Lecture IX
Let us resume our observations of
yesterday. I showed how, in the main, through factors I have
mentioned, the People of the Christ was diverted eastwards
and how, as a consequence of other factors, the Peoples of
the Church developed in the centre of Europe and spread from
there in a westward direction. I then pointed out how the
various conflicts which arose at the turning-point which
marked the beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch were
connected with this basic fact. I also showed how, within
that territory where the true People of the Church developed,
through the fact that the Christ impulse to some extent no
longer exercised a lasting influence, but was associated with
a definite moment in time and had to be transmitted through
tradition and written records, there arose the troubled
relationship between Christianity and the politically
organized church, subject to the Roman pontiff; and how then
other individual churches submitted to Rome. These other
churches, though manifesting considerable differences from
the papal church have, however, many features in common with
it — in any case certain things which are of interest to
us in this context and which seem to indicate that the state
church of the Protestants is closer to the Roman Catholic
Church than to the Russian Orthodox Church, in which however
the dependence of the church upon the state was never the
essential factor. What was of paramount importance in the
Russian church was the way in which the Christ impulse, in
unbroken activity, expressed itself through the Russian
people. I then showed how the radical consequence of this
dragging down of the Christ impulse into purely worldly
affairs was the establishment of Jesuitism, and how
Goetheanism
[ Note A ]
appeared as the antithesis of Jesuitism.
This
Goetheanism endeavours to promote a countermovement, somewhat
akin to Russian Christianity. It seeks to spiritualize that
which exists here on the physical plane, so that, despite the
circumstances on the physical plane, the soul unites with the
impulses which sustain the spiritual world itself, impulses
which are not brought down directly to the plane of sensible
reality, as in Jesuitism, but are mediated by the soul. As
was his custom, Goethe seldom expressed his most intimate
thoughts on this subject. But if we wish to know them we must
again refer to that passage in Wilhelm Meister to which I
have already drawn attention in another context. It is the
passage where Wilhelm Meister enters Jarno's castle and is
shown a picture gallery depicting world history, and in the
framework of this world history the religious evolution of
mankind. Wilhelm Meister is led by the guide to a picture
where history is portrayed as ending with the destruction of
Jerusalem. He drew the attention of the guide to the absence
of any representation of the Divine Being who had been active
in Palestine immediately before the destruction of Jerusalem.
Wilhelm was then led into a second gallery where he was shown
what was missing in the first gallery — the life of
Christ up to the Last Supper. And it was explained to him
that all the different religions represented in the first
gallery up to the time of the destruction of Jerusalem were
related to the human being in so far as he was a member of an
ethnic group. All these scenes represented an ethnic or folk
religion. What he had seen in the second gallery, however,
was related to the individual, was addressed to the
individual; it was a personal and private matter. It could
only be revealed to the individual, it could not be an ethnic
religion for it was addressed to the human being, to the
individual as such.
Wilhelm Meister
then remarked that he still missed here, i.e. in the second gallery,
the story of Christ Jesus from the time of the Last Supper until
His Death and Ascension. He was then led to a third and highly
secret gallery where these scenes were represented. But at the
same time the guide pointed out to him that these representations
were a matter of such intimacy that one had no right to portray
them in the profane fashion in which they were usually presented
to the public. They must appeal to the innermost being of man.
Now
one can claim with good reason that what was still valid in Goethe's
day, namely, that the representation of the Passion of Christ Jesus
should be withheld from the public, no longer applies today. Since
that time we have passed through many stages of development. But I
should like to point out that Goethe's whole attitude to this
question is revealed in this passage from Wilhelm Meister. Goethe
shows quite clearly that he wishes the Christ impulse to penetrate
into the inmost recesses of the soul; he wishes to dissociate it
from the national impulse, from the national state. He wishes to
establish a direct relationship between the individual soul and
the Christ impulse. This is extremely important for an understanding
not only of Goethe, but of Goetheanism. For, as I said recently,
in relation to external culture, Goethe and the whole of Goetheanism
are in reality isolated, but when one bears in mind the more inward
religious development of civilized mankind one cannot say the same
of the progress of evolution. Goethe, for his part, represents in a
certain respect the continuation of something else. But in order to
understand how Goethe is to some extent opposed to everything that
is usually manifested in the Church of Central Europe, we must now
consider a third impulse.
This third
impulse is localized more to the West, and to a certain
extent is the driving force behind the nations — one
cannot say that it inspires them. That which emerged in its
extreme form as Jesuitism, as the militia of the
generalissimo Jesus Christ, is deeply rooted in the very
nature of the civilized world. In order to understand this we
must turn our attention to the controversy dating back to the
fourth century which was felt long afterwards. From your
knowledge of the history of religions you will recall that,
in its triumphal march from East to West, Christianity
assumed diverse forms and amongst them those of Arianism and
Athanasianism. The peoples — Goths, Langobards and
Franks — who took part in what is mistakenly called the
migration of nations were originally Arians.
Now the
doctrinal conflict between the Arians and Athanasians
[ Note 1 ]
is probably of little interest to you today, but it played
a certain part and we must return to it. It arose from a
conflict between Arius and Athanasius which began at
Alexandria and was given new impetus in Antioch. Athanasius
maintained that Christ is a God, like God the Father, that a
Father-God therefore exists and that Christ is of the same
nature and substance as the Father from all eternity. This
doctrine passed over into Roman Catholicism which still
professes today the faith of Athanasius. Thus at the root of
Roman Catholicism is the belief that the Son is eternal and
of the same nature and substance as the Father.
Arius opposed
this view. He held that there was a supreme God, the Father,
and that the Divine Son, i.e. Christ, was begotten of the
Father before all ages. He was a separate being from the
Father, different in substance and nature, the perfect
creature who is nearer to man than the Father, the mediator
between the Creator, who is beyond the reach of human
understanding, and the creature.
Strange as it
may seem this appears at first sight to be a doctrinal
dispute. But it is a doctrinal dispute only in the eyes of
modern man. In the first centuries of Christianity it had
deeper implications, for Arian Christianity, based on the
relationship between the Son and the Father, as I have just
indicated, was something natural and self-evident to the
Goths and Langobards — all those peoples who first took
over from Rome after the fall of the empire. Instinctively
they were Arians. Ulfilas's translation of the Bible
[ Note 2 ]
shows quite clearly that he was an adherent of Arius.
