Occupation and Earnings
Berlin, 12 March 1908
Many people who have heard something
superficial about spiritual science or theosophy find it fairly
surprising that — after one has spoken already from this
viewpoint about the manifold practical topics — one even
attempts to speak about occupation and earnings. For many of
our contemporaries have received the idea more or less
superficially that spiritual science is something that lies far
away from all practical life and cannot at all intervene anyhow
in this practical life of the daily routine. You do not find
the idea as seldom as it expresses itself in the words: oh,
this spiritual science, it is something for single people who
are tired of life who do not deal with anything practical and
have time enough to deal with all sorts of muddled, fantastic
speculations as the spiritual-scientific ideas are.
I do not deny from the
outset that strictly speaking such a reproach is even justified
with many theosophical phenomena that it is often true that
those who deal with theosophical matters and ideas really face
the everyday life as strangely as possible. However, even among
those who have hard to fight and to work in the everyday life
and bring themselves through only with pain and misery, those
are found who are driven from inner sympathy, from the yearning
of their hearts to spiritual science. Among them many a man
will be for whom this duality — the everyday occupation, the
everyday work from morning to night and then the merging in the
great ideas has something marvellous. For others both things
stand rather abruptly side by side, the one is very far away,
so to speak, from the other.
However, someone who does
not regard theosophy or spiritual science only as an idle
employment for some daydreamers but as something that is
suitable to intervene deeply in our entire cultural movement
will also hold the conviction strictly that this spiritual
science just leads to the true knowledge of reality. It has
also something essential to say to him, where the big questions
of the everyday life appear which the human beings concern who
work hard from morning to night.
Someone who gets himself
not cursorily, but deeper into spiritual science, who not only
attains some abstract ideas from it, but also the deepest
impulses of life, comes very soon to the insight that one can
attain a true and healthy judgment in the broadest sense.
However, a few abstract sentences are not sufficient, in
least the basic sentence of any abstract brotherhood of
humanity. This abstract general brotherhood of humanity is a
matter of course for any good and striving human being.
However, the task of theosophy or spiritual science is not only
to preach this general brotherly love comprising humanity, but
also to create the method, the conditions which make a real
human brotherhood possible and can also be realised.
Admittedly, many people also say this way; but they lack the
overview.
If we look at the whole
human existence and compare the everyday life of our present to
that which was there at all times, we realise — according to
the opinion of many people — that certain forms of life have
not changed: there were always rich and poor people. There was
always hardship and misery on the one, a good life, and
contentment on the other side, and no human spiritual movement
did change these conditions. Hence, one can also not believe
that — as so many people say — an “idealistic”
spiritual movement like the theosophical one can state anything
considerable just about that which must stir our time
concerning occupation and earnings.
However, we consider this
topic best of all envisaging both ideas of occupation and
earnings spiritual-scientifically. Then it becomes apparent
that it is necessary above all to maintain a deepened thinking
in order to penetrate this field of our manifold and variform
life. There has always been the phrase of “rich and
poor” of course. This is not sufficient if one wants to
understand life. However, if we look at our environment and
compare it to the environment centuries ago or also before
shorter intervals, then it is obvious that the way of life has
substantially changed that the causes of distress and misery,
of poverty were produced by a new way of life. It is obviously
very necessary that people think more about these questions of
the changed relation to occupation and earnings. He who surveys
this life as it has gradually developed for centuries with
mature thinking has to say to himself that a certain human
class is concerned above all if we want to say anything
considerable about this question. This class has come into
being in the newest time, and just in this human class,
something gains significance more and more that reveals its
power and intensity concerning the question of occupation and
earnings in our time. If we go even deeper, we realise what it
means that humanity advances on one side and cannot pursue its
own progress, on the other side, with the necessary knowledge
and interest. The modern worker, the industrial worker is in
this form, as he exists today, actually, only the result of the
development of humanity during the last centuries.
