Lecture VII
Berlin,
September 11, 1917
When spiritual science investigates
mankind's evolution it arrives at results which in many respects differ
considerably from those presented by natural science. This applies more
especially to the human soul. The view obtained through spiritual knowledge
of the human soul's evolution during hundreds and thousands of years
differs from the view that is possible merely through natural-scientific
investigation. Looking back into earlier ages we recognize that man
once possessed atavistic clairvoyance and that this made his consciousness
different from what it is today. However, we must also recognize that
a residue of this clairvoyance persisted right into later centuries
to a far greater extent than is realized. It is particularly important
to be aware of the fact that right up to the 14th, 15th, 16th and even
into the 17th century a vestige of the ancient clairvoyance was still
in evidence. Not with its former strength, it is true, but although
weakened, it was clearly a remnant of the former atavistic clairvoyance
and could be encountered over the greater part of the earth.
I have spoken in earlier
lectures of the fact that even today there are people who possess atavistic
clairvoyance. The reason not much is known about it is because people
are usually too embarrassed to confess to their fellow men that revelations
from spiritual realms enter their consciousness. I described some instances
of this kind in the last lecture. However, the difference is very great
between what people could still experience directly from the spiritual
world in the 16th and 17th centuries and what is possible since then.
And even in the 17th century most people would not have been able to
describe what appeared to their clairvoyant vision to the extent of
being able to say that they had seen such and such a being. Their consciousness
in spiritual experiences was not strong enough to grasp the situation
sufficiently to form mental pictures of it. But though the consciousness
was subdued, spiritual beings did still enter into man's will, into
his feeling and also into his conceptual life. This was the case to
a far greater extent than is imagined today. At the present time it
is really extraordinarily difficult for someone who is able to look
into the spiritual world and is conversant with the nature of what is
to be experienced there, to speak freely about it to his fellow men.
As I have often mentioned, one's contemporaries would receive too great
a shock were one to describe certain, even elementary, facts concerning
man's relationship to the spiritual world. Naturally it can cause clashes
of views when an initiate, from his knowledge of the spiritual world,
is obliged to say the very opposite to what his contemporaries, owing
to their materialistic convictions, can accept as truth.
This situation had not yet
arisen in the 14th, 15th, 16th or even 17th centuries. Much of the literature
from this period is interpreted quite wrongly. This is not only because
modern people think they know better than their predecessors, they also
no longer understand their attitude to life. This fact comes to expression
in curious ways. For example it is quite extraordinary to witness the
way modern philosophers, in their writings or when lecturing, castigate
the Scholastics of the Middle Ages. They go out of their way to demonstrate
how far they themselves have advanced beyond i what they see as prejudiced,
pedantic and narrow ideas of the Scholastics. But in truth, compared
to the Scholastics, the modern philosophers are incredibly ignorant
and they completely misunderstand the Scholastics. What is not realized
is that at the time of Thomism, when a philosopher was engaged in the
subtle art of ideation, of defining and elaborating the finer points,
he was in contact with the spiritual world. It must be realized that
for example Thomas Aquinas,
in the 13th Century, attained the concepts and ideas he elaborated in
his writings in a completely different way from the way ideas are acquired
today. One must think of his books as being inspired by a spirit from
the Hierarchy of the Angeloi and that he recorded what came from a higher
consciousness.
A modern philosopher would
find dreadful the idea of having to sit down and wait till his Angel
inspired him before writing what he was to communicate to the world;
that with his Angel by his side he was to be the mouthpiece, the physical
human mediator for what the Angel proclaimed concerning a higher world.
Yet in no other way is it possible to understand what is coming into
being, what is becoming. What I am now saying is of the greatest importance
and I beg you to take special note of it. Only by listening to what
is inspired into us or vouchsafed through Imagination can we come to
understand what is coming into being. In our ordinary consciousness,
since the 16th, 17th but especially since the 18th century, we have
no relationship whatever to what is evolving, coming into existence.
