V
ANTI-CHRISTIANITY. — THE HEALING OF THE GULF. — THE
MYSTERIES RE-AWAKENED IN A NEW KNOWLEDGE. —
FLOW OF THE MOVEMENT IN ITS TWO FIRST PERIODS.
It
is not without significance to observe in the anthroposophic
movement itself, particularly amongst those first people who
began, as one might say, by being just an ordinary audience,
how the ground had, so to speak, to be conquered for
Christianity. For the theosophic movement, in its association
with Blavatsky's special personality, started out in every way
from an anti-christian orientation.
This anti-christian orientation, which I mentioned in
connection with the same phenomenon in a very different person,
Friedrich Nietzsche, is one which I should like to examine a
little in a clearer light before going further.
We
must be quite clear ... it follows, indeed, from all the
various studies which, in our circles more especially, have
been directed to the Mystery of Golgotha ... we must be quite
clear that the Mystery of Golgotha intervened as a fact
in the evolution of mankind on earth. It must be taken, in the
first place, as a fact. And if you go back to my book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact, and the treatment of the
subject there, you will find already the attempt made there to
examine the whole Mystery-life of ancient times with a view to
the various impulses entering into it; and then to show how the
different forces at work in the different, individual mysteries
all came together in one, met in a harmony, and thereby made it
possible for that which first, in the Mysteries, came before
men so to speak in veiled form, to be then displayed openly
before all men as an historic fact. So that in the Mystery of
Golgotha we have the culmination in an external fact of the
total essence of the ancient Mysteries. And then, that the
whole stream of mankind's evolution became necessarily changed
through the influences that came into it from the Mystery of
Golgotha. — This is what I tried to show in this
particular book.
Now, as I have often pointed out, at the time when the Mystery
of Golgotha was enacted as a fact, there were still in
existence remnants of the ancient Mystery-Wisdom. And by aid of
these remnants of ancient Mystery-Wisdom, which passed on into
the Gospels, as I described in the book, — it was
possible for men to approach this Unique Event, which first
really gives the Earth's evolution its meaning. The methods of
knowledge which they needed to understand the Mystery of
Golgotha could be taken from the ancient Mysteries. Rut it must
be noted at the same time, that the whole life of the Mysteries
is disappearing, — disappearing in the sense in which in
old times it had existed and found its crown and culmination in
the Mystery of Golgotha. And I pointed out too, that really, in
the fourth century after Christ, all those impulses vanish,
which mankind could still receive direct from the ancient way
of knowledge, and that of this ancient way of knowledge there
only remains more or less a tradition; so that here or there it
is possible — for particular persons, for peculiar
individuals, to bring these traditions again to life; but a
continuous stream of evolution, such as the Mysteries presented
in the old days, has ceased. And so all means, really, of
under-standing the Mystery of Golgotha is lost.
The
tradition continued to maintain itself. There were the
Gospels, — at first kept secret by the ecclesiastical
community, and then made public to the people in the various
countries. There were the ritual observances. It was possible,
during the further course of human history in the West, to keep
the Mystery of Golgotha alive, so to speak, in remembrance. But
the possibility of thus keeping it alive ceased with the moment
when, in the fifth post-atlantean century,
intellectualism came on the scene, with all that I spoke
of yesterday as modern education. At this time there entered
into mankind a science of natural objects, — a science
which, were it only to evolve further the same methods as it
has done hitherto, could never possibly lead to a comprehension
of the spiritual world. To do so, these scientific methods
require to be further extended: they require the extension they
receive through anthroposophy. Rut if one stopped short at
these natural science methods in their mere beginnings, as
introduced by Copernicus, Galileo and the rest, then, in the
picture of the natural world, as so seen, there was no place
for the Mystery of Golgotha.
