5th Lecture
The New Spirituality
and the Christ Expereience of the Twentieth Century
Lecture 4
Dornach,
29 October, 1920
The subject about which I shall have to speak
today, tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, and which was already referred to some time
ago,
[1]
is the special way in which, in the first half of the twentieth century,
a kind of renewed manifestation of the Christ-Event is to take place. This will need a certain
amount of preparation, and today, to begin with, I shall try to characterize again from a certain
point of view the spiritual complexion of the civilized world and, from this point of view, draw
attention to the challenges that are placed before us with regard to the evolution of humanity
— the education of humanity as a whole in the near future-by the facts of this human
evolution itself.
We know that a new age in the development of
civilized humanity began around the beginning of the fifteenth century. People today no longer
form an exact idea of what the constitution of soul was like in the people who lived before this
great turning-point of modern history. People do not consider this. But one could easily imagine
how different the soul-constitution in Europe must have been which, over large areas, inclined
people to undertake the Crusades to Asia, to the Orient; especially when one bears in mind how
impossible an event like this, resting as it did on an idealistic spiritual background, has
become since the beginning of the fifteenth century. People do not consider the completely
different nature of humanity's interests before this historical turning-point, nor the interests
which, since that time, have become particularly important. But if, from the many characteristics
which can be attributed to this more recent time, one wishes to single out the most significant
one, then this must be the increasing ascendancy, the increasing intensity of the human power of
intellect.
But in the depths of the human soul there is always
another force, whether as a sense of longing or as a more or less clear facet of consciousness.
It is the longing for knowledge. Now, when one looks back into former times, even into the
eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries of European development, it is possible to
speak of a definite longing for knowledge in as much as the human being at that time had
faculties in his soul which enabled him to achieve a relationship to nature — a
relationship to what was revealed in nature as spirit — and thereby also to achieve a
relationship to the spirit world itself. Certainly, longing for knowledge has been spoken about a
good deal since then; but it is impossible, when one looks completely without prejudice at the
development of humanity, to compare the longing for knowledge which holds sway today with the
intensity of the longing for knowledge that held sway before the middle of the fifteenth century.
Striving for knowledge was an intense affair of the human soul; for knowledge that had an inner
glow, an inner warmth, for the human being, and which was also significant for the human being
when it came to what moved him to perform his work in the world, and so on. Everything that lived
there as a longing for knowledge has become less and less comparable with what has been emerging
since the middle of the fifteenth century. And even when we consider the great philosophers of
the first half of the nineteenth century, we are presented with ingenious elaborations of the
human system of ideas; but only, if I can put it so, artistic elaborations of it. In neither
Fichte,
nor
Schelling,
nor
Hegel
— particularly not in Hegel — do we find a proper
idea of what had previously existed as a longing for knowledge.
Then, in the second half of the nineteenth century,
the striving for knowledge, even though pursued in isolation as was still the custom, enters more
and more into the service of outer life. It enters into the service of technological science and
thus also takes on the configuration of this technology. What then is the cause of this? It comes
from the fact that it is just in this time that we find the particular development and
elaboration of the intellect. This, of course, did not happen all at once. The intellect was
gradually prepared for. The last traces of the old clairvoyance had long since become extremely
dim. But one can nevertheless say that, to a certain degree, the last effects of the old
clairvoyance — though not the old clairvoyance itself — were still present even in
the fifteenth century. All human beings, or at least those who strove for knowledge, had some
idea of the faculties rising up out of the human soul that are higher than the faculties
concerned with daily life. Although in olden times these faculties arose from the soul in a
dreamlike way, they were nevertheless faculties different from those of everyday life and it was
by means of these other
[higher]
faculties that people tried to probe to the depths of the
world-being — and did, in fact, penetrate to its spirituality. Thus was knowledge
attained. People experienced it as knowing when, from the phenomena of nature, from the being of
nature, they sensed, they perceived, how spiritual elemental beings worked in the individual
phenomena of nature; how the divine spiritual being as a whole worked through the totality of
nature. People felt themselves to be in the realm of knowledge when gods spoke through the
phenomena of nature; when gods spoke through the appearance and movements of the stars. This is
what people understood as knowledge.
