LECTURE TWO
Dornach, 7
January 1922
Today I
shall add to what has been said over the past few days, both, before
and after Christmas, about the Being of Christ. Our angle of approach
to the question of Christ will be to relate it in a brief sketch
chiefly to the world-wide social question. Mankind has at the present
time an urgent need to reach a global understanding. Yet whatever
sphere of life we turn to, we find precious little of any such
understanding. The need for an understanding is there. What is not
there is any talent on the part of human beings to come to such an
understanding. We see how attempts are made to consult one another
about important aspects of life. We see congresses taking place
everywhere. With regard to the matters being discussed at these
congresses, what is to be found in the depths of human souls is quite
different from the words which are exchanged there. In the words
exchanged at these congresses there are appearances which are
deceptive. These appearances are supposed to give the impression that
individual human beings everywhere desire to come to terms with one
another, or something similar. But such coming to terms cannot be
achieved anywhere, because it is not actually individual human beings
who are speaking with one another but members of various nations.
Only the external appearance makes it seem as though individuals were
speaking with one another. What is actually speaking through each one
are the very varied beings of the different nations. And since it is
in the very nature of human beings these days to notice only the
verbal content of words and not the source of the words — not
the soil in which they are rooted — since human beings fail to
discern these fundamental aspects of life, it is simply not noticed
that it is the folk daemons who are speaking with one another, rather
than human being with human being.
We would
be hard put to it to find clearer proof of the fact that Christianity
is today not realized in the world. Christianity is not realized, for
fully to understand Christ means: to find man as man within oneself.
Christ is no folk god, no god of any race. Christ is not the god of
any group of human beings. He is the god of the individual, in so far
as the individual is a member of the human race as a whole. Only when
we can understand the Christ-being, through all the means available
to us, as the God of mankind, only then will Christ come to have what
will certainly be the greatest possible social significance for the
globe as a whole.
We have
to understand very clearly that there are things which hold sway in
the depths of the soul, things which do not find their way into those
words that remain stuck in empty phrases as a result of the
differences between the folk daemons. Out of the situation in which
people are content to reside at present, it is not possible to bring
about what can actually only be brought about today out of the
profound depths of man's being. Today what is needed is profundity, a
willingness to enter into the profound depths of man's being, if
forces of advance, forces of fruitful progress are to enter into
earth evolution. What can be heard today in every corner of the earth
does not to any extent even touch the surface of all that is rooted
in the human being. What ought now to enter into mankind is the quest
for what is most profoundly rooted in the being of man.
Let us
now show in a few simple outlines the main differences that exist in
people's attitudes to what could lead to a recognition and an
understanding of the question of Christ. I have often drawn the
distinction for you between people of the West, people of the East,
and people of the middle region between West and East. This
distinction can be viewed from very varied standpoints. Justice can
only be done to it if it is considered without any kind of prejudice
and with the utmost impartiality, if we refrain from looking with
sympathy or antipathy at one or other of these divisions, perhaps
because we happen to belong to one or the other of them ourselves.
Today all the people of the world must work together in order to
bring forth true unity in Christ. It can certainly be said that in
the most varied parts of the world, in the very depths of mankind,
the impulse exists towards finding this unity. But the search must
take us into the profound depths.
Turning
first to what appears now in the civilizations of the West, we
discover that the essential element in these western civilizations
finds an expression in the type of spirituality which is valid today.
This special spirituality of today has the characteristic of taking
the form of abstractness; it celebrates its greatest triumphs in
ideas and abstractions. These ideas, these abstractions, are most
suited to gaining a knowledge of nature as it appears to our senses,
and a knowledge of that aspect of social life which has to take place
as a result of the forces of the sense-perceptible world. With these
forces, which I shall call the western forces, it is quite possible
to penetrate into the depths of the human being and of the universe.
Above all, these forces of the West have provided the foundation for
scientific thinking and have sought those impulses of social life
which derive from scientific thinking and which mankind will need in
the future in order to shape life on earth in a possible way. What
follows will show this to be so. By no means all the treasures of
western spiritual life have been brought to the surface.
