LECTURE SIX
Yesterday
we saw how the mood of soul, towards which in this age of the
Consciousness Soul we have to aim, was in a certain sense prepared
historically. Let us keep clearly before us the relevant situation in
the external world. We may say: The year 333 after Christ represents
a kind of equilibrium (see diagram), distinctly perceptible in the
course of historical events, but figuring very little in external
history, for the simple reason that affairs revolve round it, and the
actual pivot —
this holds good even in mechanical motion — does not belong to
the system that is moving. Take a pair of scales. You see the
movement of the scales and of the beam, but the pivot itself is
an ideal point — something we cannot really see. Yet it is
obviously the most important part of the balance and must
essentially have proper support.
It is
particularly necessary for us to grasp what happened in this
important year 333, as little noticed by the external world as is the
pivot in a pair of scales. The year 333 is indeed the mid-point of
the fourth post-Atlantean epoch, the midpoint of that
significant epoch which ran its course from the founding of Rome, 747
years before the Mystery of Golgotha, until approximately 1413, when
the Graeco-Latin epoch came to an end and was followed by the epoch
which will last until the middle of the fourth
millennium —
the epoch of the Consciousness Soul. When we consider outward
events, this midpoint of 333 is as little apparent as the
mid-point of a balance. But we could indicate something else, 333
years later — the year 666. Of this year we can say that what
later developed as the scientific method of thinking was already then
evident in the activities of the Academy of Jundí
Sábúr, which were later blunted by Mohammedanism. We tried
yesterday to follow up how a certain mood of spirit, or mood of soul,
spread among the people
of Southern Europe — that typically scientific mood which still
pervades modern natural science and has extended very widely into
modern ways of thought. This was 333 years from the time when people
still only looked back to the old days, as Julian the Apostate did.
Up to 666 is 333 years; if we then go back and take the other side of
the scales, 333 years earlier, we come to the preparations for the
Mystery of Golgotha through the birth of Christ Jesus.
Fundamentally,
we have been considering these events in such
a way as to ask: What would have happened if the Mystery of Golgotha
had never taken place? For the whole founding of the Academy of
Jundí Sábúr and all that it brought about, was
independent of the Mystery of Golgotha. The Schools of Philosophy in
Athens had already come into contact with Christianity, but Justinian
had closed them in 529. A purely Greek wisdom passed through Syria to
Jundí Sábúr, in the new Persian kingdom. And
everything else bound up with this, in so far as it was not blunted
and was actually intended by Jundí Sábúr, was thought
out without reference to Christianity, without reference to the
Mystery of Golgotha. In reality, nothing has happened since the very
beginning of our era without the working of the impulse of the
Mystery of Golgotha; but of course many things have been aimed at.
In fact we
may say that even the impulses which were active in non-Christian
souls during the fourth century, at the time of the turning-point,
can be seen in their essentials only if we ask: What would
have become of
the evolution of mankind in the West if the Mystery of Golgotha had
never taken place? This can indeed be studied, even historically
— for example, in the case of Augustine, who offered both
sides for later people to contemplate. At first he is quite independent
of Christianity, seeking to find in Manichaeism an answer to the problems
that weighed on him, and only afterwards is drawn to Christianity.
But we can
go further back and then a significant question arises. Suppose we
were to look at human evolution during the time of the Mystery of
Golgotha, and ask: How was it in all the regions untouched by the
occurrence in Palestine of the Mystery of Golgotha? (Strictly
speaking, outside the narrow circle of Christ's activity, this would
apply to all the regions of the earth.) How did people look on
things, especially in Rome, when the impulse of the Mystery of
Golgotha spread later on, and became particularly effective?
This
question is of quite special importance just now; it is truly no mere
theoretical question: How were things in Rome when the Mystery of
Golgotha took place in Palestine? For presently we
shall see how
similar — but in another sphere — our immediate present
is to the time of the Mystery of Golgotha. We should never forget
something that is easily forgotten when we look back to that time: we
must repeatedly feel our way back in imagination to the culture of
the old Roman Empire, where people were ignorant of the fact that
over in Palestine a solitary human personality had arisen with a few
followers, a personality who went through a certain life, suffered
death by crucifixion, and with whom was linked the knowledge, the
important knowledge, that men in the future will have concerning
birth and death. We must increasingly accustom ourselves to the
idea that although this event, which to-day sheds its rays as a fully
risen sun into the history of man, was enacted at the beginning of
our era, it developed at that time in such a way that throughout the
world there was little recognition, either inwardly or
externally, of this Palestinian Mystery of Golgotha. Hence the
question must be asked: How was it looked upon, especially in Rome?
