|
|
|
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
|
|
Cosmic Forces in Man
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
|
|
[
Lecture:
S-4677:
4th December, 1921
| Oslo
| GA0209
]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cosmic Forces in Man
Schmidt Number: S-4677
On-line since: 28th May, 2002
THE MISSION OF THE SCANDINAVIAN PEOPLES
The two previous lectures dealt with important questions relating to
the nature and destiny of man. We heard that the human physical body
and ether-body are not connected merely with the external world
perceived by the senses and that this bodily nature of man can only be
understood aright when we also recognise its relation with the Zodiac.
And we then tried to understand how the heaven of the fixed stars and
the planetary spheres work upon what lies within the outer covering of
man, shaping and imbuing it with life. In the last lecture we also
heard how the inner, spiritual core of man's being is related to the
world of the higher Hierarchies. It was indicated that this connection
with the world of the higher Hierarchies becomes especially noticeable
when we observe how in his physical life on Earth, man can achieve
union with the spiritual world through morality, religious devotion
and love for his fellow-men; in this way he enables his Guardian Angel
so to order his descent at the end of his life between death and a new
birth that he again acquires the full power of individuality and is
able, as a free individual, to take hold of his human nature. We also
heard that if a man has not established this relation to the spiritual
world in some incarnation, his link with his nation, for example, is
of a purely external kind, and that this, in its extreme form, leads
to chauvinism.
Such studies show us that man's life can only be truly understood when
the other side, too, is considered, that is to say, the life
stretching between death and a new birth. As soon as we come to study
the inner nature of man, this life between death and a new birth must
be taken into consideration.. For life here on the Earth is in truth a
reflection of the life between death and a new birth. Life in matter
is the bodily life and what we have developed in the world of
spirit-and-soul before birth expresses itself in this bodily life.
What we must acquire anew, what must be built up anew in the
core of our being, is the element appertaining to the will, and in a
certain respect also to the life of feeling. The faculty of thinking
that is bound up with the head — this we bring with us from the
spiritual world — to the extent to which thinking is unmixed with
feeling. Our thinking faculty per se comes with us at birth
into physical existence and we have only to develop it during physical
life or allow it to be developed by education. What we mainly acquire
in the new incarnation through intercourse with the outer world are
the qualities inherent in feeling and in will, which for this reason
play an extremely important part in education.
In the sphere of education, if through our own short-comings as
teachers we are incapable of helping the child to think
properly, we may leave undeveloped much that by virtue of his
previous incarnations he could have brought to expression. If,
however, we are unable to work on the child's life of feeling and of
will through our natural authority and our example as teachers, then
we fail to impart to him what he ought to receive in the physical
world, and thus we do injury to his subsequent life after death. In
the modern world this is a cause of deep pain to anyone who
understands these things. In the world of education to-day people
insist upon the importance of the child being made to use his brain,
upon the cultivation of his intellect. True, much that the child
brings with him through birth is brought out by these means. But it
can only be of real use when earthly life, too is presented to the
child in the right way, that is to say, when we are able through
example and authority to impart to him the intangible qualities
belonging to feeling and to will. We injure the child's eternal life
if we fail to cultivate in him the right kind of feeling and. will.
The faculty of thinking which we bring with us at birth, comes to an
end here, in the material world, it dies with us. Only what we
cultivate through feeling and will — which is nevertheless
unconsciously permeated with new thoughts — this and this only we
take with us through the Gate of Death. In our present very difficult
times, religion, education, indeed every domain of mental and
spiritual life must begin to take account of man's eternal
nature, not merely of human egotism.
Religions of the present day speculate far too much upon human
egotism. On the one side they encourage inertia by not spurring men on
to acquire those things which are eternal by inner individual effort
in the life of feeling and of will; and on the other side they enhance
egotism by speaking only of eternal life after death, not of what was
there before birth or conception and has come down with us into the
physical world. I have said before that this life before birth is
connected with selflessness in man, whereas human egotism comes
into play whenever mention is made of the life after death. Life after
death assumes an egotistic form in the religious concepts of to-day.