The moment humanity renounced perception of the
spiritual in the manifestations of nature, the concept of knowledge itself also fell more or less
into a deterioration. And it is this decline of real intensity in the pursuit of knowledge that
marks the latest period of human evolution.
What then is needed here? It is that which exists
at present only in the small circle of anthroposophically-striving human beings but which must
become more and more general. Nature's manifestations spoke to ancient human beings in such a way
that they revealed the spirit to them. The spiritual spoke out of every spring, every cloud,
every plant. In the way people came to know the manifestations and beings of nature they also
came to know the spiritual. This is no longer the case. But the condition of intellectualism is
only a transitional condition. For what is the deepest characteristic of this intellect? It is
that it is impossible to grasp and know anything at all with the pure intellect. The intellect is
not just there for knowing. This is the greatest error to which the human being can give himself:
the belief that the intellect is there for gaining knowledge. People will attain to true
knowledge again only when they concern themselves with what lies at the basis of
spiritual-scientific research; which, at the least, can be given by Imagination. People will only
know truly again when they say: In ancient times divine-spiritual beings spoke from the
manifestations of nature. For the intellect they are silent. For higher, super-sensible knowledge
it will not be the phenomena of nature that will speak directly — for nature, as such,
works silently. But beings will speak to the human being — beings who will appeal, to him
in Imaginations, will inspire him, with whom he will become united intuitively and whom he will
then be able to relate again to the phenomena of nature. Thus one can say: In ancient times the
spiritual appeared to the human being through nature. In our transitional condition we have the
intellect. Nature remains spiritless. The human being will lift himself up to a condition where
he can again truly know; where, indeed, nature will no longer speak to him of divine-spiritual
beings but where he will o take hold of the divine-spiritual in supersensible knowledge and will,
in turn, be able to relate this to nature.
It was a particular characteristic of oriental
spiritual life, of oriental knowledge — which, as we know, lived on as a heritage in
occidental civilization — that the orientals, at the time of the blossoming of the
knowledge of their culture, perceived a spiritual element in all the manifestations of nature;
that the divine-spiritual spoke through nature, whether through the lower elemental beings in
individual things and phenomena or in the whole of nature, as the all-encompassing
divine-spiritual. Later on there developed in the central regions of the earth that which came
under the dialectical-legal spirit. It is out of this that intellectuality was born. Spiritual
culture was retained as a heritage from the ancient Orient. And when people still had this last
longing to experience something from the Orient — people did experience something of this
in the Crusades and brought it back to Europe — and after they had stilled this longing
through the Crusades, the Orient became effectively closed off. On the one hand, by what was
established by Peter the Great who destroyed the remains of the oriental constitution of soul on
the European side and, on the other hand, by the blockade set up by the Turks who, just at the
beginning of this age which we call the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, established their rule in
Europe. European thought and culture was, as it were, closed off from access to the Orient. But
it had to develop further and could only do so under the influence of the dialectical-legal life,
under the influence of the economic life arising from the West, and in the decadent continuation
of the spiritual life which had been received from the Orient, to which the doors were now closed
as I described. The condition was thereby prepared in which we are now living, where it is up to
us, out of ourselves, to open the doors again to the spiritual world; to come to a perception of
it through Imagination, Inspiration, Intuition.
This is all connected with the fact that, in those
ancient times in which the oriental rose to the attainment of wisdom, what was of particular
importance were the abilities, the forces, brought by the human being into physical existence
through birth. In the time of oriental wisdom, everything — despite the civilization which
took its course there and was shone through with wisdom — everything, fundamentally,
depended on the blood. But, at the same time, what was in the blood was also spiritually
recognized. It was determined by the Mysteries as to who, through his line of blood, was called
by destiny to the leadership of the people. There could be no questioning this: whoever was
called to the leadership of the people by the Mysteries was brought to this position because his
bloodline, his descent, was. the outer sign that this was how it should be. There could be no
question of any kind of legal proof as to whether anyone was rightly in this position or not
because, against the verdict of the gods, according to which people were allotted their place,
there could be no contradiction. Jurisprudence was unknown in the mission here in the world of
the senses was given by Orient. One knew theocracy, the 'rule of cosmic order', One's mission
here in the world of the senses was given by the spiritual world above. The feeling that said
that someone was in the in the right place because the gods had directed his bloodline in such a
way that he could be brought to this place was replaced with another in a dialectical-legal
dress, on the basis of which one that he could dispute on legal grounds whether someone was
entitled to his position, or to do this or that, and so on.