This is connected with
the wondrous, the most marvellous progress within the human
development. Today we see the earth littered with the
productions of human thoughts, human inventions, discoveries,
and arts. Where the human beings build up factories and
enterprises, where one digs into the earth, where one looks for
natural resources and metals, everywhere we face results of the
human thinking. We see the progress of the knowledge of nature,
the control of the physical principles; everything that the
human thinking, human mental work created in the course of the
centuries crystallised in our industry, in the threads of all
kind which encompass the earth with our modern means of
transportation.
All that has given our
life the imprint. All that has generated the modern worker, the
proletarian worker. With him, only the modern form of our
calamity has originated concerning occupation and earnings.
There is hardly any class of population that is not touched
anyhow by that which has been created for humanity this
way.
If we ask ourselves now:
was the human thinking, the human interest also capable to
create such a social structure which is in any harmony with
that which the human mental power has created in the fields of
technology and industry? Imagine once hypothetically what would
have happened if the human beings had been able to use their
mental power which has crystallised in machines, in the
international banking and in the traffic system to put those
who are placed in this development also into a suitable social
structure. We do not mean what a much-cited naturalist means
who says that any big, immense progress of human mind, of human
science, industry and traffic has contributed nothing at all to
the progress of the moral human development. However, if we
looked at that what the human beings have produced concerning
morality and civilised behaviour, we would stand even today on
the oldest viewpoint of barbarity. — I do not join any deeper
consideration to this opinion; nevertheless, it is true that
all the technical and scientific achievements that we admire
today face nothing in the area of the social life, the social
structure. We realise that the human thinking is not
appropriate to eliminate the disharmony between human longing,
human need, and human ideals, even the simple-natural human
life-style and what life offers in reality to all human beings
concerning the industrial activity.
It would be an obligation
of all classes of the population just to think about this
question because in these questions something world-shaking is
contained today. However, the broadest circles, in particular
of certain classes, feel this by no means. Just the
theosophical movement must be such a one which believes to be
able to do something here not with a few abstract dogmas, with
a few prescriptions from a think tank, but it must attempt to
unfold healthy, profound thinking also in this field, in
unselfish devotion, with knowledge of the true human being. The
essentials are in this field that the human beings educate
themselves internally in order to see the things in this field
in the right light.
Those who look down at
such an impractical spiritual movement, as the theosophical one
is, from a supposedly practical viewpoint with a shrug,
nevertheless, shall look once at life and learn with typical
symptoms in which way they shall position themselves to such
questions. Today the human thinking has become short in certain
respect because the human beings have got used to seeing
everything in materialistic thought forms.
Somebody deceives himself
who stands on spiritual-scientific ground and believes that he
can recognise the riddles of existence with a few single
concepts, which were sufficient to construct the whole world
edifice up to the human being. Yes, for a superficial
understanding a few concepts are sufficient; but not for the
intimate, precise judgement of life. Spiritual science is
uncomfortable. Indeed, it is uncomfortable not for those who
keep only to that which is spread in words and confine
themselves to an abstract approach to life but for those who
penetrate deeper in it. It has nothing to do with a few
mechanical mental pictures, but it urges us to attain
appropriate special concepts for the most different stages of
existence. However, these special concepts are good guides in
life.
People open a
spiritual-scientific book where the physical world, the astral
world and even higher spiritual worlds are brought forward,
which are hidden in our world. There they read that the human
being consists not only of that what one sees with eyes and can
touch with hands, but that one can still live in higher regions
Then they say, this is too complicated, there is everything
boxed in certain way. The world is simple, and somebody who
does not show the world simply causes mistrust with them
already from the start. The world is simple, is comfortable! —
One can probably say this, but it is not true! These concepts
are not suitable to penetrate in the real life. Many people
reach with their concepts not farther than the few steps they
go daily. It is obvious that such human beings get quite weird
ideas of life. Of course, such human beings can only be
recognised when they talk or write. I could state manifold
examples.
I want to pick out two
examples of the large quantity that may show how quickly those
persons judge about life who should be destined, actually, or
feel to be destined to manage life.