The idea is put before man in such a way that his longings are
satisfied. When the religions believe that they have helped the
egotistic life of soul in man, they think they have done what is
expected of them. But through a truly spiritual understanding of the
world, mankind must be brought to realise how essential it is for the
whole life of the human being to be viewed in the light of eternity,
free from every trace of egotism and moulded accordingly by those
whose task it is to teach and educate.
Now this has a significant bearing upon public life too, and it is of
this that I want to speak to-day. For it is in the highest degree
necessary that what we gain from an anthroposophical knowledge of
higher worlds should be carried into actual life, that we should know
how to bring it to expression in life. Abstract theories are really of
little use. Life on the Earth is many-sided, full of variety. If, for
example, we consider the life of the peoples, it is not only obvious
that Indians differ from Americans or Englishmen, but Swedes are often
said to differ from Norwegians although they live in such near
proximity. We cannot let ourselves be guided entirely by general
principles; concrete, individual conditions prevail everywhere
and it is these that are important. It is just these individual
conditions that we shall fail to recognise if we do not take our start
from the Spiritual. Modern man does not really know the world.
He talks a great deal about the world but he does not know it,
for he is unaware that the soul-and-spirit extends into physical
existence and that, fundamentally, this physical existence is governed
by the Spiritual. This knowledge is not acquired by studying abstract,
general principles. These abstract principles are often perfectly
correct, but they do not carry us very far in the world as it actually
is.
Certainly it is quite correct to say: ‘God rules the world.’ But in
face of the manifold variety of the world it is purposeless to keep
repeating: ‘God rules the world in India, God rules the world in
England, God rules the world in Sweden, God rules the world in
Norway.’ Certainly, God rules the world everywhere, but for the
purposes of life in its immediate reality, it is necessary to know how
God rules the world in India, in England, in Sweden, in Norway. In
spiritual study the individual conditions must be observed in every
case. Of what use would it be, for example, to take a man into a Geld,
show him a plant with yellow flowers and round petals and merely tell
him, “That is a plant” — and then take him to a plant
with thorns and pointed, tapering petals, repeating: “That is a
plant.” It is the specific and individual properties of the plant
that must be made clear to him. But in spiritual matters man has become
so easygoing and slack that he is content with general principles. He
only wants to hear: ‘God rules the world,’ or ‘Man has
a Guardian Angel’ and he feels no desire for detailed knowledge of how
life is differentiated in the various regions of the Earth, or how its
various manifestations have been influenced by the spiritual world.
This, then, will be the theme of the lecture.
It is precisely in these days of tumult, when people all over the
world are so utterly at sea in public affairs, when congresses and
conferences produce no result, and in spite of high-sounding
programmes, men disperse without having come to any real decision
— it is precisely now that deeper questions should be raised
concerning all that is revealing itself from the spiritual world in
the different regions of the Earth.
Think of the peninsula which you, together with the Swedes, have as
your earthly dwelling-place. There is something about it that presents
a kind of riddle to those who do not live in Sweden or Norway, as well
as to those who actually live here. There was certainly a great
difference in the way in which since 1914, let us say, you thought
about the tumultuous events going on in the world. These events have
struck their blows in manifold ways but man to-day is largely unaware
of their effects; he does not realise what deeper forces have been and
are in operation. Looking down to Middle Europe, to the South of
Europe, to Africa, even to regions of Asia, the events will have
seemed to you to be the direct expression of violent, elemental
passions, whereas up here you were merely experiencing the
consequences and reverberations of those events. People up here in the
North may well have been perplexed, for it really was as though men
had suddenly become frenzied with desire to tear one another to
pieces. Those who were only onlookers must certainly have been
perplexed when they thought about these happenings more deeply.
But such things cannot be explained by studying only the one period
— even a period fraught with happenings as momentous as those of
recent years. True, someone may say that it seems to him as though he
had lived through centuries in these few years, but in general there
will only be a very gradual realisation that this is actually so. Most
people are living and thinking to-day exactly as they did in 1914. In
countries like these in the North, this is in a way understandable.
But that it is also the case in Middle Europe is terrible. The normal
feeling would be one of having lived through events which would
otherwise have come to pass only in the course of centuries.
Everything was compressed into a few short years. Events like those of
1914-1915 embraced within a brief space of time as much as about ten
years of the Thirty Years War, and a measure of illumination can only
be shed upon them when they are studied in a much wider historical
perspective.
