The Core of Wisdom in the Religions
Berlin, 16th November 1905
If
anybody reads a popular book, about astronomy, for example,
then probably above all because he wants to inform himself
about the mysterious facts of the universe. He finds his
satisfaction, perhaps in such a book if the information makes
sense to his reason, sensation, and feeling. He also tries
perhaps to penetrate into the matters as far as it is possible
to convince himself of such truth, such knowledge, visiting
popular talks in which one makes experiments or observatories,
laboratories et cetera. However, in any case, one fact remains
in force. The human being who reads such things has to assume
that still other human beings exist who have these abilities
with particular research methods, with particular scientific
and technical schooling.
Who
reads Haeckel's Natural Creation History may possibly
say to himself, yes, this makes sense to my intellect, to my
reason and to my feeling. — However, he also becomes
aware of the fact that it requires a lot of work to ascertain
these facts only. Then maybe he assumes that there is a little
group of human beings which deals with the finding of such
facts. In quite a similar way, a big part of humanity probably
behaves towards other writings which want to bring facts of
another field home to the human being, namely towards the
so-called religious scriptures.
It
is no other relation than that I have just described. Also
towards the religious scriptures, the human being asks himself
at first, does this speak convincingly to my sensation,
emotions, and reason? — Also here, he assumes or assumed
in past times at least just as for the external, sensuous
facts, which we possibly get to know from the Natural
Creation History by Haeckel or from popular representations
of astronomy, who know the methods, have the key to ascertain
these facts. Thus, the human being also assumed concerning the
religious documents that there are single human beings who are
able not only to read this truth but also to ascertain it. He
assumed that there are single human beings who have the key of
them and know methods how one can convince oneself of them
directly. Briefly, one has to demand from the religious
scriptures, as from any other representation of facts that they
come from knowledge, from immediate experience.
The
human being assumes that there are single people who ascertain
the described sensuous facts using telescopes, microscopes,
biological and other methods of investigation. Concerning the
communications that are included in the religious documents we
must also assume that there are human beings who know the
methods to penetrate by the experience into the field, which is
described in the religious scriptures. Just as in the
Natural Creation History the field of the sensuous facts
and in the popular talks the field and the facts of astronomy
are portrayed, the field of the supersensible, the invisible,
the spiritual is portrayed in the religious scriptures. If we
who do not research have to offer the same trust, the same
confidence to the religious scriptures, we must assume also
that there are single persons in the world who made it their
particular task to collect experiences in the world of the
supersensible, which forms as spiritual causes the basis of the
sensuous world. The human being is not allowed to behave
differently towards the representation of a natural creation
history and the representation of a supersensible creation
history.
Not
the behaviour of the human beings towards these matters is
different, only the fields are different about which the
concerning writings tell. With it, one says that there must be
knowing people who are able to ascertain the facts in the
religious scriptures. Indeed, up to a certain degree this
consciousness has got lost just in our time. Just as it would
be of little use if anybody were not able to assume that
researchers exist behind the popular scientific
representations, also it would not make much sense basically if
we did not assume that researchers are behind the statements of
the religious scriptures. It is the task of theosophy or
spiritual science today to renew and animate the consciousness
that there is also a research in the supersensible fields.
Spiritual science wants nothing else than to evoke the
consciousness in the larger circles again that it is in such a
way as I have said it now.
One
often translates the word theosophy saying that theosophy is
knowledge, wisdom of God. This translation is not right; at
least it does not describe what theosophy wants. Knowledge of
God is something that the theosophist has in mind as an inkling
at first, as something that signifies the last purpose of all
knowledge. As little as we already have awareness of all means
and abilities of knowledge, just as little as we are allowed to
say that we can have a comprehensive or final knowledge of the
divine primal ground of the universe today. Humanity develops,
advances, also its abilities of knowledge. Perhaps, even the
most advanced people cannot form an idea of the insights into
the mysterious worlds of existence the human being can get on
this way. We have to absolutely realise that European civilised
human beings have another concept of divinity than, for
example, the so-called savages of Africa or the barbarians who
invaded the Roman empire from the north at the beginning of the
Middle Ages.
