VII
THIRD STAGE: THE PRESENT DAY. — LIFE-CONDITIONS OF
THE ANTHROPOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
Having now given you a picture of certain prominent features in
the spiritual movements of the modern age, as well as of the
tendencies underlying them, — modern spiritual movements,
for which the anthroposophic movement should afford, as it
were, a channel suited to the demands of these times, — I
should like to go on to-day and to-morrow to certain phenomena
that made their appearance in the third period of the
anthroposophic movement, and try from these to construe for you
what are, truly speaking, the life-conditions of the
Anthroposophical Society.
Let
us be clear as to how we stood at the time when the second
period of the anthroposophie movement was drawing to a close,
— about, that is, the year 1918 or '14, — and as to
how we stand to-day; and let us try to examine more closely
what these two stages signify for us, — I mean the
beginning of the third period and the end of the third
period.
During the past few days I have been trying more to go into the
inner depths of the picture; but to-day and to-morrow I would
like to put before you what is, for Anthroposophists, so to
speak, of actual moment, and of a kind to enter directly into
the impulses of the will.
Let
us just look back again for a minute and see how, in the first
and second periods, by keeping in the main to the rule of going
step by step with the concrete facts and carrying forward the
movement, so to speak, in pace with the developments of the
inner anthroposophic life, ... how far we had actually got in
this way? We will turn our eyes to this for a minute.
As
I said: in the first period to begin with, — down to the
years 1907 — 8 — 9, — the work was one of
slow and steady acquisition, a laborious acquisition of inner,
spiritual material. The foundations were laid of an actual,
modern science of the spirit, and pursued into their
various consequences. Down to the end of this period one may
say, too, that the paper continued to appear,
Lucifer-Gnosis; which periodically brought out things by
myself and others, that, step by step, built up a certain solid
substance of Anthroposophy.
And
then, with the second period, came the time when in
lecture-cycles and lectures, — and in a way, too, for the
general public, — new ground was acquired. from those
writings which have their very special importance for the
spiritual evolution of the West; namely, from the Bible: the
Gospels and Genesis.
Here, again, they were real steps that took place. One
started with the Gospel of John; and then went on to the other
gospels. And, led thus by the gospels, certain definite truths
and treasures of knowledge came to light one after another; so
that, from stage to stage, one piece of spiritual acquisition
was added on to another. And everything recorded on the other
side again, in the outward expansion of the Society, had its
origin mainly in these inner progressive steps of spiritual
acquisition.
Of
course the external arrangements involved making all sorts of
programmes and things of the kind. But that was not the
essential feature. The essential feature was, that positive
work was achieved, stage by stage; and then, of course, in
proportion, the spiritual ground thus achieved could be worked
out esoterically to further depths.
And
so, with all this, it came to pass, by just about the end of
the second period, that Anthroposophy, and all that
Anthroposophy is, was widened out over the general field of
human culture and civilization, — as we attempted in
Munich with our performances of the Mystery Dramas.
And
by the end of the second period we had got so far that it was
possible to think of building our Bau, which has now met
here with this disaster. One must reflect that this marked an
exceedingly important stage in the development of the
Anthroposophical Society. For, to put up such a building,
presupposed the existence of quite a considerable number of
people, who were sufficiently interested in what Anthroposophy
had already produced of substantial reality, to wish to build
such a home of their own.
At
the same time, however, it meant taking the first essential
step beyond the step-by-step work that had simply kept pace
with the whole evolution of the Anthroposophical Society. It
was the first step that went beyond this. For, obviously, a
building like the Goetheanum was bound to attract the
attention of the outside world to what was now the
‘Anthroposophical Society’, in a very different way from
anything that had been there before.
Take opponents, for instance; they had existed, of course,
before, opponents of every conceivable camp. Even in those days
they had not only written, but printed their writings. But
these opponents found really no particular public. For,
assuming even that before the year 1914 an opponent of so
indescribable a kind as Max Seiling had come on the scene, a
certain sensational interest might possibly have induced some
of the members of the Anthroposophical Society itself to read
the thing; but people outside would not have bothered about it;
there would have been no public. The building of the Bau
first made it possible for opponents to come forward and find a
public.
Things
of this kind, when one is dealing with a reality like the
anthroposophic movement, must by no means be regarded as
matters merely of theoretic interest; they must be taken with
the most intense and serious earnest; for all these things give
rise day by day to ever growing problems and
responsibilities.
And so
we were at any rate able to put up our building, the
Bau. But the fact that we could do so, my dear friends,
presupposed, as I said, that there was something already there,
for which the building could be put up. It was there. It
was felt by really a large number of people to be something
that was actually there and presented a sort of inner vitality.
And there was plenty of practical experience, too, that had
been collected through quite a long time. Experience was there
in plenty; and there was no need to disregard it. And since a
society was also there, such past experience might have been
turned to very profitable use, — night to this day be
turned to very profitable use. Everything I have been
saying during these days was with the purpose of calling
attention to certain past occurrences that imply so many pieces
of practical experience.
