Lecture 3
Dornach, 29th December, 1917
HE
Christian consciousness of to-day is still aware — or can,
at least, still be aware — of two poles, representing as
it were the outermost extremes of world-outlook. The two
poles to which I refer are the Christmas secret and the
Easter secret. To begin with — even if you only compare
them outwardly — it will strike you at once that the
Christmas secret is really the secret of birth; it represents
the birth of Christ Jesus, and therewithal attaches itself to
the secret of birth in general, the Easter secret is
connected with the secret of death, inasmuch as it is a
festival associated with the death of Christ Jesus. Now birth
and death are the two boundaries of human life, as it runs
its course within the physical body. Thus, in truth, we may
say: over against what stands before man as the visible part
of his being, birth and death veil from his sight the
invisible part; they are the two gateways to the invisible
world.
In the
festivals of Christmas and Easter, two gateways to the
invisible world are thus made the basis of the Christian
year; and inasmuch as this is so, the Christian
world-conception is indeed connected with the Mysteries of
all the World. Wherever we may look — among all peoples
and in the most varied regions of the Earth, we find
Mysteries everywhere associated either with the secret of
birth or with the secret of death, Not that it lies so
patently at hand in every case; the inner connections are not
always visible at once. Thus, certain Mysteries (I am only
referring now to post-Atlantean time) were connected with the
secret of birth in a more indirect way. I refer to those
Mysteries which place into the very centre of their life what
the profane world calls the Sacred Fire; ‘Sacred
Fire’ is very different from what the profane world can
understand. It is essentially Man himself — the
super-sensible Man who underlies the human being of the
sense-world. What is it that the profane world knows as the
Sacred Fire (or, as we might also call it, the Sacred
Warmth)? What is it in reality, when they revere this Fire?
It is a symbol of the super-sensible Man. It is that which
descends through birth from spiritual heights to grow and
evolve in it physical body. It is the invisible or
super-sensible Man — perceptible, however, to an old
atavistic clairvoyance!
This, then, is
the type of the Mysteries which takes its start from the
super-sensible Man who underlies the man of the sense-world
— the super-sensible Man who passes through birth to
clothe himself with a sensely garment. This is the type of
Mystery which afterwards passed over into the secret of
Christmas; it is essentially the Mystery of birth.
Less hidden, we
may truly say, is the other kind of Mystery, — that
which belongs to the secret of death. While the former is
associated with Fire, this kind of Mystery is associated with
the Light. Here too, however, as in the case of Fire,
something quite different is meant by ‘the
Light.’ ‘The Light’ refers to that which
speaks to man at night-time when the star-lit sky sends him
its language of Light. All astrological Mysteries in ancient
time were in reality Mysteries of Light, — in the
times, I mean, before the arrival of the Mystery of Golgotha.
Only, here again we must remember that the ancient Astrology
was not pursued with the abstract calculations of to-day, but
with an atavistic clairvoyant power. Man did not merely
observe the mineral-physical world of stars above him; in
those most ancient times, he had an organ with which to
behold the secret of the constellations. It was, especially,
a customary art in certain Mysteries of olden time, to
observe the Moon establishing its various positions through
the constellations of the Zodiac. They knew that when the
Moon was shining from the region of the Pleiades, or from
Taurus, it signified something quite different than if it
were shining from some other region of the sky. Likewise the
other planets in their several constellations were brought
home to the consciousness of men. It was, however, a very
different consciousness from what has remained to us in this
materialistic epoch. They knew, moreover, that the Mystery of
human death is connected with what is thus spoken to man by
the starry constellations. Throughout the ever-changing
association of the fixed stars with the several planets, they
saw the expression, as it were, of a language which he who
sojourns in the body hears from the Earth, while at the same
time the souls of the dead perceive it from the other side.
They were clearly conscious of the fact that when a man gives
himself up with devotion to the language of the stars, he
lives in that element which receives the human being when he
passes through the Gate of Death.
They looked on
birth as on a Question, in those ancient times; and the old
kind of Mysticism — that is, the experience in
consciousness of the invisible or super-sensible Man —
was intended as an answer to this question. What the stars
were speaking through their constellations, — they did
not regard it as a mere outer fact, to be summed-up as we are
wont to do. No! in the times of the old Mysteries — the
Mysteries of the Stars, the Mysteries of Light — they
regarded the starry constellations as a Question, and human
death as the real answer thereto. (Even as birth was
associated with the super-sensible Man, so was death
associated with the constellations. Hence we may truly call
the ‘Mysteries of Fire’ the Mysteries of Birth,
the Christmas Mysteries; and the ‘Mysteries of
Light’ the Star-Mysteries — the East Mysteries,
the Mysteries of Death. And we may add: those Mysteries which
afterwards merged into the real secret of Christmas, are the
ones which really underlie all that humanity possessed by way
of Mystery secrets, before Golgotha, in ancient India and
Egypt. Chaldea and Western Asia was more the soil for Easter
Mysteries — that is to say, for a Science of the
Stars.