The Goths and Langobards
[ Note 2 ]
who invaded Italy were also Arians, and only when Clovis
[ Note 2 ]
was converted to Christianity did the Franks accept
Christianity. They adopted somewhat superficially the
doctrine of Athanasius which was foreign to their nature, for
they had formerly been Arians at heart. And when Christianity
hoisted its Banner under the leadership of Charles the Great
[ Note 2 ]
everyone was instructed in the creed of Athanasius. Thus the
ground was prepared for the transition to the Church of Rome.
A large part of the barbarian peoples, Goths, Langobards,
etcetera, perished; the ethnic remnants who survived were
driven out or annihilated by the Athanasians. Arianism lived
on in the form of sects; but as a tribal religion it ceased
to be an active force.
Two questions
now arise: first, what distinguishes Arianism from
Athanasianism? Secondly, why did Arianism disappear from the
stage of European history, at least as far as any visible
symptoms are concerned? Arianism is the last offshoot of
those conceptions of the world which, when they aspired to
the divine, still sought to find a relation between the
sensible world and the divine-spiritual, and which still felt
the need to unite the sense-perceptible with the
divinespiritual. In Arianism we find in a somewhat more
abstract form the same impulse that we find in the Christ
impulse of Russia — but only as impulse, not in the
form of sacramentalism and cultus. This form of the Christ
impulse had to be abandoned because it was unsuited to the
peoples of Europe. And it was also extirpated by the
Athanasians for the same reason.
In order to
have a clearer understanding of these questions we must
consider what was the original constitution of soul of the
different peoples of Europe. The original psychic make-up of
the peoples who took over from the Roman Empire, who, it is
said, invaded and settled in its territory (which is not
strictly true, but I have not the time at present to rectify
this misconception), the psychic disposition of the so-called
Teutonic peoples was originally of a different nature. These
peoples came from widely different directions and mingled
with an autochthonous population of Europe which is rightly
called the Celtic population. Vestiges of this Celtic
population can still be found here and there amongst certain
ethnic groups. Today when there is a wish to preserve
national identity, people are intent upon preserving at all
costs the Celtic element wherever they find it, or imagine
they have found it. In order to form a true picture of the
national or folk element in Europe we must imagine a
proto-European culture, a Celtic culture, within which the
other cultures developed — the Teutonic, the Romanic
(i.e. of the Romance peoples), the Anglo-Saxons,
etcetera.
The Celtic
element has survived longest in its original form in the
British Isles, especially in Wales. It is there that it has
retained longest its original character. And just as a
certain kind of religious sentiment had been diverted towards
the East, with the result that the Russian people became the
People of the Christ, so too, by virtue of certain facts
which you can verify in any text-book of history a certain
impulse emanated in the West from the British Isles. It is
this impulse, an echo of the original Celtism, which
ultimately determined the form of the religious life in the
West, just as other influences determined that of the East
and Central Europe.
Now in order to
understand these events we must consider the question: what
kind of people were the Celts? Though widely differentiated
in many respects, they had one feature in common — they
showed little interest in the relationship between nature and
mankind. They imagined man as insulated from nature. They
were interested in everything pertaining to man, but they had
no interest in the way in which man is related to nature, how
man is an integral part of nature. Whilst in the East, for
example, in direct contrast to Celtism, one always feels
profoundly the relation between man and nature, that man is
to some extent a product of nature, as I showed in the case
of Goethe, the Celt, on the other hand, had little
understanding for the relationship between human nature and
cosmic nature. He had a strong sense for a common way of
life, for community life. But amongst the ancient Celts this
corporate life was organized on the authoritarian principle
of leaders and subordinates, those who commanded and those
who obeyed. Essentially its structure was aristrocratic,
anti-democratic, and in Europe this can be traced to Celtic
antiquity. It was an organization based on aristocracy and
this was its fundamental character.
Now there was a
time when this aristocratic, Celtic, monarchical element
flourished. The king as leader surrounded by his vassals,
etcetera, this is a product of Celtism. And the last of such
leaders who, in his own interests, still relied upon the
original Celtic impulses was King Arthur with his Round Table
in Wales. Arthur with his twelve Knights whose duty, so it is
recorded — though this should not be taken literally
— was to slay monsters and overcome demons. All this
bears witness to the time of man's union with the spiritual
world. The manner in which the Arthurian legend sprang up,
the many legends associated with King Arthur, all this shows
that the Celtic element lived on in the monarchical
principle. Hence the readiness to accept commands,
injunctions and direction from the King.
Now the Christ
of Ulfilas, the Christ of the Goths was strongly impregnated
with Arianism. He was a Christ for all men, for those who, in
a certain sense, felt themselves as equals, who accepted no
class differences, no claims to aristocracy. At the same time
he was a last echo of that instinctive feeling in the East
for the communion between man and the cosmos, between man and
nature. Nature was to some extent excluded from the social
structure of the Celtic monarchical system.
These two
streams converged first of all in Europe (I cannot now enter
into details, I can only discuss the main features). Then
they were joined to a third stream. As a result of this
confluence Arianism at first gained ground; but since it was
a survival of a conception that linked nature and man, it was
not understood by those who, as heirs of the Teutonic and
Frankish peoples, were still influenced by purely Celtic
impulses. They understood only a monarchical system such as
their own. And therefore the need arose, still perceptible in
the Old Saxon religious epic Heliand
[ Note 2 ],
to portray the Christ
as a royal commander, a sovereign chief, as a feudal lord
with his liege men. This reinterpretation of the Christ as a
royal commander stemmed from the inability to understand what
came over from the East and from the need to venerate Christ
as both a spiritual and temporal King.
The third
stream came from the South, from the Roman Empire. It had
already been infected earlier with what one might perhaps
call today the bureaucratic mentality. The Roman Empire
— (it was not a state; it could best be described as a
structure akin to a state) is very like — but
different, in that the different territories are
geographically remote from each other and different
conditions determine the social structure — this Roman
Empire is very like what emerged from the monarchical system
though starting from different principles. Formerly a
republic, it developed into an imperial organization, into an
empire akin to what developed out of the various kingdoms of
the Celtic civilization, but with a Teutonic flavouring.
