Course I - Lecture III
The Nature of God from the
Theosophical Standpoint
GA 52
Berlin
November 7, 1903
The theosophist does not dare so easily to speak about
the knowledge of the primary source of all matters. Theosophy should
be the way to be able to seize, finally, this concept with our mental
faculty; it should show us the way which would lead us to get clearness,
as far as it is to be got, about this idea. This way is long and leads
through some stations, and we are not allowed to pass any single station
only, but on every station we have to stop and learn.
Not only the starting point,
but also the keystone is important. If we have this in mind, we have
to go a little into the nature of theosophical life to see which views
theosophy has on the concept of God. Theosophy is — as it is striven
for since 1875 in the society founded by Mrs. Blavatsky — something
different from that which one calls western science, which our western
civilisation and its scholarship strives for in the external life. The
way how the western knowledge is gained differs basically from the theosophical
wisdom.
Theosophical wisdom is very
old, as old as the human race, and somebody who becomes engrossed in
the evolution of the human being gets to know more about the starting
point of the human being than that which our history of civilisation
of the last decades has believed in such a thoughtless way that the
human beings started from a lack of culture and from ignorance. We shall
see how it is in reality if we become engrossed in the life of primeval
times. There we see that the development of human mind started from
a strong spiritual strength of beholding that in the beginning of the
human development real divine wisdom existed everywhere. Who studies
the old religions receives the light of this wisdom. Now our time, according
to the sense of our life, gives the theosophist a renewal of this cultural
life which flows through the whole humankind.
Our western cultural life
is based on our mind first of all. It is based on the one-sided mental
strength. If you go through our whole civilisation in the West, you
find our great discoveries and inventions, our sciences and what they
have contributed to the clarification of the riddle of the world. You
find thinking, sensible thinking, observation with the senses et cetera.
In this manner the western mind spreads out its knowledge to all directions.
It investigates the cosmic space with the help of instruments, with
the telescope and penetrates with the microscope into the world of the
smallest bodies. It connects everything with the mind. Our western knowledge
thereby spreads in all directions. We know more and more about our surroundings,
but we never get to a deepening of our knowledge, namely penetrating
of the matters. That is why it may not surprise us if the western science
does not cope with the concept of God. We must get to the spring of
existence, to the spiritual being. They cannot be connected and perceived
by the senses; they must be perceived in a different way.
Those who know that there
is another way than the western one try to attain wisdom in quite a
different way. Go back to the wisdom of Egyptian priests, back to the
Greek mysteries, back to India, go back to all these religions and world
views and you find that those who looked for wisdom did this in quite
a different way than the European scholarship. It was a self-education,
a self-development what was searched for by the pupils of wisdom above
all.
They searched for self-education
through honest struggle of the human soul, and tried to gain higher
wisdom. From the start they were convinced that the human being, as
he is born in the world, is determined for advancement, for higher development.
They were convinced that the human being is not perfect that he cannot
attain the top level of perfection immediately in one single life that
a development of the human being and his soul capacities have to take
place, like with the plant whose root remains even if leaves and flowers
dry up. It is similar if we are going to have to take the self-education
in our own hands correctly which produces flowers and fruit in the life
on earth if we work on it seriously.
The pupil strove for wisdom
that way. He looked for a guide for himself. This gave him clues how
he could develop his astral organs by an appropriate way of life. Then
he developed upward step by step. His soul became able to behold farther
and farther, it became more and more sensitive for the primary sources
of existence. On every new level he attained new insights. With every
level he approached the being whose concept we have to discuss today.
He realised that he did not understand God using his intellect. That
is why he tried to advance above all. He was convinced that in the whole
nature and also in the human soul the God being is to be found. This
God being never is anything ready and finished; it is as developing
factor in all living beings, in all things. We ourselves are this God
being.
We are not the whole, but
we are droplets of the same quality, of the same essence. Deeply below
us in concealed abysses and bottoms, which are not on the surface of
the day, there is our real divine nature. We have to search for it and
to get it up. Then we also get up a little bit what hovers about our
usual existence, and then we also get up in ourselves what is divine
in us. Each of us is as it were a beam of divinity or, we say, a reflection
of divinity. If we imagine the divinity as the sun, each of us is like
a reflection of the sun in the drop of water. As well as the drop of
water reflects the sun completely, every human being is a true, real
reflection of the divine being. The God being rests in us, only we know
nothing about it; we must get it out of ourselves. We must only approach
it. Goethe says: he cannot understand how somebody would want to immediately
reach the divinity. We must approach it more and more. Self-development
leads us gradually to the understanding of the primary foundation of
life.