In Western
Asia, especially among the so-called Iranian peoples and
notably in the 3rd post-Atlantean epoch, the Science of the
Stars was well developed. Only we must conceive that in the
earliest times man had an exact super-sensible vision of the
entity which clothes itself at birth with the physical body,
just as he had on the other hand a direct vision and
perception of the language of the stars. As I have often
said, when ancient charts depict all manner of Beings in the
Heavens, such Beings are no mere figment of human fancy. They
are the image of what the old atavistic clairvoyance actually
saw in the starry sky; for the old atavistic consciousness
did really see the human being in connection with the entire
Universe. This consciousness was thoroughly aware of the
truth that the cosmos is a self-contained organism — in
which organism we, as Man, do live and move and have our
being.
This
consciousness, needless to say, has been lost. It must be
regained by mankind in course of the 5th post-Atlantean
epoch; and that, in all essentials, by the two streams
aforesaid — the streams of Star-wisdom and of Mysticism
— finding one another once more. In ancient times they
could appear distinct — two separate poles, as it were.
In our time it must be possible to unite the Christmas and
the Easter Mystery in one; to see them as the two sides of
one and the same Being.
When we
transplant ourselves into ancient times of human knowledge,
we find a clear awareness of the fact that the Zodiac is not
only to be found up yonder in the Heavens, but that man too
carries within him the same law and principle as is
represented for example by the Zodiac, — that is to
say, by the farthest circumference of the Universe of the
fixed stars.
You know that
in olden times not only certain places in the Heavens were
thus named, as Aries and Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, etc.,
but the human being too was membered thus: head = Aries; neck
= Taurus; the two sides of man in their lateral symmetry =
Gemini; the chest and ribs = Cancer; the heart as Leo, and so
on, Man bears microcosmically within him the several regions
which are also the fundamental places of the Heavens. This
connection of microcosm and macrocosm was deemed most
essential in those ancient times. Man, as it were, bore
within him the Heavens of the fixed stars, by virtue of the
Zodiac which represents it. It was said, of old time: When a
man uses his larynx in speech, there sounds forth from him
the same cosmic stream which flows down to us from the cosmos
when the Moon is shining from the Pleiades. They felt the
kinship of the Light and of that which the Light carries down
when the Moon is shining from the region of the Pleiades,
— they felt the kinship of this macrocosmic stream with
that which issues from man when he makes use of his larynx.
So too with the Sun. So too, they felt Man penetrated with
the same law and principle that works in the planetary
system, yet with this difference: — They knew that the
system of the fixed stars corresponds to fixed places in Man,
namely, the Ram to the head, the neck to the Bull, and so on.
Fixed portions of the human being were thus associated with
the heaven of the fixed stars. Those organs on the other hand
which represent, as it were, the mobile element in man,
sending the saps and fluids throughout man's nature, were
connected by them, and rightly, with the planetary system.
Man is himself, as it were, a heaven of the fixed stars, and
he carries a planetary system within him. Thus in the oldest
Mysteries they conceived an intimate relationship as between
Man and the whole cosmos.
To perceive the
full scope and range of this matter, must, however, also bear
the following in mind. In man we have the several
constellations like fixed places — Aries the head,
Taurus the neck, and so on. Thereby, man stands in a certain
relation — a quite individual relation — to the
starry heavens. Assume for a moment that a man is born to-day
in the Spring, when the Sun rises in Pisces. Pisces will be
quite especially determined by his inner system of fixed
stars. Now Pisces is associated with the feet, — that is
to say, with what man experiences through his feet, inasmuch
as he is born in the Spring, when the Sun rises in Pisces, a
man is born with that part of his being which corresponds to
this particular constellation to the Sun. If he were born at
another season of the year, his constellation would be less
in accordance with the cosmic constellation. Nowadays, this
attunement or non-attunement of the human being is determined
according to certain hard-and-fast schemes. In the ancient
Mysteries they felt in a very living way the peculiar unison,
the sounding-together of the human constellation after birth
with the heavenly constellation.