Now the
intellectual and emotional attitude towards social life which
originated in the South, in the Roman Empire — because
it envisaged an external structure on the physical plane
— could never really find any common ground with
Arianism which still survived as an old instinctive impulse
from the East. This Roman impulse needed, paradoxically,
something that was incomprehensible, something that had to be
decreed. And as kings and emperors governed by decree, so too
the Papacy. The doctrine of Athanasius could be brought home
to mankind by appealing to certain feelings which were
especially developed in the peoples I have mentioned; after
all, these sentiments exist in everyone to some extent. The
faith professed by Athanasius contains little that appeals to
human feeling or understanding; if it is to be incorporated
in the community it must be imposed by decree, it must have
the sanction of law after the fashion of secular laws. And so
it came to pass: the strange incomprehensible doctrine of the
identity of the Father and the Son, who are co-equal and
co-eternal, was later understood to imply that this doctrine
transcended human logic; it must become an article of faith.
It is something that can be decreed. The Athanasian faith can
be imposed by decree. And since it was directly dependent
upon authoritarian directives it could be introduced into an
ecclesiastical organization with political leanings.
Arianism, on the other hand, appealed to the individual; it
could not be incorporated in an ecclesiastical organization,
nor be imposed by decree. But authoritarian directives were
important for the reasons I have mentioned.
Thus that which
came from the south, from Athanasianism with its
authoritarian tendency, merged with an instinctive need for
an organization directed by a leader with twelve
subordinates. In Central Europe these elements are
interwoven. In Western Europe, in the British Isles and later
also in America, there survived however a certain remnant of
the old aristocratic outlook such as existed in the feudal
nobility, in the old aristocracy, in that element which is
responsible for the social structure and introduces the
spiritual into the social life. That the spiritual element
was regarded as an integral part of the social life is
evident from the Arthurian legend which relates that it was
the duty of the Knights of the Round Table to slay monsters
and to wage war on demons. The spiritual therefore is
operative here; it can only be cultivated if it is not
imposed by decree, but is a spontaneous expression and is
consciously directed. Thus, whilst the People of the Church
developed in Central Europe there arose in the West,
especially amongst the English-speaking peoples, what may be
called the ‘People of the Lodges,’ to give a name to this
third stream. In the West there had existed originally a
tendency to form societies, to promote in these societies a
spirit of organization. But in the final analysis an
organization is only of value if it is created imperceptibly
by spiritual means, otherwise it must be imposed by decree.
And this is what happened in Central Europe; it was more in
the society which later developed as a continuation of
Celtism, in the English-speaking peoples, that attempts were
made to rule in conformity with the lodges. Thus arose the
‘People or Peoples of the Lodges’ whose conspicuous feature
is not the organization of mankind as a whole, but rather the
division of mankind into separate groups and orders.
The division
into orders stems from this continuation of the feudal
element which is associated with the legend of King Arthur.
In history things are interwoven. One can never understand a
new development if one imagines that the effect follows
directly from the cause. In the course of development things
interpenetrate. And it is a strange fact that, in relation to
its mode of representation and to everything that is active
in the human soul, the principle of the lodges (of which
freemasonry is a grotesque caricature) is inwardly related to
Jesuitism. Though Jesuitism is bitterly hostile to the
lodges, there is nevertheless great similarity in their mode
of representation. And a Celtic streak in Ignatius Loyola
certainly contributed to his consummate achievement.
In the East
therefore the People of the Christ arose; they were the
bearer of the continuous Christ impulse. For the man of the
East accepts as a matter of course that throughout his life
he receives the continuous influx of the Christ impulse. For
the People of the Christ in Central Europe this impulse has
become blunted or emasculated because it has been associated
with a unique event at the beginning of our era and was later
supplemented by the promulgation of decrees, state decrees,
and by traditional transmission in conformity with Catholic
doctrine. In the West, in the system of the Lodges, the
Christ impulse was at first very much in question and so
became still further emasculated. Thus the modes of thinking
which really originate in this lodge impulse, which stems
from Celtism and is a last echo of Celtism, gave birth to
deism and what is called modern Aufklärung.
[ Note 3 ]
It is extremely interesting to see the vast difference between
the attitude of a member of the People of the Church in Central
Europe to the Christ impulse and that of a citizen of the
British Empire. But I must ask you not to judge this
difference of attitude by the isolated individual, for
obviously the impulse of the Church has spread also to
England and one must accept things as they are in reality;
one must take into account those people who are associated
with what I have described as the lodge impulse which has
invaded the state administration especially in the whole of
the West.
The question
is: What then is the relationship of the member of the People
of the Christ to Christ? He knows that when he is really at
one with himself he finds the Christ impulse — for this
impulse is present in his soul and is continuously active in
his soul. The member of the People of the Church speaks,
perhaps, like Augustine who, at the age of maturity, in
answer to the question, how do I find the Christ? replied:
‘The Church tells me who is the Christ. I can learn it from
the Church, for the Church has preserved in its tradition the
original teaching about the Christ.’ — He who belongs to
the People of the Lodges — I mean the true member of the
Lodges — has a different approach to the Christ from
the People of the Church and the People of the Christ. He
says to himself: history speaks of a Christ who once existed.
Is it reasonable to believe in such a Christ? How can the
influence of Christ be justified historically before the bar
of reason? This, fundamentally, is the Christology of the
Aufklärung which demands that the Christ be vindicated
by reason.
Now in order to
understand what is involved here we must be quite clear that
it is possible to know God without the inspiration of the
Christ impulse. One need only be slightly mentally
abnormal — just as the atheist is a person who is
physically ill in some respect — to arrive at the idea of
God or admit the existence of God by way of speculation or of
mysticism. For deism is the fundamental belief of
Aufklärung. One arrives directly at the belief of the
Aufklärung that a God exists.