Now we
shall understand each other better if we take our start from the
desire that was present later, in 666, among those who were
particularly influential in bringing the Academy of Jundí
Sábúr to the fore. As I said yesterday,
the desire was
to give men through revelation, received on an Ahrimanic path, that
which can only later be acquired by the Consciousness Soul through
the efforts of men themselves. The year 666 was still in the age of
the Intellectual or Mind Soul, when men could not by their own
efforts think in such a way as to be conscious of everything. So the
desire was to give them prematurely something that was intended to
come thousands of years later. The whole thing, however, was
completely reversed at the very beginning of our era, during
the age when the Mystery of Golgotha itself was enacted. Three
hundred and thirty-three years after 333, the wish was to give men
something belonging to the future, something destined for them only
in the future. Three hundred and thirty-three years before 333, just
at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, there was a wish to force men
back to a condition which in the normal way had entered human
evolution thousands of years earlier.
It is very
difficult, my dear friends, to speak of these things, for the very
reason that history, which itself has a history, has developed in
such a way that in these matters people have actually been driven
into error by history. Happenings in the southern districts of
Europe —
happenings with important consequences — have been
covered up; people have not been allowed to know about them. In the
history books we have a picture, for instance, of the personality of
Augustus, the first Roman Emperor.
[See
Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha,
lecture 5.]
But in what sense he was an important, an incisively effective personality
— of this no understanding is called forth, intentionally from
a certain side, but for the most part unintentionally. For the
Emperor Augustus was the centre-point of quite conscious Roman
endeavours to bring about a world-wide form of civilisation that
would cast a veil over all that the Intellectual or Mind Soul had
brought to mankind — over everything that men had been able to
achieve in the way of culture by their own efforts since 747
B.C.
Above all, people were to be limited to what they had acquired for
themselves prior to the age of the Intellectual or Mind Soul —
that is, in the age particularly of the Sentient Soul, in Egypto-Chaldean
times.
Thus
whereas in 666 the sages of the Jundí Sábúr Academy
wanted to bring to an earlier time something that was meant to come
later, in the days of the Emperor Augustus there was to be an
extinguishing of that which men could acquire in their own epoch.
Instead, they were to have, in its ancient glory and significance,
that which had been proper to the people of earlier times, the time
of ancient Persia, and of the Egypto-Chaldean culture. And when,
through all the undergrowth heaped up as history, we look back
at the reality, we must ask: Among certain Romans there was a
deliberate wish to preserve something from the past, and this project
was defeated by the Christian impulse —
what exactly did the Romans want to preserve?
It was
above all of a twofold nature. First, there was the wish to preserve
a feeling for the meaning of the old cults, those cults which
thousands of years before had been customary among the
Egyptians, in Asia Minor, and deeper into the heart of Asia. The aim
was to render inoperative the capacity for intelligent understanding
and to allow only the Sentient Soul to come to fruition. This was to
be done by presenting all the significant, sublime, powerful rituals
which had proved effective in earlier times, before people had
acquired intelligence and when the cults of the Gods had arisen
out of the Sentient Soul, so that men should not be left without
Gods. There were great rituals then, full of significance, designed
to take the place of
reflection —
rituals which, according to old, atavistic customs, were to arouse
the soul in a half hypnotic condition to a living experience of the
Gods and of blissfulness through the Divine, It was this experience
that some people in Rome wished to infuse with new life.
We can get
to know the specific character of this by observing the finer
points of distinction between the Roman and the Greek outlooks —
although Greek culture was then approaching its outward decline. This
feeling, which the Emperor Augustus in
particular, with his powerful initiation-impulse turned towards
the past, wished to introduce into Rome — all this was unknown
over in Greece. The Greeks had no wish to bring back the past; they
preferred to keep their eyes on what they could understand and could
feel at one with. And if the Christian impulse had not come at
a quite early date, and if it had not worked very quickly against the
intentions of Augustus and his followers, the old rituals would have
been revived in Rome with a much greater display of brilliance than
they actually were.