There is a person that
wrote a book. Today this is nothing special; it is sometimes
difficult to find out those in a society who have not yet
written a book. Now this person wrote a book about life. He
says in it that he has thought a lot about the functions of the
money and its significance for our outer life. Now, however, he
only had to learn in a special experience that money is only
one kind of means within a certain section of the community,
and that it has, actually, no real significance. He would have
learnt this once by a journey in South America. He had hundred
dollars with himself, but he would have had to starve
frightfully, because he could get nothing for his money. When
he came to a hut and got something to eat, one said to him, he
should retain his dollars; one would have no use for
them.
This person has such
“clear” concepts that he had to travel to the
Brazilian jungle to ascertain them! Further, you know that a
councillor Kolb has written a book. All the credit is due to
this book. It should be recognised that a councillor brings
himself to work as a usual worker in America, for instance, in
a bicycle factory, and to live together with the workers in
laboriousness. He has also written a book in which he says, I
learn now to judge life different from I was used once. If I
saw a person begging in the street, I said, why does this
fellow not work? Now I knew it! — And he adds meaningfully,
yes, one can economise very well and comfortably with the most
significant problems of the economists on a theoretical basis;
but in life, they appear different. — All the credit is due to
somebody if he undertakes such a thing out of his social
circles, and all the credit is due to the action to confess
this openly and freely!
But now the reverse. If
we ignore the man, we look at the fact as such. What does one
say if anybody who lives in Europe and has a responsible post
on whose measures a lot depends, grief, joy, happiness and
misfortune of various human beings if he walks like blindfolded
through the world? Has one not to ask, how was he walking,
actually, through the world? How did he study it? How did he
train himself? If one sees only what he would have to see, then
one must ask, have these people walked blindfold through the
world, and had they to go only to America to find out that one
cannot pay with money in the jungle, and to get to know, why
does the begging “fellow” not work? Must one not
say that a time in which these symptoms are possible in which
the thoughts are so short that such a time also needs clear and
certain thoughts of the social structure as one could produce
them in admirable way for centuries up to our time concerning
machines and industry? If one does not understand theosophy or
spiritual science as an abstraction, as a sermon of nice
phrases, but as an announcement of that what forms the basis of
our whole world in reality, then it gives this real knowledge
of human nature.
We want to talk about
that in detail. If we look somewhat deeper into the changes
that have taken place since centuries and still project with
their last extensions into our present, we have to say,
occupation and earnings have changed in their relation to the
human being very much, very much. Admittedly, various persons
know the nice word even today that Goethe pronounced:
“Desire and love are the wings of great actions.”
Really, desire and love are the wings of great actions! They
must also be the wings in the human life if human progress and
human bliss shall prosper. Would the artist if he pronounced
his most intimate not say any time, I can only work really and
produce something fruitful if joy inspires me at work. — That
is true, very true! However, how far is our life away from this
truth! We come to a sad chapter concerning occupation and
earnings putting this question.
Let us compare a hard
working miner with an artist who creates his works to the
delight of his fellow men. In the mines, for example, in
Sicily, you find not only adult workers, but also many children
of seven, eight, or nine years working who are ruined most
dreadfully and spend their lives below — with few exceptions.
If you recognise the impulses by which these human beings are
driven to work, then you understand something that is usually
understood very hard. There is a dreadful mood of hostility and
opposition to life if one experiences those things that are
otherwise intended to cause joy of life. The human being who
works in such a way — I tell no fairy tales and emphasise
expressly that I begrudge describing these realities —, may
express his mood, as it is expressed, otherwise, with other
human being in a nice, glad song, in a song like
this:
A curse upon the mother who born me,
A curse upon the priest who baptised me ...
(Gap in the transcript)
Compare this with the words: “desire
and love are the wings of great actions,” and try to
realise the necessity of striving for a worldview that can
deepen the hearts in such a way that one has to add it to our
human material development. For it is something that belongs to
the structure of life and has to belong to industry, traffic
and technology.
However, we can imagine
the emergence of the machines during the last centuries
concerning occupation and earnings still in another way. One
does not need to go far back; there one finds the proverb
“a trade in hand finds gold in every land.” Why?