We
have to assume that a usual educated person also has another
idea of the divine being than Goethe had. Thus, we can also
imagine that the human being advances further, that abilities
develop in him compared with which Goethe's intuitive and
imaginative strength was undeveloped. There we can have an
inkling how much more elated and more magnificent the concept
of God of those human beings will be than ours are. We can say
that we exist, work, and live in Him; however, the knowledge of
Him can never be completed. Therefore, theosophy does not think
that it wants to be knowledge of God. Theosophy is that
knowledge, namely, which attains the deepest, innermost being
of the human being, in contrast to the usual, everyday
knowledge that acquires the external, sensuous, transient
nature of the human being.
Let
us realise once: we see colours, light, we hear tones, smell
and taste, seize objects, feel heat, cold, and so on,
everything with the help of our outer senses. We can also
imagine that for anybody who has no ear no sounding world, but
a dumb world is around him, for anybody who has no eyes no
luminous, no colourful world but a dark one exists. All that is
only a summary of that which the human being can perceive with
the senses. However, the senses consist of material forces that
are handed over to the earth again. What we perceive with them
is also something transient. With it, we have realised the
transient human being. The physicist shows us that a time comes
when the earth is dispersed in countless atoms in which it does
no longer exist. Then also no colours, lights, tones, the
present forms of minerals, plants and animals exist, the human
form itself does no longer exist.
Thus, we have characterised the extent of the transient in the
human being. What this transient human being recognises is
everyday science, is our official science. With it, I say
nothing against this official science. However, this whole
science is nothing else than preoccupation with transient
matters. However, there is still another possibility to look at
the world, namely with those abilities in the human being which
are imperishable. The human being bears an imperishable core in
himself.
The
human being bears an imperishable core that we find in
ourselves by introspection, by self-observation to a new
existence in the times when the earth is dispersed. He carries
this imperishable core to other worlds, and carries that which
he recognised as the fruit of this life on earth to another
world. What the divine core recognises is the content of
spiritual science. Theosophy is not knowledge of other matters
of the human being but knowledge of the other part of the human
being. Hence, theosophy or spiritual science does not come from
such people who want to rise with the usual reason, with the
usual senses to a consideration of the spiritual from the
sensuous, but from such people who have woken the abilities
slumbering in the human being and are thereby able to
investigate the supersensible, the imperishable. The usual
science considers plants, animals, and human beings according
to their usual qualities as they present themselves to the
senses. In addition, the spiritual research looks only at that
which surrounds us in the world. However, it looks at it with
other forces and other abilities and, hence, gets to know the
everlasting and imperishable qualities of the things. This is
theosophy.
Such researchers who have woken such abilities in themselves
are able to ascertain the supersensible facts independently
which the confessions communicate. As well as the naturalists
ascertain in the laboratory and on the observatory using the
strength of the senses and their instruments what you can then
read in the popular books, the researchers of the supersensible
ascertain by their own experience what was communicated to
humanity in the religious documents. In the same sense as we
speak of the scientific laboratories and astronomical
observatories as research sites, in the same sense we speak of
spiritual research sites. We call this spiritual research site
— the term does not matter — the Lodge of the
Masters of Wisdom.
Because all wisdom must be based on a common origin, because
all those who are in a spiritual relationship to these teachers
are penetrated and irradiated by that wisdom, all researches
also go back to the spiritual primary source. They go back, to
the big brotherhood of the most advanced sages who have
recognised what those religious documents announced from own
observation by the means of spiritual research. You may call
this basis of all religions the “spiritual laboratory of
humanity,” or the “great White Lodge,” it is
the same. Now we know what it means. As any popular book goes
back to something that has really been investigated anywhere,
each of the great religions goes back to that which was
investigated in the spiritual sense in this laboratory of the
white brotherhood of humanity. Those who founded the religions
were great, excellent individualities who experienced the
lessons and instructions of that brotherhood in this big
spiritual laboratory. They were introduced into the spiritual
life, which forms the basis of all phenomena, and were then
sent from there to the various peoples to speak to them in
their language and according to their characters.
