LECTURE FIVE
The Decline of the Theosophical Society
Dornach, 14 June 1923
It is important to be aware of the need which existed in the
anthroposophical movement for Christianity to be asserted,
specifically among those who were initially what might be described
as ordinary listeners. For the theosophical movement under the
guidance of H.P. Blavatsky had adopted an expressly anti-christian
orientation. I wish to throw a little more light on this
anti-christian attitude, a perspective which I also mentioned in
connection with Friedrich Nietzsche.
It has to be understood that the Mystery of Golgotha occurred in
the first instance simply as a fact in the development of mankind on
earth. If you look at the way in which I have dealt with the subject
in my book,
Christianity As Mystical Fact,
you will see that I attempted to come to an
understanding of the impulses underlying the ancient Mysteries, and
then to show how the various forces which were active in the
individual mystery centres were harmonized and unified. Thus what was
initially encountered by human beings in a hidden way could be
presented openly as a historical fact. In this sense the historical
reality of the Mystery of Golgotha represents the culmination of the
ancient Mysteries. Remnants of the ancient mystery wisdom were
present when the Mystery of Golgotha took place. With the aid of
these remnants, which were incorporated into the Gospels, it was
possible to find access to this event, which gave earth development
its true meaning.
The impulses derived from ancient wisdom which were still directly
experienced began to fade in the fourth century AD, so that the
wisdom was preserved only in a more or less traditional form,
allowing particular people in one place or another to revitalize
these traditions. But the kind of continuous development which the
Mysteries enjoyed in ancient times had disappeared, taking with it
the means to understand the Mystery of Golgotha.
The tradition remained. The Gospels existed, kept secret at first
by the communities of the church and then published in individual
nations. The cults existed. As the western world developed it was
possible to keep alive a memory of the Mystery of Golgotha. But the
opportunity to maintain the memory came to an end in that moment in
the fifth post-Atlantean epoch when intellectualism, with what I
described yesterday as modern education, made its appearance. And
with it a type of science of the natural world began, which
pre-empted any understanding of the spiritual world as it developed
the kind of methodology seen to date. This methodology needed to be
expanded in the way that anthroposophy has sought to expand it. If
one does not progress beyond the scientific method introduced by
Copernicus, Galileo and so on, the Mystery of Golgotha has no place
within the resultant view of nature.
Now consider the following. In none of the ancient religions was
there any division between knowledge of the natural world and
knowledge of God. It is a common feature of all pagan religions that
there is a unity in the way in which they explain nature, and in how
that understanding of nature then ascends to an understanding of the
divine, the many-faceted divinity, which is active in nature.
The kind of abstract natural forces we are now aware of,
unchallenged in their absoluteness, did not exist. What did exist
were nature spirits which guided the various aspects of nature, and
with which links could be established through the content of the
human soul.
Now anthroposophy will never make the claim that it somehow wants
to become a religion. However, although religion will always need to
be an independent spiritual stream in mankind, it is a simple human
desire for harmony to exist between cognition and the religious life.
It must be possible to make the transition from cognition to religion
and to return from religion to cognition without having to cross an
abyss. That is impossible, given the structure of modern learning. It
is impossible, above all, to discover the nature of Christ on this
scientific basis. Modern science, in investigating the being of
Christ ever more closely, has scattered and lost it.
If you bear this in mind, you will be able to understand what
follows. Let me begin by talking about Nietzsche, whose father was a
practising minister. He went through a modern grammar school
education. But since he was not a bread-and-butter scholar but a
thinker, his interest extended to everything which could be learnt
through modern methods. So he consciously and in a radical way became
aware of the dichotomy which in reality affects all modern minds,
although people do not realize it and are prone to illusion because
they draw a veil over it. Nietzsche says: Nowhere does modern
education provide a direct link to an explanation of Jesus Christ
without jumping over an abyss. His uncompromising conclusion is that
if one wants to establish a relationship with modern science while
preserving some sort of inner feeling for the traditional
explanations of Christ, it is necessary to lie. And so he chose
modern learning, and thus arrived at a radical indictment of what he
knew about Christianity.
