III
Address by Rudolf Steiner
Dornach August 22, 1915
TODAY I would have liked to be able to lecture on a
theme going beyond the events of the moment, and I hope that will be
fully the case with tomorrow's lecture, which will begin at seven o'clock.
For today, however, I still feel the need to say a few things that relate
not only to the letter I had to read yesterday, but also to the very
gracious letter from the members that Mr. Bauer has just delivered to me
and to still another letter I have received. This is especially necessary
now that the things discussed in these letters have come to pass. What
I have to say will relate to the matter at hand only to the extent that
this particular case can show us all kinds of things we need to know
about the relationship of the details of what is going on among and
around us to our spiritual movement with its teachings, for in discussing
specific occurrences, it is often possible to discover something of
universal importance.
I will start from the fact
— speaking more or less aphoristically — that I read you
a letter yesterday that was signed by two members of the Society and
mentioned a third member of long standing.
I believe I will not be
committing an indiscretion in telling you about a letter that Mr. Bauer
showed me just fifteen minutes ago, a letter written by a Society member
who is a physician.
[ Note 1 ]
The writer is quite rightly of the opinion, as I myself was yesterday, not
only after but during the reading of Mr. Goesch's letter, that we are
not dealing with anything logical but with something that has to be
considered from the point of view of pathology.
Obviously, this is one of
the many assumptions we can make in this instance, but in my opinion
— and this is simply my personal opinion and should not be considered
binding on anyone else — this assumption would be incomplete if
we do not also ask whether we are allowed to tolerate the fact that
our Society and our entire movement are constantly being endangered
by all kinds of pathological cases. Are we to tolerate psychopaths who
are destroying our spiritual-scientific activity? Yes, to the extent
that we can have compassion for them. However, if we tolerate them without
fully taking their pathological nature into account, we allow them to
constantly endanger everything that is most precious and most important
to us. Of course, we need to be clear that we are dealing with psychopaths,
but we must also be clear about what we have to do so that our cause
is not jeopardized. Even things we recognize as being caused by illness
have to be dealt with appropriately in real life. Of course, how this
applies to the personalities in question is a totally separate issue.
As you have seen from many
things we have had to discuss over the course of time, there is a certain
recurrent experience that is unavoidable in a spiritual movement such
as ours: Personal interests and personal vanity inevitably get mixed
up with our purely objective aspirations. This need not even be taken
as a reproach, strictly speaking; after all, we are all human. But it
does need to be mentioned, and I am simply stating my personal opinion
on the subject; of course, you are not bound by my opinion. When people
are willing to admit that they are subject to vanity in certain areas
and that for the time being (perhaps for reasons having to do with their
upbringing and so on) they have no particular interest in getting rid
of that vanity, that is a much lesser evil than wanting to be absolutely
perfect at any given moment. The greatest evil, so it seems, is when
people want to believe in their own perfection in every instance, when
they want to believe that they are doing whatever they are doing for
totally selfless reasons, and so forth.
The greatest temptation
faced by any spiritual movement such as ours is the very pronounced
vanity that comes into play simply because such movements must necessarily
have great and noble aims that can be realized only gradually, and not
all of us can immediately broaden our interests to include the objective
requirements of our cause. It is understandable enough that when some
people first hear about reincarnation, they take an immediate personal
interest in finding out about their own previous incarnations for reasons
of personal vanity. Looking into history for this reason is the worst
possible way to investigate previous incarnations, but that is what
most people do out of personal vanity. Thus, instead of being an inner
path of meditation, historical events or the Old and New Testaments
become a treasure trove for the gratification of personal vanity. Simply
put, it is nothing more than that. And it is good to be aware that looking
for one's own incarnations in history or in the Bible is basically nothing
more than personal vanity.
It is understandable that
this kind of vanity should come into play. The trouble starts, however,
when vanity is not recognized as such, and when instead of examining
their deep-seated ambitious motives calmly, people shroud them in a
mantle of occultism or let them merge into some nebulous mysticism.
Concerning certain things
that prevail with some justification outside the confines of a spiritual
movement, the movement must make a point of approaching them from the
perspective of a much more elevated morality than is the norm. However,
we must never disregard the possibility that a lot of what we consider
higher morality may be nothing of the sort, but simply an outlet for
our own drives and instincts. From the kinds of discussions we have
been through before, you can see how people can have perfectly legitimate
human instincts and drives, but let them get mixed up with all sorts
of occult embellishments. They may even console themselves for the existence
of these drives and instincts with all sorts of deceptively rational
explanations. It would be much better if they would simply admit these
drives exist and apply their esoteric schooling to understanding them.
