, the
people will appear to you harmoniously united. One spirit
seemed to pervade the old village communities; which
afterwards became the primitive State. You can study that when
Alexander the Great
led his armies into battle, it was a
different thing from leading modern armies into war, with their
far more developed individualized will-forces. This must be
seen in a true light.
The
progressive course of civilisation consists in the fact that
the human beings became more and more individualized, more and
more independent and self-conscious. The human race developed
out of groups and small communities. Even as there are
group-souls that guide and control the single animal-species,
so the different nations were guided by the great group-souls.
By his progressive education, the human being more and more
emancipates himself from the guidance of the group-soul
and becomes more and more independent. Whereas formerly he
confronted his fellow-men with more or less hostility, his
independence brought him to the point of standing in the midst
of a battle of life which now takes hold of the whole of
humanity. This is the present situation of the world, and this
is the. destiny particularly of our epoch or race, that
is to say, of the immediate present.
Spiritual science distinguishes in the present
development of the world five great races, the so-called
sub-races. The first sub-race developed in ancient times, in
distant India. This sub-race was to begin with filled by a
culture of priests; It is this culture of priests which gave
our present race its first impulses. It had come over from the
Atlantean culture; this developed in a region which is now the
bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. The leading note was given by
this race and it was followed by the others; now we live within
the fifth sub-race. This subdivision is not taken from
anthropology or from some racial theory, but will be explained
more in detail in my 6th lecture (of the 9th of November 1905:
“FUNDAMENTAL IDEAS OF THEOSOPHY”).
The
fifth race is the one which made us progress furthest of all in
our individual existence, in our individual consciousness.
Christianity was in fact a preparation for the attainment of
this individual consciousness; man had to attain to this
individual consciousness.
If
you go back to the time before Christ, to ancient Egypt where
the gigantic pyramids were built, you will find there an army
of slaves who carried out tasks so difficult and fatiguing that
it is hardly possible to conceive this to-day. But for the
greater part of the time these workmen built the immense
pyramids as a matter of course and they were filled by an
immense peacefulness. They submitted to their work
because at that time the teaching of reincarnation and of karma
was a natural thing. No books tell you about this, but if you
penetrate into spiritual science this will be quite clear to
you. Each slave who toiled until his hands were sore and who
lived in pain and misery, knew: This is one of many lives, and
what I am suffering now must be borne as the consequence of
what I prepared for myself in my former lives! If this is not
the case, I shall experience the effect of this life in
my next; and the one who now orders me about, once stood upon
the same stage on which I am standing now, or he will do so one
day.
With such a mentality, however, it would have been impossible
to develop a self-conscious earthly life, and the High Powers
that lead human destiny as a whole, knew what they were doing,
when for a time — which lasted many thousands of years
— they blotted out the consciousness of Karma and of
Reincarnation. This disappearance was brought about by
the great course of development of Christianity, up to the
present time; it eliminated the power to look up to another
world which brought a harmonising influence, and drew attention
instead to the immense importance of this life upon the
earth.
Though this might have gone too far in its radical application,
it was never the less necessary, for the world's course of
development does not follow logic, but quite different laws.
From earthly life people deduced an eternity of punishment, and
although this is nonsense, the tendency of human development
led to this. Humanity thus learned to grow conscious of this
one earthly existence and the earth, the physical plane, thus
assumed an immense importance for the human being. This had to
come, the earth had to acquire this great significance.
Everything that takes place to-day in the form of a material
conquest of the earthly globe, could only grow out of a
mentality based upon an education cut out for this earth and
emitting the idea of Reincarnation and Karma.
We
now see the result of such an education: man came down
completely to the physical plane during his earthly life; for
the individual soul could only unfold upon the physical plane,
where it is isolated, enclosed within the body and where it can
only look out into the world through the senses, as an isolated
individual existence.
This brought human competition into the human race, in an
ever-growing measure, and the effects of such an isolated
existence. We must not be surprised that to-day the human
race is not by a long way ripe enough to eliminate once more
what was thus drawn in. We saw that the present species of
animals reached their state of perfection by mutual help and
that the struggle for existence only exists between the
species, passing from species to species. But if the human
individuality is upon a higher stage the same as the group-soul
of the animals, then the human soul will only be able to attain
self-consciousness by passing through the same struggles
through which the animal-species passed in Nature. This
struggle will last until the human being will have developed
complete independence. But he is called upon to reach this
consciously; consciously he must attain what exists
outside upon the. physical plane. Along the stages of
consciousness pertaining to his own sphere, he will be guided
towards mutual help and support, because the human race is one
species. The absence of struggle which exists in the animal
kingdom must be attained for the whole human race in the form
of an all-embracing, complete peace. It is not struggle, but
mutual help and support that led the single animal-species, to
their present state of development. The group-soul that lives
in the animal-species as an individual soul is at peace within
itself and a uniform soul. Only man's individual soul has
a special structure within its isolated physical existence.