And
now this period has expired. And the terrible event, to which
we may point as marking the expiration of this period, is the
Burning of the Goetheanum.
And
now to-day we have to ask ourselves ... you will remember that
I said these lectures were intended at the same time as an
aid to self-recollection for Anthroposophists . to-day
we must look back in self-recollection and recall how, in those
days, we were able to think with a certain security about the
further course of Anthroposophy and how we purposed to carry it
on; yet that nevertheless we were bound to foresee, and
foresee, too, in our purposes, that directly Anthroposophy came
before the open public, the opposition too would undoubtedly
set in. And now, let us just note what was the starting-point
of that period, and what was its end. The starting-point I have
already characterized. It lay in the fact that we could venture
to put up the Goetheanum. And now let us see what shape things
have assumed to-day, and what the result is of Anthroposophy's
being thus exposed, laid open by the Goetheanum to the judgment
henceforth of a whole indeterminable number of people. Well, of
this, my dear friends, I would like to show you the latest
example, — in order that we may keep up-to-date, so to
speak. The very latest example is contained in a leaflet
recently published, and entitled The Secret Machinery of
Revolution. On p.13 of this leaflet you will find the
following account. (I will translate from the English.)
‘At
this stage of my inquiry, I may refer briefly to the existence
of an offshoot of the Theosophical Society, known as the
Anthroposophical Society. This was formed as the result of a
schism in the ranks of the Theosophists by a man of Jewish
birth who was connected with one of the modern branches of the
Carbonari. Not only so, but in association with another
Theosophist he is engaged in organizing certain singular
commercial undertakings not unconnected with Communist
propaganda; almost precisely in the manner in which
“Count St. Germain” organized his dyeworks and
other commercial ventures with a like purpose. And this queer
business group has its connections with the Irish Republican
movement, with the German groups already mentioned’ (amongst
the groups mentioned is, as an instance, the ‘Consul’
organization!) ‘and also with another mysterious group which
was founded by Jewish “ Intellectuals ” in France
about four years ago, and. which includes in its membership
many well-known politicians, scientists, university professors,
and literary men in France, Germany, America and England. It is
a secret society, but some idea of its real aims may be
gathered from the fact that it sponsored the “Ligue des
Ancient Combatants ”, whose aim appears to be to
undermine the discipline of the armies in the Allied countries.
Although nominally a “Right Wing” society, it is in
direct touch with members of the Soviet Government of Russia;
in Britain it is also connected with certain Fabians and with
the Union of Democratic Control, which opposes “secret
diplomacy ”!’
Well, my dear friends, to this I need only add, that, as you
know, my visit to England is planned for August, and that you
may therefore see that the things of which I have many times
spoken are to be taken with all seriousness; that the opponents
are exceedingly well organized; and moreover, that in all
circumstances and situations they very well know what they are
doing. You will remember what I said some time ago to the
effect that — as I said — one must never imagine
that the last thing is the worst to come.
As
you see, we have to-day an opposition; that is the other, final
end of the third period. We have to-day an opposition, and one
that shrinks from no sort of falsehood, and very well knows how
to manipulate the effects of a falsehood. You must by no means
imagine that it will do to pass over such things lightly and
merely to say: ‘Well, with a thing like that, not only is not a
single word of it true, but it is such clumsy lying that not a
soul will believe it!’ — Anybody who talks in that way,
my dear friends, simply shows that he is going about asleep in
the midst of this present-day Western civilization, and simply
does not know the power of those impulses of false-hood, which
the very best people, one might say, take for true, simply out
of easy-goingness and sleepy-headedness.
What lies between these two dates is a matter now of peculiar
importance for us to consider. For, to put it in this way: in
the year 1914 the anthroposophical movement was unquestionably
so far that it possessed a store of spiritual wealth, of
spiritual material, with which it could have made its way
through the world. As circumstances actually were, however, it
was necessary to go on working very actively after 1914.
— If you look back over what has taken place since that
time, you will come to the conclusion that the work done since
then was mainly one of deepening on the spiritual side.
And in this respect again, the road taken was the straight one;
this deepening in the spiritual direction was steadily pursued
step by step, unconcerned indeed even with the events going on
externally in the world; because, as a fact, the most urgent
matter was then — and is still to-day — that that
spiritual inner treasure, which is now seeking revelation for
the progress of mankind, should, first and foremost, be
incorporated in some actual form in the life of the civilized
world. There can never be any question, in communicating or
working up this spiritual store of wealth, of doing anything
else than do everything direct from this spiritual store
itself.