I read Mr. Goesch's letter
to you; you all heard it and followed what was going on. What I am going
to say about it today is simply my personal, non-binding opinion. Among
other things, it was stated in this letter: "I am now coming to
the end of what I want to say at present. I have not been able to clothe
these insights — which I achieved under the guidance of the Keeper
of the Seal of the Society for Theosophical Art and Style… in
the ideal form I had envisioned.”
We all know that Miss Sprengel
is the keeper of the seal and that Mr. Goesch is the one who wrote the
letter. I think if any French-speaking people were to read this letter
and apply the old French proverb “cherchez la femme,” they
would be quite right, in spite of the fact that “keeper of the
seal” is a masculine noun in German. In fact, if you apply the
principle of “cherchez la femme,” much of what is talked
about in this letter becomes more understandable.
I still need to express
my own personal opinion about some of the details in this letter. For
instance, in this letter it is suggested that it is impossible to imagine
that so-called lessons of the esoteric school could be held within our
Society after all that has happened. I read that passage yesterday.
It suggests that because of all the “crimes” the letter
describes, lessons of the esoteric school could no longer be held.
We must look at these things,
too, in the right light and not hesitate to look at them closely. As
you know, we temporarily discontinued these esoteric lessons when the
war broke out, and anyone who bothers to look at these things carefully
will realize that this is due to nothing other than the present
circumstances of the war.
[ Note 2 ]
These lessons
are not being given anymore so as not to do our Society a disservice.
There are only two possibilities
these days. One is to act in the best interests of the Society, which
means that regardless of whether we live in a nation at war or a neutral
country, we must refrain from holding meetings that are not open to
the public. Just imagine what could happen, and what a windfall it would
be for people who go around making insinuations, if we were to hold
secret meetings behind locked doors. Obviously, we must not do that,
and Society members will have to resign themselves to doing without
these lessons. It is as clear as day that we cannot have meetings between
members from different countries going on behind locked doors, which
is not to say that anything unacceptable would be happening there. As
far as we are concerned, such meetings could happen on a daily basis
as a matter of course. But you know how strong the opposition to our
movement is. This must also be taken into account, and we must not endanger
the whole movement by doing anything stupid or foolish. That's why we
must give up holding closed meetings — they would simply open
the door to that modern illness known as “spy-itis.”
The other possibility, which
is totally out of the question, would be to separate the members according
to nationality in order to speak to them. That is obviously not in line
with the purpose of our Society.
I hope you have realized
by now that this measure was taken because the war made it necessary;
it will be rescinded as soon as the war is over, as you could all have
worked out for yourselves.
I must still mention a few more thoughts in connection with this measure.
We cannot simply assume that all the people out there are so decent
and respectable that they will assume that we, too, are only capable
of decent and respectable actions. We cannot expect them to be concerned
about us and about finding out what we are doing. They have no way of
knowing whether or not we are doing something they would consider unacceptable.
That is what stands behind taking measures like this. It is impossible
to count on the outside world making positive assumptions about us,
but we really ought to be able to count on this within the Society itself.
In recent months, not only
in this letter but in all the events leading up to it, we have repeatedly
heard the opinion — coming from people whose aspirations are expressed
in this letter—that the lessons of the esoteric school have been
stopped not because of the war but because the Society has assumed a
form that makes it necessary for such lessons to stop altogether. After
all, given the “crimes” that have been committed, it can
no longer be assumed that people will have the requisite trust in such
lessons. This means nothing less than that we have to expect that certain
measures we take within the Society will be judged in a way that can
no longer be considered a decent or respectable interpretation. This
interpretation is absolutely inadmissible; it is real slander and cannot
be excused as a simple mistake.
Legally speaking, it is
no different from libel, and it is even more worrisome when the rumors
being spread are veiled in all kinds of mystical disguises. The way
such things are passed around is often much more disastrous than people
imagine, although I wouldn't go so far as to endorse the point of view
of this letter-writer and claim that rumors whispered from one person
to another must necessarily make use of black magic. That is not what
I mean. Spreading rumors can be accomplished by quite natural means
and does not necessarily imply any talent for black magic.
Let me emphasize once again
before I continue that what I am saying is my own opinion, not to be
taken as binding on anyone else.
In the letter in question,
there was much talk of how people are supposed to have been unduly influenced
through me. I will not comment on the contradiction inherent in this—on
the one hand, my friendly conversations and handshakes are interpreted
as techniques of black magic, and on the other hand I am blamed for
not seeking closer relationships with members. On the one hand it is
stated that I cut myself off from the members and don't do enough for
them, but on the other hand I am supposed to have used each and every
conversation and handshake to influence people against their will.