Now you will
bear in mind that a very special constellation existed in the
age of Aries, precisely in the Mystery of Golgotha. For at
that very time the whole of mankind, with that portion of the
human being which corresponds to the head, was in harmony
with the constellation of Aries in the Spring. Here was
another reason why those who knew the Mysteries felt
something quite peculiar in this correspondence of the human
constellation of the head with the constellation of the
Cosmos. Man is related, through the head, not with the Earth
but with the Cosmos. Through the head, therefore, he is
especially adapted to receive the forces of the Cosmos. With
his head — that is to say, with his Aries — he
reaches out into the Cosmos. What constellation will
therefore be the most favourable one, of all that can exist
in the Cycle of 25,920 years in which we are now living?
Precisely that, in which the constellation of the Ram is with
the rising Sun in Spring. In short, I wish to indicate this
fact. They studied Man in his whole being, in his attunement
with the macrocosm. They studied this especially because they
were well aware how much depended, even for earthly events,
on this attunement of Man with the macrocosm.
They perceived
the manifold secrets of these constellations of the stars;
and they always knew that with every secret of a starry
constellation a human secret is connected. More and more,
they tried to express how each secret of the stars is
connected with an inner secret of Man. It is remarkable how
far they got in this direction with their ancient science. We
see it in the Pyramids. Even if crudely studied, the
structure of the Pyramids proves to contain all manner of
secrets. Take the length of the four basic sides, forming the
plan of the Pyramid; compare it with the height. It
corresponds exactly to the proportion of the diameter of a
circle to its circumference. It is a true correspondence to a
large number of decimal places. But it not only applies to
things like this. Certain sub-divisions in the Pyramids
correspond to the Zodiacal sub-divisions of the macrocosm.
The weight of the Pyramids — it has only been
calculated approximately — is a certain fraction of the
weight of the whole Earth. Certain measurements of the
Pyramids, multiplied by a power of 18, give you the distance
from the Earth to the Sun. In short, such are the
measurements of the Pyramids that they can only be the result
of a marvellous and intimate knowledge of the relationships
of the stars and the Heavens.
These Pyramids
were not really the work of the Egyptians, Whenever
conquerors came into Egypt from Iranian countries, from
Western Asia, they created Pyramidal structures, The
Egyptians learned to build Pyramids from these peoples,
peoples who possessed Star-Mysteries; their own Mysteries
were not Star-Mysteries, but rather a kind of Christmas
Mysteries.
The study of
the Pyramids had led to this result, even during the 19th
century. Men like Carus declared that the pure study of the
Mysteries was enough to show us that there was a Science in
ancient times which has since been lost, and which is
calculated to make the civilisation of to-day blush for
shame. These are Carus' own words, not mine. The humanity of
to-day are not very prone to believe that there existed in
primeval human times a science — acquired by somewhat
different means, it is true — but a true science none
the less, able to shed its light into deep secrets of the
Cosmos.
But the most
important thing is not the mere fact that the Wise Men of
those Mysteries were acquainted with such distant cosmic
measures or secreted them into the structure of the Pyramids.
The most remarkable is quite another thing. It was by no
means an abstract knowledge which they had, of man's relation
to the Universe of stars. It was a very concrete knowledge
— a knowledge whereby Man could feel himself within the
whole Cosmos. He knew that with his head, which he turns
freely to the Cosmos, he is directly related to the Heaven of
the fixed stars. All that appeared to the human being as the
secret of the head — the Wise Men of the Mysteries
perceived it as the secrets of the heaven of the fixed stars.
And it is perfectly true the human head is formed by the
heaven of the fixed stars. It is but a materialistic
prejudice of to-day to suppose that everything is inherited
from the ancestors, — that everything comes from the
germ. The germ itself — in so far as it is the germ of
the head — is informed and filled with forces, within
the human mother, by the heaven of the fixed stars. According
to his head, Man is connected with the fixed stars. His head
is an image of the whole heaven of the fixed stars. You may
read of it from another point of view in my booklet,
The Spiritual Guidance of Mankind,
where I have also touched
upon this matter. Likewise on the other side, the rest of the
human organism corresponds to all that is connected with the
secret of the Sun. Even in this direction, Man is really of a
twofold nature; and this was well known to those Wise Men of
the ancient Mysteries who were the keepers of the
Star-Mysteries, or Easter Mysteries. Man is a twofold nature:
his head is assigned to the heaven of the fixed stars; and
the rest of his body, with the centre in the heart, to the
Sun.