If we develop this way,
we exercise nothing else than theosophical life. Everything that spiritual
science teaches and recommends living, all great laws which it makes
clear to us and which its students who want to co-operate really make
it the living truth in them. They get to know the teaching of reincarnation
and karma, the law of destiny, of the intermediate beings, of the primary
source of all being which controls the whole universe. This is the internal
world which we call the astral one and the mental one, the world of
buddhi and the world of atma. We experience something of all those worlds,
and what we experience of those worlds is the steps to wisdom which
lead us to the loftiest. If we try to climb up these steps, it is a
long way. Only those who have arrived at the highest summit of human
development are able to see once that they have an inkling of the size
of that concept which we want to discuss today as intimation.
Hence, the shyness with
which theosophy speaks about the concept of God. The theosophist speaks
about these concepts possibly in the same attitude as a Hindu speaks
of Brahma. If you ask him: what is Brahma? — Then he maybe mentions
to you: Mahadeva, Vishnu and Brahma. Brahma is one of the divine beings
or rather an expression of the divine being. But behind all that something
different rests for the Hindu. Behind all beings to which he ascribes
the origin of the world something rests that he calls Brahma or Brahman.
Brahman is neuter. If you ask him what is behind the beings of which
he speaks, he says nothing about it.
He says nothing about it,
because one cannot speak about it any more. Everything that the human
being is able to say in this direction is hints, hints in that perspective
at whose end the divine being is for us. — That also leads to
the motto of our Theosophical Society. Perhaps, you know this motto.
It expresses nothing else than what I tried to outline now with some
words. This motto is normally translated with the words: no religion
is higher than truth. — We want to see how far the whole theosophical
striving goes in that direction. — What do we know about the human
striving? Human knowledge has to make every effort to penetrate the
secrets of existence and to find the primary sources of life with the
help of the different philosophies and world views.
Let us have a look at the
different religions. Apparently they are contradictory to each other;
however, they are contradictory only if one looks at them cursorily.
If we consider them deeper, they are connected. Indeed, they do not
have the same contents: Christianity, Hinduism, Zarathustrism, and natural
sciences do not have the same contents, too. Nevertheless — all
these different world views show nothing else than attempts of the human
mind to approach the primary source of all being. On different ways
you can get to the summit of a mountain. From different points of view
a region looks different, and thus the original truth also looks different
from different points of view.
We all are different from
each other. The one has this; the other has that character, this or
that mental development. However, we all also belong to a people, a
race, and an age. It was always this way. But because we belong to a
people, a race, and an age and have characters, we have a sum of different
sensations and feelings with the human beings. They form the different
languages in which the human beings put questions to themselves and
communicate about the riddles of life. The Greek could not form the
same mental pictures as the modern human being because the look was
totally different by which he saw the world. Thus the theosophist sees
different aspects, different kinds of wisdom everywhere. If we look
for the reason of it, we see that we have a concealed original wisdom,
which reveals itself time and again and which is identical with the
divine wisdom.
What have the human beings
formed in the course of time, and what will they always form? They form
opinions. We deal with opinions. The one opinion is different from the
other; the one stands above the other. We have the obligation to ascend
to higher and higher opinions. But we have to realise that we must go
far beyond the sea of opinions. Truth itself is still hidden in the
opinions at the moment, it is still covered, and it still appears in
different forms and aspects. However, we are allowed to absolutely have
these opinions if we take the right point of view on the opinions and
truth.
We are never allowed to
believe to understand truth — which Goethe regards as identical
with the divine — with our limited abilities. We may never dare
to believe that an end of thinking is possible. If we are aware of that,
we feel something that goes beyond it, and then we have something of
that which theosophy calls wisdom-filled modesty in the higher sense
of the word. The theosophist comes out of himself with his sensations
and his thinking. He says to himself: I must have opinions, because
I am only a human being, and it is my spiritual obligation to form thoughts
and concepts of the riddles of existence; but I have something in myself
that cannot be brought in a restricted concept; I have something in
myself that is more than thinking that goes beyond thinking: this is
life.