We need to understand how
such a contradiction can come about. For instance, someone may desire
something — let's take the case of a person who wants to have
been the Virgin Mary in a previous incarnation. This is a real example,
not a made-up one. Suppose the person in question comes and makes me
aware of this. If I were to say, “Yes, yes, my occult research
confirms that,” then that person would most likely not take this
remark as an instance of undue influence. If what people are told corresponds
to their desires, they are extremely unlikely to interpret it as an
attempt to influence them unjustifiably. Now, self-deception and vanity
are not usually taken to such an extreme that people imagine themselves
having gone through this particular previous incarnation — they
are more likely to choose something else, but the principle involved
is what we need to consider at this point.
At this stage of human evolution,
the autonomy of individual souls must be respected in the most painstaking
way. Basically, people who think like the person who composed this letter
do not have a viable idea of this painstaking kind of respect. After
all, the writer of this letter would have found it pleasant to have
been influenced in line with his own desires, and he wished for much
more personal discussion. Suppose he and I had actually discussed all
kinds of stuff, and also exchanged handshakes. On the one hand, that
would have been exactly what he wanted, and on the other hand, the terrible
crime he mentions would have been committed against him. As I said,
most people have no idea of the painstaking regard for individual freedom
that has to be the rule in a movement like ours. We must make an intense
effort to preserve the autonomy of individual souls.
Let's imagine people coming
to us with relatively mild cases of incarnational vanity. If we agreed
with them, they would surely not go on complaining about being unduly
influenced. But suppose we said to them, “Don't be silly; never
in all your previous lives were you any such person!” If we are
being very precise about it, that would have to be considered an unjustified
intervention in these people's inner being, although perhaps not a very
serious one.
Let's look at this instance
with all possible clarity. If people come to us and tell us who they
think they were in an earlier incarnation, regardless of whether they
have come to this conclusion out of vanity or out of something else,
they have arrived at it themselves, out of their own individual souls.
This is where their own soul's paths have led them. And it belongs to
the fundamental nature of our movement to lead people further, if possible,
starting from whatever point they have arrived at inwardly when they
come to us, but not to break their heart and will at some particular
moment. If in such a moment we simply make an end of the matter by saying,
“Don't be ridiculous; that's nonsense,” that is not an appropriate
response. It actually would be an unjustified intervention if we permitted
ourselves to speak like this, and these people would have no option
but to extend us their confidence in a very personal way not appropriate
to the situation, which, as we shall soon see, requires a totally different
kind of confidence.
Instead, we should really
say something along the lines of, “Well, as things stand now,
this thought is something you have arrived at in your own soul. Try
to make this thought carry over into real life; try to live as if it
were true. See if you can actually do what you would be able to do,
and if what happens is what would have to happen if it were true.”
An answer like this helps them arrive quite logically at how things
really are. It truly preserves their personal freedom without cutting
anything off short, no matter how erroneous a path they may have been
on until now. It is important to realize that refraining from influencing
other souls is actually a very deep issue.
If they stick to the facts,
people who share the opinions expressed in this letter will also not
be able to maintain that any individuals in this Society have been particularly
spoiled by me when it comes to having their previous incarnations made
known. Please take what I have just said extremely seriously: It is
not adequate to have some clumsy idea of what it means to influence
or not influence others; in this day and age, if we always try to respect
the freedom and dignity of others, the standards we must apply will
be extremely difficult to live up to.
I have always consciously
cultivated this sort of respect for the souls of others within our Society,
to the extent that, in my attempt to preserve individual freedom, I
have made a habit of speaking much less affirmatively or negatively
than most people probably would. I have always tried to say only what
would enable the person in question to come to independent conclusions
on the matter, without acting on my authority. I have tried to eliminate
personal authority as a factor by simply advising people to take certain
things into account. This is something I have always made a conscious
effort to foster.
I hope you will also realize
that the misconceptions set down in this letter are not even among the
strangest ones that can come about. It has happened more than once that
people showed up at a lecture cycle somewhere or other, saying that
it was Dr. Steiner's expressed wish that they attend. That has happened
many times. If you look into it a bit, you will find that the people
in question had told me of their plans to attend the series and, since
I am always heartily pleased to meet members again in different places,
I had told them I was very glad. In many cases, however, what I said
was so changed in the minds of the people in question that by the next
day they were saying that it was my particular wish that they attend
this course. This is another instance of these strange misconceptions.
Many of our friends want
nothing more than to be told what to do, but I have always tried to
conduct myself so the members would notice that it would not occur to
me to want to give people personal advice about how to manage their
everyday life. I am far from wanting to influence them in things like
whether or not they should attend a certain lecture cycle. From my perspective,
the thing people most often want me to do and that I have to resist
most strongly is to influence them personally in details like this.
I never want to do that and always have to refuse. Within a society
such as ours should be, it is necessary to refrain from that kind of
thing.