Now
only just consider what this means. In none of the ancient
religions was there any cleft between the Knowledge of the
World and what we may call the Know-ledge of God. Worldly
learning, profane learning, flowed over quite in course of
nature into theology. In all the heathen religions there is
this unity between the way in which they explain the natural
world, and in which they then mount up in their explanation of
the natural world, to a comprehension of the divine one, of the
manifold. divinity that works through the medium of the natural
world, ‘Forces of nature,’ forces of the abstract kind, such as
we have to-day, such as are generally accepted on the
compulsion of scientific authority, — such ‘forces of
nature’ were not what people had in those days. They had live
beings, beings of the natural world, who guided, who directed,
the various phenomenon of nature; beings to whom one could
build a bridge across from that which is in the human soul
itself. So that in the old religions, there was nowhere that
split, which exists between what is the modern science of the
natural world, and what is supposed to be a comprehension of
the spiritual and divine one.
Now
Anthroposophy will never make any pretension that it is going,
itself, to establish the grounds of religion. But although
religion must be always something that rests upon itself and
forms in itself an independent stream in the spiritual life of
mankind; yet, on the other hand, man's nature simply demands
that there should be an accordance between what is knowledge
and what is religion. The human mind must be able to pass over
from knowledge to religion without having to jump a gulf; and
it must again be able to pass over from religion to knowledge,
without having to jump a gulf. But the whole form and character
assumed by modern knowledge renders this impossible. And this
modern knowledge has become very thoroughly popularized, and
dominates the mass of mankind with tremendous authority. In
this way no bridge is possible between knowledge of this kind
and the life of religion; — above all, it is not possible
to proceed from scientific knowledge to the nature of the
Christ. Ever more and more, as modern science attempted to
approach the nature of the Christ, it has scattered it to dust,
dispelled and lost it.
Well, if you consider all this, you will then be able to
understand what I am going to say, not now about Blavatsky, but
about that very different person, Nietzsche. — In
Nietzsche we have a person who has grown up out of a Protestant
parsonage in Central Europe, — not only the son of
religious-minded people in the usual sense, but the son of a
parochial clergyman. He goes through all the modern schooling;
first, as a boy at a classical school. But since he was not
what Schiller calls a ‘bread-and-butter scholar,’ but a ‘lover
of learning’, ... you know the sharp distinction made by
Schiller in his inaugural address between the bread-and-butter
scholar and the lover of learning ... so Nietzsche's interest
widens out over everything that is knowable by the methods of
the present age. And so he arrives consciently and in a very
uncompromising way at that split-in-two, to which all modernly
educated minds really come, but come unconsciently, because
they delude themselves, because they spread a haze over it. He
arrives at a tone of mind which I might describe somewhat as
follows: —
He
says: — Here we have a modern education. This modern
education nowhere works on in a straight line to any clear
account of the Christ-Jesus, without jumping a gap on the road.
And now, stuck into the midst of this modern education which
has grown up, we have something which has remained left over as
Christianity, and which talks in words that no longer bear any
relation whatever to the various forms of statement, the terms
of description, derived from modern scientific knowledge. And
he starts by saying to himself very definitely: If one in any
way proposes to come to a real relation with modern scientific
knowledge, and still at the same time to preserve inwardly any
sort of lingering feeling for what is traditionally told about
the Christ, — then one will need to be a liar. He puts
this to himself; and then he makes his decision. He decides for
modern education; and thereby arrives at a complete and
uncompromising denunciation of all that he knows of
Christianity.
More scathing words were never uttered about Christianity than
those uttered by Nietzsche, the clergyman's son. And he feels
it, with really, I might say, his whole man. One need only take
such an expression of his as this, — I am simply quoting;
I am, of course, not advocating what Nietzsche says; I am
quoting it only — but one need only take such an
expression as this, where he says: Whatever a modern theologian
holds to be true is certainly false. One might indeed make this
a direct criterion of truth. — One may know what is false
— according to Nietzsche's view, — from what a
modern theologian calls true. That is pretty much his
definition, one of Nietzsche's definitions, as regards Truth.