This life is the divine
life which flows through all things which also flows through me. —
It is that which helps us along, that which we can never encompass.
We will never be able to encompass it. If, however, we admit that we
will have reached something higher in distant future, we have to admit
also that we have other opinions in distant future which are higher
than those we have now. But you cannot have the lively life which is
in us in different way. You cannot have this in a different way; for
this life is the divine life which leads to the higher thoughts which
still come to us which we also have once. If we have this sensation
of the concepts — especially of the concepts of the divine nature,
then we say to ourselves: truth is identical with divinity, the divine
lives in my veins. It lives in all things and it also lives in me. —
If we think this thought in ourselves, it is divine, but it is not God
himself and cannot enclose God. There we must say to ourselves: beyond
any human opinion, beyond any temporal or national opinion the original
truth goes which reveals itself to you which we must feel and which
we must look for ambitiously. But no human opinion is higher to us than
this living sensation for the unfathomable wisdom and divinity which
expresses itself in that which I told now. We may be convinced that
we are enclosed in the divinity that God works in us if we are living
beings. This is the sense of the theosophical motto: No human opinion
stands higher than the living sensation of the divine wisdom which always
changes and never shows itself as a whole. — Then we may also
not wonder if we look at the matter in such a way that Goethe's saying
is right:
Somebody is as his God is;
Therefore, God is mocked so often.
Indeed, we human beings
can form no other concept of the divine being as such which is adjusted
to our respective capacities. But if we have a look at the matter in
such a way as we have just looked at it, we have to say: however, we
are also justified to form a suitable concept of the divine. Only one
thing is necessary, and this is: having the good will not to stop there.
It would be presumptuous to believe that we have reached the original
wisdom. It is also presumptuous by science if it believes to have now
explained the concept of God. In this regard our present civilisation
is really once again on one of those low points on which humankind is
sometimes.
Our present civilisation
is somewhat presumptuous concerning the concept of God as you know.
Just those who want to have a new Bible, a so-called story of natural
creation were often presumptuous so that they could not advance. There
is a writing by David Friedrich Strauss with the title
Old and New Faith which appeared in 1872 and supports the opinion
that it is a new Bible compared to the old Bible and that that which
comes from sciences is true. For they undermine the Bible in such a
way that these concepts must be thrown away.
Believe me that these are
the best who are set on such a mania today that they are the best who
think in good confidence that we reach the very basis of existence spreading
the human knowledge that we come from matter and energy. What is this
materialistic belief in God which meets us there? These are often excellent
personalities who have advanced so far that they say: matter is our
God.
These whirling atoms which
attract and push off themselves mutually should cause what constitutes
our own soul. What is the materialistic belief in God? It is atheism!
This can be compared with a religious level which exists, otherwise,
in the world which we can find, however, only correctly if we have the
typical concepts of the materialistic new faith. It is dead matter and
dead energy the materialist offers and adores. Let us look back at the
times of ancient Hellenism and not take the deep mystery religions,
but the national religion of the Greeks. Their gods were human, were
idealised human beings.
If we go back to other levels
of existence, we find there that the human beings adored animals that
plants were symbols of the divine to them. But these all were living
beings. These were higher levels than that which the completely savages
had who walked towards a stone block and adored it as animated. The
stone block differs in nothing from that which is energy and matter.
As incredible it sounds, the materialists stand on the level of such
fetish adorers. They say, of course, that they do not adore energy and
matter at all. If they say this, we reply to them: you have no correct
concept of what the fetish adorer feels to his fetish. The fetish adorers
are not yet able to rise to a higher idea of God. Their culture does
not allow it to them. It is a legitimate opinion for them to adore an
image they make for themselves. Of this opinion are today not only the
savages but also the materialists. Somebody, who is today a scientific
fetish adorer, who makes the image of matter and energy to himself and
adores it, is to blame for something. He could see by virtue of the
cultural level achieved by us if he only wanted it, on what a low level
he has stopped.