All of this relates to something
else that needs to be stated once just as a matter of principle. Anyone
who observes how I try to work will realize that I always attempt to
let the matter at hand speak for itself. And that brings me to the issue
of confidence, as I would like to call it. I would really like to ask
you members to duly consider whether I have ever done anything with
regard to either an individual or the Society as a whole to encourage
confidence of a personal nature in myself. Try to think about this and
come to a conclusion on the basis of how I hold my lectures.
Let us consider an obvious
case. You were all so kind as to show up for the lecture I held two
days ago on various mathematical and geometrical ideas.
[ Note 3 ]
In the course of this lecture, I told you that from a certain
spiritual scientific perspective, matter is nothing; matter as we know
it is a hole in space. There is nothing there where matter is. However,
I do not want you to simply take this statement on faith; I am far from
wanting anyone to take these teachings on faith simply because they
come from me. Instead, I try to show how modern science, including its
most advanced and respected representatives, can arrive at the same
insight as spiritual science. I tried to demonstrate an objective basis
in fact, a basis that is also revealed by the results of scientific
research, regardless of my own personal way of arriving at this discovery
and quite apart from the fact that I am the one telling you about it.
I make a point of doing
this so you will not need personal faith in me, but will be able to
do without it and see how I try to let the subject, no matter how difficult,
speak for itself.
I am sorry to have to present
the issue of confidence to you like this; I would have preferred for
you to see for yourself that all my efforts are directed toward making
confidence in a particular personality unnecessary. The only kind of
confidence that comes into question here at all would be the kind enabling
you to say, “He is really making an effort to not simply lecture
us on some kind of inspired insights; he is really trying to get everything
together in one place so that things can be assessed on their own merit,
independent of his personality.” Of course, this is not to say
that I always succeed in “getting everything together in one place”
— first of all, there isn't enough time for that, and secondly
it is the nature of things to remain incomplete. My method, however,
does tend in the direction of eliminating rather than encouraging faith
in me personally. That is how we have to look at this issue of confidence
in a spiritual movement. That is what is important to me, but in this,
too, I am only expressing my personal opinion.
Admittedly, we must also
recognize a certain perspective that tends to make everything relative,
since in general it is true that everything should be subject to legitimate
criticism. And it is certainly true that everyone should have the right
to criticize where criticism is justified. On the other hand, this business
of criticizing must also be taken relatively. Just think, the amount
of work we can do is limited by time and cannot be extended in just
any direction according to the whims of others. In view of that, you
will realize that some of Mr. Goesch's ideas have not been thought through
in terms of real life.
As I have often pointed
out and can state quite openly, I would not venture to speak about certain
things if I had not lived and worked with them for decades and become
familiar with them over the course of a long life. For example, I would
never have spoken about Faust if I had not lived my way into it over
decades of intense involvement with the subject.
[ Note 4 ]
Having done so, however, it is a real waste of time for me,
as you can imagine, if someone who has not put anywhere near that kind
of effort into it comes and wants to argue certain points with me. You
really cannot ask that of me or of anyone else. Someone once wrote a
letter to the poet Hamerling on the occasion of his fiftieth birthday,
addressing him as “Dear old man”; Hamerling was somewhat
taken aback, needless to say.
[ Note 5 ]
Now, I am over fifty already, but I think you will admit that my task
demands a certain amount of time and will understand that I do not need
to spend time debating with people about things I was already concerned
with when those people were still in diapers. In the abstract, getting
involved in such discussions may be the right thing to do, but it is
not usually very fruitful, especially when it has to do with things
like the contents of this letter. I really have to say that. It is quite
a different thing when someone speaks out of age and experience than
when some young upstart talks about it. That is simply a fact of life.
And then, just think about
the blatant contradictions in this letter. You don't have to think as
I do, but I do want to tell you what I think about it. One sentence
reads: “Alongside the work dedicated to the good within your activity
in our spiritual movement, I have noticed certain behaviors…,”
and so on. In conjunction with this sentence, the writer lists a large
number of undertakings that I would not presume to mention myself if
they weren't listed here, since I would have to admit that everything
on this list has been done imperfectly at best. I have always emphasized,
for instance, that the Johannesbau represents only the beginning of
what ought to be done. Even so, people do not seem to be able to understand
that I might have to limit what I take on, that I cannot, in addition
to all these activities, take the time to cultivate all the relationships
dreamed up by the writer of this letter. It is really taking things
too lightly to imagine that I can possibly do both.
I am reluctant to put it
like this, and I ask you to recognize my reluctance, but in order to
do all that I would really have to ask the person who composed this
letter to make each year twice as long. Barring that, I have to be permitted
to organize my own activity as I see fit, which, however, in no way
limits what other people want and can do. That, in fact, has been the
goal of all my efforts — that each person should do what he or
she wants without anyone asking them to do anything other than what
they want to do. In that case, however, I must also be granted the right
to limit what I recognize as my own task. In most cases, it is just
those people who do not want to get involved in any concrete tasks and
do not want to develop their will to serve concrete purposes who are
most involved in criticizing what has already been accomplished.