Now for
those who are heirs of the People of the Lodges it is
a question of finding a rational justification for the
existence of Christ alongside the universal God. Amongst the
various personalities characteristic of this rational
approach I have selected Herbert of Cherbury
[ Note 4 ]
who died in 1648, the year of the peace of Westphalia. He attempted
to find a rational justification for the Christ impulse. A true
member of the Russian people, for example, i.e. of the People
of the Christ, would find a rational approach to the Christ
impulse unthinkable. That would be tantamount to demanding of
him to justify the presence of his head upon his shoulders.
One possesses a head — and equally surely one possesses
the Christ impulse. What people such as Cherbury want to know
is something different: is it reasonable to accept alongside
the God, to the idea of whom enlightened thinking leads, the
existence of a Christ? One must first study man from a
rational point of view in order to find a justification for
this approach.
Not every
member of the People of the Lodges of course responds in this
way! The philosophers express their views in definite,
clear-cut concepts; but others are not given to reflection;
but all those who are in any way connected with the impulse
of the Peoples of the Lodges, instinctively, emotionally and
in the conclusions they unconsciously draw, adopt this
rational approach. Cherbury started from an examination of
the common factor in the different religions. Now this is a
typical trick of the Aufklärung. Since they themselves
cannot arrive at the spirit, at least as far as the Christ
impulse is concerned, but only at the abstract notion of the
god of deism, they ask: is it natural for man to discover
this or that? Cherbury, who had travelled widely,
endeavoured first of all to discover the common factor in the
different religions. He found that they had a great deal in
common and he tried to summarize these common factors in five
propositions. These five propositions are most important and
we must examine them closely.
The first
proposition states: A God exists. Since the various peoples
belonging to widely differing religions instinctively admit
the existence of a God, he finds it natural therefore to
admit that a God exists.
Secondly: The God demands veneration. Again a common feature
of all religions.
Thirdly: This veneration must consist in virtue and piety.
Fourthly: There must be repentence and expiation of sins.
Fifthly: In the hereafter there is a justice that rewards
and punishes.
As you see, there is no mention of the Christ impulse. But in
these five propositions one finds the most one can know when
one relies only upon the religious impulse emanating from the
Lodges. Aufklärung is a further development of this way
of looking at things. Hobbes,
[ Note 5 ]
Locke
[ Note 5 ]
and others constantly
raised the question: since there is a tradition which speaks
of Jesus Christ, is it reasonable to believe in His existence?
And finally they are prepared to say: what is written in
the Gospels, what is handed down by tradition on the subject
of Christ Jesus agrees with the fundamental tenets common to
all religions. It seems that the Christ wished to collate the
common factors in all religions, that a divinely inspired
personality (this can be envisaged more or less) had once
existed who taught what is best in all religions. The
Aufklärer found this to be reasonable. And Tindal who
lived from 1647–1733 wrote a book entitled Christianity as
Old as Creation. This book is very important for it gives us
an insight into the nature of Aufklärung which was
subsequently diluted by Voltaireism etcetera. Tindal wanted
to show that in reality all men, the more enlightened men,
have always been Christians, and that Christ simply embodied
the best in all religions.
Thus the Christ
is reduced to the status of a teacher: whether we call Him
Messiah or Master, or what you will, He is nothing more than
a teacher. It is not so much the fact of the Christ that is
important, but that He exists and dwells amongst us, that He
offers a religious teaching embodying the most precious
element, the element which is common to the religions of the
rest of mankind.
The idea I have
just expressed may of course assume widely different forms,
but the basic form persists — the Christ is teacher.
When we consider the typical representatives of the People of
the Christ, the People of the Church and the People of the
Lodges, representatives who show wide variations, when we
seek the reality behind the appearance, then we can say that
for the People of the Christ: Christ is Spirit and therefore
He is in no way concerned with any institutions on the
physical plane. But the mystery of His incarnation remains.
For the People of the Church: Christ is King, a conception
which may assume various nuances. And this conception lives
on also in the People of the Lodges, but in its further
development it is modified and becomes: Christ is the
Teacher.
We must bear in
mind these different aspects of the European consciousness
for they are deeply rooted not only in the individual, but
also in what has developed spiritually in Europe in the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch and also in many of the social forms.
They are the principal nuances assumed by the Christ impulse.
Much more could be said on this subject; I can only give a
brief outline today since my time is short.
Let us now
return to the three forms of evolution of which I spoke
yesterday. In its present stage of development the whole of
mankind is now living in the Sentient Soul, corresponding to
the age of twenty-eight to twenty-one in man. Every single
man, qua individual, develops the Consciousness Soul today in
the course of the post-Atlantean epoch. Finally a third
evolution unfolds within the folk-souls of which I spoke
yesterday. We have, on the one hand, the historical facts and
the influence they exert, and on the other hand the
folk-souls with their different religious nuances. As a
result of this interaction, for the People of the Christ:
Christ is the Spirit; for the People of the Church: Christ is
the King; for the People of the Lodges: Christ is the
Teacher. These different responses are determined by the
different folk characteristics. That is the third
evolution.
In external
reality things always interpenetrate — they work upon
each other and through each other. If you ask who is
representative of the People of the Lodges, of the deism of
the Aufklärung then, strangely enough, a perfect example
is Harnack
[ Note 6 ]
in Berlin! He is a much more representative
example than anyone on the other side of the Channel. In
modern life things are much confused. If we wish to
understand events and trace them back to their origin we must
look beyond externalities. We must be quite clear that the
third stream of evolution which is linked to the national
element is connected with what I have described here. But
because of the presence of the other evolutionary currents a
reaction always follows, the assault of the Consciousness
Soul upon this national element, and this assault manifests
itself at diverse points. It starts from different centres.
And one of these waves of assault is Goetheanism which, in
reality, has nothing to do with what I have just described,
and yet, when considered from a particular angle, is closely
related to it. Parallel with the Arthurian current there
developed early on the Grail current which is the antithesis
of the Arthurian current. He who wishes to visit the Temple
of the Grail must follow dangerous and almost inaccessible
paths for sixty miles. The Temple lies remote and well
concealed; one learns nothing there unless one asks. In
brief, the purpose of this whole Grail impulse is to restore
the link between the inmost core of the human soul (where the
Consciousness Soul awakens) and the spiritual world. It is
(if I may say so) an attempt artificially to lift up the
sensible world to the spiritual world which is instinctive in
the People of the Christ. The following diagram shows this
strange interpenetration of the religious impulses of Europe.
