LECTURE ONE
WHEN
SOCIAL QUESTIONS are discussed from a spiritual scientific point of
view, this is not done out of any subjective motive or impulse.
Everything is based upon observation of the evolution of
humanity and of what the forces underlying that evolution
demand of us now and in the immediate future.
To reveal the deeper
impulses working at the present time is not a congenial task, for
there is little inclination to enter into such matters with any real
earnestness. But our age calls for this earnestness wherever the
affairs of humanity are concerned, above all for the discarding
of prejudices and preconceptions. Today, therefore, I shall put
before you certain deeper aspects of matters to which reference has
often been made.
Once again it is necessary
to survey a rather lengthy period in the life of humanity. As you
know, we distinguish the present epoch from other epochs, reckoning
that it began in the middle of the fifteenth century A.D. We speak of it as the fifth post-Atlantean epoch,
distinguishing it from the previous epoch which began in the eighth
century B.C. and is called the Greco-Latin
epoch after the peoples responsible for its culture. It was preceded
by the epoch of Egypto-Chaldean civilization.
When we come to consider
the Egypto-Chaldean epoch we find that the records of ordinary
history break down. Even with the help of accessible Egyptian and
Chaldean lore, external evidence does not carry us very far
back in the history of humanity.
But it is not possible to
grasp what is of importance for the present time unless we understand
the intrinsic characteristics of that third post-Atlantean epoch of
culture.
You are certainly aware
that in the ordinary history of that ancient time, all civilization,
all culture in the then-known world, goes by the name of paganism.
Like an oasis, Hebraic culture arises in its midst as a preparation
for Christianity. But disregarding for the moment this Jewish
culture, which differed so fundamentally from the other forms of
pre-Christian civilized life, let us turn our attention to
paganism. Its special characteristic may be said to lie in its
wisdom, in its deep insight into the things and processes of the
world. The knowledge contained in paganism had its source in
the ancient Mysteries and although according to modern scholarship it
bears a mythical, pictorial character, it must be emphasized that all
the imagery, all the pictures which have come down to posterity from
this ancient paganism are the fruits of profound insight.
Recalling the many
treasures of this super-sensible lore which we have been endeavoring
to bring to light, it will be obvious that here we have to do with a
primeval wisdom, a wisdom underlying all the thinking, all the
perceptions and feelings of those ancient peoples. A kind of echo of
this primeval wisdom, a tradition in which it was enshrined,
survived here and there in secret societies, actually in a healthy
form, until the end of the eighteenth century and at the beginning of
the nineteenth. In the nineteenth century the source ran dry and such
vestiges as remain have passed into the hands of isolated
groups belonging to certain, nationalities. And what is in the
possession of ordinary secret societies today can no longer be
regarded as wholesome or as a genuine tradition of the old pagan
wisdom.
Now this ancient wisdom has
one particular characteristic of which sight must never be lost. It
has one characteristic on account of which Judaism, the smaller
stream then making preparation for Christianity had to be introduced
as a kind of oasis.
If this ancient paganism is
rightly understood, it will be found to contain sublime, deeply
penetrating wisdom, but no moral impulses for human action.
These impulses were not really essential to humanity, for unlike what
now passes as human knowledge, human insight, this old pagan wisdom
gave one the feeling of being membered into the whole cosmos. People
moving about the earth not only felt themselves composed of the
substances and forces present around them in earthly life, in the
mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms, but they felt that the forces
operating, for example, in the movements of the stars and the sun
were playing into them. This feeling of being a member of the whole
cosmos was not a mere abstraction, for from the Mysteries they
received directives based on the laws of the stars for their actions
and whole conduct of life. This ancient star-wisdom was in no way
akin to the arithmetical astrology sometimes considered valuable
today, but it was a wisdom voiced by the initiates in such a way that
impulses for individual action and conduct went forth from the
Mysteries. Not only did human beings feel safe and secure within the
all-prevailing wisdom of the cosmos, but those whom they recognized
as the initiates of the Mysteries imparted this wisdom in directives
for their actions from morning till evening on given days of the
year. Yet, neither Chaldean nor Egyptian wisdom contained a single
moral impulse from what had been imparted by the initiates in
this way. The moral impulse in its real sense was prepared by
Judaism and then further developed in Christianity.