Let us,
therefore, to begin with, hold fast to this: it was the intention of
Augustus and his supporters that there should go out from Rome —
just as later a prophetic wisdom was intended to go out from
the Academy of Jundí Sábúr — a powerful
ritual which was to spread a haze over the whole world so that the
possibility of acquiring the Intellectual Soul, as well as the later
Consciousness Soul, would be ruled out. Had the Academy of Jundí
Sábúr straightway given man the Consciousness Soul in
order to cut off what was to come later — to cut off
Spirit-Self, Life-Spirit, Spirit-Man — Augustus and his
supporters in Rome would not have wanted the Consciousness Soul
ever to be acquired. They would have wished — 333 years before
the turning-point — to blot out all possibility of the
Intellectual or Mind Soul, and to place before mankind powerful
rituals, intended to lead the soul to a consciousness of God. This
was one side, meant to be introduced in accordance with the wishes of
the initiate Augustus.
But the
Intellectual or Mind Soul has always two aspects. One of its aspects
tends towards the Sentient Soul. You know that we have the Sentient
Soul, the Intellectual or Mind Soul and the Consciousness Soul. The
first to be developed was the Sentient Soul; its evolution came to an
end in 747
B.C.
The Intellectual or Mind Soul evolved from 747 to about
A.D.
1413. These are approximate dates. Then follows the age of the
Consciousness Soul. Now the Intellectual or Mind Soul inclines
on one side towards the Sentient Soul, when it wishes to permeate
itself with the past, as we have seen. This tendency is what
Augustus wanted to infuse with fresh life. What then is brought about
by this forcing back of the Intellectual or Mind Soul to the
standpoint of the Sentient Soul — what becomes of the part that
inclines towards the future, towards the Consciousness Soul?
What becomes of the more intelligent inclination? We have to
ask this question, and in the age of Augustus it had to be raised as
a great cultural question. What happens if the Intellectual or Mind
Soul is now allowed to develop further; what becomes of the human
soul that wishes to strive towards the Consciousness Soul? A striving
backwards towards the Sentient Soul through a renewal of old rituals
is satisfying to men, more than is permissible for their normal
development — but what is provided to meet a striving towards
the Consciousness Soul? In this connection a certain word is
always avoided, in order that a particular fact of human evolution
since that time may not be seen in its true light: we need only
mention this word and we shall understand what is involved. For this
other side of the soul, rhetoric is
provided — rhetoric which gives mere husks in place of
permeating the soul with substance, with inner content; mere husks
which, where living concepts should hold sway, are concerned with the
forms of words and the construction of sentences.
Yes,
indeed, my dear friends, under the influence of Augustus something
developed in Rome very different from anything experienced earlier in
Greece. However similar the Roman attire was to the Greek, a Roman in
the folds of his toga no longer felt as a Greek had felt; the toga
was looked on as a garment meant to be decorative. A certain glamour
reflected from the exaltation of the old rituals is there in
the fall of the folds of the Roman toga, quite in contrast to the
Greek garment. And a strong distinction would be felt — if
only people had a feeling for such distinctions — between
Demosthenes, who stuttered, but still expressed the Greek
nature, though not in rhetoric, and the Roman rhetoricians, among
whom there was no stutterer, but men who well understood how to
formulate the order of words and the structure of sentences.
From this
Augustan age came the wish to give mankind, on the one hand, the
incomprehensible old cults; there was indeed an endeavour to
keep people from understanding them, even from asking what anything
in the ritual meant This attitude is still prevalent in all sorts of
realms even to-day. There are Freemasons who say the most curious
things. For instance, one says to them: “You
have an extensive symbolism in which very much is concealed, but
modern Freemasons do not bother about the real meaning of the
symbols.” One may say this to people who answer: “That is
just what I find so beautiful about Freemasonry to-day; everyone can
think what he likes about the symbols.” A person of this kind
mostly thinks what his simplicity allows him to think, and this is
far, very far, from the profound significance of the symbols —
a significance that leads us deeply into the hearts and souls of men.