We look directly at things, but how much of what we see do we take into
our consciousness? Let us say we look at a blossoming rose; in no instance,
at no moment do we see the actual coming-into-being of the rose. From
the formation of the seed to the extinction of the rose what we see
is the dying, the fading away. That we see the red rose at all is due
to the fact that we grasp its dying aspect. The coming-into-being aspect
of things can be grasped only if one is able to listen to higher beings
or receive impressions from them. No one, except higher beings who at
present do not incarnate in a physical body, can perceive the becoming
of the rose. In the very lowest realm of perception, the subjective
light, which is almost as dull as the old clairvoyance was and, when
it occurs, still is, do we see something of the becoming of the rose.
But not when we look at it with physical eyes and grasp what we see
conceptually.
This illustrates that an
essential characteristic of our materialistic age is that only what
is dying, what is going towards extinction, enters our consciousness.
That was not the case at the time of the Scholastics nor even in the
17th century.
In the early part of the
17th century a little-known philosopher, Henry
More, born 1614, lived in England. When we look at his external
life we see him as a living proof that man does not develop his individuality
from inherited qualities alone. He brings with him characteristics,
not found in parents or earlier ancestors, from former lives on earth.
Henry More's parents and relations were all strict orthodox Calvinists,
but already as a small boy he fought Zwingli's rigid teaching of predestination.
Henry More rejected it emphatically although no one in his environment
maintained anything contrary to this rigid doctrine. He had also another
distinguishing characteristic. When one studies his writings, which
are very interesting, one discovers the remarkable fact that he spoke
of the inner presence of the spiritual world in human consciousness
quite differently from the way people spoke of it later. He was a philosopher
of the 17th century yet he knew that only through a more receptive consciousness
than the ordinary one which only grasps the dying aspect, can man unite
with that living reality which expresses itself in inspired consciousness
as processes of becoming. In such inspired consciousness man can know
about the processes of becoming whereas otherwise he can know only about
what is connected with processes of dying. What is perceived everywhere
through present-day consciousness is the dying aspects of things and
even Henry More was not altogether clear that he had communed with spiritual
beings. When he attempted to grasp his experiences in conceptual form;
i.e. form mental pictures of them, these pictures would vanish in the
very process of forming them just like a dream vanishes as we wake up.
Thus he could not bring his experience of meeting spiritual beings into
clear consciousness; he would forget as we forget a dream. Only dimly
was he aware of their presence in his inner life but the effect of these
experiences remained with him.
A very interesting thought,
well known to us, was expressed also by Henry More. The thought that
if one wants to reach certain higher knowledge one must learn to regard
one's whole being as a member of a higher organism. Just as a finger
is a member of the hand and loses its existence if separated from the
hand, so too is man nothing, if torn out of his organic connection with
the whole cosmos. With the finger this is more obvious. However if the
finger could walk freely over our body it might well also succumb to
the illusion of being an independent organism. Certainly the earth is
there for man, but man is equally, in the adjoining spiritual world,
a member of the greater organism of the earth. Man cannot tear himself
out of this connection anymore than the finger can tear itself from
the hand. I have often expressed this thought as an antidote to man's
misplaced and all too prevalent conceit. In Henry More it rose as a
sudden revelation. The reason was because he did have a dim knowledge,
like a half-forgotten dream, of man's interconnection with the whole
cosmos although he could not bring it into conscious conceptual form.
When one tries to discover
what helped Henry More to formulate what lived so beautifully in his
soul one finds that he had been deeply impressed by a certain booklet.
This small book: the “Theologia Germanica” had also made
a great impression on someone else; namely Luther
who made it available to wider circles in Germany. Henry More became
a student of the “Theologia Germanica” by “the man
from Frankfurth.” You will find more on this subject in my book
“Mysticism at the Dawn of the Modern Age.”
The question may have arisen
in your mind why it should be that in the 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th and
even 17th centuries people appear who know of the spiritual world through
direct communion. The reason is the following: Those who in these centuries
knew most about man's connection with the spiritual world had been on
earth, if not in their last incarnation then as a rule in the last but
one, at a time when preparation for Christianity was being made in the
secret schools, in the Mysteries. Individuals such as Henry More were
present on earth in the centuries prior to the Mystery of Golgotha.
