Lecture Two
The Anthroposophical Society
as a Living Being
September 11, 1915 Dornach
YESTERDAY, my dear
friends, I explained the primary difference between a society like ours
and other societies or associations. I said its statutes and the points
on its program do not exhaustively describe the character of our Society
— if we add or delete points and statutes, nothing significant
will be added to or subtracted from what our Society is essentially
meant to be. I also pointed out the most obvious way in which our Society
differs from the usual kind of program-based society or association.
That kind of association can be dissolved at any moment. But if it became
necessary to dissolve our Society and we actually disbanded, that would
in no way change the real state of affairs since our Society, unlike
others, is based not on illusory human inventions such as programs and
statutes, but on realities. We touched on one of these realities, namely
that the lecture cycles are in the hands of all our members, a fact
that would not change in the slightest if the Society were dissolved.
And the same applies to many other realities on which our Society is
based.
Consequently, we really
must get to know the conditions necessary for the survival of our Society
and not delude ourselves about them. I gave a rather superficial explanation
of these conditions yesterday, and would like to go into them more deeply
today.
You all know that in many
materialistic discussions on the nature of life itself, we can find
many definitions or explanations of what constitutes a living being.
You have probably learned enough on that subject from spiritual science
to realize that all these explanations and definitions are of necessity
one-sided and incomplete. The greatest mistake or illusion of materialistically
minded people is to think they can encompass the essence of a thing
in a single definition or explanation. To illustrate how grotesque this
idea is, I once told you the story of how a Greek school of philosophy
was searching for a definition of the human being. What they finally
came up with was that a human being was a living being with two legs
and no feathers.
[ Note 1 ]
Well, this is undoubtedly correct; it is an absolutely correct definition.
But the next day, someone who had understood this definition brought in
a plucked chicken and said, “Here is a living thing that has two
legs and no feathers, so it must be a human being!”
The usual attempts at defining
life are no better than that. That's just the way it is with definitions,
and we have to be aware of that fact. There is also a comparable materialistic
definition of life given by a famous zoologist, a definition that is
quite correct and useful within the limits of its applicability:
[ Note 2 ]
“A living thing is something that can leave a corpse behind
under certain circumstances; what it leaves behind when it is destroyed
is thus not a living thing.” Clearly, this definition applies
only to the outer limits of the physical plane, where a living being
does in fact leave a corpse behind at its demise; thus, this definition
is valid there. When a machine is destroyed, it does not leave a corpse
behind; we would be speaking metaphorically if we talked about the corpse
of a watch, for instance. However, if our Society were dissolved, it
would actually leave behind a real corpse, in the truest sense of the
word.
What is the nature of a
corpse? Once a corpse has been abandoned by its soul, it no longer obeys
the same laws as it did when it was united with that soul. Instead,
it begins to obey the physical laws of the earthly elements. The same
thing would be true of the corpse of our Society as soon as the Society
was dissolved. In addition, the Society's vehicle, namely all the lecture
cycles now in the members' possession, would also be part of this corpse.
We can be quite precise
and scientific in taking this comparison further. If a corpse is not
to have a detrimental effect on its surroundings, it must be cremated
or buried. This would also apply to the corpse our Society would undoubtedly
leave behind at its dissolution. As a consequence, once we know what
our Society really is, we become aware of our responsibility toward
what it is based on. A society or association based on statutes and
programs is like a machine that leaves behind only pieces if you destroy
it, but our Society would leave an actual corpse behind if it were dissolved.
It would leave behind something that would have to be thought of as
a corpse and treated accordingly.
My friends, we really must
think about what our Society requires to survive. For the time being,
let's turn away from the superficial fact that the lecture cycles exist
and look at their content, which, as I mentioned yesterday, is now present
in a certain number of heads. It exists not only in the heads of people
who took it in properly and harmoniously, but perhaps also of those—present
company excepted, of course, for politeness' sake — who took it
up in a distorted form and go on distorting it as they talk about it.
All of this is really there and is alive in the Society. And just think
of the effect it would have as the Society's corpse if the Society were
to disband. That is why we must take responsibility for guarding what
our Society requires for survival, and why I appealed to you yesterday
in various ways to safeguard those needs.
Now, I just said that if
the Society were dissolved, it would leave behind a corpse. This characteristic
tells us that in the truest sense of the word, the Society is a real
living being. But the Society also possesses another characteristic
of living things, namely the fact that it can get sick. I told you that
an association founded on the basis of a program and statutes is like
a machine or a mechanism, and when members do something that does not
fit in with the machine, they are expelled. Expelling members from an
association founded on statutes is always just a matter of “lovingly”
applying a rule.