The nature of the soul-constitution, prepared
already in Greece but then particularly also in Rome, by which Central Europeans were beginning
to use concepts, dialectics, to decide what justice was, was quite unknown and alien to the
Orient. I have described this from different aspects. In the Orient it was a matter of fathoming
the will of the gods. And there were no dialectics for deciding what the gods willed.
But we are again at a turning-point. It is becoming
necessary now for humanity to also take a closer look at this dialectical-legal element. For the
economic element, which from the West has conquered the world with the aid of technology, is
already completely entangled in the state of affairs that has arisen through the
dialectical-legal aspect. The economy was a minor element in the ancient theocratic cultures
which were permeated by the divine-spiritual. People did there in the economic life what arose as
a matter of course according to the place and rank into which the gods had placed them through
the proclamations of the Mysteries. And then the economic life, which began again only
primitively, became caught up, as it were, in the threads of the dialectical-legal life. For, at
the beginning of the so-called Middle Ages, the Romans above all had no money. Economics based on
money was gradually lost and the dialectical-legal culture spread in Europe as a kind of economy
based on nature-produce. The early part of the Middle Ages was, basically, short of money; and
this brought about all those forms of military service which were necessary because there was no
money to pay the troops. The Romans paid their troops with money. In the Middle Ages feudalism
developed, and with it a particular type of professional soldiery. All this came about because,
tied to the soil under the influence of an economy based on the exchange of nature-produce, a man
could no longer take part himself in distant campaigns of war. Thus this dialectical-legal
element grew up in a kind of agricultural economy based on barter, and it was only when
technology from the West permeated this economic life that the new age arose. The life of this
new civilization, which has become so fragile, has arisen in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch
entirely as a result of technology. I have already described this in different ways. I have
described how, according to the official census, world population at the end of the nineteenth
century was 1,400 million but that as much work was being accomplished as though there were 2,000
million. This is because such a phenomenally large amount of work is done by machines. The
machine technology with its stupendous transformation of the economic life and the social life
has arrived.
What has not yet arrived — because everything
is still engulfed in the intellectual life — is precisely what must now carry this
machine-technological economy into modern civilization. One experiences the strangest things
today with regard to the prospects facing humanity. There are already many people today,
particularly among those who pride themselves on being practical, who, for example, go into
governmental positions with their practical experience where it then usually evaporates. The
little practical experience people have usually evaporates as soon as they take it into a
government department. Such `governing practicians', such 'practical men in government' —
one has to put it in inverted commas — get the strangest ideas these days. Someone said to
me recently: 'yes, the new age has brought us machines, and with them urban life; we must take
life back to the land.' As though one could just remove the machine-age from the world! The
machine would simply follow us into the country, I said to him. Everything, I said, could be
forgotten; spiritual culture could be forgotten, but machines would remain. They would simply be
taken out to the land. What has arisen in the cities will transplant itself into the country.
In fact, people become reactionaries in a grand
style — when they no longer feel inclined — and this is the characteristic of people
generally today: that they have no will — to form ideas concerning true progress. They
would prefer to bring back the old conditions of the countryside. They imagine that this can be
done. They believe that one can shut out what the centuries have brought. That is nonsense! But
people today love this nonsense so tremendously because they are too complacent to grasp the new
and prefer to get along with the old. The machine age has arrived. Machines themselves show how
much human labour they save. It is simply that 500 million people would have to do the work
machines do if their work on the earth were to be done by people.
And all this work by machines began, primarily, in
Western civilization. It arose in the West and spread to the Orient very late where it did not
establish itself at all in the same way as it did in occidental civilization. But that is a time
of transition. And now try and grasp a thought which, however strange it may seem to you, must be
taken seriously.