No one has been more cutting about Christianity than Nietzsche,
the minister's son. And he experiences this with his whole being. One
example is when he says — and it is not, of course, my
standpoint — that what a modern theologian believes to be true
is certainly false. And he finds that the whole of modern philosophy
has too much theological blood flowing through its veins. As a result
he formulates his tremendous indictment of Christianity, which is of
course blasphemous, but which is an honest blasphemy and therefore
worthy of greater attention than the hypocrisy which is so often
found in this field today. It needs to be emphasized that a person
like Nietzsche, who was serious about wanting to understand the
Mystery of Golgotha, was not able to do so with the means at his
disposal, including the Gospels in their present form.
Anthroposophy provides an interpretation of all four Gospels,
[ Note 1 ]
and these interpretations are rejected decisively by
theologians of all denominations. But they were not available to
Nietzsche. It is the most difficult thing for a scientific mind
— and almost all people today have scientific minds in this
sense, even if at a basic level — to come to terms with the
Mystery of Golgotha, and what is precisely not the old Mysteries, but
the discovery of a whole new mystery knowledge. The discovery of the
spiritual world in a wholly new form is necessary.
Basically Blavatsky's inspiration also came from the ancient
Mysteries. If one takes
The Secret Doctrine
as a whole, it really feels like nothing
fundamentally new but the resurrection of that knowledge which was
used in the ancient Mysteries to recognize the divine and the
spiritual. But these Mysteries are only capable of explaining the
events which happened in anticipation of Christ. Those who were
familiar with the impulses of the ancient Mysteries when Christianity
was still young were able to adopt a positive attitude to what
happened at Golgotha. This applied into the fourth century. The real
meaning of the Greek Church Fathers was still understood: how their
roots stretched back to the ancient Mysteries, and how their words
have quite a different tone from those of the later Latin Church
Fathers.
The ancient wisdom which understood nature and spirit as one was
contained in Blavatsky's revelations. That is the way, she thought,
to find the divine and the spiritual, to make them accessible to
human perception. And from that perspective she turned her attention
to what present-day traditional thinking and the modern faiths were
saying about Christ Jesus. She could not, of course, understand the
Gospels in the way they are understood in anthroposophy, and the
knowledge which came from elsewhere was not adequate to deal with the
knowledge of the spirit which Blavatsky brought. That is the origin
of her contempt for the way in which the Mystery of Golgotha was
understood by the world. In her view, what people were saying about
the Mystery of Golgotha was on a much lower level than all the
majestic wisdom provided by the ancient Mysteries. In other words,
the Christian god stands on a lower level than the content of the
ancient Mysteries.
That was not the fault of the Christian god, but it was the result
of interpretations of the Christian god. Blavatsky simply did not
know the nature of the Mystery of Golgotha and was able to judge it
only by what was being said about it. These things have to be seen in
an objective light. As the power of the ancient Mysteries was drawing
to a final close in the last remnants of Greek culture in the fourth
century AD, Rome took possession of Christianity. The empirical
attitude of Roman culture to learning was incapable of opening a real
path to the spirit. Rome forced Christianity to adopt its outer
trappings. It is this romanized Christianity alone which was known to
Nietzsche and Blavatsky.
Thus these souls whom I described as homeless, whose earlier earth
lives were lighting up within them, took the first thing on offer
because their sole aim was to find access to the spiritual world,
even at the risk of losing Christianity. These were the people who
began by seeking a way into the Theosophical Society.
Now the position of anthroposophy in relation to these homeless
souls has to be clearly understood. These were searching, questioning
souls. And the first necessity was to find out what questions resided
in their innermost selves. And if anthroposophy addressed these
souls, it was because they had questions about things to which
anthroposophy thought it had the answer. The other people among our
contemporaries were not bothered by such questions.
Anthroposophy therefore considered what came into the world with
Blavatsky to be an important fact. But its purpose was not to observe
the knowledge which she presented, but essentially to understand
those questions which people found perplexing.