From the vantage-point of your Northern peninsula you will be able to
realise that it is only since the beginning of the present epoch that
things have been happening South of you in which your participation
has been different from that of the peoples who live in the South of
Europe, in Western Asia, or in Middle Europe. There has really been an
utter contrast between the South and the North of Europe in this
respect.
I want you to think of the fourth century A.D., or rather of the
period which reaches its climax in that century. In the South, on the
Greek peninsula and especially on the Italian peninsula — also in
the life of Middle Europe which was in contact with Italy — you
see the spread of Christianity. But something else as well is to be
perceived. Christianity makes its way from the East into the Pagan
world of Europe, expressing itself in many different forms. When we
consider the early centuries, the first, second and even the third
centuries, we find the old, inherited wisdom being brought to bear
upon Christianity. Efforts are made to understand Christianity through
the Gnosis, as it is called, to interpret Christianity in the light of
the highest form of wisdom. A change comes about in this respect, but
not until the fourth century, just at the time when Christianity
begins to spread more towards the regions of Middle Europe. The
Gnostic conceptions, the wisdom-filled conceptions of Christianity now
disappear. A writer like Origen who wants to introduce something of
the old Gnostic wisdom into Christianity is branded as a heretic:
Julian, the so-called Apostate, who wants to unite the old pagan
wisdom with Christianity, is ostracised. And finally Christianity is
externalised by the deed of Constantine into the political form of a
Church. In the fourth century, that which in Christianity had once
been quite different, those secrets which were felt to need the
illumination of the highest wisdom if they were to become intelligible
— all this begins to take on a more superficial character. Men
are called upon to lay hold of Christianity in a more elementary way,
with a kind of abstract feeling. Christianity makes its way from the
South towards the North. It is, of course, true, that from the fourth
to the fifteenth centuries, the Christian life which develops in the
South and especially in Middle Europe, is rich in qualities of soul,
but the Spiritual in its living essence, has receded. The Gnosis is
regarded as an undesirable element in Christianity... There you have
one or two cursory flashlights upon happenings among the peoples of
Europe more towards the South.
Christianity spreads out, finds its way into the Greek world, the
Roman world, into the life of Middle Europe, and there, in a certain
sense it is stripped of spirituality. Think now of your Northern world
in the third and fourth centuries, that is to say in the same early
centuries of the post-Christian era. External history gives no true
account of the conditions then prevailing. This period must be studied
with the help of Anthroposophy. In connection with the European
Folk-Souls
this was done here some years ago (1910) but to-day we will
think more of the external character of the peoples.
At the time when, in the South, the Spirit withdrew more and more
towards the East — that is to say, shortly after the period I
have described — the old Athenian Schools of Philosophy were
closed and the last philosophers of Athens were obliged to make their
way to the East, where they attached themselves to the mysterious
academy of Gondi Shapur from which at that time a remarkable spiritual
life was spreading via Africa and Southern Europe towards the rest of
Europe, deeply influencing the spiritual life of later times. Yet it
can truly be said that there, in the South, men looked back to a lofty
spirituality they had once possessed.. The mighty Event of Golgotha
had taken place. In the first centuries it had still been found
necessary to understand the Mystery of Golgotha with the help of this
sublime spirituality. This spirituality had been gradually swept
aside; the human element had more and more taken the place of
what may be called the working of the Divine in the life of man.
The Gnosis still helped man to realise the existence of the
Divine-Spiritual within him. This Divine-Spiritual reality was more
and more put aside and the human element brought to the fore.
In this respect much was contributed by those peoples who took part in
the migrations. In their migrations towards the South, in their
conquests of the Southern regions, the Germanic peoples of Middle
Europe who brought with them souls more naturally bound to the
physical, contributed to this repression of the Spiritual. For they
did not understand the old spirituality and brought a more
fundamentally human influence to the South. And so the lofty primeval
wisdom which had once been alive in men receded from the spiritual
culture of the West. And at the same time when this repression of the
Spiritual was taking place — in the third and fourth centuries
A.D.— we find that up here in the North, teachings about the Gods
were being spread among men.