He decides, moreover, that the whole of modern philosophy has
too much theological blood in its veins. And then he formulates
his tremendous denunciation of Christianity, which is of
course, a blasphemy, but at any rate an honest blasphemy, and
therefore more deserving of consideration than the dishonesties
so common in this field to-day. And this is the point which one
must keep in sight: that a person like Nietzsche, who for once
was in earnest in the attempt to comprehend the Mystery of
Golgotha, was not able to do so with the means that exist,
— not even by means of the Gospels as they exist.
We
have now in our Anthroposophy interpretations of all the four
Gospels. And what emerges from the Gospels as the result of
such interpretation is emphatically rejected the theologians of
all the churches. But Nietzsche in that day did not possess it.
It is the most difficult thing in the world, my dear friends,
for a scientific mind (and almost all people at the present day
may be said in this sense to have, however primitively,
scientific minds), to attain possession of the Mystery of
Golgotha. What is needed in order to do so?
To
attain to this Mystery of Golgotha, what is needed, is not a
renewal of the ancient form of Mysteries, but the discovery of
a quite new form of Mystery. The rediscovery of the spiritual
world in a completely new form, — this is what is
necessary. For, through the old Mysteries, not excepting the
Gnosis, the Mystery of Golgotha could only be uttered
haltingly and brokenly. Men's minds grasped it haltingly and
brokenly. And this halting, broken utterance must to-day be
raised to speech.
It
was this urgent need to raise the old halting utterance to
speech which was at work in the many homeless souls of whom I
am speaking in these lectures. With Nietzsche it went so far as
a definite and drastic — not denial only — but
appalling denunciation of Christianity.
Blavatsky, too, drew her impulse mainly from the life of the
old Mysteries. And, truly speaking, if one takes the whole of
Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine, one cannot but see in it a
sort of resurrection of the old Mysteries, — in the main
nothing new. The most important part of what one finds revealed
in the works of Blavatsky is simply a resurrection of the old
Mysteries, a resurrection of the know-ledge through which in
the old Mysteries men had become acquainted with the divine
spirit-world.
But
all of these Mysteries are only able to comprehend what is a
preparation for the Christ. The people, who, at the time
when Christianity began, were still in a way con-versant with
the old Mysteries and their impulses, — these persons had
a positive ground still, from which to approach the Unique
Event of Golgotha. So that down, in fact, to the fourth
century, there were people who still could approach the Event
of Golgotha on positive ground. They were still able in a real
sense to comprehend the Greek Fathers of the Church, in whom
there are everywhere connections with the old Mysteries, and
who — rightly understood — speak in quite a
different key from the later Fathers of the Latin Church.
Within what dawned upon Blavatsky's vision there lay the
ancient wisdom, which sees the natural world and spirit-world
in one. And much as a soul, one might say, before the Mystery
of Golgotha, beheld the world of Nature and Spirit, so
Blavatsky beheld it now again. That way, — she said to
herself — lies the Divine and Spiritual; that way a vista
opens up for men into the region of divine spirit. And from
this aspect she then turned her eyes upon what modern tradition
and the modern creeds say about Christ-Jesus.
The
Gospels, of course, she had no means of understanding as they
are understood in Anthroposophy: and the understanding that is
brought to them from elsewhere was not of a kind that could
approach what Blavatsky had to offer in the way of spiritual
knowledge. Hence her con-tempt for all that was said about the
Mystery of Golgotha in the outside world. She said to herself,
as it were: ‘What all these people say about the Mystery of
Golgotha is on a far lower level than the sublime wisdom
transmitted by the ancient Mysteries. And so the Christian God
too must be on a lower level than what they had in the ancient
Mysteries.’