Now these
ancient astronomers (or you may call them astrologers, if you
will) knew something else as well. When we observe the stars
in their relation to the Sun, we see the Sun gradually
remaining behind as against the movement of the fixed stars.
Thereby the vernal point keeps on appearing at a different
place; the Sun is always being left behind a little. The
stars seem to go a little quicker in their annual movement
than the Sun. And the strange thing is (though for the old
astronomers it was not strange at all — it was a deep
and significant Mystery for them) that after 72 years the
fixed stars in their movement have sped on exactly a day
ahead of the Sun — one day in 72 years.
What does this
signify, transferred to Man; For the old astronomers it was
fraught with meaning, though for the clever people of to-day,
no doubt, it may seem nonsense. It meant that among all other
things we also have in us this twofold, fixed-star and solar
nature. With our head we go quicker than with the rest of our
body. And when we have lived for 72 years (these things, of
course, arc only to be taken approximately), our head has
gone ‘ahead’ of the rest of our body by a whole
day of stars. That is why the average — as I have often
explained from other points of view — human life lasts
for 72 years. It can be much longer, of course, or shorter as
the case may be; but on the average, the span of human life
is 72 years. All this is connected with the duality between
the course of life in the head, and in the rest of the human
body. It corresponds exactly to the duality of the movements
of the heaven of the fixed stars and of the Sun.
So does Man
stand as a microcosm in the macrocosm. In those olden times,
Man was indeed able to feel himself within the macrocosm,
just as our little finger now feels itself to be part and
parcel of the organism as a whole. Man was really able to
feel himself a member of the whole.
And they
considered this the most important thing: to perceive how
human life is connected with the secret of the stars.
Therefore especially the Mystery of death, the Easter
Mystery, was associated with the Star-Mystery.
The Christian
World-conception now had the task of connecting the two
together. This must essentially be contained in the concrete
development of Christian World-conceptions. The Mystery of
birth, the Christmas Mystery, the Mystery of super-sensible
Man on the side of birth, must be connected with the Mystery
of death, the Easter Mystery, the Mystery of the
super-sensible Man on the side of death.
That which is
generally known as Science nowadays, concerns itself with
birth; that which is generally known as Religion, concerns
itself with death. The Religion of to-day lacks any
inclination to turn to the super-sensible Man. It sounds a
strange thing to say; but the mere fact that Religion still
talks of the super-sensible Man does not imply that it has any
strong inclination to concern itself with super-sensible Man
in any real way. For we can only concern ourselves with the
super-sensible Man if we take our start from what was felt
most strongly in the ancient Mysteries of Christmas —
that is to say, if, taking our start from birth, we find our
way through birth into human pre-existence. Therefore the
Mysteries of birth laid the greatest stress on the
pre-existence — the existence before birth — of
super-sensible Man. The other Mysteries — those that
then culminated in the Easter Mysteries — laid especial
stress on the post-existence, on the existence of Man beyond
death. It is to this latter side that the Religions have
inclined, at the same time rejecting the Science that is
connected therewith, namely the wisdom of the stars.
Meanwhile the Science of to-day, which concerns itself
chiefly with problems of descent — with all that
belongs to birth — has rejected what leads to the
super-sensible Man and to the conscious experience of him,
which is true Mysticism.
Thus it has
come about that Science on the one hand, by rejecting the
super-sensible Man, has become materialistic; while on the
other hand Religion, by declining to study the super-sensible
Man, has become unscientific. In our time the two are
standing side by side, without any bridge between them. Those
who seem to represent Religion — though in reality,
broadly speaking, they only want to “guard their pounds
and talents” — those who call themselves official
representatives of the religious faiths, are most annoyed
when you speak of the pre-existence of the soul, that is, of
super-sensible Man in his reality.
Needless to
say, I have been speaking of all this only in the briefest
aphorisms. I only wished to emphasise how we must try once
more to widen out man's vision, beyond what is immediately
present in the physical world. Inasmuch as we have pointed to
the two directions in the Mysteries, our outlook has indeed
been widened in the two directions in which the sense world
must he transcended. For on the one hand we must seek again
for the true inner Man, who can only be found within us by
the path described in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment.
That is the one side; and the other is,
to seek in a new form for what the stars can say to us. But
we shall only find it in its new form if we are able once
again to bring into direct relation to the Macrocosm what is
there in Man himself. Such is the inner composition a book like
Occult Science.