Let us suppose the human being in ancient times had
before him a cloud, or perhaps a river, or all kinds of vegetation and so on. He did not see in
these the dead nature seen by the human being of today — he saw spiritual elemental beings,
up to the divine-spiritual beings of the higher Hierarchies. He saw all this, as it were, through
nature. But nature no longer speaks of these divine-spiritual beings. We have to grasp them as
spiritual reality beyond nature and then relate them again back to nature. The period of
transition came. Man created machines as an addition to nature. These he regards for the time
being quite abstractly. He works with them in an entirely abstract way. He has his mathematics,
geometry, mechanics. With these he constructs his machines and regards them altogether in the
abstract. But he will very soon make a certain discovery. Strange though it may still seem to the
human being of the present that such a discovery will be made, people will nevertheless discover
that (in this mechanistic element which they have incorporated into the economic life) those
spirits are again working which in earlier times were perceived by the human being in nature. In
his technical machines of the economic sphere the human being will perceive that, although
he constructed and made them, they nevertheless gradually take on a life of their own
— a life certainly which he can still deny because they manifest themselves to begin with
only in the economic sphere. But he will notice more and more in what he himself creates that it
gains a life of its own and that, despite the fact that he brought it forth from the intellect,
the intellect itself can no longer comprehend it. Perhaps people today can barely form a clear
idea of this, but it will be so nevertheless. People will discover, in fact, how the objects of
their industry
(Wirtschaft)
become the bearers of demons.
Let us look at it from another side. Out of the
naked intellect, out of the most desolate intellect, there has arisen the Lenin-Trotsky system
that is trying to build an economic life in Russia. Despite Lunacharsky,
[2]
these people are not interested in the spiritual life. For them the spiritual life must be an
ideology arising from the economic life. It can hardly be said that there is a very strong
dialectical-legal element in the Trotsky-Leninist system — everything is to be geared
towards the economic. The desire is, in a certain sense, to embody the intellect in the economic
life. If one could do this for a time — this initial experiment will not work, but let us
suppose that it were possible — the economic life would grow over peoples' heads. It would
bring forth everywhere destructive, demonic forces out of itself. It would not work because the
intellect would not be able to cope with all the economic demands that would surge up! Just as
the human being in ancient times beheld nature and the manifestations of nature and saw in them
demonic beings; so, too, must the human being of present times learn to see demonic beings in
what he himself produces in the economic life. For the time being these demons, which human
beings have not diverted into machines, are still in human beings themselves and manifest as the
destructive beings
(die zerstarenden)
in social revolutions. These destructive social
revolutions are nothing other than the result of not recognizing the demonic element in our
economic life. Elemental spirits
(elementarische Geistigkeit)
must be looked for in the
economic life just as in ancient times elemental beings (elementarische Geistigkeit)
were sought in nature. And the purely intellectual life is only an intermediary stage which has
no significance at all for nature or for what man produces, but only for human beings
themselves.
Human beings have developed the intellect so that
they can become free. They have to develop a faculty that has absolutely nothing to do with
nature or with machines but only with the human being himself. When the human being develops
faculties that stand in a relationship to nature, he is not free. If he tries to flee into the
economic life he is also not free because the machines only overwhelm him. But when he develops
faculties that have nothing to do with either knowledge or practical life, like pure
intelligence, he can appropriate freedom to himself in the course of cultural development. It is
precisely through a faculty like the intellect, which does not stand in a relationship to the
world, that freedom can arise. But in order that the human being does not tear away from nature,
in order that he can again work into nature, Imagination must be added to this intellect;
everything must be added to it which supersensible research is seeking to find.
There is something else involved here. I related
how, for the ancient oriental, the relationships of the blood line were of very particular
importance, for the wise men of the Mysteries were guided by these as though by signs from the
gods when they placed the human being into his appropriate
[social]
position. And all these
things reach over then like after-effects, like ghosts, into later times. Then came the
dialectical-legal element. The official stamp became the most important thing. The diploma,
examination results or, rather, what was on the piece of paper that was the examination
certificate — this became the important thing. Whereas in ancient theocratic times blood
was the decisive factor, it was now the piece of paper. Those times drew near for which many
things are characteristic. A lawyer once said to me during a discussion I had with him: The fact
that you were born, that you exist, is not what matters!' This did not interest him. It was the
birth certificate or the christening certificate that had to exist; that was the important thing.