With regard to this, there came again an extension, as you
know, in this third period, through the introduction of the
eurhythmy. Of this eurhythmy at any rate it can
never be said that it draws from anything else than straight
from the sources of Anthroposophy itself. Everything in it is
taken direct from anthroposophic sources. Are there not at the
present day, my dear friends, all manner of schools of artistic
movement, — all manner of attempts in one way or another
to arrive at something, which perhaps on the outside looks a
little like our eurythmy. But, if you go back through
all that has happened, from the moment when Frau Dr. Steiner
first took the eurhythmy in hand, and eurhythmy
began to develop, so that from being carried on more, I might
say, in a private circle during the war-time, it then was able
to come out in public, and has aroused ever-increasing
interest. If you take everything that has gone to the
building-up of this eurhythmy, why! don't you think that
there were numbers of people from one quarter or another
continually hinting to one, ‘Here is something quite similar,’
‘There is something quite similar,’ ‘This should be
considered,’ ‘That should be adopted!’ The only way in which
the thing could be carried forward successfully, was by looking
neither to right nor left and troubling about nothing round
one, but drawing simply and solely from the sources of the
thing itself. The moment anything whatever in the nature of a
compromise had been introduced, the thing would no longer have
been what it is, — could never have become what it is. It
is part of the life-conditions of a movement like this, that
there should he absolute security: Everything can be drawn from
the sources themselves, in ever-wider extension as it comes to
be needed.
This practice of working solely from the central source, which
was comparatively easy, because there could be no question
about it, down to 1914, — this and this alone makes it
possible to carry anything like Anthroposophy forwards in the
right way.
Well, this third period, after 1914, witnessed a great many
things of all kinds, in which of course, — like every
other person and movement, — the anthroposophic movement
too was involved. And now, of course, on the one hand for
instance, it must emphatically be pointed out again and again,
that during the world-war, whilst the different nations were
tearing each other in pieces, there were here members of some
sixteen or seventeen nationalities working together side by
side, and that the Anthroposophical Society went through this
whole time without deviating in the slightest from its true,
original character. Rut still, one must not forget, that all
the things which were surging in men's minds in those days, and
therefore in the minds of Anthroposophists, were just of the
sort to create divisions in the Anthroposophical Society, and
to split it up. This is a fact which must be admitted.
You
will understand, that in pointing out these things quite
objectively I am not by any means belittling all the many good
qualities of the Anthroposophists, not in any way denying them.
They shall all be taken for granted. And certainly it is quite
true that to a certain degree we managed to get over the things
that were — let us say, ‘splitting-up’ mankind so
disastrously, outside the Anthroposophical Society, between the
years 1914 and 1918. Rut still, those who look a little closer
will recognize, that waves of this kind, though in a different
form perhaps from else-where, did nevertheless break in upon
the anthroposophic movement; and in connection with this, there
began to show itself somewhat markedly, my dear friends,
something which I have frequently indicated before in these
words: namely, that in this third period something began to
take shape which I might call an internal opposition to
what I myself am called upon to do in the Anthroposophical
Society, — a sort of internal opposition.
Most of you, of course, are very much surprised when I speak of
this internal opposition; because they themselves are not aware
of it — many of them at least. But so much the worse! I
could almost say; for this internal opposition came out very
strongly in people's feelings, particularly during this third
period. And there were external signa too in which it showed
itself. When a movement like this has passed through two such
periods as I have described, there by no means requires to be a
blind confidence, if, in the third period, (seeing what
has gone before, and that there are antecedents to go upon)
something or other is then done for reasons of which the whole
connection is not immediately obvious to everybody. Just
reflect for a moment: — reasons, of which the whole
connection could not possibly at that time be obvious to
everybody, which required a great number of things to be taken
together, and where, before all, it was a question of setting
the anthroposophic movement permanently on the right lines! And
these were the things, in which what one might call this
‘internal opposition’ showed itself.
I
know, of course, that, directly I touch upon these things, a
number of people will say: Aren't we expected then to have
opinions of our own! — Of course one is expected to have
one's own opinion as to what one does oneself: but when
something is done by another person with whom one is in
some way associated in life, it necessarily then becomes a
question of confidence playing a part on occasions, —
especially when there already are antecedents to go upon, of
the kind I mentioned.
Now, at a certain moment in the third period, during the Great
War, I wrote the little book called Thoughts in
War-time. And thereupon this internal opposition made
itself peculiarly manifest, in a quite remarkable way. Not only
did people come to me and say: We thought Anthroposophy never
meddled with politics! — as if this little book had
meddled with politics in any way! — and more things of
the kind; but it was also quite plain to see from the whole
attitude, that many a heart had taken a certain tinge of
something that should never be allowed to grow on
anthroposophic soil, — that has its growth in very
different soil! Well, it has been my lot to meet with a great
many objections that were made especially to these ‘Thoughts
during the Wartime’; but I never yet met, I really never yet
have met with anyone who said ... and now I am going to say
something dreadfully presumptuous, my dear friends; but it is
quite objective ... I never found anyone say, ‘We don't rightly
know what to make of the thing; but we'll wait a year or two,
till 1985, and then perhaps we shall know, why this little book
was written.’ — And there have been a good many other
things besides, all showing how very strongly the kind of thing
was at work that simply tended direct towards the undermining
of all natural freedom and independence of action inside the
Anthroposophical Society. For one would think that the writing
of the book might naturally have been left to me, as being my
concern; instead of which, there had come to be a sort of
notion: ‘If he means to be the person with whom we are to carry
on the Anthroposophical Society, then he must only write what
we please!’