Many people had a deep personal relationship to their work and
the product they created. Try to imagine the medieval cities.
Try to watch any door lock and any key exactly, and then try to
look in the workshops where these things were created. Imagine
how people worked there with joy and love, how the worker gave,
so to speak, a piece of his soul to the products he
created.
On the other side, try to
imagine the industrial worker, the worker in the factories who
works on a small part only whose coherence with the whole he
does not survey. He lacks the intimacy of the coherence between
that product and his work. This personal relation is something
exceptionally important. It is something that brings these both
concepts — occupation and earnings — home to us clearer and
clearer. It is something different concerning the acquisition
if the human being can take a personal interest in the
products, in their form, their appearance etc., than if the
only interest in the product is the acquisition, the wage. The
one gives the occupation; it expresses itself in the work that
becomes the product. The acquisition expresses itself in that
what the human egoism receives in recompense for the product.
We have to put both concepts side by side this way comparing
the craftsman of former times and the modern worker. Today
everything is different right down to the last detail that you
carry with yourselves and have round yourselves. The whole
tragedy of the industrial era concerning occupation and
earnings in the human life expresses itself in a nice small
poem that an almost unknown poet of our newer time wrote
(Heinrich von Reder, 1824–1909, Bavarian officer, poet, and
painter):
Gone to rack on a mule track
a smithy stands in woodland solitude;
no longer does the hammer blow
accompanied by merry songs.
Not far away the buildings rise
where sooted blacksmiths
are working so hard.
With the steam mill's nails
the coffin is closed,
it carries the nail smith
impoverished to grave.
In these lines, you have the turnaround
during the last centuries concerning occupation and
earnings.
We need to take only the
lines: “No longer does the hammer blow accompanied by
merry songs.” They express this turnaround. We realise
everything that concerns occupation and acquisition. Imagine a
human being who accompanies the hammer blow with merry songs
and then imagine the mood of a human being who stands as sooted
worker in the factory. It is not the task of spiritual science
to preach the reaction, to restore the old conditions or to
prevent things that have developed in the human progress and
had necessarily to come. We do not criticise what had to happen
inevitably. However, we have to realise that it depends on the
human beings to work from their spiritual work for the welfare
of the human being and for the human progress.
Many people will now say,
nevertheless, we see enough human beings in our surroundings
who have prepared themselves well to think about the social
question, about what should happen.
There is a certain
difference, which is very immense, between that, what spiritual
science has to say and the general mood of time. One could
characterise this mood with general expressions. Those who have
studied say: you theosophists preach that the human beings
should become better that they should develop love et cetera.
We do not deal with such childish trifles, we do not want to
improve the human beings for better life and for their welfare,
but we know that it does not depend on the human beings, but
that it depends on the conditions. — Many people say this, not
only professors, but also people at the “green
tables” of socialism. What is announced there is as
haughty as what is spread by the other green tables. Everywhere
one preaches: improve the conditions, and then it already comes
that the human beings are getting better. — One can hear them
declaiming this, the quite clever people who appear
repeatedly.
I could enumerate many
examples of the immediate life. From here, I needed to do only
three steps, and I could point to a place where once someone
stood who said [about theosophy]: these are brainless ideas! It
depends on improving the conditions. If one gives them better
conditions of life, the human beings are getting completely
better by themselves. — We hear this song singing concerning
occupation and earnings in all variations repeatedly. If
anything is wrong, one does not think that it depends on the
human beings, but one says, one must make a new law, so that
the conditions change. If anything is wrong in a field, they
say that one has to protect the immature mass that has no right
judgement against those who want to slave-drive in this or that
area. If one says this, for example, towards some methods of
treatment, nevertheless, one would like to ask, is it not more
obvious and more natural to say that everybody who understands
these matters has the duty to enlighten the human beings, so
that they turn out of own judgment to those to whom they should
turn? It does not depend on the conditions but only on the
development of the human soul.