However, in the case of
a society like ours, which is a living organism rather than a mechanism,
taking the action of expelling a member will very seldom have any significant
effect on the actual problem. In our circumstances, expelling a member
who has done something wrong is simply taking the easy way out. That
is not to say that we cannot do it, but we do have to realize that it
is much more important to keep the organism of our Society so healthy
that it acts as a healer in its totality when confronted with individual
unhealthy growths. In most cases, healing a sick organism is nothing
more than calling up the healing forces of the entire organism when
an individual member or organ is ill. It is important that we understand
the process of potential illness within our Society and become aware
of the need to call up the healing forces of its entire organism.
Now, I already explained
yesterday that one important force for healing consists in getting used
to being absolutely exact with regard to phenomena on the physical plane
— truth in exactitude, and exactitude in truthfulness. In outer
exoteric life, if some bit of information is altered through gossip
or lack of precision in being passed on from one person to the next,
that doesn't matter nearly as much as it would matter if we were to
let this become habitual within our Society. One of the most urgent
needs, then, is for us to take exactitude as our guiding principle in
everything we say and do.
It is only natural for people
to ask what they must do in order to help strengthen the Society. The
answer is that the single most important thing is for each individual
to really feel like a member of the Society in the right way. Members
must experience the Society as an organism and themselves as its organs.
That requires, however, that we all make the affairs of the Society
our own and that we are able to follow the Society's train of thought.
Knowing about the concerns of the Society and wanting to know about
them is of fundamental, crucial importance. Of course, this presupposes
a certain interest in the Society as such, and to develop this interest,
we have to know that the Society is an organism and take this fact seriously.
It is much more than just a metaphor.
For example, we need to
understand the following. We have three points listed in our statutes.
[ Note 3 ]
It follows from what I said
before that statutes are only of secondary importance for us. Nonetheless,
they are there. In fact, they have to be there. And if we consider these
three statutory points, we can describe them best by saying that they
represent our work, the work of our Society. But if you think about
how it is with human beings and their relationship to their work, you
will find that people's work is what makes them tired and wears them
out. Describing a person's work, however, by no means definitively characterizes
that person, and it makes just as little sense to say that the work
within the confines of these three points on our program encompasses
the whole nature and essence of our Society.
However, performing this
work does wear the Society down. This means that our Society, just like
a human being, needs to be taken care of. Just like a human organism,
the organism of the Society also needs care. And it's not enough to
think that being a member of the Society means nothing more than using
the Society as a place for fostering what is expressed in these three
points in our statutes. It also means taking an interest in the guidance
and management of the Society as such. When someone lacks this interest,
that really means that person is opposed to the Society's ongoing existence.
Being interested only in the work the Society does is not the same thing
as being interested in the Society as such. But in order for our Society
to exist as a basis for this work, a certain interest in the Society
as such, in the Society as an organism, must also be present. That is,
a certain principle of togetherness, of living and working together,
has to be cultivated within our Society.
I said yesterday that in
certain cases it is necessary to become quite drastic in calling a spade
a spade, and also that it belongs to the very nature of our Society
to be able to count on not having these things spread abroad immediately.
The grotesque example I used yesterday, the example of the man in the
barbershop whose habits were at odds with those of his surroundings,
was meant to show that the motive behind this kind of clash is often
quite different from what people claim. As I showed, the man in question
was motivated by hysterical vanity.
Karma has led us to set
up our headquarters here in this area, and so we find ourselves living
under conditions that are not exactly ideal in all respects, if I may
put it like that. That was what I meant when I said that even if each
of us behaved in an absolutely exemplary manner, we might be attacked
with still more slander and so on, even if all our members were absolutely
exemplary in how they behaved within the general population. So you
see, I am not saying that we must take all possible prejudices into
account, but only that we need to look at the living conditions our
Society needs.
In terms of our own human
nature, our own physical body, we know that we have to be physically
adapted to the external conditions of life around us, on which we depend,
and that our physical organism is in constant interaction with the outside
world. The same thing applies to the outer organism of our Society.
It has to develop within the social framework in which our karma has
placed us, and this makes it imperative that our members respect our
Society's needs with regard to living conditions. I have explained what
these conditions are time and time again.