How were the answers to be formulated? We need to look at the
matter as positively and as factually as possible. Here we had these
questioning souls. Their questions were clear. They believed they
could find an answer to them in something like Annie Besant's book
The Ancient Wisdom,
[ Note 2 ]
for instance. Obviously, it would have been stupid to tell people
that this or that bit of
The Ancient Wisdom
was no longer relevant. The only possible
course was to give real answers by ignoring
The Ancient Wisdom
at a time when this book was, as it were, dogma among these people,
and by writing my book
Theosophy,
[ Note 3 ]
which gave answers to questions which I knew were being asked. That
was the positive answer. And there was no need to do more than that.
People had to be left completely free to choose whether they wanted
to continue to read
The Ancient Wisdom
or whether they wanted to use
Theosophy.
In times of great historical change things are not decided in as
rational and direct a manner as one likes to think. Thus I did not
find it at all surprising that the theosophists who attended the
lecture cycle on anthroposophy when the German Section was
established, remarked that it did not agree in the slightest with
what Mrs Besant was saying.
Of course it could not agree, because the answers had to be found
in what the deepened consciousness of the present can provide. Until
about 1907 each step taken by anthroposophy was a battle against the
traditions of the Theosophical Society. At first the members of the
Theosophical Society were the only people whom one could approach
with these things. Every step had to be conquered. A polemical
approach would have been useless; the only sensible course was hope,
and making the right choices.
These things certainly did not happen without inner reservations.
Everything had to be done at the right time and place, at least in my
view. I believe that in my
Theosophy
I did not go one step beyond
what it was possible to publish and for a certain number of people to
accept at that time. The wide distribution of the book since then
shows that this was an accurate assumption.
It was possible to go further among those who were engaged in a
more intensive search, who had been caught up in the stream set in
motion by Blavatsky. I will take only one instance. It was common in
the Theosophical Society to describe how human beings went through
what was called kamaloka after death. To begin with, the description
given by its leaders could only be put in a proper context in my book
Theosophy
by avoiding the
concept of time. But I wanted to deal with the correct concept of
time within the Society.
G = birth T = death |
As a result I gave lectures about life between death and a new
birth within the then Dutch Section of the Theosophical Society. And
there I pointed out, right at the start of my activity, that it is
nonsense simply to say that we pass through kamaloka as if our
consciousness is merely extended a little. (see diagram above). I
showed that time has to be seen as moving backwards, and I described
how our existence in kamaloka is life in reverse, stage by stage,
only at three times the pace of the life we spend on earth. Nowadays,
of course, people leading their physical lives have no idea that this
backward movement is a reality in the spiritual realm, because time
is imagined simply as a straight line.
Now the leaders of the Theosophical Society professed to renew the
teachings of the old wisdom. All kinds of other writings appeared
which were based on Blavatsky's book. But their content took a form
which corresponded exactly to the way things are presented as a
result of modern materialism. Why? Because new knowledge, not simply
the renewal of old knowledge, had to be pursued if the right things
were to be found. Buddha's wheel of birth and death and the old
oriental wisdom was quoted on every occasion. That a wheel is
something which has to be drawn as turning back on itself (see
diagram) was ignored by people. There was no life in this
rejuvenation of the old wisdom, because it did not spring from direct
knowledge. In short, it was necessary through direct knowledge to
create something which was also capable of illuminating the ancient
wisdom.
Nevertheless, in the first seven years of my anthroposophical work
there were people who denied that there was anything new in my
material in relation to theosophy. But people never forgot the
trouble I caused in the Dutch Section by filling my lectures with
living material. When the congress took place in Munich in 1907
[ Note 4 ]
the Dutch theosophists were seething that an alien
influence, as they perceived it, was muscling in. They did not feel
the living present standing against something which was based merely
on tradition.
Something had to change. That is when the conversation between Mrs
Besant and myself took place in Munich,
[ Note 5 ]
and it was
clarified that the things which I had to represent as anthroposophy
would work quite independently of other things active within the
Theosophical Society. What I might describe as a modus vivendi
was agreed.
On the other hand, even at that time the absurdities of the
Theosophical Society which eventually led to its downfall began to be
visible on the horizon. For it is clear today that it has been ruined
as a society which is able to support a spiritual movement, however
great its membership. What the Theosophical Society used to be is no
longer alive today.