The
fault lay not with the Christian God; the fault lay with the
ways in which the Christian God was interpreted. Blavatsky
simply did not know the Mystery of Golgotha in its essential
being; she could only judge of it from what people were able to
say about it. Such things must be regarded with perfect
objectivity. For as a fact, from the time of the fourth century
after Christ, when with the last remnants of Greek civilization
the sun of the old Mysteries had set, Christianity was taken
over and adopted by Romanism. Romanism had no power, from its
external civilization, to open up any real road on into the
spirit. And so Romanism simply yoked Christianity to an
external impulse. And this Romanized Christianity was, in the
main, the only one known to Nietzsche and Blavatsky.
One
can understand then that the souls I described as homeless
souls, who had gleams from their former earth-lives, and were
principally concerned to find a way back into the spiritual
world, took the first thing that presented itself. They wanted
only to get into the spiritual world, even at the risk of doing
without Christianity. Some link between their souls and the
spiritual worlds, — that was what these people
wanted.
And
so one met with the people who at that time were groping their
way towards the Anthroposophical Society.
Let
us be quite clear, then, as to the position which Anthroposophy
held towards these people, when it now came upon the scene,
— towards these people who were homeless souls. They
were, as we saw, questing souls, questioning souls; and the
first thing necessary was to recognize: What are these souls
asking? What are the questions stirring in their inmost depths?
— And if now from the anthroposophic side a voice began
to speak to these souls, it was because these souls were asking
questions about things, to which Anthroposophy believed that it
could give the answers. The other people of the present day
have no questions; in them the questions are not there.
Anthroposophy, therefore, had no sort of call to go to the
theosophists in search of knowledge. For Anthroposophy,
Blavatsky's phenomenal appearance, and what had come into the
world with it, was so far a fact of great importance. But what
Anthroposophy had to consider, was not the knowledge that came
from this quarter, but principally the need for learning to
know the questions, the problems that were perplexing a number
of souls.
One
might have said, had. there been any possibility at that time
of putting it plainly into words: As to what the leaders of the
Theosophical Society have given the people, one doesn't need to
concern oneself at all; one's concern is with what the people's
souls are asking, what their souls want to know. And therefore
these people were, after all, the right people in the first
instance for Anthroposophy.
And
in what form did the answers require to be worded? —
Well, let us take the matter as positively, as
matter-of-factly, as possible. Here were these questioning
souls: one could plainly read their questions. They had the
belief that they could arrive at an answer to their questions
through the kind of thing which is found in Mrs. Besant's
Ancient Wisdom: Now you can easily tell yourselves that
it would have been obviously very foolish to say to these
people that there are a number of things in this book,
Ancient Wisdom, which are no longer appropriate to the
modern age; for then one would have offered these souls
nothing; one would only have taken something away from them.
There could only be one course, and that was, really to
answer their questions; whereas from the other side they got no
proper answer. And the practical introduction to really
answering was that, whilst Ancient Wisdom ranked at that
time as a sort of canonical work amongst these people, I did
not much trouble about this Ancient Wisdom, but wrote my book,
Theosophy, and so gave an answer to the questions which
I knew to be really asked. That was the positive answer; and
beyond this there was no need to go. One had now to leave the
people their perfect liberty of choice: Will you go on taking
up Ancient Wisdom? or will you take up
Theosophy?
In
epochs of momentous decision, when world-history is being made,
things do not lie so rationalistically, along straight lines of
reasoning, as people are apt to conceive.
And
so I could very well understand, when theosophists attended
that other set of lectures on ‘Anthroposophy’, which I gave in
those days, at the founding of the German Section, that these
theosophists said the same thing as I have been pointing out to
you here: ‘But that doesn't in the very least agree with what
Mrs. Besant says!’ Of course it didn't agree, and couldn't
agree! For the answer had to be one which proceeded from all
that the mind of this age can give out of its deeper
consciousness. And so it came about, — just to give for
the moment the broader lines only, — that, as a fact, to
begin with — down to about 1907 — every step on
behalf of Anthroposophy had to be conquered in opposition to
the traditions of the Theosophical Society. The only people, to
begin with, whom one could reach with these things, were the
members of the Theosophical Society. Every step had to be
conquered. And controversy at that time would have had no sense
whatever; the only thing was to hope and build upon the
alternative selection.