These things have to be said somewhat drastically, or else, as
you know, they are not understood. They are symptoms, and show
the rise at that time of a certain temper of mind which is
contrary to the life-conditions of the anthroposophic movement,
— that within the society there arose a temper of mind
contrary to the life-conditions of the anthroposophic
movement!
One
thing there was, however, in this third period, that cannot but
be of quite peculiar importance: the consciousness namely, in
founding this society, of having taken the first, leading step
in a matter where a large part of the human race is bound to
follow. Reflect upon it, my dear friends: a comparatively small
body of people associated together, with the claim of doing
something, in which they shall be followed by a large part of
the human race! It imposes not only those obligations that the
other people will have later, who follow after; it imposes
obligations of a far higher kind, obligations that are many
times, a hundredfold higher in degree, than any duties
incumbent on the great mass of people who hereafter may take
Anthroposophy as their guide in life.
The
Anthroposophists of to-day must not suppose that they have
simply the same obligations as those people will one day have,
who believe in Anthroposophy, when Anthroposophists are
reckoned by millions, and not by thousands. When a few
thousands are forerunners in a movement, these thousands are
under a far greater, a multiple degree of obligation. They are
under the obligation namely, in all and every detail to
exercise greater courage, greater energy, greater patience,
greater tolerance and, above all things, greater truthfulness.
And in this third period the test was laid in particular on
truthfulness and on earnestness. What in a way
was necessary, was that the thing should grow up, which formed
the theme of discussion on one occasion during the course
delivered to the Theologians. It was spoken of then.
That was what there should have been amongst the little
band of Anthroposophists, and that is what must come:
namely, a feeling, a kind of sense, that Anthroposophy, —
quite apart from the existence of Anthroposophists, —
must be looked upon as an independent living Being in itself;
as something, so to speak, that goes about amongst us, and to
which we are responsible at every moment of our lives.
It was said in this lecture to the theologians in so many
words: Anthroposophy is herself an invisible person,
going about amongst visible people, and to whom, so long as
they are only a little number, they owe the very greatest
responsibility, — something, that must really be treated
as an invisible person, actually living amongst us, who must be
consulted in every single action of life, as to what she
says to it.
Whenever, therefore, so long as there is only a little band of
Anthroposophists, anything is formed in the way of human
associations, — friendships, or fellowships, or any sort
of clique, — it becomes all the more necessary that this
Invisible Being should be asked, and that everything should
be so, that it can be justified before this Invisible
Being.
Of
course this will be, to the same extent, ever less and less the
case, the more wide-spread Anthroposophy becomes. Rut so long
as it is only the possession of a little band, it remains
absolutely necessary that everything that is done should be
done, so to speak, in consultation with this person,
Anthroposophy. It is one of the essential
life-conditions, that Anthroposophy should be regarded as a
living Being. And this Being must only die, when the multitude
of its adherents has grown past numbering. This, then, is the
necessary condition: sincere and genuine earnestness in
following after that Invisible Person of whom I spoke; —
profound earnestness, which must grow day by day. If this
profound and growing earnestness is there, then my dear
friends, there can be no doubt but that everything, whatever is
done, will be begun and will be carried on in the right
way.
There is one fact to which I should like, in the next place, to
call your attention. — Whereas the second period —
from the years 1907, 8, 9, down to 1914 — was more
essentially the period that helped to develop Anthroposophy on
the side of sentiment, of religious knowledge, in the third
period there came in again something that had been there before
in the first period, as I described yesterday. It came about,
that Anthroposophy was again brought into a certain relation,
for instance, to the scientific world, to the different
branches of science and learning followed by a large part of
the human race! It imposes not only those obligations that the
other people will have later, who follow after; it imposes
obligations of a far higher kind, obligations that are many
times, a hundredfold higher in degree, than any duties
incumbent on the great mass of people who hereafter may take
Anthroposophy as their guide in life.
The
Anthroposophists of to-day must not suppose that they have
simply the same obligations as those people will one day have,
who believe in Anthroposophy, when Anthroposophists are
reckoned by millions, and not by thousands. When a few
thousands are forerunners in a movement, these thousands are
under a far greater, a multiple degree of obligation. They are
under the obligation namely, in all and every detail to
exercise greater courage, greater energy, greater patience,
greater tolerance and, above all things, greater truthfulness.