In those days human beings who were inspired in an instinctive way
were held in high esteem. These were times which had long since passed
away for the Southern people. Up here in the North it still happened
that here and there a man or a woman living in isolation would be
sought out and listened to, when in a mysterious way, through
faculties arising from their particular bodily constitution, they gave
revelations concerning the spiritual worlds. These faculties were a
natural gift in certain individuals who worked in this way among their
fellows. And when the people were listening attentively to these
isolated seers, they realised, when they went into the hut of one of
these ‘God-intoxicated,’ ‘God-revealing’ men or women, that it was not
really the physical man or woman to whom they were listening, but that
it was the Divine-Spiritual itself which had descended and was
inspiring such individuals in order that they might give forth the
teaching of the Gods to their fellow-men.
It is very striking for the anthroposophical student of European
history to find that the men of the North were still so constituted as
to be able to receive divine teachings, to feel that the Gods —
the Beings of the higher Hierarchies — were still living
realities among them; whereas in the South, during the same period,
the Spirit is becoming weaker and weaker and the human element
which man brings to expression in his life on the physical Earth comes
to the fore and supersedes the Divine. So it was in the decisive
fourth century, when the men of the South were becoming more and more
eager for human doctrine.
These individual revelations, springing as they did from obscure
depths of spiritual life must be taken in all seriousness. It is
verily as if in those times the Gods moved as teachers among the still
childlike peoples of the North. This condition which was still present
in a particular form in the North during the first centuries of the
Christian era had long since vanished in the South. But it is a
remarkable and significant fact in the destiny of the peoples that the
men of the North became for the men of the South, the bearers of what
had been learnt from the Gods — not from men.
This must be taken earnestly. The people who belonged, in the main, to
the population of the West of your peninsula, whose descendants are
the Norwegians of to-day, journeyed towards the West, towards the
South West, and as a result of their wanderings, their sea-voyages and
conquests, their influence reached right down to Sicily and North
Africa The sons of the Gods went to the sons of the World, bringing
them what they had learned from their Gods.
It is an interesting chapter of history to study the migrations of the
Northern peoples towards the South West and to see how — in
continual metamorphosis, of course — the teachings of the
Northern Gods spread towards the South West, deeply influencing the
British Isles, France, Spain, Italy, Sicily and North Africa.
Moreover, the effect of this influence is perceptible even to-day. The
Roman, Latin form of life which makes its way from the South towards
the North is permeated with the Northern influence. Whatever
consciousness of the Divine has remained in the stream of civilisation
from the South is here influenced by the Northern teachings of the
Gods. But it takes on a peculiar character which is not fully
noticeable until we look towards the Eastern side of this Northern
peninsula — towards Sweden.
We need remind ourselves only of one fact — how the peoples of
Eastern Europe turned to the Vareger, and how in the East of the
Northern peninsula the trend is more towards the East. It is a really
remarkable picture. The form of life that later on tends more towards
the civilisation of Norway, streams towards the South West, and the
life that later on tends towards the civilisation of Sweden, streams
towards the South East. Everywhere, of course, there are the teachings
of the Northern Gods, but they are presented in different ways.
The peoples who later on became the Norwegians, carry the element of
activity, of strength, of enthusiasm, towards the South West. In this
way the languishing Latin culture is stimulated and imbued with life.
The influence of the Northern Gods in these migrations is such that it
is a stimulus to activity in the whole life of the peoples. This is
apparent everywhere and it is a most fascinating study.
But we also see what is happening in the East of this peninsula.—
It is of course influenced by geographical conditions, but these
geographical conditions are also reflected in the character of the
people, for the human being does not grow out of the Earth but is born
on the Earth, he comes down from world of soul-and-spirit and there is
a real difference between being born as a Norwegian or as a Swede. We
shall not get anywhere by simply saying that the geographical
conditions are such and such, but we must question further as to why
one soul has the urge to become a Norwegian, and another a Swede. But
now think of the remarkable character — and this applies even at
the present day — of the Eastern Scandinavian, the Swedish
impulses which make their way towards the East.
These impulses stream towards the East but as they advance they are
everywhere deflected. They do not become really active. They cannot
maintain their stand against what is brought over from the East, first
by other Asiatic peoples and later by the Mongols and Tartars, nor
against the early, more characteristically Eastern form of
Christianity. This stream flows towards the, South East but meets with
obstacles everywhere and takes on a more passive character. The
impulse as a whole is deeply influenced by the North. But what streams
from the West of the Northern peninsula towards the South brings
activity everywhere; whereas the influence that makes its way towards
the East, is seized by the inactive, the more reflective element of
the East and its own activity is in a way blunted.