[ Note 6 ]
However, this is not a constructive
attitude in real life. People who are not in agreement with an association
as it already exists are welcome to stay out of it, and to do whatever
they are in agreement with. It is much easier, though, to become part
of some society and criticize it from within than to do something on
your own initiative. Finding fault is easy, but it in no way determines
or restricts what you yourself can accomplish. Knowing what ought to
happen and that someone else is doing something badly is never the crucial
factor, but what is crucial is the effort someone makes to actually
carry out what one talks about and is able to do. It is also not crucial
that other people carry out what I want to have happen — they
can take it up or leave it; their freedom is limited, not by me, but
only by what they believe themselves able to accomplish. They must simply
develop the will to carry out what lies within their own capabilities.
When this Society of ours
was in the beginning stages, I believed it could be a prime example
of this last-stated principle. It is the greatest failing of this day
and age that people always want a tremendous amount but do not actually
manage to do anything. Well, that is understandable enough. You see,
anyone who has acquired knowledge and capability in any particular field
and works with what has been learned knows that what one can actually
accomplish is really terribly little. People who have had to develop
their abilities are the most aware of how little can actually be done,
while those who can do very little or have not yet tested their abilities
think they can accomplish the most. That is why programs are more visible
nowadays than accomplished facts; programs are floating around all over
the place. It is extremely easy to set down in abstract terms what we
hope to achieve through socialism, theosophy, the women's movement,
community with others, and so on. It's easy to develop ingenious and
appropriate programs. But people who have done something positive, even
within extremely limited circles, have actually accomplished much more
than the ones who put out the greatest programs for all the world to
see. My friends, we must realize that what counts is what actually gets
done. It would be best if we would more or less keep our programs locked
up in a secret chamber in our hearts and only use them as guidelines
for our individual lives.
Of course, it is very easy
to misunderstand a movement like ours. Yesterday, I pointed out that
we have to accept misunderstanding as a matter of course and spoke about
how we should relate to misunderstanding on the part of people outside
the movement who are not only unsparing in their criticism — their
criticism would actually be a good thing — but unsparing with
slander and false accusations as well. A significant amount has been
accomplished in this regard over the course of the years. Especially
in the area of slander and disparagement much has been achieved; yet
the steps necessary to fend them off have not been taken. It is really
necessary that the most intimate attributes of a spiritual movement
like ours spread within our Society.
Something I always advocate
and repeatedly mention because it is obviously part of my task is the
fact that what I can mean to another person must be determined only
by the spiritual aspect of our movement. And it is crucial that this
spiritual factor, this purely spiritual factor uniting us, not be misinterpreted.
I really cannot discuss the issue of the case at hand without touching
upon these things. I am very sorry about all this because I always try
to protect people as long as possible. However, our cause has to be
more important than individuals. There is no other way.
Anyone who can judge these
things objectively will be readily able to see the connection between
what I said earlier about respecting the freedom of each independent
soul and how I relate to individual members. I am constantly trying
to make a reality out of something that is a natural consequence of
our spiritual movement and that seems necessary to me in order to handle
all personal relationships in such a way that they are appropriately
integrated into our spiritual movement. This means I must leave each
and every member of our Society free to act in ways that may differ
completely from mine.
Some of you may share Mr.
Goesch's opinion, and welcome any efforts to cultivate our social and
personal interaction and cohesiveness. I myself think it would be a
good thing if someone would make this effort, so that our Society would
be a society in more than name only. However, my own role in this Society
is necessarily limited. Nevertheless, I realize that I am still the
one who knows by far the greatest number of members personally. Many
people here know fewer than I do. I am certainly not opposed to people
doing a lot to cultivate the personal aspects that play such a great
role in this letter, but as I said, I must limit what I myself take
on for reasons I have already presented adequately.
In view of that, it seems
a very strange misunderstanding of what is actually going on when we
hear opinions like those expressed again in this letter, claiming that
the best of what I have to offer is becoming a mere shadowy image because
of all this. According to this point of view, it seems that this Society
built on the basis of spiritual science, this Society as I have to understand
it, is seen as something that is too abstract and ought to assume a
much more personal character. I am putting it like this — “ought
to assume a much more personal character” — in order to
avoid using a different expression. I have often explained that this
personal character is not possible; it simply cannot be. I have even
said so to some members individually. I would prefer to see this personal
element rooted out to such an extent that I could, for instance, lecture
from behind a screen so as to avoid mixing up personal connections to
members with the main point, which is to disseminate anthroposophical
teachings and make them effective in actual practice. I am sorry to
have to say things like this, but how are we supposed to understand
each other if these things are not said?