Matters went on by no means without internal obstacles.
Everything — in my opinion at least — had its
proper place, in which it must be done properly. In my
Theosophy I went, I think, no single step beyond what it
was possible at that period to give out for a number of people
publicly. The wide circulation which the hook has found since
then of itself shows that the supposition was a right one: Thus
far one could go.
With the people who were more intently seeking, and had,
accordingly, come into the stream set going by Blavatsky, with
these people it was possible to go further. And with
these one now had to make a beginning towards going further. I
could give you any number of instances; but I will pick out
just one, to show how, step by step, the attempt was made to
get away from an old, bad tradition, and come to what was right
for the present day, to the results of direct present-day
research.
For
instance, there was the description usually given in the
Theosophical Society of the way Man travels through so-called
kama-loca, after death. The description of this, as
given by the leading people in the Theosophical Society could
only be obviated in my Theosophy by my leaving the
Time notion so far out of account in this book. In the
circles inside the society, however, I tried to work with the
right notions of time.
So
it came about that I delivered lectures in various towns,
amongst what was then the Dutch Section of the Theosophical
Society, on the Life between Death and New Birth, and there for
the first time, quite at the beginning of my activities,
pointed out that it is really nonsense to conceive of it
simply so, that if this, B D, is the life on earth from
birth to death, that then the passage through kama-loca
were simply a piece joined on, as it were, in one's
consciousness. I showed, that time, here, must be
conceived backwards; and I depicted the life of
kama-loca as a living backwards, stage by stage,
only three times as quick as the ordinary earth-life, or the
life that was spent on earth: B ----------
D.
In
outer life, of course, nobody to-day has any conception of this
going on backwards as a reality, a reality in the
spiritual field; for Time is simply conceived as a straight
line from beginning to end; and a going on backwards is
something of which people to-day form no notion whatever.
Now
the theory was, amongst the leaders of the Theosophical
Society, that they were renewing the teachings of the old
wisdom. They took Blavatsky's book as a basis; and all sorts of
writings came out, linked onto Blavatsky's book. But in these
writings everything was presented to the mind in just the same
way as things are conceived under the materialist
world-conception of modern-times. And why? — Because
they would have needed to become again knowing, not merely
to renew the old knowledge, if they had wanted to find the
truth of the matter.
The
old things were for ever being quoted. Amongst other things
always being quoted from Buddha and the old Oriental wisdom,
was the Wheel of Births. Rut that a wheel is not of such
a nature that one can draw a wheel as a straight line —,
this the people did not reflect; and that one can only draw a
wheel as running back into itself.
— There was no vitality in this revival of ancient
wisdom, for the simple reason that there was no direct
knowledge.
What was needed, in short, was: that something should be
brought into the world by direct, living knowledge; and
then this might also throw light upon the old, primeval
wisdom.
And
so one conclusion, from these first seven years especially of
anthroposophic labour, amounted to this: that there were people
who were ... well ... just as well pleased that there should
not be any renovations, or, — as they called it,
— ‘innovations’ in the theosophic field; and who said:
Oh, all that he says is just the same thing as the other!
There's no difference! The differences are quite inessential!
And so they were argued away. But this awful thing that I had,
so to speak, ‘gone and done’ at the very beginning of my work
in the Dutch Section of the Theosophical Society, when I
lectured ‘from the life’ instead of simply rehearsing the
doctrines contained in the canonical books of the Theosophical
Society as the others did, — that was never forgotten! It
never was forgotten. And those of you, who may perhaps go back
in memory to those days in the growth of our movement, need
only recall in the year 1907, when the Congress was held in
Munich, at a time when we were still within the fold of the
Theosophical Society, how the Dutch Theosophists turned up all
primed and loaded, and were quite furious at this intrusion of
a foreign body, as they felt it to be. They had no sense, that
here a thing of the living present was matched against
something merely of tradition, — they simply felt it to
be a foreign body.