And in this third period the test was laid in particular on
truthfulness and on earnestness. What in a way
was necessary, was that the thing should grow up, which formed
the theme of discussion on one occasion during the course
delivered to the Theologians. It was spoken of then.
That was what there should have been amongst the little
band of Anthroposophists, and that is what must come:
namely, a feeling, a kind of sense, that Anthroposophy, —
quite apart from the existence of Anthroposophists, —
must be looked upon as an independent living Being in itself;
as something, so to speak, that goes about amongst us, and to
which we are responsible at every moment of our lives.
It was said in this lecture to the theologians in so many
words: Anthroposophy is herself an invisible person,
going about amongst visible people, and to whom, so long as
they are only a little number, they owe the very greatest
responsibility, — something, that must really be treated
as an invisible person, actually living amongst us, who must be
consulted in every single action of life, as to what she says
to it.
Whenever, therefore, so long as there is only a little band of
Anthroposophists, anything is formed in the way of human
associations, — friendships, or fellowships, or any sort
of clique, — it becomes all the more necessary that this
Invisible Being should be asked, and that everything
should be so, that it can be justified before
this invisible Being.
Of
course this will be, to the same extent, ever less and less the
case, the more wide-spread Anthroposophy becomes. Rut so long
as it is only the possession of a little band, it remains
absolutely necessary that everything that is done should be
done, so to speak, in consultation with this person,
Anthroposophy. It is one of the essential
life-conditions, that Anthroposophy should be regarded as a
living Being. And this Being must only die, when the multitude
of its adherents has grown past numbering. This, then, is the
necessary condition: sincere and genuine earnestness in
following after that Invisible Person of whom I spoke; —
profound earnestness, which must grow day by day. If this
profound and growing earnestness is there, then my dear
friends, there can be no doubt but that everything, whatever is
done, will be begun and will be carried on in the right
way.
There is one fact to which I should like, in the next place, to
call your attention. — Whereas the second period —
from the years 1907, 8, 9, down to 1914 — was more
essentially the period that helped to develop Anthroposophy on
the side of sentiment, of religious knowledge, in the third
period there came in again something that had been there before
in the first period, as I described yesterday. It came about,
that Anthroposophy was again brought into a certain relation,
for instance, to the scientific world, to the different
branches of science and learning.
Already during the war, one might see some scientist or man of
learning from one corner or another beginning to draw in to
Anthroposophy. This gave the Anthroposophic Society helpers
upon scientific ground. At first these men of science did not
come much to the front. The scientific department, down to the
year 1919 or 20 remained more of a hope, with the exception of
what Dr. Unger extracted and turned to account for
Anthroposophy from the Philosophy of Freedom and other
writings of the pre-anthroposophic time. Otherwise, apart from
what was done in this respect in the further elaboration of the
science of knowledge, — work which afforded valuable,
substantial material for the future movement, — apart
from this, one may say that at first, at the beginning of the
third period, the scientific element was a hope. For this
scientific element began now, in the third period, by making
itself felt in precisely the reverse direction, to what it had
done before, in the first period. In the first period, as I
told you, the main point with the people I spoke of yesterday
was, how to justify Anthroposophy in the eyes of Science.
Anthroposophy was required to get her pass viséd by
Science. That was the tendency in the first period. And since
Anthroposophy could not do this, the scientific branch of the
business gradually died out. In the second period it had ceased
to exist, and towards the end of the time the whole thing
leaned more towards the artistic side; interests of a general
human kind came into the ascendant.
And
then in the third period these scientific aspirations again
crept out of their corners, but in the reverse way. Now it was
no longer a question — not explicitly at least — of
justifying Anthroposophy in the eyes of Science; but of
refertilizing Science from Anthroposophy.
And
now every kind of person began to turn up, all complaining: We
can get no further with our particular science; it wants a new
seed of life. It was no longer now a question, as before, in
the first period, of inventing atomic constructions, because
this was the customary thing, and borrowing atomic theories
from physics and astronomics for the ether and the astral
bodies too. Now, having experimented long enough in the hope of
reducing it to Science, it was now a question of precisely the
reverse tendency.
Well, this new tendency ... I will discuss it to-day
only from the positive aspect ... will only work out to
any-thing, will only be of any use or benefit to the
anthroposophic movement, if it finds the way to work solely and
purely from anthroposophic sources — much in the same way
as we work in the artistic branches, in eurhythmy, for
instance; and if this again is done with all the seriousness
and earnestness of which I was speaking just now. So long as,
after all, a good deal still of that style of thinking, which
is nowadays ‘scientific’, is unconsciously introduced into the
anthroposophic movement, so long nothing will profitably come
of it. And, in particular, nothing will profitably come of it,
so long as the idea prevails, that the people, who are to-day
official representatives of science and learning, can possibly
be convinced of anything whatever by argument, without finding
their way themselves into anthroposophic lines of thought. They
must first find their way into the anthroposophic lines of
thought; and then one can talk to them. With regard to the
people to-day who are opposing Anthroposophy, our only business
is to point out clearly where they are making false statements.