This kind of materialism,
which comes from the atomistic way of thinking and which was
transferred to the social conditions, lies deeply in our
thinking. Many people discuss such things, however, arguing
leads only to endless debates. Someone who knows the secret of
dialectic knows that one can talk about the significance of the
human being with endless pros and cons. It concerns not only
that one can state endless reasons for pros and cons, but that
one also feels the weight of the reasons. A human being who was
destined to pass sentence in this field because he was an
ingenious human being is the Englishman Robert Owen
(1771–1858). He was ingenious because he wanted to make the
human being happy, but also because he had a warm heart for the
social misery. He succeeded in founding an almost prototypical
colony. He attained something great with it. He made the matter
so clever that he put those people who were addicted to drink
or had other vices among the diligent human beings who could
work by their example on them. Thereby he got some good
results.
This encouraged him to
found another colony. Again, he did it in such a way that he
wanted to realise certain ideals that fulfilled him. However,
after some time the development in the colony was so that he
had to realise that those who did not have diligence and
industriousness became parasites of the colony. There he said
to himself, no, and — it was like a confession — with general
institutions, one must wait, until the human beings have been
brought to a certain height in theoretical respect. Only by the
transformation of the human soul welfare and progress can come,
never by mere institutions.
A man said this who was
allowed to say it because he had gone out from a compassionate
view and was taught by experience. From such facts, one should
learn, not from abstract theories. However, what gives an inner
and viable thinking in this field? A precise and viable
thinking in this field shows us that human beings have made all
institutions that press and become awful for the human beings.
Human institutions originate there which become the cause of
hardship and misery, only because they are made first by human
beings. Someone who wants to figure the things out really shall
try to study the historical course, to study how the human
beings live together today, how the one is placed in life this
way, the other that way. Who has placed them there? Not
uncertain social powers, but human thoughts, human sensations
and human will-impulses. We must put the sentence: the human
being can suffer only by the human being. Any other suffering
is not real, considered socially.
One cannot demand that
the spiritual scientist should criticise the historical
necessities. It is necessary to understand that human beings
have created the conditions and then brought misery in these
conditions solely by wrong thoughts. It is not difficult to
realise that a short thinking, a thinking that has no idea of
the big, immense world connections can create no institutions
that can bring happiness and welfare of humanity. With the
dictum that one should be unselfish that one should love the
human beings it is in such a way, as if you say to a stove: you
are a stove, be a friend and warm; it is your moral duty to
warm the room. — It does not become warm! However, if you heat,
it becomes warm! Preaching general charity is something that
one can put with self-evidence in the world. However, the
practical handling, that what enables us to intervene in the
outside world so that welfare and blessing develop for humanity
depends on the relation from human being to human
being.
A materialistic epoch
sees that of the human being only which one can touch with the
hands and perceive with the eyes. However, the human
being is more than this. It is a spiritual, mental, and
physical being. Everything that can bring welfare and blessing
to the human beings can arise only from the fact that one
considers the whole human being, in particular in the more and
more complex conditions of the present and future. Spiritual
science shows this true nature of the human being, shows his
basis, and leads us thereby in quite different way to an
understanding of the human being and the world. Only in a life
eager to work, we can produce by our occupation in the world.
Imagine what it makes up if the workers can accomplish their
work like in the poem with a merry song. The single blacksmith
was able to do this. He knew the work from its beginning to the
ready product. The work cannot arise from the earnings;
absolutely no work has arisen from the earnings.
Try to look back at the simple work: it took place
rhythmically, the hammer blow was rhythmic, and the song
accompanied the rhythm. The impulses, which one can compare to
joy and love, drove him to the work. The further you go back,
the more you find that earnings and occupation are two
completely different things.
What the human being
performs as a work he works from an impulse towards the thing.
Something different is to get earnings. However, this is the
reason of our modern misery that earnings and occupation that
wage and work have become one, have coincided. Our
consideration must culminate in this. A human being who works
on a small part in the factory will never have the abandon for
the product that the former craftsman had; this is past
retrieval. It is never possible in future with our complex
conditions that a merry song penetrates the field of work. The
song has faded away, the song that joins the
product!