To start
with, it is perfectly true that today's natural science could only be
founded on those fundamental forces of man's being which can be most
adequately expressed in the spirituality of abstractness and ideas.
But it is also true that in everything that has been revealed there
is another essential element as well. What has been revealed in the
thought processes of natural science, and the social thought
processes that go with it, can indeed be taken right up to the
spiritual realm. A progression can be made from the laws of nature to
a recognition of the spiritual beings within nature. These beings of
nature are divine and spiritual. And if Christianity is to be
understood in a way that befits mankind's most current needs, it will
have to be permeated with that very spirit which has so far only
poured itself out into natural science and its social consequences
through the forces of the West. Any world conception gained out of
these forces of the West can only be satisfying if it can be
expressed in clearly defined, sharply contoured concepts and ideas.
Human beings will need such clear, sharply defined concepts for the
future of the earth. They will have to learn to present the highest
spiritual content to mankind in terms which are every bit as clearly
defined as are the natural and social concepts arising out of the
forces of the West.
Let us
turn now to the forces of the East. Here, what is made clearest to us
is the following: If, out of the forces of the East, we want to
attempt to describe Christianity, or indeed anything divine and
spiritual, in sharp, clearly-defined terms, our efforts will be
invain. Starting with Russia and going eastwards through Asia, the
whole of the East brings forth forces in its peoples which are not
capable of rising up to spiritual, divine realms in sharply defined
concepts. The forces here are suitable for rising up to the spirit
out of the depths of feeling.
In order
to describe Christianity in a manner befitting the West we need
philosophy, we need a concept of the world which is clothed in modern
thought forms. But to describe Christianity with the forces of the
East we cannot find such thought forms if we remain at the level of
outer nationality. If we remain in the external, sense-perceptible
world we have to grasp other means. For instance, we have to describe
the feelings which are found as soon as we start going further and
further eastwards, even in the regions of central Europe bordering on
the East. Look at the living rooms of simple people and see the altar
with the Mother of God in the corner. See how the image of the Mother
of God is greeted by visitors as they arrive. Everywhere the first
greeting is for the Mother of God, and only then are greetings
exchanged with the people in the room. This is something that
emanates from all the forces of the human being, with the exception
of those of abstract ideas. There exists a radical contrast between
West and East in the inmost feelings for what is divine and
spiritual. Yet all these forces are root forces which can develop
further, which can put forth leaves and shoots and finally bear
fruit, if only they can come to a fundamental understanding of
themselves.
The West
is capable of reaching a conception and a feeling of the Father God
in a manner which befits the new human spirit, a conception and a
feeling beside which those other divine spiritual beings, the Son and
the Spirit, can stand. But above all it is the task of the West to
contribute to the world concepts and feelings about the Father God
which are different from those possible in earlier times, when only
vague presentiments could be achieved in this respect. On the other
hand, if the forces mainly present in the East are developed —
the forces which can only be described suitably in what might be
called a non-intellectual way with the help of external gestures
— if these forces are developed with the feelings and will
impulses they entail, and if they take up also the forces streaming
towards them from the West, they will be able to come to a fitting
concept and a fitting feeling of the Son God. In this way mankind's
development into the future can only be rightly understood when the
things that are achieved in the different regions of the earth are
taken to be contributions to a total outcome.
Especially the more outstanding spirits in the West — though
mostly they are not aware of this themselves — may be seen to
be struggling for a concept of the Father God, a concept arising from
the foundations of natural science. And in the East we see in the
external gestures of the people, in what comes out of their feelings
and their will, how they are wrestling for an understanding of the
Son God, the Christ. The middle region stands between these two
extremes. This is shown clearly by what has been developing more
recently in the culture of the middle region. It is characteristic of
modern theology in Central Europe that it is uncertain in its
understanding of the Father and also in its understanding of the Son,
the Christ. Endeavours to find such an understanding are taken
immensely earnestly. But this very earnestness has caused the
endeavours to be split in two separate directions. On the one hand we
see knowledge developing, and on the other we see faith. We see how
knowledge is to contain only what applies to the sense-perceptible
world and everything that belongs to it. And we see how faith, which
must not be allowed to become knowledge, is allotted everything that
makes up man's relationship to what is divine and spiritual. These
divergent endeavours express the quest, a quest which cannot achieve
an adequate concept and feeling for either the Father God or the Son
God without joining forces with the other regions of the earth, with
East and West.