An important point I once
expressly stated in a rebuttal
[ Note 4 ]
of a local pastor's article attacking our Society
[ Note 5 ]
was that our Society as such does not have anything directly
to do with religion. After all, what matters is not only to always say
the right thing, but also to say what needs to be said in each particular
instance. That is what is important. And one of the things most crucially
needed for our whole movement to flourish is for the outer world to
finally realize something I've tried to explain again and again. I have
said repeatedly that our movement has no more to do with religion than
the Copernican view of the solar system at its inception had to do with
any particular religious confession. That the religious denominations
were opposed to the Copernican system was their problem, and no reflection
on the Copernican view itself. And now we must stand firm on one point,
namely, that we have no intention of founding a sect or a religious
movement. At one point, I had to get downright unpleasant, because,
with the best will in the world, people were writing articles about
our building and calling it a “temple,” which was very detrimental
to us. It made it seem, quite unnecessarily, as if we were competing
with the religious denominations. That is why I always remind our members
to try to popularize the term “School for Spiritual Science.”
It is really important for
people to hear again and again that we have nothing to do with a religious
sect or with founding a new religion or anything like that. Our members
commit untold sins against the Society when they fail to point out,
when providing information, that our Society has nothing to do with
founding a religion. Not only that, but by omission they actually do
a lot to make it seem as if we were trying to found a religion. It is
important to take this into account even in trivial instances and to
take every opportunity to beat it into people's hard heads that this
is not a temple and not a church, but something that is dedicated to
scientific purposes.
Sometimes, my friends, what
is said is less important than how it is said. We have to realize that
we will always give outsiders the impression that we are a sect or some
kind of new religion if we invariably put on a long face in talking
about anything happening in our movement— “so long a face
that your chin hits your stomach,” as someone once put it to me.
[ Note 6 ]
I know this is not a nice
way of putting it, but it is certainly to the point. Of course, this
is because many people imagine that this kind of exaggerated seriousness
is the only way to talk about feelings related to religious life. But
we must make every effort to free our movement from the preconceived
idea that we are trying to found a church, a religion, or a sect, and
to popularize the idea that this is a spiritual scientific movement
taking its place in the world just as the Copernican system did, so
that everyone can see that we are the ones being wronged. The Church
made a mistake in opposing the teachings of Copernicus; it had to accept
them eventually anyway.
[ Note 7 ]
The same thing will happen with our movement as well — the Church
will have to accept it.
This is an example of how
we have to learn to speak very exactly, and precise speaking must be
considered the lifeblood of our Society in its relations with the outside
world. It is one way of doing something really constructive on behalf
of the Society. People who are only interested in reading lecture cycles
— which has its uses, of course, and we couldn't do without it
— and take no interest in the governance of the Society, especially
here, where you are all in such close contact — well, people who
do not want to develop that interest are actually not in support of
the Society as such, as I said before. You must develop an interest
in the Society! The point is not simply to be there for the sake of
participating somehow in the work the Society has to do, but to develop
an interest in the Society as such. This means, however, that the affairs
of the Society as a living entity have to enter our individual awareness.
And the less we need statutes in order to do that, the better.
You see how necessary it
is for us to become more and more able to stand firm when someone from
the outside says something negative about our Society, and to be able
to say that we can vouch for the fact that something like that could
not possibly happen in our Society. We must be able to count on the
fact that the kind of slander that gets circulated is false in almost
all instances — although exceptions are always possible, of course.
This, however, requires a really vital interest in the affairs of the
Society.
Let's assume that some kind
of indiscretion occurs. For example, let's take the hypothetical case
of a man and a woman who, one fine afternoon in May, are so indiscreet
as to do something they shouldn't do, outside and in full view of the
people in the neighborhood. Let's assume that this kind of indiscretion
takes place. What ought to happen as a matter of course if our Society
were constituted as it should be? The natural thing would be for the
people in question to realize in the course of the next few days that
they ought to find an older member in whom they could confide, and ask
what can be done about it. That would mean that they are making their
own private matters the concern of the Society.
Please note the kind of
example I have chosen. It is not simply the kind of thing we should
regard as a strictly private matter that is none of our business. Rather,
it is something that could be extremely damaging to the Society. We
cannot function on the principle of the knee that says, “That's
my private business”; the knee has to feel like a part of the
whole organism. Of course, such things must also be received with real
interest. They have to be seen as a concern of the Society; there must
always be someone there who is aware of not only what is of immediate
interest to him or her, but who also knows a lot about the Society and
can contribute to the Society's ongoing well-being.