As the Northern Gods send their impulses towards the West, they
unfold, paramountly, their nature of will. As they send their
impulse towards the East, they unfold their life of reflection, their
contemplative nature.
External wars and conflicts are ultimately only the material images of
what takes place in the way I have just indicated. Those who are
abstract theorists, who view the whole world from the standpoint of
some theory — and the empiricists of to-day are fundamentally the
greatest theorists of all, for they never get down to realities, they
think about things instead of trying to know them from inside
— these theorists will bring forward all sorts of characteristics
displayed by the Norwegians and the Swedes. The inhabitants of these
countries themselves often emphasise the existence of outward
divergencies simply because people to-day will not penetrate to the
depths of human nature in order to acquire a real knowledge of life.
But life must be observed in the way indicated in the two lectures I
have given here. External life must be viewed not only from the
standpoint of life between birth and death, but also from the
standpoint of life between death and a new birth; we must be mindful
not only of those things which satisfy the egotism of the human being
who merely wants to be happy after death and because he still has
physical life before him, does not trouble about the life before
birth. We must study how we can apply in this earthly life what we
have brought with us through birth from worlds of soul-and-spirit.
Then we begin to see that there are connections in the life of men and
in the life of the peoples which are only revealed when we perceive
what man is and has become through many earthly lives, when we have
knowledge of the periods he spends between death and a new birth.
A most remarkable connection is then revealed, helping us to
understand what comes to pass on Earth. In the external national
character of the Norwegian of the present day there are traits which
have been inherited from those men who once migrated towards the South
West and by their revelations of the Gods poured life and activity
into the Roman-Latin form of civilisation. At that time something
developed in the great plan of the world which gave the Norwegians
their special character, their particular task. And those who are born
in Norway to-day will understand their destiny and task in the world
as a whole, only if they look back with spiritual understanding to the
times when Norway was able to develop in a particular way, when the
Northern people went forth on their migrations, their raids and their
campaigns of conquest towards the South West, to fulfil a task on
Earth. The task sprang out of the character of the people who inhabit
these countries. Their character, it is true, was different in those
times but something remains as a heritage in the present-day Norwegian
and endows him with certain faculties which are important from the
point of view of man's eternal life, of man's immortality.
From the Eastern part of this peninsula where the Swedish character
has developed, the old teachings of the Gods were carried towards the
East, to men whose own religious doctrines had been preserved in a
certain mystical, oriental form. What was more a revelation from
Nature met with little response in the East; those who wandered
towards the East, therefore, were destined to lead a more
contemplative life.
But this again has left a heritage which has set its stamp upon the
character of the people. And if we are to understand the western and
the Eastern parts of the Scandinavian peninsula, we must look back to
what these peoples have experienced through the centuries, realising
what they have become to-day as a result of these experiences. We have
every reason at the present time to think about these things. It is,
after all, quite easy to realise in an elementary way that spiritual
forces must be working in the world, in the whole international course
of events, in the whole racial life of man, and that the missions of
each particular people must be understood in the light of spiritual
knowledge.
Now when the power of super-sensible cognition is brought to bear upon
this connection between the tasks of the modern Norwegians and Swedes
and the course of their historical evolution, remarkable things come
to light. Norwegians have a definite gift — nor does this gift
depend upon actual birth into a Norwegian milieu. What develops in the
life of Norway can be seen even in the physical world; it can be
described by anthropologists, historians, or even journalists. Their
statements will be more or less correct but will give no true account
of the forces at work in the depths of the human soul. For man has a
mission not only here on Earth; he has a mission also in the spiritual
worlds after death. And this mission in the spiritual worlds after
death takes shape here, on the Earth.
What we experience in the period immediately following death is a
consequence of our Earth-evolution. What we experience on the Earth
immediately after birth — this again is a consequence of our life
in the world of soul-and-spirit, and it is of the highest importance
to study the mission of the Norwegian people not only on the Earth but
in the period after death, with the means at the disposal of spiritual
investigation.