We have here an impulse which still exists today
instinctively, in embryo and undeveloped, in the People of
the Christ (red); philosophic spirits such as Solovieff come
to accept this Christ impulse as something self-evident.
On account of
its ethnographical and ethnic situation, Central Europe is
not disposed to accept the Christ impulse as something
self-evident; it had to be imposed artificially. And so we
have an intervention of the current of the Grail radiating in
the direction of Europe — a Grail current that is not
limited therefore to the folk element. This Grail atmosphere
was active in Goethe, in the depths of his subconscious. If
you look for this Grail atmosphere you will find it
everywhere. Goethe is not an isolated phenomenon in this
respect and therefore he is linked with what preceded him in
the West. He has nothing in common with Luther, German
mysticism and its forerunners; this was in part a formative
influence and helped to shape him as a man of culture. It is
the Grail atmosphere which leads him to distinguish three
stages in man's relation to religion: first the religion of
the people; secondly, the religion of the philosophers
portrayed in the second gallery, and finally the most
intimate religion in the third gallery, the religion which
touches the inmost depths of the soul and embraces the
mysteries of death and resurrection. It is the Grail
atmosphere which inspires him to exalt the religious impulse
active in the sensible world and not to drag it down after
the fashion of the Jesuits. And paradoxical as it may seem
today the Grail atmosphere is found today in Russia. And the
future role that the Russian soul will play in the sixth
post-Atlantean epoch depends upon this unconquerable spirit
of the Grail in the Russian people.
So much for the
one side. Let us now consider the other side. Here we have
those who regard the Christ impulse neither as an
inspiration, as in the East, nor as a living force
transmitted by tradition and the Scriptures, but as something
rational. It is in this form that it spread within the Lodges
and their ramifications. (In the diagram I indicate this by
the colour green.) Later it became politicized in the West
and is the last offshoot of the Arthurian current. And just
as the Christ impulse in the Russian people is continued in
the Grail quest and irradiates all men of good will in the
West, so the other current penetrates into all members of the
People of the Church and takes on the particular colouring of
Jesuitism. That the Jesuits are the sworn enemy of that which
emanates from the Lodges is not important: anyone and
anything can be the declared enemy of the outlook of the
Lodges. It is a historical fact that the Jesuits have not
only infiltrated the Lodges, that high-ranking Jesuits are in
contact with the high dignitaries of the Lodges, but that
both, though active in different peoples, have a common root,
though the one gave birth to the Papacy, the other to
freedom, rationalism, to the Aufklärung. I have now
given you a kind of picture of what may be called the working
of the evolution of the Consciousness Soul. I described to
you earlier the three stages of evolution proceeding from the
East to the West which are based on the ethnic element. That
they assumed the form of Aufklärung in the West, as a
consequence of interaction, is due to the fact that every
individual is involved in the evolution of the Consciousness
Soul.
Then we have a
third current of evolution in which the whole of mankind is
involved and by virtue of which mankind ceases to develop
physically at an ever earlier age. Today mankind as a whole
is at the ‘age’ of the Sentient Soul, i.e. between the ages
of twenty-eight and twenty-one. This applies to the whole of
mankind.
In describing
the first current, the ethnic current when folk or tribal
religions arise within Christianity such as the religion of
the Christ, the religion of the Church and the religion of
the Lodges, we are speaking from the standpoint of the
evolution of peoples (or nations) which I usually
characterize as follows: the Italian peoples = the Sentient
Soul; the French peoples = the Intellectual or Mind Soul,
etcetera. We have described how the Consciousness Soul
develops in every individual in the course of the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch. In this consciousness we have the
element that streams into religion. But from that moment
begins the interaction with the other current, with the
evolution of the Sentient Soul (common to all men) which
follows a parallel course and is a far more unconscious
process than that of the evolution of the Consciousness
Soul.
If you study
how a man like Goethe — though the impulses are often
subconscious — nevertheless determines consciously his
religious orientation, you see the working of the
Consciousness Soul. But at the same time another element is
at work in modern mankind, an element which finds powerful
expression in the instinctive life, in unconscious impulses,
and is intimately associated with the evolution of the
Sentient Soul. And this is the trend towards socialism which
is now in its early stages and will end in the way I have
described. The initial impetus, it is true, is always given
by the Consciousness Soul (as I have already indicated); but
the development of socialism is the mission of the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch and will end in the fourth millennium
when it will have fulfilled its purpose. This is owing to the
fact that mankind collectively is at the age of the Sentient
Soul, corresponding to the age of twenty-eight to twenty-one
in man. Socialism is not a matter of party politics, although
there are many parties within the community, within the body
social. Socialism is not a party political question as such,
but a movement which of necessity will gradually develop in
the course of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. And when this
epoch has run its course an instinctive feeling for socialism
will be found in all men in the civilized world.
In addition to
the interaction of these currents in the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch there is also at work that which lies in the depths of
the subconscious, the desire to find the right social
structure for all mankind from now until the fourth
millennium. From a deeper point of view it is not in the
least surprising that socialism stirs up all sorts of ideas
which could be highly dangerous when one recalls that they
derive their impulses from the depths of the subconscious,
that everything is in a state of ferment and that the time is
still far distant before it will come into its own. But there
are rumblings beneath the surface — not, it is true, in
the souls of men at present, i.e. in the astral body —
but in the etheric body, in the temperaments of men. And
people invent theories to explain these stirrings in the
temperaments of men particularly. If these theories do not
explain, as does spiritual science, what lies behind maya,
then these theories, whether they are the theories of
Bakunin,
[ Note 7 ]
Marx, Lassalle and the like, are simply masks,
disguises, veils that conceal reality. One only becomes aware
of the realities when one probes deeply into human evolution
as we have attempted to do in this survey. All that is now
taking place (i.e. in 1918) in the external world are simply
tempestuous preparations for what after all is now
smouldering, one may say, not in the souls of men, but in
their temperaments. You are all socialists and you are often
unaware how deeply impregnated you are with socialism because
it is latent in your temperament, in the subconscious. But it
is only when we are aware of this fact that we overcome that
nebulous and ridiculous search for self-knowledge which looks
inward and finds only a caput mortuum, a spiritual void, an
abstraction. Man is a complex being and in order to
understand him we must understand the whole world. It is
important to bear this in mind.