Here the attempt is made once
more to build the bridge between Man and the Macrocosm. What
can be found in man himself, the evolution of man, is
connected with that in the macrocosm to which man's evolution
belongs. Definite stages in the evolution of man are
connected with definite processes in the macrocosm. Thus, in
our anthroposophical Spiritual Science we have begun again to
look in both directions — to look for the
super-sensible man and for the secrets of the Macrocosm. This
also means the building of it bridge, once more, between
Religion and Science.
Religion has
become void of science. Any one who will, can see that it is
so. And, that the science of to-day has become void of
Religion, is still more obvious. Quite unconnectedly, the two
stand side by side in the so-called civilisation of our time.
In this way alone was it possible for such strange errors to
arise as I described in these lectures, — errors of
which the sharp-witted intellectual theories of Dupuis are a
particulate example. Dupuis, as I said, considered the
ancient Mysteries mere error and deceit. He believed that in
those ancient Mysteries certain tales were invented merely in
order to delude the people, while in reality they had nothing
else in view than the mere movements of the stars. Dupuis
made the simple mistake of believing that the Ancients could
see nothing else in the star-lit sky than a modern astronomer
can see; whereas in reality, what the modern astronomer sees
in the star-lit sky is precisely equivalent to what the
modern anatomist sees in the human body. Just as the corpse
is not the man, so too, the content of modern Astronomy is
not the real heaven of the stars. Natural-scientific
Astronomy is only in its initial stages; it has experienced
no more, as yet, than a mere mathematical, mechanical and
summary description of what goes on in the great Universe
outside us. Study what is afforded by the Astronomy of
to-day; you will find mathematical and mechanical
relationships; it is the mere expression of an immense
celestial machinery. Meanwhile, all that takes place on Earth
(with the exception of the coarsest physical processes), the
scientist only seeks to investigate on the Earth itself.
Wherever a plant arises, wherever a human being or an animal
is born, it is all supposed to be due to
“inheritance.” For it goes without saying, you
can in no way apply to man what the modern astronomer finds
in the stars. But in real fact there is a mutual interplay
between the starry Heavens and the Earth. No seed or germ can
arise on the Earth — neither the germ of a plant, nor
of an animal or man — unless it be prepared and laid
down by the whole macrocosm.
What does the
scientist of to-day say? Here is the hen, and in the hen, the
egg. It goes without saying: from the egg a new hen is
derived, and from the hen an egg again, and thence again a
hen. Therefore the scientist follows it up from hen to hen.
Whereas the truth is: Here are the starry heavens, here is
the hen. The whole of the heavens send their forces, from all
the constellations, into the hen; and the germ inside the hen
is an expression of the entire heaven of the stars.
It is strange
to look into the course of evolution in this respect. A
science existed, once upon a time, which might well make the
people of to-day blush for shame. It has been lost and
ruined. We must be conscious that we are living to this day
in the age of a lost science. The first beginnings of a
science have been planted again in a new form, and they must
be developed. What is admired so much, in the progress of
science during the last four centuries, can only justly be
admired if looked upon as a beginning. It is only when the
bridge is built from this beginning to the real Mysteries of
Christmas and Easter — only when this bridge is built,
at least for human feeling — that something real will
have been achieved.
We should make
this thought living in our soul, for this thought alone is
prone to unite the man of to-day, in his soul, with the
Universe. Every seed is united with the macrocosm; the seeds
of the Spirit likewise. Man unites himself with the macrocosm
when he tries to receive into his soul a macrocosmic science.
To begin with at least in the idea, in the intuition thereof,
this consciousness of the macrocosmic connections of Man and
the Earth needs to be carried into all branches of life. Our
time is far remote from such a consciousness. In this
respect, our time is indeed in a certain sense in the reverse
position, as compared with a certain epoch of the past. For
we may ask: How could a primeval wisdom of mankind — so
great and so far-reaching that this present time could blush
for shame to contemplate it, — how could such a science
have been lost? We need not wonder very much that it was
lost. We must remember that in the evolution of humanity the
positive is most certainly connected with the negative
aspect. We have often spoken of the progress humanity has
undergone by the spread of Christianity; let us not, however,
forget that the spread of Christianity — the positive
aspect — is also connected with the negative aspect of
the same, namely the laying-waste of an ancient culture. Let
us not forget that tens of thousands of works of ancient
culture were destroyed while Christianity was being spread
abroad. Thousands and thousands of symbols in which the
Ancient Wisdom had been handed down, were destroyed. People
to-day have little conception of the ruthless work of
destruction which culminated in the third and fourth
centuries of our era. Julian the Apostate still tried to some
extent to stem this work of destruction; but the time was
against him. He did not succeed. Humanity to-day ought to be
well aware how many things were destroyed and lost and ruined
in those centuries.