As we are today surrounded
by this virtually paralysing idea of God, we say to ourselves: this
is a reason why we speak of the idea of God. — Hence, I may point
to a book. One says it is a great merit of Feuerbach,
the philosopher, that he represented a so-called “fantastic”
God. Feuerbach published a book in 1841 and took the view that we should
turn round the sentence: God created the human being according to his
image — and say: the human beings created God according to their
image. — We have to realise the fact that the wishes and needs
of the human being are in such a way that he likes to see something
above himself. Then his imagination creates an image of him. The gods
become images of the human being. — With it Feuerbach, one says,
expressed a lofty wisdom.
If we go back to the times
of the ancient Hellenism, back to the Egyptians et cetera, again and
again the human beings formed ideas of the gods in such a way as they
were themselves. Thus they could also form bull and lion images of gods.
If the human beings were similar to bulls in their souls, then the bulls
became their gods. The gods became similar to bulls. If people were
similar to lions, the lions and lion-like images became their gods.
This is no new wisdom. It is a wisdom which spreads in our time only
again.
However, is it then not
true that really the human being creates his gods to himself? Is it
not true that our opinions about the gods arise from our own chests?
Is it not true that — if we look around in the world — we
do not see the divine with the eyes, with our senses? Somebody who wants
to look with the senses and understand with his mind speaks that way
as for example Du Bois-Reymond, the great physiologist: I would believe
in a ruler of the universe if I could prove him; if I could prove him
like the human brain. Then, however, I would be able to prove nerve
strands also outside in the world, as well as I can prove nerve strands
in the human body. In the outside world, as Du Bois-Reymond and the
younger ones want it, we cannot find the divine. Their opinions are
created from their own chests like Feuerbach says.
But one can also say: what
speaks in the human soul if this human soul forms thoughts and opinions?
— We know that we ourselves are parts of this divine being; we
know that God lives in us. We know that we human beings are the last
member of all things that surround us in the physical world, so to speak,
the noblest and most perfect beings within this world. Have we not to
say that the human being, in so far as he forms himself physically,
forms himself according to God as the most perfect being? Who does not
agree with Goethe as he expressed his opinion with the nice words:
“If the healthy nature
of the human being works as a whole if he feels being in the world like
in a great, nice, worthy and valued whole if the harmonious pleasure
grants a pure, free delight to him: then the universe if it could feel
would rejoice because it would have reached its purpose and would admire
the summit of its own evolution and being.”
The human being forms thoughts;
the thoughts stream from the human breast. But what speaks out of the
human breast? God himself speaks out of it — if the human being
is only inclined to hear this inner voice unselfishly, not to let drown
it by his interests and inclinations of the everyday life. It is this:
indeed, it is a human voice, but God’s voice is in the human voice.
That is why it does not come as a surprise if we have different aspects,
different views about the old divine wisdom in the human voice. A higher
spiritual modesty is that which must penetrate the theosophist if he
wants to obtain this concept of God. Above all, he has to realise that
life is a continual study that he never closes with an opinion; that
everything is developing. Also the human soul is developing. Then it
turns out that there are souls of lower and higher levels. There are
also souls which have not yet far advanced in their idea of God, and
on the other side there are souls which have advanced beyond the ordinary
for a long time and have acquired lofty world concepts and also lofty
concepts of God.
European and American knowledge
regards itself as wise and elated that nothing outstrips it. Everybody
believes that he has the sum of all wisdom. Somebody who adheres to
oriental or to theosophical wisdom is completely different. He says
to himself: everyday you can overtake what you have achieved if you
continue the way. Everything you have achieved is your inner possession.
But you are not allowed to rest; you must go on and hear to the voice
in nature and in your own breast.
Nothing is as perishable
for the western culture as our criticism getting out of hand. Because
it is never prepared from the point of view that one has to develop
that one is never allowed to have a closed judgment about a matter.