That is a point one can discuss. But for matters more of
debate, of actual substance, one obviously cannot discuss these
with people, who are not only not willing to be
convinced, but really indeed are not able to be
convinced, because they lack the first foundations! —
This is the first thing that everyone must work at: to lay for
himself the first foundations in Already during the war, one
might see some scientist or man of learning from one corner or
another beginning to draw in to Anthroposophy. This gave the
Anthroposophic Society helpers upon scientific ground. At first
these men of science did not come much to the front. The
scientific department, down to the year 1919 or 20 remained
more of a hope, with the exception of what Dr. Unger extracted
and turned to account for Anthroposophy from the Philosophy
of freedom and other writings of the pre-anthroposophic
time. Otherwise, apart from what was done in this respect in
the further elaboration of the science of knowledge, —
work which afforded valuable, substantial material for the
future movement, — apart from this, one may say that at
first, at the beginning of the third period, the scientific
element was a hope. For this scientific element began now, in
the third period, by making itself felt in precisely the
reverse direction, to what it had done before, in the first
period. In the first period, as I told you, the main point with
the people I spoke of yesterday was, how to justify
Anthroposophy in the eyes of Science. Anthroposophy was
required to get her pass viséd by Science. That was the
tendency in the first period. And since Anthroposophy could not
do this, the scientific branch of the business gradually died
out. In the second period it had ceased to exist, and towards
the end of the time the whole thing leaned more towards the
artistic side; interests of a general human kind came into the
ascendant.
And
then in the third period these scientific aspirations again
crept out of their corners, but in the reverse way. Now it was
no longer a question — not explicitly at least — of
justifying Anthroposophy in the eyes of Science; but of
refertilizing Science from Anthroposophy.
And
now every kind of person began to turn up, all complaining: We
can get no further with our particular science; it wants a new
seed of life. It was no longer now a question, as before, in
the first period, of inventing atomic constructions, because
this was the customary thing, and borrowing atomic theories
from physics and astronomics for the ether and the astral
bodies too. Now, having experimented long enough in the hope of
reducing it to Science, it was now a question of precisely the
reverse tendency.
Well, this new tendency ... I will discuss it to-day only from
the positive aspect ... will only work out to any-thing, will
only be of any use or benefit to the anthroposophic movement,
if it finds the way to work solely and purely from
anthroposophic sources — much in the same way as we work
in the artistic branches, in eurhythmy, for instance;
and if this again is done with all the seriousness and
earnestness of which I was speaking just now. So long as, after
all, a good deal still of that style of thinking, which is
nowadays ‘scientific’, is unconsciously introduced into the
anthroposophic movement, so long nothing will profitably come
of it. And, in particular, nothing will profitably come of it,
so long as the idea prevails, that the people, who are to-day
official representatives of science and learning, can possibly
be convinced of anything whatever by argument, without finding
their way themselves into anthroposophic lines of thought. They
must erst find their way into the anthroposophic lines of
thought; and then one can talk to them. With regard to the
people to-day who are opposing Anthroposophy, our only business
is to point out clearly where they are making false statements.
That is a point one can discuss. But for matters more of
debate, of actual substance, one obviously cannot discuss these
with people, who are not only not willing to be
convinced, but really indeed are not able to be
convinced, because they lack the erst foundations! — This
is the first thing that everyone must work at: to lay for
himself the first foundations in each of the different fields
of work; but to lay these foundations really from the centre of
Anthroposophy, to work direct from the central sources.
And
then, after the war, when the attempt was made to grapple with
all manner of practical problems of life, with actual
world-problems, here again it was a question of guiding
everything, of letting everything take shape, from the central
anthroposophic core, and of recognizing, that with these
practical problems of life one can least of all deal in any
sort of compromise. There can be no question of anything but
simply and solely saying to the world what has to be said from
the anthroposophic centre itself, and then of waiting, and
seeing how many people have an understanding for it. But never
in any case must anything whatever that is drawn from the
anthroposophic central source be advocated in such a way before
the world that one says, ‘There is some party, which perhaps
one might win over’! ‘There is some person, whom perhaps we
might get hold of’! — That won't do! All that is
absolutely out of the question; all that is contrary to the
innermost life-conditions of the anthroposophic movement!
And
if, here, there is some Woman's Movement, and there some Social
Movement, and somebody thinks that we ought to ‘get in’ here,
or come to terms there, ‘for the people are quite close to
Anthroposophy’ on the one side or other, ... all that won't do!
it absolutely won't do! What is needed is to have such a firm
inner security in Anthroposophy, that one manages really,
wherever one may be placed, to stand for Anthroposophy and what
is Anthroposophic.