One
taught a uniform ground of knowledge, an ancient truth in that
spiritual laboratory, and it is possible that those who advance
further by internal development learn the methods of research
and can use them as Haeckel and other naturalists used the
sensuous methods. It is possible that these find access to the
researchers of the spiritual laboratory, that they get to know
from which central site the great sages came who went to the
south and the west, and brought the great messages to humanity.
It is possible that they find the way to those from whom they
can learn how all that has come about.
The
ancient religious teachers were sent out from the same site,
the great founders of a religion who brought the first messages
to India the echo of which the European researchers admired so
much when they faced the wisdom, which is contained in the old
Brahmanism. The same site of wisdom sent out the various
Buddhas who brought their messages to the single members of the
Asian religions. It sent out the Egyptian Hermes, too, who
founded that marvellous religion about which anybody said to
Solon (~640-~560 B.C., Athenian statesman, lawmaker and poet):
what you know is like the knowledge of children compared with
the wisdom of our initiates.
Pythagoras (~570-~495 B.C., philosopher, and mathematician)
came out of it, the great teacher of the Greek people. That man
came out of it who illuminates the future, whose religion
becomes more and more comprehensive and spiritual, Jesus
himself. There we have the spiritual connection, and we see how
the different religions point back to the central site where
the loftiest human wisdom is cultivated. Who looks at the
different religions can convince himself that their qualities
point to such a central site. Our materialistic cultural
researchers have also often recognised resemblances of the
different confessions. Zarathustrism, the ancient Indian
culture, Buddhism, even the religion that lived in the old
America contain all components in which marvellous accordance
exists. However, one has believed that this accordance comes
from external reasons. One has not penetrated deeply enough
because one had lost the key of it. Who gets involved, however,
really in the core of truth of the religions can obtain the
conviction concerning the religions that the accordance cannot
come from the outside, but that it arises from a common core of
wisdom, and that they were differently organised considering
the single peoples and the different epochs.
If
we look at Asia, we still find the remnants of an ancient
religion at first, which one cannot understand, actually, as
religion in the modern sense. We find this religion in the
strange culture of the Chinese. I do not speak about the
religion of Confucius, not about that which spread as Buddhism
in India and China, but I would like to speak of the remains of
the ancient Chinese religion, of Taoism. This religion points
the human being to Tao.
One
translates Tao as the way or the goal, the destination.
However, one gets no clear idea of the being of this religion
if one simply sticks to this translation. For a big part of
humanity, Tao expresses and already expressed the highest to
which the human beings could look up. They thought that the
world, the whole humanity would attain it once, the loftiest
that the human being bears in himself as a seed and that
develops once as a ripe flower from the innermost human nature.
Tao signifies a deep, concealed soul ground and an elated
future at the same time. Somebody who knows what it concerns
not only pronounces it but also thinks of it with shy
reverence. Taoism is based on the principle of development. It
says, what is around me today is a stage, which will be
overcome. I must be clear in my mind that this development in
which I am has an aim that I develop to an elated aim and that
a force lives in me that urges me to arrive at this destination
Tao.
If
I feel this big strength in myself and if I feel that with me
all beings strive for this goal, then this strength is to me
the steering force which blows from the wind against me, which
sounds towards me from the stone, which shines towards me from
the flash, which sounds towards me from the thunder. It appears
in the plant as force of growth, in the animal as sensation and
perception. This force produces form by form repeatedly up to
that elated goal by which I recognise myself as one with the
whole nature, which streams into me and streams from me with
every breath, which is the symbol of the loftiest developing
spirit that I feel as life. I feel this force as Tao. —
One did not speak in this religion of a transcendent god at
all, one did not speak about anything that is beyond the world,
but of something that gives strength to the progress of
humanity.
The
human being felt Tao intensely when he was still connected with
the divine original source, in particular in the Atlantean age.