I would like to relate a
particular incident and then comment on it. There is a certain person
to whom I have always related as I described above, trying to practice
what is right in relation to our spiritual movement, fulfilling my obligations
with regard to this movement and disregarding any personal factors.
[ Note 7 ]
Some time ago, this person
found it necessary to write me a letter that begins as follows. I will
not read the whole letter, but only the part of it that seems to be
at the root of this whole incident. This letter arrived on December
25, 1914 — Christmas Day of last year. I will now read this very
characteristic passage, which begins with a quotation from one of the
mystery dramas: “ ’Seven years now have passed,’ Dr.
Steiner, since you appeared to my inner vision and said to me, ‘I
am the one you have spent your life waiting for; I am the one for whom
the powers of destiny intended you.’ ” Further on in the
letter, we read, “Neither the teaching nor the teacher was enough
to revive my soul; that could only be done by a human being capable
of greater love than any other and thus capable of compensating for
a greater lack of love.”
This is asking for something
that cannot and must not be given in a personal sense. The teacher and
the teachings are of lesser importance; what is wanted is the human
being, the person. We should not play hide-and-seek in cases like this.
At the conclusion of Mr. Goesch's letter, he says that he arrived at
his insights under the guidance of the keeper of the seal of the Society
for Theosophical Art and Style. Now, this keeper of the seal is the
same person who wrote the sentence I just read, a sentence that shows
that the things she is writing about have been slowly coming to a head
for a long time. I will refrain from using any adjectives to describe
the particularly pronounced insinuations in the letter Mrs. Steiner
received from her yesterday. (See p. 115.) Such insinuations should
not be repeated because of course people should be protected as long
as they actually allow themselves to be protected. However, I really
must point out that it is possible for things like this to happen in
our Society.
Please do not imagine that
I have been blind to this development, which has split into two parts,
so to speak. I will speak first about the part that has to do with our
Society as it is seen from outside, since it may be best to talk about
that aspect first. Among the many things, some of them highly slanderous,
that have been written in defamatory articles about our movement in
general and myself in particular, there have been ever-recurring insinuations
about the number of man-chasing hysterical women in our Society. I am
not saying that this is true, but simply that it is mentioned in the
many diatribes that have appeared, slandering us and myself in particular.
The current case is not
an isolated incident, and things that appear in this form should not
be interpreted personally but taken as symptomatic. Still, I must say
that someone trying to get close to our movement should not try to do
so by writing “Seven years now have passed, Dr. Steiner…”
and so on. I do not want to go into these things at great length, but
you will understand what was meant. These things cannot be judged on
the basis of a single case, however. Instead, each individual case has
to be interpreted as a sign that the teachings have not been received
as impersonally as they should have been, and as an indication that
there were some among us ready to set less store by the teachings and
the teacher than by the human personality.
This was one of the secondary
reasons why I and my loyal colleague, who had stood by me for so many
years, were married last Christmas. I admit that we were not at all
inclined to conceal the matter behind any occult cloak. First of all,
as far as we were concerned, these personal things were nobody else's
business. Secondly, with regard to the relationship between us, it had
become necessary not to let misunderstandings arise because of things
being taken on a more personal human level than they were intended.
[ Note 8 ]
An expression used frequently
between the two of us in those days was that by marrying me, Mrs. Steiner
had become the “cleaning lady” with regard to things that
had been accumulating in some people's heads. I think you understand
what I mean. Our intent was to have things taken less personally than
they had been until then.
I hope you will not misunderstand
me when I say that in general in a society such as this one, liberating
ourselves as much as possible from the customs of the rest of the world
is not the point. Instead, we should be helping the world progress with
regard to customs and ways of looking at things. It can only be of help
to us to arrange such matters so they are quite clear in the eyes of
the outer world and so no one can get mistaken ideas about them.
This also led Mrs. Steiner,
in responding to a letter from the person who actually instigated this
whole business, to write that a civil wedding ceremony was actually
not such a terribly important event, considering our years of working
together on things that were of utmost importance to our lives. The
response to that was, “However, your civil marriage unleashed
a disaster for me, one that I had feared and seen coming for years —
not in what actually happened, you understand, but in its nature and
severity.” It should suffice for me to point out that a certain
relationship exists between what we are experiencing now and the appointment
of the “cleaning lady.” As far as I am concerned, no further
proof of the need for the cleaning lady is needed!
There is no harm in taking
things at face value and not reading more into them than is actually
there, my friends, but it is always harmful to link a particular occult
mission with some petty detail, or even something of major importance,
from one's personal life. That's why we prefer the image of the “cleaning
lady,” which corresponds to the facts much better than any pompous
pronouncements we might have come up with, although we never imagined
we would have to talk about it.