They then had an intermediate incarnation in the 7th, 8th or 9th century
but this later incarnation had much less impact on them than that received
in the previous one from the teaching in the mysteries. These teachings,
preparing for the Mystery of Golgotha, made a deeper, more intense,
impression on their soul. That is why so much of great significance
was said concerning Christianity during those later centuries. Through
their communion with the spiritual world these individuals derived an
insight into the world's coming-into-being which, since the 17th century
has no longer been possible. From then onwards one had to draw ever
more on external accounts alone; these accounts, however, only describe
what is in the process of decline. Spiritual knowledge is needed to
bring insight once more to what is in the process of becoming. The preparation
for Christianity, which lasted more than half a millennium during the
tragic centuries leading up to the Mystery of Golgotha, made an enormous
impression on these spirits. What they carried over into the later incarnation
was an impulse of feeling, an inner mood of soul which they were able
to give conceptual form.
European cultural development,
between the 14th and 17th centuries, takes on a deeper significance
when studied with this background in mind. One comes to realize that
very spiritual concepts and ideas concerning Christianity and the Bible
are to be found in this period. These concepts and ideas often seem
strange today because they originated from spiritual experiences. To
turn his attention to the essential aspect of that period is of special
interest for man today. The period between the 14th and 17th centuries
is really like a mighty retrospect. Forces were still present in man's
soul through which experience could arise of the surging weaving life
of the spiritual world. We enter the minds of those who lived in that
period when, in contemplating them, we do not forget this retrospective
quality of their consciousness.
If for example we want to
understand Luther it is essential to keep in mind what I have just said.
Recently a very interesting book: Luther's Creed by Ricarda
Huch has appeared. The reason why the book is so interesting
is mainly because it is written completely out of present-day consciousness;
that it is also inadequate makes it somewhat disappointing. The periodical:
“North and South” contains in the July issue an article
about this book entitled: “Ricarda Huch and the Devil.”
The article points out that with our consciousness as it is today we
cannot really comprehend the way man's mind worked in an earlier epoch.
This fact makes it all the more interesting to see how Ricarda Huch
deals with Luther's belief in demons. Unlike those who, when requested
for an opinion concerning Luther's belief in demons, are too cowardly
to voice one, she tries to treat him fairly. Others usually dismiss
the issue by saying: Well, Luther was certainly a great man but his
talk about demons, his belief in the devil stemmed from the fact that
he shared the general superstitions of his time.
An opinion of this kind
is just about as helpful as that of the honest professor who, reading
with his students what Lessing had written about a drama performance,
explained that Lessing had not really been able to think through what
he had written; and the professor added: “Well, if only I myself
had more time!” It is through this kind of superior attitude that
it is concluded that Luther had shared in the superstition of his time.
The fact is that no one can understand Luther who does not realize that
what, out of the spirit and consciousness of his time, was called “the
devil” — we would say Ahriman and Lucifer — was for
him actual spiritual experience. When he spoke of these matters at Wartburg
or anywhere else it was always from direct experience. Try to compare
and bring together what Luther says and you will inevitably come to
the conviction that only someone who has actually seen the devil, who
has met him in direct experience, can speak as Luther did. Moreover
he was well aware that: “Small folk never see the devil even when
he has them by the collar.” Ricarda Huch agrees, with much good
will but purely theoretically, against the superior attitude of the
academics who, in their cleverness, know that the devil does not exist.
They conclude that Luther was superstitious as were others at his time
and one must excuse and forgive the great man.
Ricarda Huch does not agree
with those who hold such a superior view of great spirits of the past.
However it is obvious that she has no personal experience of what the
devil looks like. She does believe in him although she has never seen
him; so how does she visualize the devil? She believes in his existence
because she knows that there are things which neither natural science
nor physiology can explain, things which must come from the devil. She
too feels that some excuses must be made for Luther for she says: "One
ought not to imagine that Luther believed the devil walked about the
streets complete with horns and tail." However, like others, she
sees what she calls the devil as a combination of certain evil traits
and characteristics such as stupidity, pride, untruthfulness and so
on. But these are mere abstract concepts and Ricarda Huch thought Luther
used his pictorial expressions in that sense. Luther was obliged to
use pictures because there is no other way to express spiritual experiences.