Because of their physical and racial character, because of the special
constitution of their brains and the rest of their bodily make-up, it
can — I repeat, it can — fall to the lot of those
souls who pass through the gate of death from the soil of the Western
part of the Scandinavian peninsula, to give a very definite stimulus
to other souls after death. They can give to other souls after death
something that only the Norwegian characteristics are able to impart.
In this epoch especially, the Norwegian character is so constituted
that subconsciously and inwardly it understands certain secrets of
Nature.
I am not now referring to your external, intellectual knowledge but to
the kind of knowledge which you develop in your spiritual body,
without using the physical senses, between the time of falling asleep
and waking, when you are outside your bodies. When during sleep you
experience the spirit in the plant-world, in stone and rock, in the
rustling trees and the roaring of the waves, you become aware of the
reality of forces living in the plants, hidden in the rocks, operating
in the waves of the sea as they break in upon the shores, in the
sparsely flowering rock-plants. A great picture arises in your souls
during sleep, in the form of an intimate knowledge of Nature of which
the intellect and the life of the senses are unconscious. And when, as
I described in the last lecture, you develop a real connection with
the Angel-Being, then you can bear into the spiritual world this
unconscious Nature-wisdom, this concrete knowledge of spirituality in
the plants, the stones and the other phenomena. of Nature.
Those who in the true and real way have lived a Norwegian life become
the stimulators and teachers of their fellow-souls after death in
regard to the secrets of Nature here on the Earth. For in the
spiritual world, souls must be taught about the secrets of the Earth,
just as here, on the Earth, they must be taught about the secrets of
the spiritual world.
In the Eastern portion of this peninsula, where the heritage from
olden times is as I have described it, a different mission is carried
through the gate of death. What the souls there carry through death
into the spiritual world is not so much what is experienced during
sleep but during waking consciousness in connection with the external
world, in contemplation and study of the sense-world and in a kind of
understanding — permeated with feeling — of the external
world.
But this after all, is something which fundamentally speaking, has
significance only for the earthly life. Yet while man is developing
just this element in earthly life, something very significant develops
in the subconscious region of the soul. I have pointed out to you that
even in waking life a certain part of our being sleeps and dreams. The
life of feeling is really only another form of dream life. In our
feelings we dream and in the operations of our will we are asleep.
What we know of our will is only the illumination thrown upon it by
our thinking. But the kind of will that is kindled in the Swedish soul
is less capable of penetrating the secrets of Nature during sleep.
What enters the Swedish soul more unconsciously in the life of will
and of feeling during contemplation of the outer world and in the
operations of intellect and reason — that is what is carried
through death. So the mission of the souls belonging to the Eastern
part of the Scandinavian peninsula who pass through death is to impart
to other souls an element pertaining more to the will —
exactly the opposite of what they were able to impart to their
physical fellow-beings during the times of their old historical
connection with them.
Let me put it like this — A special gift in connection with the
element of will developed in the Eastern part of the Scandinavian
peninsula as a primary and then as an inherited quality of the
character of the people. The people of Europe have lived a long time
without asking in this concrete way what they really have to do after
death, for they have contented themselves with the egotistical answer:
We shall be happy. But if the world is to be prevented from falling
into complete decadence, this egotistical answer will not suffice. It
will only be possible for men to lead a true and proper life when they
are willing to accept the selfless answer, when they not only ask
about the happiness in store for them after death but when they also
ask: What am I called upon to do, in view of my particular situation
in earthly life? Only when people are willing to frame the question in
this way will they put their situation in life to proper use and so
prepare truly for their mission. And then the preparation will no
longer be difficult.
The two lectures — indeed the three — which I have given you
here, are all connected in this respect. In view of this special
mission, it is essential that the spirituality in the
anthroposophical attitude to the world should be understood here in
Norway. For when you consider that it is a specific task to create out
of the subconscious life a natural science for the next world —
however paradoxical this may seem, it is indeed so — then you
must deliberately and consciously prepare your life of feeling in such
a way that your souls, while you sleep every night, are not
unreceptive to the knowledge of Nature which should be infused into
them during sleep. But the bodies of to-day are not always a help in
this process of preparation. The souls of the Northern peoples are,
through ancient heritage, fundamentally fitted for the spiritual
world. Here above all, the bodies must be influenced by a spiritual
form of culture.