I
could tell you an amusing example again of this. — As you
know, when people quarrel with my having taken the theosophic
movement for my field of activity, I always reply, that I shall
advocate Anthroposophy everywhere, wherever people ask for it;
no matter where they ask for it, I shall always do so. I
have done it in many places, where I was only able to do it
once, for the simple reason that the people wouldn't hear any
more from me a second time; but I didn't speak in any such way
as to give them an external inducement, in their existing state
of soul, to hear it over again a second time. And this is the
thing to be avoided. If people desire to hear anything from
one, then one must give them Anthroposophy, —
Anthroposophy pure and simple, drawn boldly from its innermost
core.
These things have all been gone through already, by way of
illustration, as I might say — really just as though
simply to illustrate them! — during the course of the
anthroposophic movement. For instance, we once received an
invitation from a spiritualistic society in Berlin; I was to
speak on Anthroposophy. It never entered my head to say No;
— why shouldn't these people have a right to hear
something of the sort? I delivered my lecture; and directly the
lecture was over, I saw how unsuitable the people were, and
that in actual truth they didn't want to hear any more from me.
For, after the lecture, something quite delicious occurred:
namely, I was with one voice elected president of the society!
Frau Doctor Steiner and her sister, who were with me, simply
didn't know where they were! — ‘Whatever is to be done
now!’ — said they — ‘President of a society like
this! Whatever is to be done!’ — I merely replied: ‘Not
come back again!’ For that, of course, was the obvious thing;
the people had sufficiently shown by their whole idiotic
procedure in electing a man, whom they had just heard for the
first time, ... by the mere fact of electing him as president,
they had shown, that what they wanted was something entirely
different from Anthroposophy. What they wanted, in fact, was to
make Anthroposophy spiritualistic, and they imagined that they
could do so in this way. — But similar experiences maybe
met with in abundant variety.
As
you see therefore, there can really be never any question of
not advocating Anthroposophy in whatever company. I was
once, for instance, invited to speak on Anthroposophy in the
Gottached Society in Berlin. And what reason could there
be for my not speaking there? The only point was, that
nothing should be sacrificed of Anthroposophy.
This was the problem of peculiar difficulty at the time after
the Appeal to the German People and the Civilized World
was written, and the Threefold Commonwealth had
appeared. Then, it was really a question of doing nothing on
any side whatever, except plainly urging what can be urged
direct from this source, and then waiting and seeing, who will
join in. And I must still express it as my conviction to-day,
that, had we done this, — had we simply taken our stand
on the positive ground contained in the Appeal and in
the book, without seeking contact either with this party or
that (a thing which I, for my part, was always for declining),
— that we should then, to-day, not have been tripped up
by the obstacles put in our way from those quarters; and we
might very probably even have a few fruits to record; —
whereas, as it is, we are so absolutely without any fruits to
record in that field, my dear friends!
For
in truth, it is one of the life-conditions of a society like
this, that the way should always be found to work straight
from the spirit itself. — One needn't, of
course, imagine that one is required to do anything so
senseless as to rush in everywhere in and out of season, and
never on all occasions be able to fit in with actual life,
— that one should behave altogether unpractically. What
is necessary to-day is just the opposite! What is necessary
to-day is to bring a little real practicality into what is
termed practical life! For, to anyone who knows anything at all
of the real conditions of life, the modern life of to-day seems
... well, very much like that of the ‘really practical people’,
who take such a really practical stand in life, that they
tumble down directly they try to stand on their two feet. That
is what is commonly termed to-day, ‘practical life’! And when
these experts in practical life make their way into a spiritual
movement, then it is a bad look-out for the spiritual
movement!
As
I said, I want to-day to deal rather with the positive aspect
of the matter; I do not want, as often before, to criticize the
mistakes in what has been done, but merely to indicate how
things ought to go on. The point, then, in going the straight
road, is not to go it in the way of saying: I go my
own straight road, — and then, if a post
happens to be there, to run one's head against it! One
naturally avoids posts; one naturally makes use of anything
that may help one forwards. But the point is, in all one does,
to put into it unreservedly that impulse which comes from
the very centre.
If
people took this way of going forwards, then we should soon see
that the Anthroposophical Society would then in actual fact,
and not just superficially or conventionally, but justifiably,
at last get beyond being treated by the rest of the world as a
mere sect.
What is the use of our telling people over and over again that
we are not a sect, when we behave as though we were a
sect! For the first thing of all, you see, that needs to be
understood by the members of the Anthroposophical Society, is
this condition of existence for any society what-ever in modern
times: A Society cannot possibly be a Sect. And accordingly
there can never really — if the Anthroposophical Society
is to stand on its own true ground — there never really
can be any we, where it is a question of views and ideas.
Over and over again one hears Anthroposophists saying, when
addressing the outer world: ‘We (the society) hold this or that
view. Amongst us,’ this or that is done. ‘We aim’ at
this or that. — This kind of thing was possible in old
days; then, societies could confront the world with this kind
of solid uniformity. In our day, it is no longer possible. In
our day, more especially with a society like this, every single
person in it must be a really free individual. Views, ideas,
opinions, are the property of the private individual only. The
society has no opinion. And this must find expression even in
the very terms in which the individual speaks of the society.