Consider from
this point of view the evolution of mankind in the course of
the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. First, the People of the
Christ in the East with its fundamental impulse: Christ is
Spirit. It is in the nature of this people to give to the
world through Russianism, as if with elemental force and from
historical necessity, that for which the West of Europe could
only have prepared the ground. To the Russian people as such
has been assigned the mission to develop the essential
reality of the Grail as a religious system up to the time of
the sixth post-Atlantean epoch, so that it may then become a
cultural ferment for the whole world. Small wonder then
that when this impulse encounters the other impulses the
latter assume strange forms.
What are these
other impulses? Christ is King and Christ is Teacher. One can
scarcely call ‘Christ is Teacher’ an impulse,
for, as I have already said, the Russian soul does not really
understand what it means, does not understand that one can
teach Christianity and not experience it in one's soul. But
as for the conception ‘Christ is King’ — it
is inseparable from the Russian people. And we now see the
clash between two things which never had the slightest
affinity, the clash between the impulse ‘Christ is Spirit’
and Czarism, an oriental caricature of the principle which
seeks to establish temporal sovereignty in the domain of
religion. ‘Christ is King and the Czar is his
representative’ — here we have the association of the
Western element manifested in Czarism with something that is
completely alien to Czarism, something that, through the
agency of the Russian folk soul, permeates the sentient life
of the Russian people.
A
characteristic feature of external physical reality is that
those things which inwardly are often least related to each
other must rub off on each other externally. Czarism and
Russianism have always been strangers to each other, they
never had anything in common. Those who understand the
Russian nature, especially its piety, must have found the
attitude to the elimination of Czarism as something
self-evident when the time was ripe. But remember that this
conception ‘Christ is Spirit’ touches the deepest springs of
our being, that it is related to the highest expression of
the Consciousness Soul and that, whilst socialism is
smouldering beneath the surface, it collides with that which
dwells in the Sentient Soul. Small wonder then that the
expansion of socialism in Eastern Europe assumes forms that
are totally incomprehensible: a chaotic interplay of the
culture of the Consciousness Soul and the culture of the
Sentient Soul.
Much that
occurs in the external world becomes clear and comprehensible
if we bear in mind these inner relationships. And it is vital
for mankind today and for its future evolution that it does
not neglect, out of complacency or indolence, its essential
task, namely, to comprehend the situation in which we now
find ourselves. People have not understood this situation,
nor have they attempted to understand it. Hence the chaos,
the terrible catastrophe which has overtaken Europe and
America. We shall not find a way out of the present
catastrophic situation until men begin to see themselves as
they are and to see themselves objectively in the context of
present evolution and the present epoch. We cannot afford to
ignore this.
That is why it
is so important to me that people should realize that the
Anthroposophical Movement, as I envisage it, must be
associated with an awareness of the great evolutionary
impulses of mankind, with the immediate demands of our time.
It is tragic that the present age shows little inclination to
understand and to consider the Anthroposophical
Weltanschauung precisely from this point of view.
I should now
like to round off what I said last week in connection with
The Philosophy of Freedom
by a consideration of more general
points of view. From what I have said you will realize that
the rise of socialism
[ Note B ]
at the present time is a movement
deeply rooted in human nature, a movement that is steadily
gaining ground. For those endowed with insight the present
negative reactions to the advance of socialism are simply
appalling. Despite its ominous rumblings,
despite its noisy claims to recognition, it is evident that
socialism, this international movement which is spreading
throughout the world, prefigures the future and that what we
are now seeing, the creation of all kinds of national states
and petty national states at the present time, is a
retrograde step that inhibits the evolution of mankind. The
dictum ‘to every nation its national state’ is a terrible
obstacle to an understanding of the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch. Where this will end nobody knows; but this is what
people are saying! At the same time this outlook is entirely
permeated with the backward forces of the Arthurian impulse,
with the desire for external organization. The antithesis to
this is the Grail quest which is intimately related to
Goethean principles and aims at individualism, at autonomy in
the domain of ethics and science; it concerns itself
especially with the individual and his development and not
with groups which have lost their significance today and
which must be eliminated by means of international socialism
because that is the trend of evolution.
And for this
reason one must also say: in Goetheanism with its
individualism — you will recall that I emphasized the
individualism in Goethe's Weltanschauung in my early Goethe
publications and also in my book Goethe's Weltanschauung when
I showed that this individualism is a natural consequence of
Goetheanism — in this individualism, which can only
culminate in a philosophy of feedom, there lies that which of
necessity must lead to the development of socialism. And so
we can recognize the existence of two polesindividualism and
socialism — towards which mankind tends in the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch. In order to develop a right
understanding of these things we must ascertain what
principle must be added to socialism if socialism is to
follow the true course of human evolution. The socialists of
today have no idea what, of necessity, socialism entails and
must entail — the true socialism that will be achieved
to some extent only in the fourth millennium if it develops
in the right way. It is especially important that this
socialism be developed in conjunction with a true feeling for
the being of the whole man, for man as a tripartite being of
body, soul and spirit. The religious impulses of the
particular ethnic groups will contribute in their different
ways to an understanding of this tripartite division of man.
The East and the Russian people to the understanding of the
spirit; the West to an understanding of the body; Central
Europe to an understanding of the soul. But all these
impulses are interwoven of course. They must not be
systematized or classified, but within this tripartite
division the real principle, the true impulse of socialism
must first be developed.
The
real impulse of socialism consists in the realization of
fraternity in the widest sense of the term in the external
structure of society. True fraternity of course has nothing
to do with equality. Take the case of fraternity within the
same family: where one child is seven years old and his
brother is newly born there can be no question of equality.