Yet he was directly acquainted with the devil through the inner battles
which unavoidably must be fought when man comes face to face with the
devil.
Luther clothed his experiences
in pictures in the way one otherwise clothes them in words. Only the
most obtuse thinkers could possibly maintain that the words one uses
to depict an event contain the event itself. Yet this is precisely the
objection levelled against me by professor Dessoir when he says that
I have derived the various stages of mankind's evolution, not from reality,
but from mental pictures. Such things are rather prevalent; in this
particular case it stems from lack of insight, from utter ignorance.
In the second chapter of my forthcoming book, dealing especially with
moral corruption in academic circles, you will see what kind of people
are among those who teach in public places of learning. These people
who help shape the present, contribute to its dreadful miseries. They
also create a situation in which the Royal Academy of Science awards
its prize to the shoddy history of psychology submitted by Dessoir.
If you read what Dessoir's colleagues have themselves said about this
slatternly superficial treatise you will get an idea of the kind of
literature that circulates and even wins awards in the academic world.
Luther lived at a time when
the possibility still existed to have awareness of the spiritual world.
All the devilry of Ahriman he experienced directly; he could not put
these experiences into ordinary words because words are designed for
physical things. Spiritual experiences must be described in pictures,
in Imaginations. However, Imagination does express the reality of what
is perceived and experienced super-sensibly. This Ricarda Huch does
not understand. She thinks that though Luther spoke of the devil one
must not take it to mean that when someone with spiritual sight comes
among people he will, in numerous cases, find Ahriman, hunchbacked and
with horns, looking at him from where he sits firmly entrenched between
their shoulders. But Luther's descriptions were based on experience,
and the pictures he uses are his way of describing these experiences.
His personality was not such a gentle one as that of Ricarda Huch who
believes he merely used symbolic pictures for man's evil upsurging passions.
One can ask what it is that
gives Luther's doctrine — as it is usually called — the
power it has. The answer lies in the fact that it is no mere doctrine,
it must be understood very differently if one is to do it justice. In
one's imagination Luther, standing there in the 17th Century, must be
visualized as looking back with inner sight to a time when communion
was being cultivated with the spiritual world, to a time when he himself
cultivated such communion precisely in the realm of the ahrimanic. To
recognize Ahriman is to free oneself from him; the danger lies in not
recognizing him — you can read more about this aspect of Ahriman
in my Four Mystery Dramas. To come face to face with Ahriman,
the way Luther did, is to set oneself free. What Luther says can seem
incomprehensible unless one recognizes that he is describing actual
experiences; when it is realized then the power of his words is greatly
enhanced. Even when we find certain aspects of what he said unpalatable
his words strike us as genuine because he saw things in a much wider
context than is normally possible today.
It is an interesting and
highly significant phenomenon that Luther should appear, embodying the
fruits of what was taught in the pre-Christian Mysteries. Luther was
one of the greatest participants in those Mysteries that prepared the
way for the founding of Christianity. What he absorbed in these Mysteries
remained quite unimpaired by the later intermediate incarnation and
was the source and strength of his power in his incarnation as Luther.
But what was Luther's most significant revelation concerning his direct
experience of Ahriman?
We must keep in mind that
the essentially ahrimanic age begins only after Luther. Though people
are not aware of it, present-day natural-scientific knowledge is saturated
by Ahriman. The characteristic feature of today's materialistic outlook
is that every concept is prompted by Ahriman. Luther was destined, at
a significant turning point to make man aware of this fact. However
when someone is able to look into the spiritual world he sees things
in a different light from those who cannot do so. Furthermore the spiritual
world affects man differently once he becomes conscious of it.
We begin to understand Luther's
peculiar position once we realize that the powerful force he brought
over from an earlier evolutionary stage could not be effective in later
epochs. He was destined to rescue for mankind a view of Christianity
before it had been weakened by unrecognized ahrimanic influences. That
is the reason for the breadth of his vision and the strength of his
consciousness of Ahriman.