But
something else could not fail to occur even then. And at that
time the conversation took place in Munich between Mrs. Besant
and myself, in which it was definitely settled that what I have
to stand for, the Anthroposophy which I have to represent,
would carry on its work in perfect independence, without any
regard to anything else whatever that might play a part in the
Theosophical Society. This was definitely settled, as a
modus vivendi, so to speak, under which life could go
on.
Even in those days, however, in the Theosophical Society, there
were already dawning signs on the horizon of those absurdities
by which it afterwards did for itself. For as a vehicle for a
spiritual movement, the society to-day — despite the
number of members still on its lists — may truly be said
to have done for itself. Things, you know, may live on a long
while as dead bodies, even after they are done for. But what
was the Theosophical Society is to-day no longer
living.
One
thing, however, must be clearly understood: At the time when
Anthroposophy first began its work, the Theosophical Society
was full of a spiritual life, which, though traditional,
nevertheless rested on sound bases, and was rich in material.
What had come into the world through Blavatsky was there; and
the people really lived in the things that had come into the
world through Blavatsky.
Blavatsky had now, however, been dead for ten years past as
regards earthly life. And one can but say of the tone in the
Theosophical Society, that what lived on in it as a sequel of
Blavatsky's influence and work was some-thing quite sound as a
piece of historical culture, and could undoubtedly give the
people something. Still, there were even then unmistakable
germs of decay already present. The only question was, whether
these germs of decay might not possibly be overcome; or whether
they must inevitably lead to some kind of total discord between
Anthroposophy and the old Theosophical Society.
Now
one must say that amongst the tendencies that existed in the
theosophic movement, even from the days of Blavatsky, there was
one tendency in particular that was a terribly strong
disintegrating element.
One
must make a distinction, when considering the subject in the
way I am doing now. One must make a clear distinction, between
what was flung as spiritual information into the midst of
modern life through the instrumentality of Blavatsky, and what
was a result of the particular way in which Blavatsky was
prompted to give out this information, out of her own person,
in the manner I described. For in Blavatsky there was, to begin
with, this particular kind of personality, — such as I
described to you recently, — one who simply, having once
been given, so to speak, an instigation from some quarter
— through a betrayal, if you like, — then, out of
her own person, as though in recollection of a previous life of
incarnation on earth, and though only as a reawakening of an
old wisdom, yet did bring wisdom into the world, and
transmitted it in book-form to mankind. — This second
fact one must keep quite distinct from the first. For this
second fact, that Blavatsky was instigated in a particular way
to what she did, introduced elements into the theosophic
movement which were different from what they should have been
if the theosophic movement was to be one of a purely spiritual
character.
That it was not. For the fact of the matter was, that Blavatsky
in the first instance received an instigation from a quarter of
which I will say no more, and put forth, out of herself, what
is in her Isis Unveiled; and that then, through all
sorts of machinations, it came about that Blavatsky, the second
time, was subjected to the influence of esoteric teachers from
the Orient; and behind these there was a certain tendency of a
political-cultural kind and egoistic in character. From the
very first, there lay an orientalist policy of a one-sided
character in what it was now hoped to obtain in a roundabout
way by means of Blavatsky. Within it all lay the tendency to
show the materialistic West, how far superior the spiritual
knowledge of the East is to the materialism of the West. Within
it was concealed the tendency to achieve, in the first place, a
spiritual, but, more generally, any kind of dominion, an
‘empire’ of some kind, of the Orient over the Occident: And
this was to be done, in the first place, by indoctrinating the
spirituality or unspirituality of the West with the traditions
of Eastern wisdom. — Hence came what I might call that
shifting of the axis which took place, from the
altogether-European of Isis Unveiled, to the
altogether-Oriental of Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine.