This is
what it was intended to bring about in Rome at that time — a
cult with no questions asked as to what it all meant, no attempt to
approach the ritual with intelligence and will. The other pole,
necessarily connected with this, is rhetoric devoid of content
— rhetoric which does not take effect only in speeches, but
which as rhetoric went into the laws of Justinian, and afterwards
flooded the Western world as so-called Roman law. This Roman law
bears the same relation to what should be active in souls approaching
the development of the Consciousness Soul as rhetoric does to a
soul-warming substance of speech. The frigidity inherent in Roman law
has been the cause throughout the world of Roman law being related to
warmth of soul in the same way that rhetoric is related to what is
spoken out of the warmth and light of the soul — even if spoken
with a stuttering tongue.
My dear
friends, the fact that nothing willed by Augustus in this connection
came fully to fruition was a result of the influence of the
Mystery of Golgotha flowing in from the East. Yet just as the
aftermath of the Academy of Jundí Sábúr has been
preserved in our present-day science, so has the after-effect
of what Augustus aimed at been preserved. It could no more come
to fruition in the form he intended than could the Academy of
Jundí Sábúr achieve its purpose. It was simply the
supersensible that was banished from the impulse of the Academy of
Jundí Sábúr, and this is still evident in the
scientific attitude of our own time. But the supersensible was
driven out also from what Augustus aimed at — at least the
grander supersensible element through which he wished to bring about
a real renewal of the old religious feeling of the Sentient Soul. The
supersensible was driven out, and of the rest — which in the
time of the Mystery of Golgotha was founded chiefly in Rome —
there remained only Catholicism, the Catholic Church; for the
Catholic Church is the continuation, the true continuation, of
the Augustan age. The fact that the Catholic Church has taken the
form it has is the result of its not being founded upon the Mystery
of Palestine, not upon the Mystery of Golgotha. Only a breath
of this has passed over it. The most active element that runs through
the Catholic Church is at best its ritual. And into this ritual there
are woven only some threads derived from the Mystery of Golgotha; in
its forms and ceremonies it has come over from the age of the
Sentient Soul.
At the
centre of this ritual there is something truly great, truly holy,
because it brings the holiness that from primeval times has been
woven into mankind (everything has its great and powerful aspects and
needs only not to be developed one-sidedly), but we can relate
ourselves rightly to this central point, the sacrifice of the Mass,
which is an image of the highest Mysteries of all time, only if
new life is brought into what is dead and was intended for the age of
the Sentient Soul. The new life must come from all that Spiritual
Science has to say in our modern lime concerning the Mystery of
Golgotha. All that is found again, in the normal course of human
evolution, by the researches of Spiritual Science —
all this can be carried into the designs of Augustus, in so far as
these have been preserved by Catholicism. In the same way, that
which Spiritual Science can bring from the spiritual world must be
carried into what has remained — physically blunted — of
the aims of the Jundí Sábúr Academy. Spirit must be
drawn into science.
Spirit
must be drawn down into all that is enacted in the sacraments, to
which men must turn again.
The
weighty, momentous content of what I have just said will be taken in
only by those who feel —
and anyone who has studied Spiritual Science for more than a short
time can fed it — how like our age is, in terms of what lives
for the most part unconsciously in our souls, to the time when the
Mystery of Golgotha was approaching mankind. I have often mentioned,
and you will find it brought out in the first of my Mystery Plays,
The Portal of Initiation,
that as at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha men stood facing the
turning-point of the fourth post-Atlantean age, the year 333, so we
to-day are facing a turning-point. The time is rather shorter because
the movements of the higher Spirits change in velocity; we cannot
reckon that to-day we have 333 years again before the turning-point.
It changes somewhat in the course of time, this speed with which the
various separate Spirits of the higher Hierarchies move on.
Thus to-day, in the first third of the twentieth century, we are
facing the approach of an important event for mankind. And all the
convulsions, all the catastrophes, are nothing else than the
earth-shaking occurrences which precede a great spiritual event of
the twentieth century. It is not an event now in the physical world,
but an event that will come to men as a kind of enlightenment,
reaching them before the first third of the twentieth century has run
out. If the phrase is not misunderstood, one can call it the
reappearance of Christ Jesus.
[See
True Nature of the Second Coming.
Two lectures given at Carlsbad and Stuttgart in January and March,
1910.]