And now a great question arises which can be illuminated by comparing
the mission of the peoples of Middle Europe with that of the peoples
of the North.
The state of the people of Middle Europe, if they will not accept the
Spiritual, was not badly described by a man who gave no thought at all
to the possibility of a spiritual regeneration of humanity. Oswald
Spengler has written his book on the Decline of the West, that
brilliant but thoroughly pessimistic book — although he has
repudiated the pessimism in a subsequent pamphlet. Of course, it is
pessimism to speak of the decline of the West. But Spengler is
actually speaking of the decline of culture, of something that is of
the soul. Without spiritual regeneration the people of Middle Europe
will suffer injury to their souls. But in this corner of
Northern Europe, human beings cannot be injured only in the
life of soul; when they are injured in the soul, their very bodily
nature is injured at the same time. In a way this is fortunate, for if
the people of Middle Europe do not accept spirituality, they become
barbarian, they degenerate in soul. The Northern people can
only die out, in the bodily sense, for everything depends here
upon the particular constitution of the body.
The influence of a new stream of spiritual culture is profoundly
necessary. For Middle Europe will degenerate, will become barbarian
will go to its decline if it does not allow itself to be influenced by
the spirit. The Northerner will die out, will suffer physical death if
he does not allow himself to be influenced by the Spirit.
And so what is developed here, during physical life, is connected with
the mission of Northern souls after death. They cannot fulfil their
mission if they allow their bodies — which are so well-adapted
for spirituality — to degenerate.
These earnest words must be uttered to-day for the evolution of our
epoch demands that men shall speak together of such matters. And it is
for this reason that I wanted to speak to you from the general, human
standpoint, to say to you what a man says to his fellow-beings on this
Earth if he has the destiny of Earth-evolution deeply at heart. For
those human beings who do not prepare themselves selflessly for an
eternal life, will not be leading their earthly life between birth and
death aright.
That is the thought I should like to leave with you. Those who feel
themselves Anthroposophists should realise that they are a tiny
handful of people in the world who must apply all their energy to
shaking a lazy humanity out of its lethargy and helping it onwards.
Those who hate Anthroposophy to-day — this may be said. among
ourselves — hate it because their love of comfort and ease
prevents them from being willing to grapple with the great tasks of
humanity. They are afraid of what they must overcome if they are to
transform their easy-going thoughts and feelings and experience
something much more profound. For this reason we see many a storm of
opposition arising against what is taking place in Anthroposophy and
developing out of it. You too will have to accustom yourselves to
violent attacks being made against Anthroposophy or Spiritual Science
by reactionaries of every kind, by all who love to saunter along their
old beaten tracks. Those however who let this opposition deter them
from developing their powers, are not firmly rooted in the real task
of Anthroposophy. When people see how Anthroposophy is being attacked
to-day from all sides, they may become timid and say: Would it not be
better to go forward more quietly so that the opposition may be less
violent? Or again they may ask, if they find praise being meted out to
them by men who in a decadent age hold leading positions: What have I
done wrong? This is a matter of great importance from the
anthroposophical point of view. Attacks and abuse are usually
explicable for the reasons given above. But if praise were to come
from the same quarters, it would be a bad augury for anthroposophical
world! It is just because the opponents of Anthroposophy to-day do
attack it, that we can be reassured — but only, of course, in
the sense that we must apply all the more energy in order to introduce
Anthroposophy into the world, not out of personal idiosyncrasies but
out of a deep realisation of the needs and tasks of the world.
On this note, then, we will conclude. Let me express to you my
heartfelt thanks for your active and energetic co-operation. I assure
you that I mean it seriously when I say that separation in space is no
separation to those who know the reality of the spiritual bond between
souls. In taking my leave, I remain together with you, I do not really
go away from you. I believe you can always realise this, if you wish
it to be so. You may be quite sure that there are already numbers of
people who feel this bond and who look with love in their hearts
towards this region in the North West with its special task — the
importance of which is so well known to Anthroposophy.
I take leave of you with this love in my heart for those who feel that
they truly belong to us, to our Anthroposophical Movement. May our
next meeting, too, be full of the inner strength that is necessary and
right among Anthroposophists.
|
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
|
The Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
|