Our ancestors still had no such advanced reason, no such
intelligence like the modern humanity. In return, however, they
had a more dreamlike consciousness, an instinctively ascending
imagination and their life of thought was in such a way that
they were almost innumerate. Imagine the dream life, but
increased, so that it makes sense and is not chaotic, and
imagine a humanity from whose souls such pictures arise that
announce the sensations which are in the own soul, which echo
everything that is external round us. One has to imagine the
soul world of these prehistoric human beings quite unlike ours.
The human being today strives for forming thoughts and images
of the environment as exactly as possible. However, the
prehistoric human being formed symbolic images, which appeared
in him full of life.
If
you face a person today, you try above all to form an idea of
him whether he is a good or a bad, a clever or a silly person,
and you try to get an idea very soberly which corresponds to
the external human being. This has never been the case with the
prehistoric Atlantean. A picture arose in him, not a rational
concept. If he faced a bad human being, a picture arose in him,
which was vague and obscure. However, this perception did not
become a concept. Nevertheless, he acted on this picture. If he
had a bright, beautiful picture before himself, which appeared
dreamlike in his soul, then he knew that he could trust in such
a being. He got fear of a picture if it arose in black, red, or
brown colours in him. He did not yet grasp realities with
reason and intellect, but they appeared as inspirations. He
felt as if the divinity working in these pictures was also in
him. He spoke of the divinity, which announced itself in the
blowing of the wind, in the whispering of the woods and in the
pictures of his soul life if he felt the urge to look up to an
elated human future. He called this Tao.
The
present human being who replaced this ancient humanity relates
to the spiritual powers differently. He has lost the strength
of the immediate beholding, which was more vague and twilighted
than ours in certain respects. He has attained the
developmental stage of the intellectual and rational ideation,
which is higher in certain respects, however, also lower in
certain respects. The modern human being thereby outranks the
prehistoric human being because he owns a sharp, pervasive
intellect; but he is no longer feeling the lively connection
with the divine Tao forces of the world. That is why he has the
world as it reveals itself in his soul, and on the other side
his intelligence. The Atlantean felt the pictures living in
him. The modern human being hears and sees the external world.
These two things, outside and inside, are opposing each other,
and he is no longer feeling the connection of both.
This is the great sense of the human development. Since the
land masses have risen again, after the floods of the oceans
had flooded the continents, since that time humanity longs for
finding the connection of inner soul life and external sensuous
world again. That is why the word religare (Latin) —
religion is justified. It means nothing else than to combine
again what was connected once and is separated now, the world
and the ego. The different forms of the confessions are nothing
else than the means, than the ways taught by the great sages to
find this connection again. Therefore, they are formed so
differently to become understandable in this or that form to
the human beings of any cultural level.
The
ancient Indian had an excessively growing plant world around
himself, which made him dreamy in his soul and did not make it
necessary to produce external tools and external culture. He
had to get religion in another form than the modern human
being. If the human being lives quietly, other images appear in
his soul, than if he works with coarse tools and must be
technically active. The external nature is different in the
different areas of the earth, and the inner soul life of the
human beings is different, too. Because the connection should
be sought by the different religions, it is only a matter of
course that the masters had to determine the way of finding the
connection differently for different peoples and different
times.
The
first way to determine this connection, to look for the ancient
Tao of Atlantis, is the religion of the ancient India. This
received the instructions of the holy Rishis, great initiates
in ancient times whose elated teachings still go on sounding in
the marvellous Vedic poems and in the Vedanta philosophy of the
ancient Brahmans, which extends to the loftiest levels of human
understanding. It was announced to humanity in broad outlines
there that there is something that as a uniform world ground
serves everything as a base. One called it Brahman,
Parabrahman, Bhagavad and so forth.
What we find in the Vedas, which are only an echo of the
original old teachings, shows us how great and stupendous and,
at the same time, how sublime the concepts were by which that
subtle spirituality attempted to reach the divine original
source of being. One could circumscribe it as follows: once the
spiritual hosts assembled round the original being and asked it
who it was, and it said, I am not that who I am if I am able to
define myself by anything other than by myself. If you define a
thing, you look for a higher concept. You define the single
animal beings, the lion, the eagle, the dog, the wolf, while
you change over to the superior concepts of the cat species,
the dog species, the bird species et cetera. You define the
single winds, while you change over to the general concept of
wind. Thus, anything in the world has its name that indicates
what stands above it. I, however — the Brahman said to
the spirit hosts — I have no name which stands above me.