The ‘we’, strictly speaking, must vanish.
1 The really practical people, a humorous
poem by Christian Morgenstern, frequently performed in
Eurhythmy.
And
with this there is involved something else besides. When this
‘we’ has vanished, then each person will not feel himself in
the society as though it were a water-barrel that holds him up
and carries him, and that he can fall back upon in case of
need. Instead of which, when each person in the society has to
stand for his own opinion and above all for himself, he will
then also feel the full responsibility for everything that he
himself says as a private individual.
This sense of responsibility, — this is what must grow
continually greater and greater, so long as the society is
still a little band only. And therefore it might be well to
consider, — seeing that the Anthroposophical Society has
not hitherto succeeded, through its habits and customs
of life, in figuring before the outer world as an eminently
modern society, and that these habits and customs of life have
brought along with them the continual use of terms such as: ‘We
believe’ this! ‘We think’ that! ‘We hold this view’!
‘Our world-conception is ...’ and so forth; until the
world outside has come to believe that it is a collective mass
with certain opinions, and that anyone, who wants to join, is
obliged to subscribe to this collective opinion, — which
naturally repels every soul with any self-respect. ... Now
however, that this has happened, it becomes necessary to-day to
consider a measure, which need not have been considered perhaps
a year ago; because things had not then gone so far, because
one had not yet been confounded with Carbonari and Soviet
Governments and Irish Republicanism (all, of course, to certain
non-ostensible ends). So that to-day it really looks as though
we must very seriously consider the necessity of doing away
with the three Points that are continually being quoted:
Fraternity without distinction of races, etc.; and the
comparative study of religions and study of spiritual
worlds and spiritual methods. The fact that these three
Points are always quoted makes the impression in the eyes of
the world as though one were required to swear to these three
Points. One must find a quite different form: above all one
must put it into such a form, that everybody who is not
willing to subscribe to an opinion, but who is interested in
the pursuit of a spiritual life, doesn't need to think that he
is subscribing himself body and soul to a fixed set of
opinions. — This is the thing we have to consider to-day;
for it is one of the life-conditions of the society, now that
we have experienced the third stage and its peculiar
features.
I
have often been asked by different people, whether they could
join the Anthroposophical Society, or not, since they were not
yet prepared to subscribe to the anthroposophic doctrines. My
reply was, that it would be a poor sort of society in these
days, which thought of recruiting its members from the people
who subscribe to its particular doc-trines. That would be
something dreadful! — I invariably replied, that, for
honest membership, there can be no question of anything but
what can be expressed in the words: One is interested simply in
the existence of a society that is looking for the way to the
spiritual world. One has an interest in such a thing. How it is
then done, is the concern of those who have entered the
society; one person contributes one thing, another another.
I
can very well understand anyone being unwilling to join a
society for which he is required to pledge himself to articles
of faith. But when one says, ‘Whoever is interested in the
pursuit of spiritual life can be a member of this society’,
then the different people will come together, who have this
kind of interest; and the others, ... well, they may stay
outside, — but they will be led ever further and further
into the ad absurdum of life.
When we begin to reflect upon the conditions, like these, which
are necessary for the life of the Anthroposophical Society;
when we are no longer willing to vegetate on for ever in the
old groove, — then first do we really fulfil the
life-conditions of the society.
When this society, therefore, finds its way in actual fact to
handling things in a perfectly free fashion, — with no
sort of narrowness, but only broad-heartedly and generously,
— then, and then only, will it be possible for this
society to become in actual fact, what it can and should become
in as much as the anthroposophic movement runs through it.
— For the anthroposophic movement links on everywhere
quite positively, — without compromise, but quite
positively, — to all that can be found existing at the
present day, and that can bear any sort of good fruit for the
future.
These things mean acquiring a certain delicacy of
under-standing. And it is necessary that this delicacy of
under-standing should be acquired by the Anthroposophists
within, I might say, the next few weeks. And then the further
ways and means will be found.: that will all come in the course
of actual practice.
But
no one will be able to think along these lines, who does not
come radically out of the more narrow circle of his private
personality, and begin really to care for the cause itself,
— really to recognize Anthroposophy as an
invisible Being with a life of her own.
I
was, in the nature of things, obliged, as you see, to speak of
this third period in a different way from the two first. For
the two first are really history. The third, although we are
now at the end of it, belongs to the present day; and everybody
ought really to know what are the necessary conditions of the
day. Even in the smallest details we must work through to
guiding principles like these. Such guiding principles are not
dogmas; they result quite obviously, as matters of course.
What still remains to be said, I will leave over till
to-morrow; and we will see if we can then bring these lectures
to a conclusion.
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