The paper substitute! So the dialectical-legal arose. This, at the same time, is also the
expression for the unreal
(das Scheinhafte)
in relation to the world, for the unreal
element of the intellect. But precisely in the human being himself there could develop, as the
counterpart of this maya element (Scheinhafte) in the world, what gave the human being
freedom.
But now there develops, out of what is signified in
paper — which in earlier times was signified in the blood — out of what is signified
in the letter-patent of nobility or similar documents, something that is already showing itself
today and which will — continue if things go on as now. And they will continue! Descent by
blood will no longer be of importance. The letter-patent of nobility and similar papers will have
no more importance. At most, only what a man manages to salvage of what he possesses from the
past will count. To ask 'why' was not possible when the gods still determined an individual's
place in the world. In the dialectical-legal age it was possible to dispute this 'why'. Now all
discussion ceases, for only the factual is left, the actuality of what an individual has
salvaged. The moment people lose faith in the paper-regime there will be no more discussions. The
things an individual has saved for himself will simply be taken away. There is no other way to
bring humanity forward, now that nature no longer reveals the spiritual, than to turn to the
spiritual itself and, on the other hand, to find in the economic element what people in earlier
times found in nature.
This, however, can only be found through
association. What a human being alone can no longer find can be found by an association which
will again develop a kind of group-soul, taking in hand what the individual at present cannot
decide alone. In the Middle Ages, in the age of the intellect, it was the individual that ruled
in economics. In the future it will be the association. And people must stand together in an
association. And then, when it is recognized that a spiritual element has to be kept in check in
the economic life, something will be able to arise which can replace the blood-line and the
patent. For, the economic life would grow above the human being's head if he did not show himself
equal to it, if he did not bring a spiritual insight with him to guide it. No one would associate
with someone who did not bring qualities that made him effective in the economic life and which
qualified him really to control the spirits which assert themselves in the economic life. An
entirely new spirit will arise. And why will this be so?
In the ancient times, in which people judged
according to the blood, what had taken place before birth or before conception was of importance
for human beings, for this is what they brought into the physical world through the blood. And
when existence before birth had been forgotten a recognition of the life before birth still lived
on in the recognition of the blood-line. And then came the dialectical-legal element. The human
being was only recognized in relation to what he was as a physical being. Now the other element
comes in — an economic life that is growing demonic. And the human being must also now be
recognized again in his inmost soul-and-spirit being. And just as one will see the demonic
element in economic life, so one will also have to begin to see that which the human being bears
through repeated lives on earth. One will have to be aware of what a human being brings when he
enters this life. This will have to be taken care of in the spiritual limb of the social
organism.
When one judges according to the blood, one really
does not need a pedagogy; one only needs a knowledge of the symbols through which the gods
express where it is a human being is to be placed. As long as one judges in a purely
dialectical-legal way one only needs an abstract pedagogy which speaks of the human child in a
generalized way. But when a human being is to be placed in an associative life in such a way that
he is fit and capable one has to take account of the following. One must realize that the first
seven years in which the human being develops the physical body, are not significant for what he
will be able to do later in the social life -— he must only be made fit and capable in a
general way valid for all human beings. In the years between seven and fourteen, in which the
etheric body is developed, the human being must first of all be recognized. What has to be
recognized is what then emerges as the astral body at the age of fourteen or fifteen and which
comes into consideration when the real soul-and-spiritual core of the human being is to bring him
to the place he is meant to be. Here the educational factor becomes a specifically social one. It
is a matter here of gaining a true understanding of the child one is educating so that one can
see that a certain quality in the child is good for this, and another quality is good for that.
But this does not show itself clearly until after the child leaves primary school and it will
belong to an artistic pedagogy and didactics to be able to discern that one child is suited for
this and another is suited for that. It is according to this that those decisions will be made
that are the challenge in
Towards Social Renewal
for the circulation of capital; that is
to say the means of production. A completely new spiritual concept must arise which, on the one
hand, is capable of perceiving the economic life in its inner spiritual vitality and, on the
other, can perceive what role must be played by cultural life; how cultural life must give
economic life its configuration. This can only happen if the cultural life is independent, when
nothing is forced upon it by the economic life. It is when one inwardly grasps the whole course
of humanity's evolution that one recognizes how this evolution requires the threefolding of the
social organism.