How such
a global working together in the spirit should take place can be seen
especially in the beginnings made by the Russian philosopher Vladimir
Soloviev.
[ Note 1 ]
This Russian philosopher has taken western
thought forms into his own thinking. If you are thoroughly familiar
with the thought forms of the West, you will find them everywhere in
Soloviev's work. But you will find that they are handled differently
from the way in which they are handled in the West. If you approach
Soloviev with a thinking prepared in the West you will have to
relearn something — not about the content of thoughts, but
about the attitude of the human being towards the content of
thoughts. You will have to undergo a complete inner
metamorphosis.
Take what
I regard as one of the cardinal passages in Soloviev's work, a
passage he has invested with a great deal of human striving towards a
knowledge of man's being and his relationship with the world. He
says: Human beings must strive for perfection. This endeavour is
expressed in the way they strive for the truth. By uniting truth ever
more and more closely with their souls they will become ever more and
more perfect. Without this movement towards perfection human life
would be worthless. Human beings must have the prospect of reaching
the highest pinnacles of perfection through truth, as otherwise their
lives would be null and void. At the same time they must have a part
in immortality, for a striving for perfection destined only to be
forfeited in death would be a fraud of universal proportions.
This is
expressed by Soloviev in words and thought forms which imitate those
of the West, or rather the thought forms are borrowed and the word
forms imitated. But the way in which it is expressed, and the way the
impulse to express it is present — this is impossible in the
West. You will not find it expressed in this way by any western
philosopher. Just imagine Mill or Bergson saying such a thing! It is
unimaginable. These are the things for which we must develop a sense
nowadays. We must develop a sense for the living sources from which
words flow. The content of words is growing ever more insignificant
in comparison with world concepts. A sense for the living source of
things is what has real significance.
We can
today only imagine a person to be capable of speaking in the way
Soloviev does if he still has a true experience of what every one of
his compatriots does before the icon of the Mother of God. Such a
person must stand immersed in his people, a people capable of
bringing proof without having to base it on abstract, logical
foundations, a people for whom proofs based on mere abstract logic
are less important than those which come out of the whole human
being.
We feel
in these words of Soloviev how, coming from the East, what is said
comes out of the total being of man, not just out of mere
intellectual human understanding. Because Soloviev speaks and thinks
and feels out of the very foundations of his people, the whole of his
world conception tends in the direction of the Christ. Because he has
also taken on, as something from outside, the thought forms of the
West, his world conception at the same time tends in the direction of
the Father God as well as the Christ. Thus we discover in him
something which it is almost impossible to find anywhere in the
present, and that is a fundamental, clear distinction in the feelings
of a human being between the way to the Father God and the way to
Christ, the Son God. In a spirit such as Vladimir Soloviev we find a
hint of what must come about in the future. For what must come about
is a working together of the different regions of the earth, and this
cannot come about if any one region imagines itself to be in
possession of the whole.
Mankind
came forth out of a unity. If we go back into the obscure, remote
antiquity of human evolution we come to an archetypal wisdom which
was still instinctive and which, because of this, still filled the
whole human being. Throughout the whole of the earth people
communicated with one another, not yet by means of the logical
content of language but externally, by means of the then still
existing inner capacity to communicate in gestures, of which today we
no longer have the faintest idea. People communicated with one
another by means of something which today, if at all, remains only in
those remnants of the treasure-house of language which we call
interjections. Naturally, if you exclaim: Whew! or sigh: Oh! you will
be understood world over. This kind of understanding resembles the
communication that took place at the time of instinctive archetypal
wisdom. Today we no longer know how to feel in language as a whole
what the archetypal wisdom felt in it. All that remains for us is our
feeling or the interjections which, of course, we only use
occasionally. In parenthesis let me add that it is quite in keeping
that, out of people's dissatisfaction arising from the whole chaos of
our spiritual life, authors are starting to write novels in
interjections. This does happen nowadays. I am not quoting, but
simply mention that you can find prose passages today which read: Ah!