In other words, this means
that we have to get beyond saying, “I have my own circle of friends,
and it's to my credit that I brought them into the Society; this circle
of friends is what interests me.” I certainly do not mean to criticize
people for developing friendships and personal connections — that
is none of the Society's business. However, it does have an immediate
effect on the Society if people are only interested in the Society because
of their own membership in it. We have to make the concerns of the Society
our own. We must preclude the possibility of first hearing about some
offensive incident from someone outside the Society rather than from
within our own membership, and we will automatically take a step toward
preventing this when the right kind of interest in our internal social
relationships is present.
For instance, at present
you can ask four or five people whether a particular person has been
attending our lectures in the past few weeks, and discover that none
of them knows. That can easily happen among us. Of course, it is understandable
if one or the other person doesn't know anything about it, but if you
cannot find out anything at all, even by asking around among people
who can be presumed to be in the know, that demonstrates a lack of interest
and shows that our Society is a mechanism, not an organism. It shows
that people are not taking an interest in its life and vitality. That
is what I want to emphasize again and again — the need for an
interest in our Society's life and vitality.
You see, my friends, we
are sometimes surprised by events in our Society that would not surprise
us if the members were sensitive to their obligations — and I
use that word deliberately — and were participating in the thinking,
feeling, and doing of the Society as if they were part of a living organism.
But two things are necessary for that to happen. First, each one of
us must be willing not to deal with incidents touching on the Society's
needs as if they were his or her strictly private concerns. And second,
anyone willing to do that must seek out another member with a sympathetic
ear.
In this present crisis involving
the part of the Society around the building in Dornach, regardless of
how many formal resolutions and new paragraphs you formulate, you will
still not be able to cope with what is going on in the Society. In spite
of all that, we will still not be able to prevent ending up with the
above-mentioned corpse on our hands. You can only prevent it by beginning
to take an active interest in the affairs of the Society. This means
more than the one-time application of intelligence and good sense to
formulating new paragraphs and setting up tribunals to deal with “transgressions”;
it means making the Society an ongoing object of interest in a living
context. But above all, it means we must not be afraid to think, regardless
of how unsettling that may be.
I have already mentioned
that we are now living in a highly abnormal phase of European history,
which we hope will soon come to an end. In times like this, we have
to realize that we should not feel free to send anything and everything
we happen to think of over international borders, even if it is nothing
incorrect or offensive. I am not talking about private matters, I'm
talking about things that concern the Society. In fact, however, a large
number of our members do not want to think at all about what might or
might not be appropriate to the times. Of course, nothing wrong has
been done and I do not mean to reprimand anyone, but only to encourage
you all to give it some thought and consideration before you act.
We all know that applications
for membership or notices of acceptance are totally innocuous documents
that cannot possibly cause political repercussions. However, that is
not how nations at war look at things. So why do our members insist
on sending membership cards out of the country? Perhaps out of thoughtlessness,
perhaps out of stubbornness, because they have a point to prove. But
if such things continue to happen on a large scale, people will mistakenly
read all kinds of things into them, and it will become impossible for
the Society to continue to exist. Our members, of all people, ought
to be distinguished by their ability to think! But we have to pay attention
to these things, or we will not see the Society continue for very much
longer.
Once in a while I need to
refer back to things in the past. For example, our criterion for admitting
members to the Society has never been that only exceptional human beings
who were head and shoulders above the rest of humanity would be considered.
That is what many people think, but it's not true, and there are others
who think that people who are admitted to the Society are in no way
exceptional. In fact, we also made a point of admitting people to help
them become healthy. And then what happened? Other members began to
regard one of these people, someone who was to be helped by being admitted,
as a kind of apostle, as someone who was there to heal the Society.
Why is it possible, my friends,
for something like that to happen? It is because we are not adequately
aware of the ways and means we have at our disposal to prevent it. Just
think back to some of the things that have happened — and think
we must, if we are to sustain an esoteric movement! If you think back,
you will find that whenever something like that happened, whatever you
needed in order to be able to assess the situation was usually made
available in a lecture; it was spoken out. You only had to be alert
to it whenever some danger was present. This means, however, that you
really have to consider in detail the lectures given during the time
in question. There is no need for us to make the mistake of getting
overly personal in our efforts to do the right thing; we can stick to
objective facts. But we have to understand what is objectively true
on a case-by-case basis.
At this point, there can
be no doubt that something radical and fundamental has to happen, especially
for that part of our Society gathered around this building. But it is
high time to make sure that we do not look for this fundamental and
radical action in the wrong direction, that we do not believe it can
be accomplished through a few simple things, a few principles and resolutions.
That will not bring about any fundamental change or any fundamental
healing.