The theosophist will never have this. He says to himself with boldness
and courage what he has recognised as true: I arouse the same sensation
in everybody, who wants to hear me, that I long for higher levels and
higher summits of existence and wisdom. — The theosophist talks
to himself that way. We never reach the end of soul development; we
never have a closed world. We look for the way which leads us to knowledge
beyond our senses to the higher worlds which gives us a right sensation
above all. Even if each of us were an advanced being, we would have
to look deeper and deeper into the world, to recognise the sources of
life deeper than we are able today standing within the western life
and feeling. We should behave as advanced human beings. That is why
it is also so difficult to fulfil the wisdom which flows to us from
advanced beings who have already developed to a higher level than the
everyday person. These are beings who have to say a lot to us. We must
have a sensation of grandeur; then we learn to listen.
In this attitude theosophy
wants to build up a spiritual current and to bring up a centre of humankind
which believes honestly and really that the human soul is a product
of development. If the worm which lived at that time had said millions
of years ago: I have arrived at the summit of existence, then the worm
could not have developed to the fish, the fish not to the mammal, not
to the monkey and not to the human being. Unconsciously they have believed
that they have to go beyond it that they have to grow up to higher and
higher levels. They believed a little bit in that which takes up their
being and that is the strength of their development. We human beings
cannot really feel against nature. We should feel with nature. What
nature has unconsciously as strength of development in itself which
we should become more and more aware of, this consciousness should be
the strength of our development. We have to realise that we must develop
beyond ourselves. Just as outside in the animal realm the imperfect
mammal lives beside the perfect one, as the one lagged behind as it
were on a lower level, the other reached a higher level earlier and
lives beside the lower one, just the same also applies to the human
beings. In humankind the different human beings live side by side on
different levels of development.
We have to admit that our
concept of God is a petty one compared to that which a lofty being has.
We have also to admit that our present-day concept of God is pettier
compared to that which humankind will have in millions of years if it
has developed further. Therefore, we have to move the concept of God
in an infinite perspective and to carry it as life in ourselves. The
theosophical concept of God distinguishes from all other that we have
to approach it that we have to take care for it. We deny none of these
concepts. We realise that they all are justified according to the human
abilities. But we also realise that none of them is exhaustive. We realise
that we cannot join those who sow discord between the different opinions.
The different religions have to be side by side and not against each
other.
And now what do we call
the concept of God? It is not pan-theism, not a pan-theistic concept,
not an anthropomorphic concept, not an outlined concept. We do not adore
this or that God, we adore Brahman behind Brahma whom the Hindu reveres
who is more sensitive of the matters about which he remains silent.
We realise that we can experience this God Being in life. We cannot
imagine it, but it lives in us as life. This is not knowledge of God,
not science of God; theosophy is also not theology. Theosophy wants
to find the way; it is the search for God.
A German philosopher said
only short but striking words concerning this matter. Schelling
said: can one prove the existence of existence? — The different
proofs of the existence of God cannot be guides to God; they deliver
an imagination of God at most. A real proof is only necessary if a matter
has to be reached by our concept. God lives in our actions, in our words.
It cannot be a matter of proving the existence of God but of gaining
opinions of it only and of taking care that they become more and more
perfect. It is that which it concerns, and the Theosophical Society
has set it as its goal to collaborate on it.
Those who represent the
theological point of view have no sensation, no inkling which sensations
pointed the way in this regard in past times. I would like to remind
you of a spirit of the 15th century who set the tone and was actually
theosophist even then, theosophist completely in our sense. He was a
Catholic cardinal. I would like to remind of the sensitive theosophist
Nicholas of Cusa because he can be an ideal for the
modern theosophists. He expressed that in all religions a core is contained
that they are different aspects of an original religion that they should
be reconciled that they should be deepened. One should search for truth
in them, but not claim to be able to grasp the original truth immediately.
Cusanus tries to get the
concept of God clear in his mind in a profound way. If you understand
this view of Cusanus, you get an idea of the fact that Christianity
had significant, deep spirits also in the Middle Ages, spirits of a
type that one cannot have any concept of them using our ideas. Thus
Cusanus says — and also still some other predecessors: we have
our concepts, our thoughts. Where come all our human ideas from? From
our surroundings we have experienced. What we have experienced, however,
is only a small part of the infinite. If we go to the highest concept
and take the concept of being: is this not also a human concept? Where
we have the concept of being from? We live in the world. It makes an
impression on our senses of touch, on our eyes. We say of that which
we see or hear: it is. We attribute the being to it. “A thing
is” means basically as much as: I have seen it. — “Being”
(German: sein) has the same root as “seeing” (sehen).