But Christ Jesus will not appear in external life, as at
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, but will work in man and be felt
supersensibly. He is present in the etheric body. Those who are
prepared can constantly experience Him in visions, constantly receive
His counsel; in a certain sense they can enter into a direct personal
relation with Him. All this that lies before us is comparable with
what the Romans felt prior to the Augustan age, as the physically
real Mystery of Golgotha that was approaching.
But, my
dear friends, for things such as these one must have the true
feeling. In face of various external phenomena that have come about,
and have finally led to this terrible world-catastrophe, we must feel
how the urge towards religious ritual exists once again in men. It
has been long in coming. Just reflect, just consider —
but with real attention, I beg you — how for more than a
century sensitive spirits have repeatedly felt this urge to move away
from the prosaic, rational intellectualism of the Protestant religion
towards ritual. See how just those spirits among the Romantic writers
who were able to feel something of the whole significance of ritual
for the soul, strove after Catholicism. Because they were still
incapable of gaining illumination from Spiritual Science as to what
was seeking to enter the world sacramentally, they looked to
Catholicism. Such spirits as Novalis —
and just because of the specially deep spirituality that arose in him
at a comparatively youthful age, he is a particularly characteristic
personality — such spirits as he are not satisfied with prosaic
Protestantism and strive after the forms of Catholicism, but they are
healthy enough by nature to be shielded from stepping over into
Catholicism. Such spirits give expression to what our age must
express if it is to be healthy — the endeavour to feel once
more in the world something sacramental, something
corresponding to ritual. But they have no use for anything that wants
to drag in merely an old cult, as is so often done to-day, when seeds
appear which are no longer capable of growth, where spiritual
invalids appear — among whom I would certainly place my old
one-time friend, Hermann Bahr. Where
these invalids of the soul are concerned, we see how even
to-day they incline towards a misunderstood Catholicism, as
with Herman Bahr, Scheler, Börres von Münchhausen. With all
these people — they are very numerous and I know many of them
— in the weakness of their soul-life they strive after
Catholicism. One knows very well this attitude of soul; it springs
from these people being unable to make the effort towards a life of
soul that is inwardly
active, a genuine, courageous activity in their soul-life, because in
their soul-life they have become invalids and so they turn to what is
offered them as a finished article. This permeates all Scheler's
books of myths, which are very gifted, and all the quite mythical
writings of Hermann Bahr's later period, and so on and so forth. It
is all invalidism of the soul in a certain sense. It is the
comfortable attitude that refuses to call forth out of the soul's
depths what the times demand, in order to rediscover in the age of
the Consciousness Soul, the way towards a true natural science, and
to see in the whole of nature herself something sacramental —
to see all nature as an expression of the divine-spiritual World-Order.
In the age
of the Consciousness Soul, man must very soon develop the possibility
of having not merely the abstract, dry natural science which
petrifies the whole of him — a
science which is to-day extolled as the salvation of the world
— but a science that can deepen itself to a reverent perception
of all the sacred symbols spread out over the world by the Godhead,
in all the deeds giving joy to man, but also in everything by which
the Godhead puts man to the test. If man is able once more to do his
laboratory experiments sacramentally, on a higher level, and to make
the operating table an altar, instead of a carpenter's workshop and a
shambles, then the time will have come which is demanded for and
souls to-day by divine evolution. Hence it is not surprising that at
such a time as this much can be misunderstood, misunderstood above
all through the aftermath of the Jundí Sábúr Academy,
and is therefore taken up into natural science without any wish for a
connection with the Mystery of Golgotha. Because of this, natural
science becomes a purely Ahrimanic science, corresponding to
all the Ahrimanic needs of mankind, corresponding to the state of
mind which wants to organise the world according to externals alone.
It may be said that the impulse of the Mystery of Golgotha has always
to be sought anew; we must take in earnest the words: “I am
with you always, even unto the end of the world” — even
to the time when all the cycles of the earth have been accomplished.
These words have to be
taken seriously. If we wish to remain connected with the Mystery of
Golgotha, we must keep our souls fresh, so that we can take up the
new impulses which flow out repeatedly from the spiritual world
— not always in cycles but because of the wish to approach
mankind from time to time.