I am the I-am.
From this original source, the human being started; he shall
come to it again. There was also development in the ancient
India. Development was the magic word by which the human being
felt his destination. There must have been anything, as the
confession says, that leads to the point on which the human
being stands today. Once there must have been a longing that
leads him from the divine origin down into this world, to the
necessary stage on which we stand today. As true and inevitable
as it was that there was such a yearning and desire which leads
into the world, as true it is that there must be a force that
leads the human being again out of it, so that he brings the
fruits of this world back again to the divine original source.
This force is the overcoming of the desire by the divine
desires, the purification of the destinations by the divine
destination.
Now
it was something else that was felt as a religion than in the
ancient times of which we have spoken. Now, it was no longer
the god who revealed himself to the inside, now it was the god
revealing himself from the outside, because the human being had
to create an abyss between himself and the outside world. The
word obviously replaces the immediate life and the sheer
strength, and Veda means nothing else than “word.”
By this word, advanced, wise human beings announced the origin
and destination of the human being, which forms the basis of
the universe. One had another idea of this word in ancient
times than today if one speaks of the word.
I
would like to try to give you an idea of that which one felt
speaking of the Veda, of the Logos, and later of the Word. The
human being gives names to the things. He says, this is this
and that is that. However, if his mouth names the things, it is
no arbitrariness, but these are the same names, which once the
divine original soul of humanity pronounced from itself and
thereby created the things. The human being sees the things and
pronounces the names afterwards. However, once the original
soul spoke the names first and according to the word, the
things formed. This is why there an original soul was in the
ancient times, which expressed the words of creation. The words
became things and the human soul afterwards found the words out
of the things, which the god had put into them.
It
revived the sleeping words out of the things. The human being
behaved to the divinity this way where one had religious
sensation, the sensation towards the word, which lived with the
ancient Indians really. Therefore, the opinion combined with
the word that there are human beings who are able to look
deeper into nature and the being of the world, who are able to
directly echo in their words and announce what once the
divinity breathed out of itself into the world. One perceived
such human beings as initiates. The ancient Indian considered
his Rishis not as usual human beings, but as such beings who
had reached the level of immortality already in the physical
body and live not in the sensory world, but with their souls in
the higher heavenly world and have contact with the gods, with
the spiritual beings who form the basis of the world. While one
looked up at the human beings who had developed the Tao in
themselves in this way, one was aware that every human being
would also attain this stage once.
The
doctrine of rebirth, of the repeated return was combined with
it. Buddha did not speak out of his imagination but out of his
perception when he spoke to his believers and said, I see back
at one, two, three, four, ten, hundred lives. — He spoke
of these hundred lives as the human being speaks of one life.
In these many lives, he obtained everything that enabled him to
speak no longer about the experience of the sensuous world, but
about the experience of the supersensible worlds and to bring
the message of these supersensible worlds to humanity. This
supersensible knowledge is an original component of all
religions.
If
we put ourselves once again in the peoples feeling the Tao.
They not only tried to unite in the religion with the divine,
but they also considered themselves as embodiments, as covers
of the divine. This was their immediate consciousness. There
were human beings who could not think correctly; they were not
as clever as we are, but had a direct consciousness that they
surrounded a divine core as a fruit surrounds the pit. They saw
and felt this core, and they looked through it at the past and
the future. They thereby felt the doctrine of reincarnation in
themselves.