Thus, because we have been closed off from the
Orient in more recent times by the Petrinism of Peter the Great on the one hand and Turkey on the
other, we therefore need an independent spiritual life; a spiritual life that really recognizes
the spiritual world in a new form and not in the way in which, in ancient times, nature spoke to
man. One will then be able to relate this spiritual life back to nature. But once one has found
it, one will also be able to develop this spiritual life in such a way in the human being that it
becomes the content of his skills; that he will be able through this spiritual life to satisfy,
in associative cooperation, an economic life that becomes more and more dynamic. Such thoughts as
these really must exist in an anthroposophically-oriented spiritual science. For this reason such
a spiritual science can only be born from a knowledge of the course of human evolution.
The first thing is to steer towards a real
knowledge of the spirit. Talk of the spirit in general terms — in empty, abstract words in
the way that is accepted practice today among official philosophers and in other circles and
which has become generally popular — is of no use for the future. The spiritual world is
not the same as the physical world. Thus it is not possible to gain a perception of the spiritual
world by abstracting from the physical but only by direct spiritual investigation. These
perceptions naturally then appear as something completely different from what the human being can
know when he knows only the physical world. People who, out of complacency, wish only to know of
the physical world call it fantastic to talk about Old Moon, Old Sun and Old Saturn. They find
that, when one speaks about these former embodiments of the earth, it strikes no chord in them.
Things are described there of which they do not have the foggiest notion. The fact is of course
that they have no notion of them because they do not want to know about the spiritual world.
Things are related to them about the spiritual world and they say: But it doesn't concur with
anything we already know. But that is the whole point: worlds are found that do not concur with
what one knows already. This is the way, is it not, that, for example, Arthur Drews, the
philosophy professor, judges spiritual science. It does not concur with what he has already
imagined. Indeed, when the railway from Berlin to Potsdam was to be built, the post master of
Berlin
[3]
said: And now I'm supposed to send trains to Potsdam! I already send
four post coaches a week and no one travels in them. If people really want to throw their money
out of the window why don't they do it directly! Of course, the railways looked different from
the post-coaches of the 1830s of the honest post-master of Berlin. But, of course, the
descriptions of the spiritual world also look different from what nests in heads like Arthur
Drews'. He, however, is only characteristic of many others. He is even one of the better ones,
strange as it may seem. Not because he is good, but because the others are worse.
It was first of all necessary to show how, on a
strict scientific basis, one can truly penetrate into the spiritual worlds. This is what, in the
first place, our lecture course this autumn has been striving towards. And even if this is only
at its beginnings, it has at least been shown how, in certain areas of the sciences, knowledge
can be raised to a knowledge of the spiritual as such and how this spiritual element can in turn
permeate what is gained by sense-knowledge.
But what can thus be gained in the field of
knowledge and what will be achieved in contrast to the accepted knowledge in the schools —
for it is in this area that fine beginnings are apparent — would remain incomplete. One
could in fact already show how psychology, and, indeed, even mathematics, point towards spiritual
realms. But it would only be something incomplete and therefore unable to aid our declining
civilization if a truly elemental and intensive will does not arise from the area of practical
economic life. It is necessary that old usages, old habits, be truly dropped and that everyday
life be permeated with spirituality. It must come about as a flower of the Anthroposophical
Movement that, with the help of the mood of soul that can arise out of spiritual science, a
perceptive understanding of practical life is brought to bear — especially of the practical
economic life — and that it may be shown how the downfall can be averted if a consciousness
of creating something alive is carried into this economic life.