You
see, the great acquisition which spiritual development
can bring to our soul is to recognise truly the one soul that,
fills the whole human race, the unity with humanity as a whole.
We do not receive this as an unconscious gift, but we must
conquer it for ourselves consciously. It is the task of the
spiritual- scientific world-conception to develop really and
truly this uniform soul that lives within the whole human
race.
This is expressed in our first fundamental principle, to
establish a brotherly league throughout the world,
independently of race, sex, colour, etc. This implies the
recognition of the SOUL that lives in the whole of humanity.
The purification enabling us to discover the same soul also in
our fellow-men must go as far as our passions. In physical life
we are separated, but in the life of the soul we are one with
the Ego of the human race. This can only be grasped in real
life; true life alone can lead us to this. Consequently, only
the development of spiritual life can permeate us with the
breath of this one Soul. Not the people of the present, but
those of the future who will more and more unfold the
consciousness of this One Soul, shall lay the foundation of a
new human race that will devote itself entirely to mutual help.
Our first principle therefore means something quite different
than is generally supposed. We do not fight; but we also do not
oppose war or any other thing, because opposition and battle do
not lead to a higher development. Each animal-species developed
into a special race by coming out of the struggle for
existence. Let us leave fighting to the bellicose who are not
yet mature enough to go in search of the common Soul of the
Human Race in spiritual life. A real Society of Peace is one
that strives after a knowledge of the Spirit, and the
spiritual-scientific current is the true Peace Movement, if is
the Peace Movement in the only form in which it can exist in
practical life, because it envisages what lives within the
human being and what will unfold in the future.
Spiritual life always developed as a stream that came from the
East. The East is the region where spiritual life was fostered.
And here in the West we have the region where the
external. materialistic civilisation was unfolded. That
is why we see in the East the land where people dream and
sleep. But who knows what is going on in the souls of those
whom we call dreamers or sleepers, when they rise up to
worlds which are quite unknown to the peoples of the
West? We must now come out of our materialistic civilisation,
and yet bear in mind everything that surrounds us in the
physical world. We must ascend to the spiritual with
everything which we conquered upon the physical plane.
It
is more than symbolically significant that in England
Darwinism should have found a new representative in Huxley who
deemed it necessary to state out of his western conception:
Nature shows us that the human apes fought against each other
and the strongest remained on the field ... whereas from the
East came the watchword: Support, mutual help, this is the
guarantee for the future!
Here in Central Europe we have a special task: It would be of
no use to use to be one-sidedly Oriental, or one-sidedly
English. We must unite the morning dawn of the East with
the. physical science of the West so that they become, a great
harmony. Then we shall be able to grasp how the idea of the
future may be connected, with the idea of the struggle for
existence.
It
is more than a coincidence that in one of the fundamental
books of Theosophy those who penetrate more deeply into
spiritual life will find light upon the path, for the second
chapter significantly closes with a sentence which coincides
with this idea. “Light upon the Path” does not
contain it as a phrase, for spiritual development will lead us
to a paint where we shall recognise that the beautiful words at
the end of the 2nd chapter in “Light upon the Path”
harmonize with the One Soul that enters the individual human
soul, flashing up and coming to life within it. Those who
immerse themselves in this beautiful little book — which
does not only fill the soul with a content that makes us feel
inwardly devout and good and that gradually gives man real
clairvoyance by the. power of its words — will
discover in the single individual this harmony, when they
experience what is written in every chapter. The final words,
“Peace be with you,” will then descend into the
soul. In the end this will be experienced by the whole of
humanity, for the most significant words will then be:
“Peace be with you.”
This opens out to us the true perspective. Then we must not
only s p e a k of peace, not only envisage it abstractly
as an ideal, make treaties or long for the verdicts of a court
of arbitration, but we must cultivate spiritual life, the
Spiritual. We then awaken within us the strength which will be
poured out over, the whole human race as the source of mutual
help and support. We do not oppose, we do something else: we
foster love, and we know that by fostering love, every
opposition must disappear. We do not set up struggle against
struggle. We set up love against struggle, by developing and
fostering love. This is something positive. By pouring out love
we work upon ourselves, and we establish a society based upon
love. This is our ideal. If this livingly penetrates into our
souls, we shall realize an old saying in a new way, and
this will be in accordance with Christianity. And a new
Christianity, or rather the Christianity of the past, will
arise again for a new humanity. Buddha gave his people a motto
which envisages this. But Christianity contains even more
beautiful words on the unfolding: of love, words which should
be grasped in the right way: Not by strife we overcome strife,
not by hatred we overcome hatred, but strife and hatred can in
reality be overcome by love alone.
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