There was every variety of factor here at work; but one of the
factors was this one, that wanted, namely, to join India on to
Asia and so create an Indo-Asiatic Empire with the assistance
of Russia. And so this ‘Doctrine’ of Blavatsky's was inoculated
with the Indian vein, in order, in this way, to conquer the
West spiritually.
Now
this, you see, is a one-sided vein, egoistic, —
nationally egoistic. And this one-sided vein was there from the
very beginning. It met one directly with symptomatic
significance. The first lecture I ever heard from Mrs. Besant
was on ‘Theosophy and Imperialism’. And when one inwardly tried
to answer the question: Does really the main impulse of this
lecture lie in the continuation-line of the strictly
spiritual element in Blavatsky? or does the main impulse
of this lecture lie in the continuation-line of what went
along with it; — then one could only say: the
latter.
With Mrs. Annie Besant it was often the case, that she said
things of which she by no means knew the ultimate grounds. She
took up the cudgels for something or other of which the
ultimate grounds were unknown to her; she was ignorant of the
connections that lay at their root. But if you read this
lecture, ‘Theosophy and Imperialism’ (which is printed), and
read it understandingly, with all that lies underneath it, you
will then see for yourselves, that, supposing there were
somebody who wanted to split India off from England, — to
split it off in a certain sense spiritually after a
spiritual fashion, — a good way of taking the first
unobtrusive step, would be with a tendency such as there was in
this lecture.
This was always the beginning of the end with all such
spiritual streams and spiritual societies, that they began to
mix up one-sided political interests with their own sphere.
Whereas a spiritual movement — above all to-day —
can only possibly pursue its course through the world, and it
is indeed, to-day, one of the most vital life conditions for a
spiritual movement that would lead to real, actual
spirituality, that it should be universally human, wholly
and undividedly human. And everything else, which is not
wholly and universally human, which sets out in any way to
split the body of mankind, is from the first an element of
destruction in any spiritual movement that would lead to the
real spirit-world.
Just consider how deep one strikes with all such things into
the sub-conscious regions of man's being. And hence it is one
of the life-conditions of any such spiritual movement, —
for instance, such as the anthroposophical movement, too, would
be, — that there should be at least an earnest, honest
endeavour to get beyond all partial, sectional interests in
mankind, and really to rise to the universal interests of all
mankind. And therein lay the ruin of the theosophic movement,
that from the beginning it had an element of that kind in it.
On occasion, as we know, this kind of element is quite capable
of reversing steam: later, during the Great War, this opposite
tendency turned very anglo-chauvinist. Rut this very
circumstance should make it perfectly clear, that it is quite
impossible successfully to cultivate a real spiritual movement,
so long as there is some kind of sectionalism which one is not
pre-pared to leave behind one.
Amongst the external dangers, therefore, which beset the
anthroposophic movement to-day, there is this especially: That
people in the present age, which is wandering astray in
nationalisms on all sides, have yet so little courage to get
beyond these nationalisms.
What then lies at the root of a one-sidedness like that of
which we were speaking? — At its root lies the desire to
acquire power as a society through something else than simply
the revelations of the spiritual source itself. And one can but
say that whereas, at the turn of the century, there was still a
fairly healthy sense in the Theosophical Society as regards
conscious aspirations after power, this was by 1906 all gone,
and there existed a strong ambition for power.
It
is necessary, do you see, that one should clearly recognize
this growth of the anthroposophical life out of universal
human interests, common to the whole of mankind; and
that one should clearly see, that it was only because the
questioners were there, in the Theosophical Society, and
because of this only, that Anthroposophy was obliged to take
growth in the Theosophical Society, to take up its lodging
there, one might say, for a while; since otherwise it had
nowhere to lodge.