It is true
that over against this we have a natural science without any desire
to know of such influences; a science which wants simply to install
its scientists in laboratories or in hospitals where the work
is a matter of routine. There, as we know, research is carried on
which works like invisible radiations and no-one concerns himself
about what is thereby let loose in the world. Things are tried out,
aspirin or phenacetin, and given to patients. When such things are
administered one after another, all that has to be done is to
record what is perceived physically —
there is no need to call upon any activity of the soul. This is the
state of mind which in essentials has come from the impulse of the
Academy of Jundí Sábúr. For if men had been permeated
by those impulses in the past, they could have taken their ease
to-day, with no need to do anything more. They would have been
endowed through grace with everything they would otherwise have to
work for in developing the Consciousness Soul. Translated into
physical terms, this attitude is present in external science.
The other
attitude comes from what has been poured out into the world by Rome.
It lives on in the most varied impulses, derived, not from Palestine,
not from the Mystery of Golgotha, but from Rome, and it has developed
in two directions —
the burning of incense for the carrying out of a ritual which makes
no demand on intelligence but only on the Sentient Soul; and,
secondly, rhetoric, which is concerned only with the forming of
sentences, or with giving human actions a character such that there
is rhetoric even in the resulting laws that are made. Both
these two attitudes have lived on. There can be no help for either
unless it is clearly seen how in the future there should not be a
science devoid of spirit; without fighting against science, we shall
have to recognise its limits. There is no need to fight against it,
for if it is studied in a positive way it offers magnificent
and powerful gifts, and no-one has the right to say anything against
science who is not well acquainted with its fruits. Anyone who is not
acquainted with science, and yet harshly criticises it, is wrong;
only someone who believes in it, is thoroughly acquainted with it,
has gone into it deeply and made its methods his own — only
such a person has acquired the right to judge it, to specify its
limits and point out how science itself will have to advance towards
a spiritual comprehension of the world.
Hostile
opinion has found among other things in my writings that I have
spoken with appreciation of Haeckel and modern science. My dear
friends, from the standpoint of Spiritual Science, out of which I
speak, I should never dare to utter a word of criticism about science
had I not previously made it every acknowledgement. For from the
ground of the positive life of spirit we have the right of negative
criticism only if we are able to show that within its acceptable
limits we fully appreciate what we are fighting against. I believe I
have fully earned the right to make known a spiritual development
of mankind, a spiritual evolution, in doing which I have given out
what the senses do not teach, because I have shown also what
significance Darwinism and Haeckelism have for scientific life.
On the
ground of Spiritual Science it must be asked that the words one
speaks should be taken rather differently from the way in which they
are generally taken. Hence I should not like anything I may say about
Catholicism, or any other present-day movements, in the way I have
been speaking to-day, to be understood from the standpoint of the
ordinary philistine, or confused with criticism put forward about
Catholicism or similar movements by one or other society with liberal
views. Nothing is meant beyond what has been stated here; nothing is
meant that cannot be fully justified from the standpoint of
spiritual-scientific research. Research in natural science needs to
be deepened so that it gradually leads into spiritual life. What has
been preserved from ancient times, what has fallen into
disuse — to some extent rightly — in the course
of human life, is now appearing anew for reasons I have mentioned
— man's need for the sacramental and his need for expressive
forms. To see in forms the signature of the Divine in the world, but
to understand these forms; not to speak in terms of dogma about
Lucifer, Ahriman and Christ, but to have this trinity before us in
artistic forms — this is what we need.
Out of
this thought will arise the creation that is to be the centre-point
of our Building, the wood-carving of Christ-Lucifer-Ahriman; out of
this thought, the creation in an expressive unity of forms demanded
by human evolution; but in such a way that while looking at the forms
we penetrate to the spirit. The creation of such forms had to be the
very foundation of our Building. No-one has the right to take this
Building in a trivial sense; it must be understood in
accordance with the essential aims arising from the great
demands of our age, and with the needs of an age which once again,
and now in a new way, has to approach the Mystery of Golgotha.
As we are
given the necessary point of time in this age for finding the Christ
anew, for finding the Christ on a higher level, so opposition to the
Christ must also occur. These opposing forces were there in the past.