When anthroposophy began its work the Theosophical Society still
contained a justified and full spirituality. The things which were
brought into the world by Blavatsky were a reality, and people had a
living relationship with them. But Blavatsky had already been dead
for a decade. The mood within the Theosophical Society, the things
which existed as a continuation of Blavatsky's work, had a solid
historico-cultural foundation; they were quite capable of giving
something to people. But even at that time they already contained the
seeds of decay. The only question was whether these could be
overcome, or whether they would inevitably lead to complete
disharmony between anthroposophy and the old Theosophical
Society.
It has to be said that a destructive element existed in the
Theosophical Society even in Blavatsky's time. It is necessary to
separate Blavatsky's spiritual contribution from the effect of the
way in which she was prompted to make her revelations. We are dealing
with a personality who, however she was prompted, nevertheless was
creative and through herself gave wisdom to mankind, even if this
wisdom was more like a memory of earlier lives on earth and
restricted to the rejuvenation of ancient wisdom. The second fact,
that Blavatsky was prompted to act in a particular way, introduced
elements into the theosophical movement which were no longer
appropriate if it was to become a purely spiritual movement.
For that it was not. The fact is that Blavatsky was prompted from
a certain direction, and as a result of this she produced all the
things which are written in
Isis Unveiled.
But by various machinations Blavatsky for a second
time fell under outside influence, namely of eastern esoteric
teachers propelled by cultural tendencies of an egoistic nature. From
the beginning a biased policy lay at the basis of the things they
wished to achieve through Blavatsky. It included the desire to create
a kind of sphere of influence — first of a spiritual nature,
but then in a more general sense — of the East over the West,
by providing the West's spirituality, or lack of it if you like, with
eastern wisdom. That is how the transformation took place from the
thoroughly European nature of
Isis Unveiled
to the thoroughly eastern nature of Blavatsky's
The Secret Doctrine.
Various factors were at work, including the wish to link India
with Asia in order to create an Indo-Asian sphere of influence with
the help of the Russian Empire. In this way her teaching received its
Indian content in order to win a spiritual victory over the West. It
reflected a one-sidedly egoistic, nationally egoistic, influence. It
was present right from the beginning and was striking in its
symptomatic significance. The first lecture by Annie Besant which I
attended dealt with theosophy and imperialism.
[ Note 6 ]
And if one questioned whether the fundamental impulse of the lecture was
contained in the wish to continue in Blavatsky's spiritual direction
or to continue what went alongside it, the answer had to be the
latter.
Annie Besant frequently said things without fully understanding
the implications. But if you read the lecture “Theosophy and
Imperialism” attentively, with an awareness of the underlying
implications, you will see that if someone wanted to separate India
from England in a spiritual way, the first, apparently innocuous step
could be taken in a lecture of this kind.
It has always spelled the beginning of the end for spiritual
movements and societies when they have started to introduce partisan
political elements into their activity. A spiritual movement can only
develop in the world today if it embraces all humanity. Indeed, today
it is one of the most essential conditions for a spiritual movement
whose intention it is to give access to the real spirit that it
should embrace all mankind. And anything which aims to split mankind
in any way is, from the beginning, a destructive element.
Just consider the extent to which one reaches into the
subconscious regions of the human psyche with such things. It is
simply part of the conditions for spiritual movements, such as
anthroposophy wants to be, that they honestly and seriously endeavour
to distance themselves from all partisan human interests, and aspire
to take account of the general interest of mankind. That was what
made the theosophical movement so destructive, in so far as it
contained divisive elements from its inception. And on occasion they
also veered in their position; during the war there was a tendency to
become very anglo-chauvinistic. But it is essential to understand
very clearly that it is completely impossible to make a genuine
spiritual movement flourish if it contains factional interests which
people are unwilling to leave behind.
That is why one of the main dangers facing the anthroposophical
movement today — in an age deteriorating everywhere into
nationalist posturing — lies in the lack of courage among
people to discard these tendencies.