If we say: God is, we attribute an idea to God which we have got only
from our experience. We say nothing other than: God has a quality which
we have perceived in different things. Therefore, Cusanus expressed
a word which is deeply characteristic. He says: not the being has to
be attributed to God, but the super-being.
This is not an idea which
we can get with our senses. That is why the sensation of the infinite
also lives in Cusanus. It is deeply affecting if this cardinal says:
I have studied theology in my whole life, have also pursued the sciences
of the world and have also understood them — as far as they are
to be recognised with reason. But then I noticed in myself, and thereby
I have got to know: in the human soul a self lives which is woken more
and more by the human soul. — You read that with Cusanus. The
meaning of that which he says goes far beyond that which we think and
conceive today.
As necessary as it is that
we come to clear and sharply outlined concepts of all that which we
experience in the world, it is also necessary that we are aware at every
moment concerning the concept of God that our sensation must go beyond
everything that we perceive with the reason and with the senses. Then
we realise that we should not recognise God but search for Him. Then
we see more and more the way of the knowledge of God and develop to
this. If God is not closed life, but living life, we wait, until the
methods of theosophy have developed higher spiritual forces in us. God
rules not only in this world, but also in those worlds which only somebody
can behold whose spiritual eye is opened for all those worlds of which
theosophy speaks. It speaks of seven levels of the human consciousness.
It knows that human development means: not stopping at the physical
level of consciousness, but ascending to higher and higher levels.
Somebody, who does this,
experiences a subordinated concept of it at first. Nevertheless, we
are never allowed to despair, but have to realise that we are justified
to form higher and higher opinions of the God being that it is, however,
presumptuous to believe that one day an opinion exhausts the object.
We have to realise that we must have the right sensations and feelings
in ourselves, then our feeling becomes devout again, then we become
reverent again. We have lost reverence because of our European thoughts.
We have to wake reverence and devotion anew. What could arouse our reverence
more than that which exists as a divine being, as a primary source of
existence! If we learn to develop devotion again, our soul is warmed
up and set aglow by something totally different, namely by that which
flows through the universe as blood of life. This becomes a part of
our being.
Spinoza
speaks about that, too. Spinoza developed concepts of the divinity in
his Ethics, and he closes his Ethics with a literary hymn on the divinity.
He closes them in this sense: only that human being has got to freedom,
only that human being also creates a deep feeling, a feeling, which
allows the divinity to flow into him, whose knowledge combines in love.
Amor dei intellectualis — recognising love for God, that is: the
love for God resting in the knowledge of the spirit is God’s love.
This is not a concept, not a restricted idea, but living life.
That is why our concept
of God is not a science of God, but we let flow everything we can experience
as science together into a lively feeling, into a feeling of the divine.
The word theosophy should not be translated as “wisdom of God,”
but as “divine wisdom” or even better: the search for a
way to God, the search for a perpetually increasing apotheosis. “Search
for wisdom,” that is it.
Those who exerted themselves
and advanced to higher levels of existence stood always on this ground
more or less. Among others also Goethe who was much more theosophist
than one normally suspects who is, above all, the theosophical poet
of the Germans. He can be understood completely when he is illuminated
with the light of theosophy. Among many other truths which rest covertly
in Goethe's works the motto of theosophy can also be found there. At
a prominent place, Goethe expressed: no religion is higher than truth.
— Goethe was deeply convinced of that.
As well as any existence
is formed also our thoughts are formed. As any formed being is an allegory,
our ideas of God are also allegories of God — but never the divine
itself. Concerning the transient concept of God and the image of the
imperishable Goethe’s word is correct:
Everything is transitory
Is only a symbol.
Faust II, verse 12, 104f.
Notes
David
Friedrich Strauss (1808–1874), German theologian and writer
Ludwig
Feuerbach (1804–1872), German philosopher
Friedrich
Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775–1854), German philosopher
Nicholas
of Cusa (1401–1464), German theologian, philosopher, astronomer,
cf . CW 7 Mystics after Modernism (Anthroposophic Press, 2000, 71ff)
Baruch
Spinoza (1632–1677), Jewish-Dutch philosopher
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