Precisely from
such things, we can learn that evolution, so-called, is by no
means simple. Suppose for a moment that Christianity had not
gone on its way through the world as an appalling destroyer.
Mankind would have had to remain in their old state of
un-freedom. For the attainment of freedom is after all, only
possible by that Impulse which is also the Impulse of the
Mystery of Golgotha.
On the other
hand, the negative side must not be allowed to get the upper
hand. For there exists a certain spirit which has preserved
far more the negative aspect of Christianity. It appears in
this form to-day: it wants to destroy — this time, in
the soul-life — all that arises towards the re-conquest
of the Ancient Wisdom. This ought not to be allowed to
happen. To-day, again and again — wherever they have
the opportunity — the so-called official
representatives of Christianity bring forward this idea:
“At the time of Christ,” they say, “in the
apostolic age, there were Revelations. To-day no such thing
is permissible. Today it is sin or swindle or deceit; it is
anti-Christian.” To see clearly in these matters is
also one of the tasks of today, for every human being who
strives for the truth. The striving for clarity is one of the
essential tasks for to-day. Alas! in other matters too,
clarity has grown befogged by all manner of feelings which
people associate with mere empty phrases. I do believe the
healthy feeling of the truth can only be sought and found
again along the paths of the Spirit.
Words are
terribly misused to-day. Think of all the words that are
sounding through the world to-day, and taken seriously as
though there were anything contained in the empty words. In
this domain, Spiritual Science is no less important as an
educator than by its immediate contents. If it claims to be
true Spiritual Science, it can never feed men with mere
words. Why not? For the very simple reason that you can talk
of anything nowadays if you remain at the mere words, if you
remain at the mere words, you can talk much about Natural
Science. Fritz Mauthner proves, in his dictionary that
Natural Science, whenever it claims to become a
“Science,” — whenever it goes beyond the
mere notification of facts, — becomes a science of mere
words. And in the science of History there is nothing else
than words, for — as I told you — everything else
is passed-through by man in a dreaming condition. And so it
is in other spheres. In Politics, — go to work
uprightly and honestly, and you will probably find still less
behind the words than in the other spheres of life. If you
hold to the mere words, you can talk a lot nowadays about
Nature and History and Politics and Economics. But you can
not talk of the Spirit if you hold fast to the mere words for
the Spirit, to-day, is nowhere contained in the words. I mean
this in all earnestness. Yet the converse is also true.
Namely, in compensation for this, the Spiritual Science of
to-day is a real education, for men to grow beyond the
prevailing attachment to words.
It is the
paramount task of those who believe in Anthroposophy to go
beyond the words to the real things; and — as the
“thing” of Spiritual Science is the Spirit itself
— this means to go beyond the words to the Spirit. This
will be fruitful; this will endow us with new purposes and
aims in all domains of life One fruit, above all, it will
bear. It will liberate — all those who are willing to
be liberated — from the belief in authority; from that
credulity and superstition which is so widespread in the
humanity of to-day — so widespread that they even fail
to notice its existence. Alas! many a bitter experience will
still be necessary for poor mankind of to-day to find its
way, more or less, on to the path to which I here refer.
The poor
humanity of to-day! — it prides itself on the very
thing which it most lacks, namely, on freedom from faith in
authority, freedom from idol-worship. In the eyes of him who
knows the Spirit, many an idol of the past is worth more than
the idols of the present. As to the idols of the present...
The conscious man, no doubt, has fallen out of the habit of
prayer; but the unconscious man prays to the idols of the
present all the more fervently. For in the eyes of him who
sees through the evolution of the world, the Woodrow Wilsons
and the rest are far more perilous idols of superstition than
any idols of the past. The humanity of to-day is far more
attached to its idols and superstitions than ever primeval
humanity were attached to theirs. Even the clearest signs
will scarcely avail the humanity of to-day. Precisely in
these things, they are extraordinarily difficult to bring on
to the oaths of truth.
The earnestness
of the moment does indeed require it again and again. —
Even when we bring forward truths that reach out into such
far and wide perspectives, we must conclude with such remarks
as I have made just now. It is essential to Spiritual Science
to serve real life; and that which claims to be serving life
nowadays is serving it least of all.
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