Someone once wrote a book
in which he had collected all the contradictions to be found in Luther's
writings. Luther read the book and wrote a reply which is included in
a letter to Melanchthon. Luther's comment was: “The silly ass
only speaks of contradictions because he understands neither side of
a contradiction, he does not understand that one can honour someone
as a Prince yet at the same time speak of him as a devil and oppose
him.”— Luther's letter to Melanchthon, where he speaks of
this, is most interesting, for it also reveals his relationship to his
own time. He used other expressions which would not be used today but
are entirely comprehensible in view of his acquaintance with the spiritual
world. These expressions are not, as historians suggest, merely a product
of his time. Those who call Luther's expressions cynical or frivolous
do so out of their own cynicism or frivolity.
What is important in relation
to these things is to recognize that individual aspects of something
may recur, although the greater issue itself is not repeated. This applies
also to Scholasticism; people will only learn to relate to it when they
rediscover in it the more subtly differentiated thinking than the one
cultivated today. The way the spirit came to expression in Luther will
never be repeated. He must be accepted just as he is, as a historical
phenomenon. It would be a mistake to imagine that anyone could repeat
Luther's life. What one should do is to make so thorough a study of
Luther, as he appears in history, that one comes to recognize what it
was that revealed itself through him in this particular incarnation.
One must attempt to see beyond the individual who was active in the
mysteries preparing for Christianity and then had an intermediate incarnation
before appearing as Luther. We need to see that we are not dealing here
only with a certain individuality but that in this one phenomenon the
whole trend and law of mankind's evolution is expressed. It could happen
because of his former conscious experience — even though as Luther
this knowledge had become subconscious — of that realm where he
encountered the devil; i.e., Ahriman.
In general Luther is seen
the way academics see him: theologians are usually academics. His direct
experience of the spiritual world is disregarded and his talk of the
devil is seen as the weakness of a great man. But in truth the weakness
lies in those who speak in this way about Luther.
Then came — and here
we see how evolution runs its course — the time after Luther when
Ahriman permeated the materialistic view of life. Though man was not
conscious of it this was the case especially in the 19th Century. From
the eastern part of Europe the possibility will first emerge for man
to know once more the realm he enters when he attains insight beyond
the physical plane. This seems a strange fact when we at present look
towards the East. We see there aspects revealing both the baseness and
the greatness of Russian nature. Over several years we have described
what is preparing itself in Russia. It is indeed a remarkable experience
to watch what takes place there; one has to say that these people are
children still. They really are children and when they are not children
they are possessed.
How can one escape the realization
that Kerensky is possessed?
Naturally he considers himself far above such a superstitious idea that
Ahriman has taken possession of him. But Ahriman has learned to produce
from Western science a thinking which is utterly alien to the East,
alien because it is a thinking related only to processes of dying. Not
only does Western thinking understand nothing about the Russian people;
Easterners themselves — that is, the leading people in the East
— who try to judge Russians with Western thinking do not understand
the Russians. There is in the Russian people still something childlike,
something that points to the future. And in the future it is destined
to develop into the ability to look once more into the spiritual world,
to develop a relationship once more with the spiritual world.
What is preparing in Russia
for the future is in complete contrast to the preparations that were
made for our own epoch at the time of the Great Luther. Our age looks
back, it makes manifest a force working from the past. We are looking
at something very remarkable in the contrast between Luther's experience
of his time and for example the childlike experience of a Russian like
Soloviev during the time leading
up to the revolution. We are seeing two opposite poles which are related
as North to South, or if an abstract comparison is wanted, as positive
and negative electricity. Two opposite directions of thoughts and views;
unable to understand each other. It is obvious from the way Soloviev
speaks that he is remote from any understanding of Luther, and if we
remain with Luther it is quite impossible to understand Soloviev. We
must widen our horizon to encompass both positive and negative.
I wanted to place these
important issues before you. When next we meet I shall attempt to present
Luther as a self-contained individuality — not only as he appeared
in his time but as he appears within mankind's evolution as a whole—from
a point of view obtainable only through Anthroposophy.
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