We ask, is there another
impulse, which can replace it? Let us look at the time when
more and more factories were built and more and more human
beings were herded together in the sites of modern misery. If
we let all that pass by, we realise — even if many things have
changed — that one means to attach the future development
simply to the past, when joy and love were still the impulses
of work. However, humanity could create no substitute
that attaches the human being again to the product. This can
also not brought back. However, something else can be done.
What can replace it? How can joy and love become impulses of
the daily work again? How can one create them?
Of course, some people
will argue, create impulses for a work that is dirty, bad, and
hideous! — There are such impulses. Remember only what mothers
do if they do the work because of love for the child. Remember
what the human being is able to do if he does anything because
of love for other human beings. There is no love for the
product of the work necessary; there it needs a tie between
human being and human being. You cannot bring back the love for
the product within humanity, because it was bound to primitive,
simple relations. However, what the future must bring back is
the big, all-embracing understanding and love from human being
to human being. Not before any human being finds the impulse
for his activity from the deepest impulses which only a
spiritual world movement can give, not before he is able to do
the work because of love for his fellow men, it is not possible
to create real impulses for a future development in the sense
of the human welfare.
Thus, we have put as an
impulse what any occult science knows since immemorial times.
There is a spiritual principle; this is, in the social life
only that is fruitful for the welfare of the human beings what
the human beings do not for themselves, but for all human
beings. All work is detrimental which the human beings do only
for themselves. This is apparently a hard principle, but this
hard basic sentence is the result of true knowledge.
Theosophy or spiritual
science has to bring this to the today's humanity: to learn to
understand such a sentence again. Something that should enclose
all human beings or groups of human beings has become a
complete abstraction in the materialistic view. This can no
longer provide any moral impulse. Reflect once how one speaks
about folk souls or group souls. This is nothing real! The
human beings must get clearness again about the fact that there
are beings who live in spiritual worlds, and that such group
souls live and are reality. We have advanced in our development
so far that we have arrived just in our time at views that are
exactly the opposite of spiritual science that regards as
formalities only, for example, all that what encloses a group,
a togetherness in the world.
Spiritual science,
however, shows that the entire existence is not included in the
physical, in the visible, but that the supraphysical, the
supersensible underlies all the visible, so that such things
like common spirits and group spirits are no abstractions for
us. Thus, it becomes to us a precise concept if we say, it does
not depend on the work, and if it is valued ever so much. It
depends on the work only in the human coherence if this work is
fruitful, productive for the fellow men.
Realise that by a simple
example: two human beings live on an island. The one produces
things that satisfy the hunger of both, make their existence
possible. The other also works a lot; he occupies himself with
throwing stones from one place to another. He is very
industrious and diligent. However, his work has no
significance, is quite unsubstantial. Not that is the point
that we work, but that we perform work which is fruitful for
the other. The work of throwing stones is fruitful only if it
gives pleasure to the person concerned. However, if he is
forced by any institution to be paid for the work, then the
work is insignificant for the coherence. It must be in a
coherence that wisdom and structure regulate. He who looks into
the coherence knows that the most important works are performed
independently from earnings. Earnings must stand for
themselves. It is a separate question how the human beings keep
themselves mutually. The impulse of working is not allowed to
be grounded in egoism, but it must originate from the regard to
the entirety.
Other human beings
require what one human being does. If the human beings ask for
that which I produce by my work, then my work may correspond to
my ability, it may be lower if I have low abilities, it may be
significant if I have high abilities. However, if the human
beings need this work, it is an impulse for the work that can
induce me to a merry song. However, we must have the impulses
and the abilities at first to look into the hearts of the human
beings and to see that the hearts can become something for us.
If we understand to immerse ourselves in the hearts of the
fellow men, we know the nature of the human beings; then we
also work in community and obtain social thinking. You will
say, no one throws stones from one place to the other. — This
happens in our relations perpetually, only people do not see
it! They see too short.