We know that Christianity prevented the aims of the Academy of
Jundí Sábúr from coming to fruition. We know that
Augustus in Rome was aiming at something quite unconnected with the
Christ Impulse. The persecution of the Christians by Nero, by
Diocletian, even the rejection of Christianity by Apollonius of
Tyana —
all this came about because some people in Rome did their utmost to
resist Christianity. It was meant to be quite rooted out — but
it did not allow itself to be rooted out. So it is that Romanism, by
taking from Christianity as much as suited it, became the Catholic
Church, which developed also in this spirit; for directly there comes
to mankind a new revelation, leading to further knowledge of the
Mystery of Golgotha, the Catholic Church turns not towards it but
away from it.
Only
think — we
must constantly look this fact in the face — when Copernicus,
who was himself Canon of a cathedral, and therefore a true Catholic,
advanced his theory, the Catholic Church condemned it as heretical.
Up to the year 1827 orthodox Catholics were forbidden to accept the
Copernican theory; since that time they have been allowed to believe
in it. It has also become possible for a university professor of
Catholic philosophy to say: Certainly the Catholic Church proscribed
the Copernican theory and treated Galileo in the way it did. But it
is no longer appropriate to think in that way (so said Professor
Müllner, a Catholic philosopher, in his inaugural address as
Rector of Vienna University); to-day it is appropriate to say that
through these very discoveries of Copernicus and Galileo concerning
the secrets of the external universe, the miracle of Divine
Omnipotence has become all the more clearly a miracle of Divine
Omnipotence. That, it is true, was spoken in a Christian way, but if
it were judged critically by former standards, it would certainly not
be regarded as spoken in a Roman Catholic way. Thus it has taken a
good deal of time for the Catholic Church to be compelled by
external pressure to recognise that knowledge of the cosmos does no
harm to Christianity but helps it forward. How long it will take the
Catholic Church to recognise the results of Spiritual Science —
well, we will wait and see; we must certainly resign ourselves to the
probability of no such outcome during our present incarnations. That
is one side of the matter, my dear friends.
Confusions
and misunderstandings, however, can very easily arise. They can arise
from the subconscious urge in souls to experience the sacramental.
The whole of mankind to-day is striving for a higher level of
sacramental experience. Naturally, the Catholic Church makes use of
this for its own advantage. And to-day, when men, alas, are so deeply
asleep, one must earnestly wish that they would at least be awake to
the most important things that are happening, even if as individuals
they can do little to change them in many cases. There is no need to
say: How can I alone change anything?
Often we
must let time tell; in many cases we can work only when conditions
are right. We need not apply the same prescription to everything; but
we do need to be clear in our consciousness, to know how to observe,
so that when something is asked of a man in his own sphere he
really knows what he has to do. Above all, we must realise that most
people nowadays who believe they do a great deal of thinking, in fact
go to sleep whenever they can; they sleep when they might be won
over —
though this is difficult — to real knowledge of the
impulses at work in human evolution. But others are awake! And these
powers make use of every opportunity, every channel, in order to
prevent human life from developing so as to meet the demands of the
Consciousness Soul, and to make it develop only in accordance with
their own aims. If people would only wake up to what is being willed
in this direction, if they would only recognise things that often lie
close at hand and are judged from quite another point of view, this
would be of tremendous significance for the solution of those
questions which arise out of the chaos of the present day and in the
near future will have to be solved. Hence a recognition of such a
fact as we have been speaking about yesterday and to-day is of very
great importance. We should not judge the world to-day in accordance
with abstract principles, for then we only fall into a deeper
doze; we should make it our aim to judge with actual knowledge. For
what must happen in these coming years can be brought about only by
those who draw their principles, the impulses for what they do and
will, from a spiritual knowledge of world-evolution. From this point
of view — I must add — we dare not allow the healthy,
genuine, welcome and refreshing trend that leads human souls towards
sacramentalism — we dare not allow this to be used for the
revival of ancient cults. For this would be using it not to gain
knowledge of the Mystery of Golgotha, but to preserve a symbolism
without spirit, the very thing that was inaugurated in the Augustan
age and is now promoted in certain quarters for their own advantage.