My friends, I must confess
that it is not at all easy for me to discuss these things as I have
been doing yesterday and today, simply because I would prefer to be
talking about other things, of course, and because I also know that
many of you have no desire to hear such things, since, after all, your
reason for being here is to hear various esoteric truths. However, my
friends, if the Society continues to be of as little use as the recent
actions of some individuals suggest, we may have to concede that it
is no longer possible to use it as a vehicle for introducing spiritual
science into the world. Just think of the discrepancy between what I
have just said and something else I have had to say here many times
in the last few weeks, namely, that spiritual science as we know it
must be the greatest influence of our times in counteracting the presumptuous,
superficial, and deceptive knowledge existing in the name of science
and research. Indeed, spiritual science must make itself felt as a fundamentally
progressive element within humankind. And yet we still have to talk
about things that should really be self-explanatory, and all this at
the risk of being constantly misunderstood. We all tend to see the sins
of the other and not make the effort to see our Society as a real living
organism, that is, to experience ourselves as organs within this organism.
Of course, members who have
joined us only recently can easily make mistakes, but I wonder what
some of the long-term members are doing here if they are not doing anything
to prevent the mistakes of the newcomers. It should be a principle of
ours that longtime members pay attention to the new members as individuals
and offer help, in word and deed, to protect them against mistaking
foolishness for cosmic wisdom.
It is inherent in the very
nature of an esoteric society, however, that foolishness occurs every
now and then. Thus, there have to be as many members as possible who
can see through the foolishness and prevent it from being implemented.
That includes what is in Mr. Goesch's letter.
[ Note 8 ]
He claims that promises have been made and not kept, and has
tried to confirm this through a member who he believes or assumes has
been promised something. When this member told him that this was not
the case, Mr. Goesch, instead of admitting he was wrong, said that this
was one more proof that magic is at work—when I shake hands with
somebody on something, the handshake wipes out the promise in that person's
memory. This is one of the main accusations in Goesch's letter.
It is obvious, my friends,
that Mr. Goesch has not only written about these things, but has talked
to a number of individuals about them. A vital interest in the affairs
of the Society would really have required these people to go in all
due haste to a more experienced member and make him or her aware of
this situation. It is absolutely incomprehensible how anyone can allow
Goesch to say something as impossible as, “When people tell me
no promise has been made to them, the conclusion I come to is not that
they really were not promised anything, but that their memory of the
promise has been wiped out by the power of suggestion,” and let
it stand uncontested. When things like this are allowed to happen unhindered,
then clearly the Society is not viable and cannot be used as a vehicle
for esoteric truths.
There are two things, my
friends, that are very much on my mind. One is the fact that everything
I know compels me to consider bringing spiritual science to human beings
as both necessary and urgent. But I am equally aware of another fact,
namely, that the instrument established for this purpose is in the midst
of a crisis. That is why I cannot help “tormenting” you
with what I had to say yesterday and today. After all, meetings to take
remedial action have been announced. But if these meetings run their
course the way they did in earlier, similar cases, we will get nowhere.
Please be aware that the
simple measure of expelling some one will never accomplish anything.
Expulsion cannot resolve any concern of the Society. As you recall,
we expelled Dr. Hugo Vollrath many years ago, and he managed to do everything
he did later on in spite of having been expelled.
[ Note 9 ]
The same thing will happen in similar cases. It is possible
to expel a member, but that is not enough; we cannot rest content with
that.
If you will get out Theosophy,
which is the first book I wrote in the theosophical movement on the
subject of theosophy, and read the chapter entitled “The Path
of Knowledge,” you will find certain things that, if you think
them through, will make it easy for you to come up on your own with
what I said yesterday and today.
[ Note 10 ]
It is all there in that chapter. However, I must assume that
not even this very first book of mine has been understood, for if it
had been, many recent events could not have taken place.
When the special members'
meeting takes place tomorrow, we must be sure that we are looking at
these things with all due seriousness and dignity.
[ Note 11 ]
We need to ask ourselves whether we really want to let things
get to the point where we have to admit that spiritual science cannot
be disseminated by means of a society like this one. If that is the
case, if it becomes impossible to do this through the Society, then
we will need to find other ways of dealing with what is left behind
as its corpse, and that will be much more difficult.
[ Note 12 ]
I am not responsible for
making the agenda for tomorrow, but how that agenda is dealt with will
play a part in deciding whether the Anthroposophical Society will continue
to exist in the future. Therefore, I will content myself with making
an urgent appeal to you to deal with this situation with the greatest
possible responsibility and to not gloss over things that are of the
utmost significance for human civilization as a whole.
Tomorrow there will be a
eurythmy performance at half past ten, followed by a lecture.
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