Someone who learns to
think socially soon becomes aware of that. Imagine, you sit
somewhere and find a nice picture postcard and then you write
twenty postcards without having to inform of something
particular. Somebody who looks deeper sees not only the
postcards with the pictures, he sees many mailmen going
upstairs and downstairs. How much work one would save if the
postcards were not written!
However, a quite clever
one says: because one writes so many postcards, one brings
about that one mailman is no longer sufficient. Another is
hired, and this other earns his keep. — No one considers that
in this way no productive work is performed. This is the work
by which nothing is produced. Because you force a human being
to a work and pay a remuneration for it, you create no welfare
for humanity. However, one must look into the structure of
existence as spiritual-scientific education can only give us.
One has to realise that not only a few economists should look
into these matters. One has to make any single human being
unfold this social thinking. That flows from the
spiritual-scientific wisdom as a spiritual-scientific
disposition that the human soul becomes open and free that it
then sees things, which he thinks and studies to an end, so
that one does no longer say, one must create work for the
unemployed people. It does not depend on giving this or that
person work, but which work is performed, just work which the
community needs. If we look at the matter in such a way, we
realise that that what must become the impulse of our work must
be a feeling of solidarity penetrated by real wisdom, the
living social feeling that shall take place in any human soul.
Not the abstract love, not that love which talks only about
love and cannot see beyond its nose, but only that love which
is illumined by knowledge can cause an improvement of the human
conditions.
Hence, spiritual science
cannot be an accumulation of dogmas, of ideas. The ideas are
there for the soul. The point is the living human being. The
more this wisdom grasps human beings and inspires them, the
more exists true, real love, the more it serves the progress,
the welfare of the human beings. Thus, we find that, because
the occupation is based on the commitment to humanity, and the
earnings are based on the care for the maintenance of the human
being, welfare is bestowed on humanity thinking completely in
this direction. The spiritual scientist does not assume that
one can change this with dogmas overnight. Someone who stands
firmly on the ground of spiritual science is clear in his mind
that the soul can settle down into the active love, and that —
because human beings are there who found the insights — one can
work for the welfare of humanity. Then a person like Kolb has
not to go to America to find out that one can easily judge
about social questions on a theoretical basis, but a current in
the public life will open his eyes, so that he will not have to
walk blindfold through the world.
This will be the best and
nicest fruit of the spiritual-scientific worldview if it does
not entice the human beings into sentimental preaching of
charity and fraternity but induces them to look at the true and
spiritual reality with open and free sense. Humanity will
thereby fulfil the Goethean sentence more and more:
“from the force that binds all
creatures that man is delivered who masters
himself.”
This sentence applies in
the enclosing sense to the national, professional, and
commercial fields. It applies in such a way that only if our
social structure is completely controlled by this principle
that our work is not subject to wage and earnings but is made
independent from acquisition, something fruitful can be
created.
Of course, there are
people who say, one takes care everywhere to take away all
kinds of things from the subjective acquisitiveness and to
transfer them on the community. Someone who says this could
regard the official as the ideal of the human being, with whom
earnings and occupation are separated. However, it depends on
the fact that any single human being has the impulses from
which the characterised welfare can arise. Community must not
hover over the whole as an abstract spectre, as a cloud, but it
must live in any single soul which points always to the
spiritual height of the universe as it reflects itself in any
human soul. Only such a worldview can succeed in realising what
is salutary in the human living together.
The great human beings
have felt this, a great spirit felt it about whom one talks
today again more, some people even more, and the less they
understand him. This spirit said that by merging in the real,
true unity bliss comes about the human being, and that any
misery originates from the variety and the differences. Misery
comes above all if the human beings are driven in these
differences that nobody does anything else than for his egoism
only. Not before the single one feels that he must lay down
what he can do on the altar of humanity, if this feeling and
this thinking flow through the human being, it can also flow
through humanity most intensely. It is true what Fichte (Johann
Gottlieb F., 1762–1814) said: all bliss is contained in merging
in the true one and any distress and misery in life is based on
separateness and differentiation. For the true love can be
attained only if the soul is not hardened in separateness and
in variety, but if it finds rest and peace in the true
community and in the whole spirit.
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