This is one aspect
of what can be done to expose men's souls to misunderstandings
— misunderstandings about sacramentalism, misunderstandings
about ritual, misunderstandings about rhetoric, about living in
concepts, in mere words. The formalization has indeed not sprung from
the endeavours of Demosthenes in Greece, who put pebbles on his
tongue because he stuttered, but wished to share with his countrymen
the warm, loving content of his soul. It derives from rhetoric, and
people who are not fully awake to the impulses at work in the
evolution of mankind absorb it with enthusiasm.
The other
side is made up of those who swear by the crudest science, who refuse
to accept the spiritual, who value science only as technology,
rejecting all that can be discovered concerning the spiritual content
of the world through the great and powerful phenomena of nature. I
once said, and this was truly not said rhetorically, but out of the
deeper knowledge of the soul: Until our physics, our mechanics, the
whole of our external science, come to be permeated by the Christ
Impulse, science will not have reached its goal. Not only history
should speak of the Mystery of Golgotha: men should also realise that
since the Mystery of Golgotha natural phenomena have to be observed
in such a way that Christ is known to be on the earth, whereas He was
not on the earth before. A truly Christian science will not seek for
atoms, not for atoms and their laws, nor for the conservation of
matter and of energy; it will seek for the revelation of Christ in
all the phenomena of nature, and these will thereby reveal to men
their sacramental character.
From a
contemplation of nature in this light there will spring a feeling for
moral, social, political and religious principles in human life
which will really answer to the demands of human living. If we absorb
the divine element in nature, if we draw upon the power of Christ in
our knowledge of nature, then we shall carry into the rules of
conduct that we set up for mankind, and into all that we want to
exemplify, whether in caring for the poor or in any other realm of
social service — we shall carry Christology into all our works.
If we are unable
to look upon nature around us as permeated by Christ, if we are
unable to discover the activity of Christ in all that lives in human
deeds even when they are halting deeds, neither shall we be able in
our social, moral or political life to meet the real demands of our
time. In that case we should be left on the one hand with our crude
science, which simply refuses to know anything about the
supersensible, or with mere rhetoric, which is a legacy of Romanism,
the ghost of Romanism. And if, when we speak of sacramentalism and
ritual, which are both misunderstood, we must refer to Rome, in fact
to present-day Rome, to the Rome that has become great especially
through the shrewdness of Pope Leo XIII, then we have also to find
the name which goes with the empty phrase-making of rhetoric —
the kind of phrase-making which anyone really permeated by
anthroposophical understanding of spiritual life must recognise.
We have
often referred to this rhetoric. I must now go into actualities. I
generally do this when enough time has been spent on other aspects of
a subject. Where do we find the rhetoric that confronts a no longer
healthy ritual, just as the Roman pulpit rhetoric of the Jesuits
does? Where do we find the rhetoric that confronts modern science,
which is craving for spirituality, the rhetoric that threatens our
contemporaries because in a sleeping condition they are absorbing
something which for external reasons is perhaps necessary for them?
But should the people who recognise these things remain inwardly
aloof, entirely aloof, from what is spreading through the world as
mere rhetoric? This is Wilsonism! Woodrow Wilson is the name which
has to be imprinted on this life in rhetoric, on the stringing
together of words without substance. Call it a League of Nations,
call it what you will, it is all a wallowing in mere rhetoric. This
is something that mankind should not sleep through. People should
feel impelled in one way or another to wake up to what is here
emphasised —
that Wilson ism is essentially opposed to the true progress of
mankind; and this must be recognised in the very nature of its
rhetoric; an idol with feet of clay.
These
things, my dear friends, cannot be expressed through a few bourgeois,
philistine ideas. That which threatens our time from the direction
indicated, and has to be looked at soberly when present events are
considered, must also be recognised in all its significance. We must
not allow the world to be Wilsonised because everyone is asleep. Let
there be followers of Wilson in America, in Europe, or anywhere else,
but there must also be people who know that a deep connection
exists between Jesuitism on the one hand and Wilsonism on the other.
There must be people who realise this. Certainly they will have to
grow beyond the philistinism of to-day; they must not form their
opinions according to what the day brings, or even the years; they
must be able to take account of what the centuries conceal, and yet
reveal to us, if really and truly, with the innermost active force of
the soul, we are able to look up to the hill where stood the Cross of
Golgotha, the symbol for everything that as a revelation of the
primeval Mysteries has poured into human life. But it will remain
always youthful, always bringing fresh revelations to mankind.
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