Every day one should keep an ever-watchful eye on
the so blatantly visible signs of our declining economic life. This old economic life cannot be
galvanized. For just as today no one should be proud of what he gains from ordinary science
— for that would definitely lead humanity into the future prophesied by Oswald Spengler
— so, too, no one should be proud of what he can gain from the old economic life by way of
abilities that correspond to this old form. Today no one can be proud of being a physicist, a
mathematician, a biologist in the usual sense. But also no one can be proud of being a merchant,
an industrialist in the old sense. But this 'old sense' is the only thing we have today. Nowhere
today do we see anything arising like a true association. What is really needed, as a kind of
second event of this
Goetheanum,
is to have something on the lines of this lecture-course, which
could provide something tangible out of the realm of practical life itself, and which could stand
side by side with the sciences. We will not get any further with what is contained in just one
stream but only when this other side of human striving also has its place.
This today is still the characteristic feature of
our present human evolution: on the one side the traditional bearers of the old spiritual life
who calumniate and slander one when, working out of the modern scientific approach, one tries to
achieve a spiritualization. They already do this today quite consciously because they have no
interest in the progress of human development and because, for the time being, they only think to
hold back this evolution of humanity. Sometimes they do so in a truly grotesque manner, like that
strange academic
[4]
who recently spoke in Zurich about Anthroposophy and went to
such extremes that even his colleagues were shocked; so that, as it seems, this attack against
Anthroposophy has actually acted as mild propaganda for it. These representatives of a redundant
spiritual life persist, however, and will do so far more, for they will dose ranks with
formidable slanders. Here one sees what one is up against, arising in the form of slanders and so
on, in regard to untruth.
On the other side one can notice another strong
resistance; which, however, occurs in the unconscious. And this is a painful experience. In this
area one can definitely speak of an inner opposition, sometimes quite unintentional, against what
must lie in the direction of spiritual-scientific endeavour. It will be a matter of having to
learn, particularly in this area, to identify with the aims that spiritual science can set here.
For to judge, in the subjective way that has been usual up to now, what must be willed from
spiritual science, would be to do the same as the priests and others in other areas do when they
declare spiritual science a heresy. This is what makes difficulties for our Anthroposophical
Movement — the fact that precisely in this area a kind of inner opposition is clearly
noticeable. One can say that it is particularly in this area that what sheds light in such a
strange way on certain accusations which come from many sides, shows itself most clearly. They
say: 'In this Anthroposophical Society everyone only repeats what one man has said. But in
reality they do not repeat at all; everyone just says what he thinks so that the one man can
approve it.' We have experienced this many times, have we not? A person talks frequently about
what he may want, saying that I said so, even though from me he actually heard the exact
opposite. Now this is the real rule of blind faith in authority. A strange faith in authority!
This has been evident in many cases. But it would be particularly damaging if this strange kind
of opposition — there has actually always been more opposition than faith in authority and,
therefore, an indictment of faith in authority is really unjust — it would be far more
fatal if what I refer to here as inner opposition were, particularly in the sphere of practical
life, to take on wider dimensions. For then the opponents of anthroposophical striving would, as
long as they could, of course say: `Aha, a sectarian, fantastic movement which cannot be
practical.' Of course it cannot be practical if people do not engage themselves in it; just as,
after all, no matter how good one is at sewing, one cannot sew without a needle.
With this I only wished to draw attention to
something that needs watching. It is by no means intended as a criticism or as a reference to the
past but is something necessary for the future. Nevertheless, I would of course not have referred
to it if I did not see all sorts of smoke-clouds rising. But I am really only pointing out what
has, as it were, to be a challenge to really cooperate on all sides and not to shelter behind
reactionary practices and, behind the bulwark of these reactionary practices, destroy
Anthroposophy even though one is perhaps trying to help it. So I am not referring to something
that has already happened but to something that is necessary for the future. It is necessary to
think about these things.
With these comments I shall have to let it rest for
today. Tomorrow and the following day we shall have to link up this prelude which, as you will
see, is in fact an introduction to a study of the Christ-experience in the twentieth century.
Notes:
1. See
Das Ereignis der Christus-Erscheinung in der atherischen Welt
(The Event of the Reappearance of Christ in the Etheric World),
sixteen lectures given in different cities in 1910, (GA 118). Return
2. Anatol Vasilevich Lunacharsky (1875–1933), Russian writer and
politician. From 1917 he was the Commisar for the education of the masses. Return
3. Karl Ferdinand Friedrich von Nagler (1770–1846). Return
4. It has not been possible to establish who this was. Return
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