It is my personal opinion
that if someone in our spiritual movement looks for something so personal
in things that are perfectly self-explanatory, it is a disturbing reminder
of the prevalence of certain instincts in our Society. The only acceptable
way to deal with these instincts is to admit that they exist and face
up to them truthfully without any occult disguises. That is also the
best way to move beyond them. It only works if you confront them for
what they really are. In our circles, however, an incredible amount
has been done to surround these things with an occult aura.
Why should we let the purely
objective interest we actually ought to have in our spiritual movement
be clouded by dragging personal vanity into everything? Why should we
let that happen? People who spend a lot of time thinking about their
incarnations down through history are not really interested in this
cause; they lack the particular kind of interest they ought to have.
The only difference between them and ordinary egotists is that ordinary
egotists are not so presumptuous as to identify themselves with all
kinds of historical incarnations, but satisfy their personal vanity
with other things.
It is really true that it
is much better for people to flaunt their clothes or their money than
their incarnations — that is much the lesser of the two evils.
These are things we have to take seriously and inscribe into the depths
of our soul. They have done too much harm over the years and are so
intimately bound up with what I am forced to call “personal vanity,”
to use a general term.
When personal vanity plays
a large part, the most unbelievable misunderstandings can arise. As
she recounts in her letter, this “keeper of the seal” once
came to me and stated that she was obliged to apply standards already
long since present within her to whatever came toward her from the outer
world. My response was, “Why should that mean you can't be part
of our spiritual movement? Of course you can apply your own standards,”
by which I only meant that our teachings have nothing to fear from anyone's
personal standards. That is what people are supposed to apply. In my
opinion, there was nothing wrong with her wanting to apply her own standards.
But the way she interpreted this showed that what she actually meant
was that she was already in possession of everything spiritual that
could be given her; she had already seen it in visions and thus was
already in possession of it.
Then this woman went on
to ask whether in that case she could or should become a student of
mine. I do not know why she asked that; the question is a contradiction
in itself. Well, all I can say is that it was an undeniable fact that
she wanted to join us in spite of everything, and there was no way to
prevent her from doing it. However, her claiming to be already in possession
of it all and condescending to work with this movement while insisting
on applying her own standards reveal a kind of vanity that is looking
for something other than our teachings. After all, she did not need
the teachings if she had them already. People are so unbelievably unaware
of this kind of vanity, and it plays such a very great role in a movement
like ours.
This person assumed that
what was being taught actually stemmed from her, no less. That is somewhat
difficult to understand. She must have found some reason to believe
that in something in Mrs. Steiner's letter of response to her,9 something
that led her to point more specifically to this mysterious source of
our esoteric movement. That is how this strange state of affairs came
about. My friends, it is no longer possible to play hide-and-seek for
the sake of protecting individuals; it is time for us to go into these
things. In the seal-keeper's answer to Mrs. Steiner, she says, "Three
years ago, like a sick person seeking out a physician, I asked Dr. Steiner
for a consultation. There was something very sad that I had to say during
that interview, and I have had to say it frequently since then: Although
I could follow his teachings, I could not understand anything of what
affected me directly or of what happened to me. I must omit what brought
me to the point of saying this, since I do not know how much you know
about my background and biography." She says this because I once
had to hear a conversation in which this was discussed. “I was
not able to express my need, and Dr. Steiner made it clear that he did
not want to hear about it.” It's true that I did not want to hear
about it, but I did respond. You cannot just avoid things like that
by indicating that you do not want to hear about them. “The following
summer, however, we were graced with the opportunity to perform
The Guardian of the Threshold;
in it a conversation takes place between
Strader and Theodora, a conversation that reflected in the most delicate
way the very thing that was oppressing me. Perhaps Dr. Steiner did not
‘intend’ anything of the sort” — intend is in
quotation marks — “nevertheless, it is a fact. Perhaps it
was meant as an attempt at healing.” In the passage in question
from the mystery drama, Strader says he owes everything to Theodora.
When people write things
like this, especially in an attempt at a formal style, though its grandiloquence
contributes nothing to its clarity, we really cannot assume that it
deserves to be treated as a personal communication. There is a lot that
could be seen as personal, and I have mentioned none of that; everything
I have mentioned is intimately related to the whole character and nature
of our movement. If people don't want these things to be mentioned in
public, they should not write them down. When the kind of attitude expressed
in this letter becomes predominant, it undermines everything I am trying
to accomplish with every word I speak and with everything I have been
doing for many years.
If we are to go on working
together, you must not remain ignorant of what I think my position among
you should be. If in fact we are to go on working together, it will
have to be on the same basis as before. We must find a way to create
a form for our spiritual movement that will be appropriate to the stage
of evolution of people in our day and age. That cannot happen, however,
if all kinds of personal things take the place of what should be achieved
and understood on a spiritual level. It astounds me that in these difficult
times, when our interest should be focused on the development of a major
portion of humanity, someone should have so little interest in the events
of the day as to drag such highly personal interests into our Society.