At
that time, the immigrants found such a consciousness. At that
time, the ancient Indian teachers who gave the first Brahma
culture to the Indians still found a lively view of
re-embodiment. Hence, all religions, which started from this
site, have the teaching of reincarnation. One felt the Tao in
its different creation of human activity. It is only a matter
of course that the human being of our period who has separated
his soul life from the big external powers could not overlook
so many lives, but only saw that he represented this limited
soul life. From every next stage, which extends northbound then
— starting from the ancient Persian religion — the
consciousness of the fact disappeared that the human soul is a
cover around the core reincarnating forever. The consciousness
confined itself to the zenith between birth and death and to
how within birth and death “religare“, religion,
has to be sought for. There one felt the contrast of a duality
instead of the unity for the first time.
Whereas the Taoist human being of the Atlantean age felt his
connection with the original source vividly, and the Brahmanic
human being still tried to rouse the Brahman, which is thought
outside and within the human being as the same, the human being
felt a certain duality, a dualism in Persia first. He felt that
which has originated from the human being, as an inside and
outside, as an original ground and present human figure. He
looked up to the original ground from which everything had
risen round him, he looked up to the word from which plant,
animal, and human being had arisen according to the physical
figure. However, he still felt something else: he felt that
anything was therein that did not be in accordance with the
original harmony that has to become only again like the
original divine. He felt the latter as renunciation from the
original divine. He faced the contrast, the duality of light
and darkness or of male and female. They represent the original
ground and that which expects the human soul in the material
compression. This is the second level of human development.
The
third stage faces us in the prehistorical and historical Egypt;
it is preserved for us as the Book of the Dead. There
the human being felt a third aspect besides the duality. He saw
a light, the sun, illuminating the earth and saw it penetrating
this with its beams and enlivening the seeds and beings
slumbering in the earth, and saw how the primal ground had to
be fertilised. We find this triad original ground, conception,
new life, symbolised as Osiris, the sun, the god of light; as
Isis, the matter, and as Horus, the life developing from it.
These were three Egyptian divinities. The triad appears here.
This triad becomes a basic core in all later confessions.
As
trinity the divinity faces us in the confessions where it is
called Father, Word and Holy Spirit — Isis, Osiris, Horus
— atma(n), buddhi, manas. We find the triad everywhere in
the religions now. We have recognised the reason. It faces us
with pictures or words in Asia, in Egypt with the priests, but
also in the Greek-Roman world, with Augustine, then as nuances
in the Middle Ages.
If
we have got a bigger perfection in the future, that strength
will have appeared as a forming one to which we owe our
existence and which works today as a concealed primal ground of
the being in us. One felt this as the divine, the inexpressible
of the human being that is identical with the first essential
component of the tripartite world. One felt then what lives in
the human being, what strives for this highest as the word
active in the present, the son, who originated from the father
who rests unutterably in him. As true as this Father's ground
forms the future, more perfect human being, he created the
developing son, the buddhi, the second human member, which is
not yet perfect but is the reason why we strive for perfection.
This is the second being. Also in the past this original ground
worked. As well as the sensuous human being was created by the
universal primal ground in the past, also that which has
already assumed and given off shape in him has something that
has likewise arisen in the past from the primal ground and is
already developed now.
Let
us look at the universe, how it makes itself perceptible as
colours, tones, smells and tactile sensations, it streamed from
the inexpressible primal ground. In such respect, we may call
this primal ground, which appears to us, the creatures, spirit,
also in the Christian sense. However, the creation of the world
is not finished. The world is a germ, something that has a soul
that has the impulse of the future in itself. This is the son.
Hence, one called this striving the Word, Veda, Edda. The third
one is a strength in us that becomes discernible in the future
in us: the Father's ground of all being deep set in any of our
souls.
Feeling this vividly means feeling the trinity, making it the
being of the entire internal imagination. Persona
(Latin) signifies mask or external figure, cover. Hence,
the religion shows this core of truth, which I have just
explained, in three different masks, in three persons. God has
three different persons. That means that he appears in three
different masks: Spirit, Word, and Father. With it, we have
touched that confession at the same time that then led to
Christianity. If you understand this really, you find this
truth also expressed in it. If you correctly understand the
deepest Gospel, that of John, you find the same consciousness
of religare, of the connection with a higher consciousness that
appeared in human form. It is the teachings of the incarnate
Logos, the incarnate divinity, the present divinity that lives
in brotherliness with both forms of the divinity, with the
active Spirit coming from the past, working in the present, and
the Father creating in the present into the future. Thus, the
Son originated from the Father, is connected with the Spirit at
the same time, and that is why the Son is the great
preannouncement that will lead to the Father.