Oh! Wow! Eh! Then the writer begins: Once there was — and then
come more interjections. Some recent novels are tending in this
direction. As symptoms they are not without significance. As I said,
this just in passing.
We have
lost the ability to invest the whole of language with what we today
only invest in interjections. Consider the following:
‘Anthropos’ means man, human being.
‘Anthropoid’ means man-like, that is, the higher animals.
The final syllable, ‘oid’, is connected with the word
which means ‘like, similar to’. Now there is a remarkable
connection between Greek and, for instance, German. In German the
final syllable meaning ‘like’ is ‘ig’. This
is pronounced ‘ich’. If we speak this final syllable by
itself, we have the German word for ego, for our own being. This is
one kind of etymological truth. The ‘ich’ in the human
being is what strives in its totality to become like the universe.
‘Ich’ is like, is similar to, everything; microcosm
compared with macrocosm. Of course to go into things in this way
cannot be done in the superficial manner in which etymology and
linguistics are conducted nowadays. One has to go down to a more
profound level and gain a sense for the way in which the sounds are
connected with one another.
I brought
this up merely to show one of the facets of what we must do to enter
into language in search of a far more alive content than exists
nowadays in the languages of the world. We must strive not to take
words merely as words but to seek out their living roots. We must
learn to understand that two people can say the same thing and yet
mean something quite different, depending on the way of life from
which it stems. We shall need such a deepening of our feelings in
order to enter into the kind of global working together which will be
necessary if mankind is to set out once more on the upward path.
It is not
enough to address Christ as: Lord, Lord! Christ must become something
which fills the whole human being. This can only happen if we support
our understanding with something which comes to meet us when we look
towards the archetypal wisdom of the world and remind ourselves that
that wisdom made mankind into a totality. It was, though, a totality
in which all individuality was lost. But evolution progressed. Human
beings became ever more individualized. They felt more and more that
they were approaching the point at which each one feels separated
from all the others, for that alone guarantees the experience of
freedom. So something had to be poured out into human evolution which
might once more bring unity to the whole earth. This was the
Christ-being. The Christ-being will only be fully understood when we
gain from it a feeling for the impulse to bring about a social unity
of human beings over the whole earth. Or looked at the other way
round: Only the Christ-being, fully understood, can lead to a right
social impulse throughout the world.
We look
to the archetypal wisdom, which developed out of instinctive
foundations to a certain high degree of vision — not our vision
but an ancient vision. We find this vision in its final phase
expressed in the archetypal symbol of what the three wise men, the
three Magi from the East, brought to Christ Jesus. What led them to
Christ Jesus was the most ancient and, at that time, the highest
wisdom of mankind. And at the same time we are told by another
evangelist how the individual human being, out of the inmost forces
of his soul, as though in a dream — for the individual is alone
when he dreams, even though he may be in company with others —
is also led to Christ Jesus, how the shepherds in the field, dreaming
in their solitary souls, are led to Christ Jesus: the first beginning
of a new age. By the fourth century AD mankind had lost the wisdom of
the Magi from the East. At the time of the Mystery of Golgotha the
highest archetypal wisdom — about to fade — meets and
mingles with something that appears at first utterly devoid of
wisdom, something which must be developed ever further, until in the
end it can take root in every individual human being, uniting all
mankind.
In his
youth, Augustine
[ Note 2 ]
endeavoured to save the last remnants
of the wisdom brought to Christ Jesus by the Magi from the East. But
Augustine had already received it in a form to which he could not
confess in the long run. It was even then too degenerate. So he had
to turn to what had been present at the beginning of evolution, to
what will have to progress ever further and further, to what must be
sought in order that mankind may once again find unity over the whole
face of the earth.
If we
pursue these hints — for that is all they are for the moment
— in the right way, they will give us forces which will lead
ever more profoundly into an understanding of the Christ-being, to an
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. This is what I wanted to
add to what we have been saying about the Being of Christ.
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