A person who thinks it permissible to live in the illusion that something
did not happen the way she dreamed it would, and has nothing better
to do than cause a crisis on that account, is really cut off from the
most profound aspect of our times.
This is how these highly
personal matters start creeping into our Society. However, personal
matters cannot be allowed to enter our movement, not in this form and
not in any other. People whose chief interest is in their own person
will only find a place in our Society to a very limited extent. Generally,
people who wrap themselves in a mystical cloud also attempt to do the
same to those around them. It would be inconsistent to imagine that
you yourself are everything under the sun and not have the people around
you be something special too, so the tendency is to broaden the circle.
But when, as so frequently happens, this purely personal interest and
personal feeling of vanity take the place of objective observation of
and efforts toward what our spiritual movement is meant to be, they
inflict the worst possible damage on our Society.
One might have thought that
the Johannesbau going up here would have presented enough problems to
keep our members busy and distract them from the vainer and more foolish
things in life. One really might have believed that this building would
turn their thoughts to better things. But as you see, that has not come
about as we might have hoped, and yet we have to go on working. I thank
you all for the expressions of confidence contained in the letter our
friend Mr. Bauer brought to me, as well as those expressed by other
members, and I hope ways and means can be found to deal with these obstacles
to our movement's true progress and to give a little thought to what
it will take to keep our movement from being too seriously constrained
by outer hindrances in the future.
Criticism, my friends, cannot
harm us. People can criticize us objectively as much as they like, and
it will do no damage. First of all, it will always be possible to counter
the criticism with whatever needs to be said, and secondly, time is
on our side. Today, people may well still think we're fools because
of our boiler house or the Johannesbau itself, or whatever, but they'll
come around, and we can wait until they do. That's the way it is with
anything new.
It is something totally
different when slanderous and untrue statements are made. In that case,
we are obliged to set these claims straight again and again if we don't
choose to simply ignore them, and of course the slanderers can always
answer back. It can even reach the point of taking legal action. Yet,
we do need to defend ourselves against such statements, even if it feels
like washing our hands in black and filthy water.
If we could really foster
an active attitude and strengthen our forces on these two fronts, we
would be able to do a lot that has been left undone so far.
Of course, this is not meant
as a personal reproach to anyone in particular; some of what I said
applies to some people, other things to others. It is intended quite
generally. However, what I have pointed out has a solid basis in fact,
and in order for you to see it, I have had to present something of the
situation to show how things that were only intended to be taken spiritually
have been taken very personally.
Please don't take it amiss
if I say that if someone comes with complaints, even if she says she
already knew everything she has gained or can still gain through the
movement, the only thing to do is treat that person like a child and
offer fatherly admonition or friendly consolation. I was naive enough
to believe that it had helped, and then had to watch these delusions
of grandeur appear afterward, so it…
[gap in stenographic record]
great damage within this Society of ours.
Considering the claims of
the keeper of the seal, there was never any point in doing anything
other than smilingly forgiving her for this rubbish, the way you excuse
a child. Please don't hold it against me that I said what simply had
to be said. But for the sake of our movement's dignity, we cannot permit
pathological elements to destroy it. That is why we cannot always take
the stand that we should simply accept these pathological elements for
what they are. When this pathological element takes on all the appearances
of delusions of grandeur, we have to call it by name; we have no other
choice. This is by no means directed against the personality in question,
but only against what is deserving of criticism in that person. After
all, we must face the facts and not hide the issue behind the cloak
of the occult. It requires a particular effort at self-education to
do that, but if we succeed, we will see things as they truly are instead
of through a glass darkly.
Perhaps you will say that
I myself am speaking out of vanity at this point. That will make no
difference to me, since I have already been condemned to call a spade
a spade in this instance. I have known many students who thought they
were smarter than their teachers and proceeded to tell them off, claiming
that the latter had made all kinds of promises without keeping them.
That this should also happen within our Society comes as no great surprise.
Now I have given you my
own humble opinion, which you are not to take as binding. I am simply
asking that you take it in the same way I want you to take everything
I say, that is, I would like you to try to see if we are better able
to get on with life in our movement once a common resolve is there to
call the big things big and the little things little instead of drawing
a mystical halo around any old arbitrary personal vanity.
If we are not aware of the
full seriousness of our movement, the temptation is very great to fake
it by decking out all sorts of life's little vanities in this same serious
garb. That cannot be, and this simple statement means more than it seems
to. This is what I had to say, although I did not want to. I cannot
read these letters in their entirety in front of the whole movement, but
it would not occur to anyone who could read them that I have overstepped
my authority by quoting passages from private correspondence. In this
case, it had to happen because these things are related to the very
foundations of what we are doing together.
|