One must first understand what is meant by fraternity. On the
physical plane the present state-systems must be replaced
throughout the whole world by institutions or organizations
which are imbued with fraternity. On the other hand,
everything that is connected with the Church and religion
must be independent of external organization, state
organization and organizations akin to the state; it must
become the province of the soul and be developed in a
completely free community. The evolution of socialism must be
accompanied by complete freedom of thought in matters of
religion.
Present-day
socialism in the form of social democracy has declared that
‘religion is a private matter’. But it observes
this dictum about as much as a mad bull observes fraternity
when it attacks someone. Socialism has not the slightest
understanding of religious tolerance, for in its present form
socialism itself is a religion; it is pursued in a sectarian
spirit and displays extreme intolerance. Socialism therefore
must be accompanied by a real flowering of the religious life
which is founded upon the free communion of souls on
earth.
Just think for
a moment how radically the course of evolution has thereby
been impeded. There must be opposition to evolution at first,
so that one can then work for a period of time towards the
furtherance of evolution; this, in its turn, will be followed
by a reaction and so on. I spoke of this in discussing the
general principles of history. I pointed out that nothing is
permanent, everything that exists is doomed to perish. Think
of the opposition to this parallel development of freedom of
thought in the sphere of religion and in the sphere of
external social life, a development that can only be realized
within the state community! If socialism is to prevail the
religious life must be completely independent of the state
organization; it must inspire the hearts and souls of men who
are living together in a community, completely independent of
any kind of organization. What mistakes have been made in
this domain! ‘Christ is the Spirit’ — and alongside
this, the terrible ecclesiastical organization of Czarism!
‘Christ is the King’ — complete
identification of Czarism and religious convictions!
[ Note C ]
And not only has the Roman Catholic Church established itself
as a political power, it has also managed, especially in the
course of recent centuries, indirectly through Jesuitism, to
infiltrate the other domains, to participate in their
organization and to imbue them with the spirit of Catholicism.
Or take the case of Lutheranism. How has it developed? It is
true that Luther was the product of that impulse
[ Note D ]
of which I have already spoken here on another
occasion — he is a typical Janus who turns one face to
the fourth post-Atlantean epoch and the other to the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch, and in this respect he is animated by
an impulse in conformity with our time. Luther appears on the
stage of history — but what happens then? What Luther
wanted to realize in the religious sphere is associated with
the interests of the petty German princes and their Courts. A
prince is appointed bishop, head of synod, etcetera. Thus we
see harnessed together two realms which should be completely
independent of each other. Or to take another
example — the stateprinciple which permeates the external
organization of the state is impregnated with the Catholic
religious principle, as was the case in Austria, the Austria
which is now disintegrating; and to this, fundamentally,
Austria's downfall must be attributed. Under other
leadership, especially that of Goetheanism, it would have
been possible to restore order in Austria.
On the other
hand, amongst the English-speaking population in the West the
princes and the aristocracy have everywhere infiltrated the
Lodges. It is a characteristic feature of the West that one
cannot understand the state organization unless we bear in
mind that it is permeated with the spirit of the Lodges
— and France and Italy are thoroughly infected by
it — any more than one can understand Central Europe
unless one realizes that it is impregnated with Jesuitism. We
must bear in mind therefore that grievous mistakes have been
made in respect of freedom of thought and social equality
that must necessarily accompany socialism.
The development
of socialism must be accompanied by another element in the
sphere of the spiritual life — the emancipation of all
aspiration towards the spirit, which must be independent of
the state organization, and the removal of all fetters from
knowledge and everything connected with knowledge. Those
‘barracks’ of learning called universities, which are
scattered throughout the world are the greatest impediment to
the evolution of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. Just as
there must be freedom in the sphere of religion, so, too, in
the sphere of knowledge all must be free and equal, everyone
must be able to play his part in the further development of
mankind. If the socialist movement is to develop along
healthy lines, privileges, patents and monopolies must be
abolished in every branch of knowledge. Since, at the present
time, we are still very far from understanding what I really
mean, there is no need for me to show you in any way how
knowledge could be freed from its fetters, and how every man
could thus be induced to participate in evolution. For that
will depend upon the development of far reaching impulses in
the sphere of education, and in the whole relationship
between man and man. Ultimately all monopolies, privileges
and patents which are related to the possession of
intellectual knowledge will disappear; man will have no
other choice but to affirm in every way and in all domains
the spiritual life that dwells in him and to express it with
all the vigour at his command. At a time when there is a
growing tendency for the universities, for example, to claim
exclusive rights in medicine, when in widely different
spheres people wish to organize everything with maximum
efficiency, at such a time there is no need to discuss
spiritual equality in detail, for at present this is far
beyond our reach and most people can safely wait until their
next incarnation before they arrive at a complete
understanding of what is to be said on the subject of this
third point. But the first steps of course can be undertaken
at all times.
Since we are
involved in the modern world and the modern epoch, all we can
do is to be aware of the impulses at work, especially
socialism and what must accompany itfreedom
of religious thought, equality in the sphere of
knowledge. Knowledge must become equal for all, in the sense
of the proverb which says that in death all men are equal,
death is the great leveller; for knowledge, even as death,
opens the door to the super-sensible world. One can no more
acquire exclusive rights for death than one can acquire
exclusive rights for knowledge. To do so nevertheless is to
produce not men who are vehicles of knowledge, but those who
have become the so-called vehicles of knowledge at the
present time. These words in no way refer to the individual;
they refer to what is important for our time, namely, the
social configuration of our time. Our epoch especially which
saw the gradual decline of the bourgeoisie has shown how all
rebellion against that which runs counter to evolution is
increasingly ineffective today. The Papacy firmly sets its
face against evolution. When, in the seventies, the ‘Old
Catholics’
[ Note 8 ]
rejected the dogma of papal infallibility, this
consummation of papal absolutism, life was made difficult for
them (and is still made difficult for them today); meanwhile
they could render valuable service by their resistance to
papal absolutism.