The
words no one comes to the Father except by me (John
14:5), by the divine essence of the present, point to this. He
says that he sends the Spirit again, the essence of that which
is already in the world. As true as Christ said, I will be
with you always, to the end of time (Matthew 28:20), it is
also true that he will come again that the whole Christianity
has been a preparation of the new figure. The Spirit is there
provisional, the knowledge, the science, the religions were
taught provisionally as they were taught in the past. The
religious documents were preserved to us and now the
theologians try to interpret them and to teach according to
them. This is the way now theology works in place of wisdom.
Theosophy means wisdom and truth, theology means the doctrine
of wisdom and truth. As well as theology originated from
spiritual science, theology has to go back to spiritual
science.
I
have often drawn your attention to the condition of former
research, and that then a reversal took place. Once one trusted
in the books of the old sages, in Plato, Aristotle and others
at all sites where one taught. Researchers were not there, but
interpreters. I have that strange time in mind about which
theology tells that one could no longer understand later when
one learnt to read in the book of nature. The confidence in the
written was almost absolute. If, for example, a naturalist had
stated that the nerves do not start from the heart, but from
the brain, one said, nevertheless, Aristotle says differently,
and Aristotle is right, although one saw the demonstrated
phenomena. Today in wide sections of the population, the
consciousness does not yet exist that there is a key that there
are research sites and research methods that ascertain the
facts of the spiritual worlds as the observatories or the
laboratories ascertain the facts of the sensuous world.
Since thirty years it has been announced again that there is
such a thing like a spiritual central site of humanity, and
with it the theosophists say nothing more unbelievable, than if
Haeckel says: this is in that and this way. — If Haeckel
argues anything, we assume that he has found the proofs of it
in his research. We assume also that the statements in the
religious documents were proved by the facts to be true, and
that there are persons among us which themselves can go back
again to the sources. Theosophy or spiritual science means
drawing the attention to the spiritual researchers and to the
central site. It speaks again from experience about the matters
of the supersensible, as those did who originally created the
religious documents, from their inner experience. As well as
400 years ago, the natural sciences experienced a revival,
theosophy or spiritual science should today signify a revival
of the immediate spiritual research.
Thus, we are put in the necessity to return to that core of
truth, which I tried to outline from the Tao up to the
appearance of the great saviour of humanity. I wanted to
generate awareness of the relation of spiritual science to the
central point, the core of truth in the different religions.
Those who have not yet approached spiritual science maybe come
again to hear more. However, some may also say that it is a
kind of neo-Buddhism, a new religion, something oriental; it
wants to bring in something foreign to our world. However, this
is not the case; this would not be spiritual-scientific. Only
those speak in such ways who do not have the will to listen to
that which spiritual science says. The aspiration of spiritual
science is to look for the core of truth in our external
confessions, to go back to the sources from which the books
existing today were created. It is necessary to go back to the
facts, then the books are better understood, then new life
flows in humanity.
Christianity is to be understood as a religion that has to
prepare humanity for the future, as the religion of the Son by
which one finds the Father on the same ways. At the same time,
it is one of the most important tasks of spiritual science to
get this religion across. Therefore, it searches for the core
of truth in all religions to find it in our own. We recognised
that religion originated not from childish images, but from the
highest wisdom, from spiritual research. However, we also
learnt that one can abreast with science and be, nevertheless,
a religious person. If this knowledge finds an echo again, the
lively feeling awakes for that which one of the theosophists,
Goethe, called into the world more than hundred years ago like
a program, like a beautiful and marvellous saying to humanity.
I would like to close with this saying today, confessing that
there can be no true science, no deeper human observation,
which shows the religious truth as something childish; and that
all religions contain as a core of our highest destination:
Who has science and art,
Has religion, too;
Who does not have both,
Should have religion.
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