But what is the root cause of this tendency? It arises when a
society wants to accrue power by something other than spiritual
revelation. At the beginning of the twentieth century there was still
much that was positive in the way the Theosophical Society developed
an awareness of its power, but that awareness had almost completely
disappeared by 1906 and was replaced by a strong drive for power.
It is important to understand that anthroposophy grew out of the
general interests of mankind, and to recognize that it had to find
access to the Theosophical Society, because that is where the
questioners were to be found. It would not have found accomodation
anywhere else.
Indeed, as soon as the first period came to an end, the complete
inappropriateness of the theosophical movement for western life
became evident, particularly in its approach to the issues
surrounding Christ. Where Blavatsky's contempt for Christianity was
still basically theoretical, albeit with an emotional basis, the
theosophical movement later turned this contempt into practice, to
the extent that a boy was specially brought up with the intention of
making him the vehicle for the resurrection of Christ. There is
hardly anything more absurd. An Order
[ Note 7 ]
was established
within the Theosophical Society with the aim of engineering the birth
of Christ in a boy already alive here.
This soon descended into total farce. A congress of the
Theosophical Society was to take place in Genoa in 1911,
[ Note 8 ]
and I felt it necessary to announce my lecture “From Buddha to
Christ” for this congress. This should have resulted in a clear
and concise debate by bringing into the open everything which was
already in the air. But — surprise, surprise — the Genoa
Congress was cancelled. It is, of course, easy to find excuses for
something like that, and every word that was uttered sounded
uncommonly like an excuse.
Thus we can say that the anthroposophical movement entered its
second stage by pursuing its straightforward course, and it was
introduced by a lecture which I delivered to a non-theosophical
audience of which only one person — no more! — is still
with us, although many people attended the original lecture. That
first lecture, lecture cycle in fact, was entitled “From Buddha
to Christ”. In 1911 I had wanted to deliver the same cycle.
There was a direct connection! But the theosophical movement had
become caught up in a hideous zig-zag course.
If the history of the anthroposophical movement fails to be taken
seriously and these things are not properly identified, it is also
impossible to give a proper answer to the superficial points which
are continually raised about the relationship between anthroposophy
and theosophy; points made by people who refuse absolutely to
acknowledge that anthroposophy was something quite independent from
the beginning, and that it was quite natural for anthroposophy to
provide the answers it possessed to the questions which were being
asked.
Thus we might say that the second period of the anthroposophical
movement lasted until 1914. During that time nothing in particular
happened, at least as far as I am concerned, to resolve its
relationship with the theosophical movement. The Theosophical Society
remedied that when it expelled the anthroposophists.
[ Note 9 ]
But it was not particularly relevant to be in the Theosophical Society and
it was not particularly relevant to be excluded. We simply continued
as before. Until 1914 everything which occurred was initiated by the
Theosophical Society. I was invited to lecture there on the basis of
the lectures which have been reprinted in my book
Eleven European Mystics.
I then proceeded to develop in various directions the material contained
in it.
The Society, with its unchanged views, then proceeded to expel me
— and, of course, my supporters. I was invited in for the same
material which later caused my exclusion. That is how it was. The
history of the anthroposophical movement will not be understood until
the fundamental fact is recognized that it was irrelevant whether I
was included in or excluded from the theosophical movement. That is
something upon which I would ask you to concentrate in your
self-reflection.
Today how many souls have a hint of such homelessness about them?
That is revealed in incidents such as the following, which was
reported very recently. A professor announced a course of university
lectures on the development, as he called it, of mystic-occult
perceptions from Pythagoras to Steiner. Following the announcement,
so many people came to the first lecture that it could not be held in
the usual lecture hall but had to be transferred to the Auditorium
Maximum which is normally used only for big festive occasions.
Such occurrences demonstrate the way things are today, how the
tendency to such homelessness has become an integral element in many
souls. All of this could be anticipated: the rapidly growing evidence
of a longing in homeless souls for an attitude to life which was not
organized in advance, which was not laid out in advance; a longing
for the spirit among them which was increasingly asserting itself,
and asserting itself more strongly week by week.
|