If you recall
what I have said you will find that, at the present time,
there exists on the physical plane something which in reality
belongs to the soul life and to the spiritual life of men
whilst on the external physical plane fraternity seeks to
manifest itself. That which does belong directly to the
physical plane, i.e. freedom, has manifested itself on the
physical plane and has organized it. Of course in so far as
men live on the physical plane and freedom dwells in the
souls of men, it belongs to the physical plane; but where
people are subject to organizations on this plane there is no
place for freedom. On the physical plane, for example,
religions must be able to be exclusively communities of souls
and must be free from external organization. Schools must be
organized on a different basis, and above all, they must not
become state-controlled schools. Everything must be
determined by freedom of thought, by individual needs.
Because in the world of reality things interpenetrate it may
happen that today socialism, for example, often denies its
fundamental principle. It shows itself to be tyrannical, avid
for power and would dearly like to take everything into its
own hands. Inwardly, it is, in reality, the adversary of the
unlawful prince of this world who appears when one organizes
externally the Christ impulse or the spiritual in accordance
with state principles, when, in the external organization,
fraternity alone does not suffice.
When we discuss
vital and essential questions of the contemporary world we
touch upon matters which mankind finds unpalatable today. But
it is important that these problems should be thoroughly
understood. It is only by gaining a clear understanding of
these problems that we can hope to escape from the present
calamitous situation. I must repeat again and again that we
shall only be able to contribute to the true evolution of
mankind by acquiring knowledge of the impulses which can be
found in the way I have described.
When I
discussed here a week ago my book
The Philosophy of Freedom
I tried to show how, as a result of my literary activities, I
was rejected everywhere. You will recall no doubt that in
many fields my work met with opposition. Even when I
attempted in the recent fateful years to draw attention to
Goetheanism I was ignored on all sides. Goetheanism does not
mean that one writes or says something on the subject of
Goethe, but it is also Goetheanism to search for an answer to
the question: What is the best solution, anywhere in the
world at the present time, when all nations are at each
others throats? But here too I felt myself ignored on all
sides. I do not say this out of pessimism, for I know the
workings of Karma much too well for that. Nor do I say it
because I would not do the same again tomorrow if the
opportunity presented itself. I must say it because it is
necessary to apprise mankind of many things, because only by
insight into reality can mankind, for its part, find the
impulses appropriate to the present age.
Must it then be
that men will never succeed in finding the path to the
‘light’ by awakening that which dwells in their hearts and
their inmost souls? Must they then come to the ‘light’
through external constraint? Must everything collapse about
their ears before they begin to think? Should not this
question be raised afresh every day? I do not ask that the
individual shall do this or that — for I know only too
well that little can be done at the present moment. But what
is necessary is to have insight and understanding, to avoid
false judgement and the passive attitude which refuses to see
things as they really are.
A remark which
I read in the Frankfurter zeitung this morning made a strange
impression upon me. It was an observation of a man whom I
knew intimately some eighteen or twenty years ago and with
whom I have discussed many different questions. I read in the
Frankfurter zeitung an article by this man; it was from the
pen of Paul Ernst,
[ Note 9 ]
poet and dramatist, whose plays have been
performed on the public stage. I knew him intimately at that
time. It was a short article on moral courage and in it I
read a sentence — it is indeed very encouraging to find
such a sentence today, but one must constantly raise the
question: must we suffer the present catastrophe for such a
sentence to be possible? A cultured German, a man who is
German to the core writes: in Germany people have always
maintained that we are universally hated. I should like to
know (he writes) who on earth really hated the creative
genius of Germany? And then he recalls that in recent years
it is the Germans themselves who have shown the greatest
antipathy to the creative genius of Germany.
And in
particular they harbour a real inner antipathy to
Goetheanism. I do not say this in order to criticize in any
way, and certainly not — you would hardly expect this
of me — to say something that would in any way imply
making concessions to Wilsonism. It is tragic when things
happen only under constraint, whereas they could be truly
beneficial if they were the fruit of freedom. For today that
which must be the object of freedom must stem from free
thoughts. I must constantly reiterate that I say these things
not in order to evoke pessimism, but in order to appeal to
your hearts and souls so that you, in your turn, may appeal
to the hearts and souls of others and so awaken
insight — and therefore understanding! What has suffered
most in recent years is judgement that has allowed itself to
be clouded by submission to authority. How happy people are,
the world over, that they have a schoolmaster for their idol
(i.e. Wilson), that they no longer need to think for themselves!
This must not be accounted a virtue or defect of any
particular nation. It is something that is now widespread and
must be resisted: we must endeavour to support our
judgements with sound reasoning. One does not form judgements
by getting up an one's hind legs and pronouncing judgements
indiscriminately. Those who are often the leading
personalities today — and I have already spoken of this
in a different context — are the worst possible choice,
the products of the particular circumstances of our time. We
must be aware of this. It is not a question of clinging to
slogans such as democracy, socialism etcetera; what is
important is to perceive the realities behind the words.
That is what
one feels, what comes to mind at the present time when one
sees so clearly that the few who are shaken out of their
complacency awaken only under constraint, when compelled to
do so by constraint. That is why one says to oneself: what
matters is judgement, insight and understanding. In order to
gain insight into the evolution of nations we must bear in
mind these deeper relationships. We must have the courage to
say to ourselves: all our knowledge of ethnology and
everything that is concerned with the social organization is
valueless unless one is aware of these things. We must summon
up the courage to say this and it is of this courage that I
wanted to speak. I have spoken long enough, but I felt that
it was important to show the direct connection between the
deeper European impulses and those of the present time.
As you are
aware one can never know from one day to the next how long
one is permitted to remain in a particular place — one
may be compulsorily directed at the behest of the
authorities. Whatever happens — one never knows how long
we may be together — in any case, though I may have to
leave very soon, the present lecture will not be the last. I
will see to it that I can speak to you again here in
Dornach.
Translator's Notes:
Note A:
See also
Goethestudien und Goetheanische Denkmethoden
(in Bibl. Nr. 36).
Note B:
See Soziale und antisoziale Triebe im Menschen,
[Social and Anti-Social Forces in the Human Being]
Bern, 12th December, 1918 (in Bibl. Nr. 186).
Note C:
Note — the stenogram is unclear.
Note D:
See 17th and 18th September, 1917,
Das Karma des Materialismus
(in Bibl. Nr. 176).
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