The
first period — so to speak — was scarcely over,
when, as you know, the whole impossibility of the theosophical
movement for Western life demonstrated itself quite peculiarly
in the question of the Christ. For what with Blavatsky was in
the main a theory, — although a theory that rested on
emotions, — namely, the depreciation of Christianity, was
afterwards carried in the theosophic movement to such a very
practical depreciation of Christianity, as the education of a
boy in whom they said they were going to train-up the soul of
the re-arisen Christ.
One
could hardly conceive anything more nonsensical. And yet an
Order was founded amongst the Theosophical Society for the
promotion of this Christ-Birth in a boy, who really, as one
might say, was already there.
And
now it very soon came to the perfection of nonsense. —
With all such things, of course, there very soon come muddles
which border terribly close on falsehoods. In 1911, then, there
was to be a Congress of the Theosophical Society in Genoa. The
things leading to this nonsense were already in full bloom, and
it was necessary for me to announce as my lecture for this
Genoa Congress From Buddha, to Christ. It must then
necessarily have come to a clear and pregnant settlement of
relations; for the things, that were everywhere going about,
would then necessarily have come to a head. But, lo and behold!
the Genoa Congress was cancelled. — Of course excuses can
be found for all such things. The reasons that were alleged all
looked really uncommonly like excuses.
And
so the anthroposophic movement may be said to have entered on
its second period, pursuing its own straight course; which
originally began, as I said, with my delivering a lecture,
quite at the beginning, to a non-theosophical public, of whom
only one single person remains, (who is still there!) and no
more, although a number of persons attended the lecture at the
time. Anyhow, the first lecture I delivered (it was a cycle of
lectures, in fact) bore the title From Buddha to Christ.
And in 1911 I proposed again to deliver the cycle From
Buddha to Christ. That was the straight line. But
the theosophical movement had got into a horrible zigzag.
Unless one takes the history of the anthroposophic movement
seriously, and is not afraid to call these things by their
right name, one will not be able to give the proper reply to
the assertions continually being made about the relation of
Anthroposophy to Theosophy by those surface triflers, who will
not take the trouble to learn the real facts, and refuse to
see, that Anthroposophy was from the very first a totally
separate and distinct thing, but that the answers, which
Anthroposophy has the power to give, were naturally given to
those people who happened to be asking the questions.
One
may say, then, that down to the year 1914 was the second period
of the anthroposophic movement. It really did nothing very
particular — at least, so far as I was concerned —
towards regulating relations with the theosophic movement. The
Theosophical Society regulated relations by excluding the
Anthroposophical one. But one was not affected by it. Seeing
that from the first one had not been very greatly affected by
being included, neither was one now very greatly affected by
being excluded. One went on doing exactly the same as before.
Being excluded made not the slightest change in what had gone
on before, when one was included.
Look for yourselves at the way things went, and you will see
that, except for the settlement of a few formalities, nothing
whatever happened inside the anthroposophic movement itself
down to the year 1914, but that everything that happened,
happened on the side of the Theosophical Society.
I
was invited in the first place to give lectures there. I did
so; I gave anthroposophic lectures. And I went on doing so. The
lectures for which I was originally invited are the same newly
re-printed in my book, Mysticism at the Dawn of the New Ape
of Thought. And I then carried on further what is written
in this Mysticism at the Dawn of the New Ape of Thought,
and developed it in a variety of directions.
By
this same society, with the same views, I was then excluded,
and of course, my followers, too. For one and the same thing I
was first included, and afterwards excluded. Yes ... that is
the fact of the matter. And no one can rightly understand the
history of the anthroposophic movement, unless they keep
plainly in sight as a fundamental fact, that as regards the
relation to the theosophic movement, it made no difference
whether one were in- or excluded.
This is something for you to reflect upon very thoroughly in
self-recollection. I beg you to do so. And then, on the
grounds of this, I should like to-morrow to give a sketch of
the latest and most difficult phase, from 1914 until now, and
then to go into various details again later, in the subsequent
lectures.
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