Inevitably the question
arises: Why is it that this sublime pagan wisdom, although it
contained no moral impulse, was able, for example in ancient Greece,
to come to flower in such beauty of art and grandeur of
philosophy?
If we were to go much
farther back, to a time more than three thousand years before the
Christian era, we should find that together with the promptings of
wisdom there did come a moral impulse, that the moral
principles, the ethics needed by these people of old were contained
in this wisdom. But a specific ethos, a specific moral impulse
such as came with Christianity was not an integral part of paganism.
Why was this? It was because through the millennia directly preceding
Christianity, this pagan wisdom was inspired from a place far away in
Asia, inspired by a remarkable being who had been incarnated in the
distant East in the third millennium before Christ — namely,
Lucifer.
To the many things we have
learned about the evolution of humanity, this knowledge too must be
added: that just as there was the incarnation which culminated in
Golgotha, the incarnation of Christ in the man Jesus of
Nazareth, there was an actual incarnation of Lucifer in far-off Asia,
in the third millennium B.C.And the
source of inspiration for much ancient culture was what can
only be described as an earthly incarnation of Lucifer in a man of
flesh and blood. Even Christianity, even the Mystery of Golgotha as
enacted among human beings, was understood at first by the only means
then available, namely the old luciferic wisdom. The one-sidedness of
the gnosis, for all its amazing profundity, stems from the influence
that had spread from this Lucifer incarnation over the whole of the
ancient world. The significance of the Mystery of Golgotha
cannot be fully grasped without the knowledge that rather less
than three thousand years previously, there had been the
incarnation of Lucifer.
In order that the luciferic
inspiration might be lifted away from its one-sidedness, there came
the incarnation of Christ and with it the impulse for the education
and development of European civilization and its American offshoot.
But since the middle of the fifteenth century, since the impulse for
the development of individuality, of personality, has been at work,
this phase of evolution has also contained within it certain forces
whereby preparation is being made for the incarnation of another
super-sensible Being. Just as there was an incarnation of Lucifer in
the flesh and an incarnation of Christ in the flesh, so, before only
a part of the third millennium of the post-Christian era has elapsed,
there will be, in the West, an actual incarnation of Ahriman: Ahriman
in the flesh. Humanity on earth cannot escape this incarnation of
Ahriman. It will come inevitably. But what matters is that people
shall find the right vantage point from which to confront it.
Whenever preparation is
being made for incarnations of this character, we must be alert to
certain indicative trends in evolution. A being like Ahriman, who
will incarnate in the West in time to come, prepares for this
incarnation in advance. With a view to his incarnation on the earth,
Ahriman guides certain forces in evolution in such a way that they
may be of the greatest possible advantage to him. And evil would
result were people to live on in a state of drowsy unawareness,
unable to recognize certain phenomena in life as preparations for
Ahriman's incarnation in the flesh. The right stand can be taken only
by recognizing in one or another series of events the preparation
that is being made by Ahriman for his earthly existence. And the time
has now come for individual human beings to know what tendencies and
events around them are machinations of Ahriman, helping him to
prepare for his approaching incarnation.
It would undoubtedly be of
the greatest benefit to Ahriman if he could succeed in preventing the
vast majority of people from perceiving what would make for their
true well-being, if the vast majority of people were to regard these
preparations for the Ahriman incarnation as progressive and good for
evolution. If Ahriman were able to slink into a humanity
unaware of his coming, that would gladden him most of all. It is for
this reason that the occurrences and trends in which Ahriman is
working for his future incarnation must be brought to light.
One of the developments in
which Ahriman's impulse is clearly evident is the spread of the
belief that the mechanistic, mathematical conceptions inaugurated by
Galileo, Copernicus, and others, explain what is happening in the
cosmos. That is why anthroposophical spiritual science lays such
stress upon the fact that spirit and soul must be
discerned in the cosmos, not merely the mathematical, mechanistic
laws put forward by Galileo and Copernicus as if the cosmos were some
huge machine. It would augur success for Ahriman's temptings if
people were to persist in merely calculating the revolutions of the
heavenly bodies, in studying astrophysics for the sole purpose
of ascertaining the material composition of the planets — an
achievement of which the modern world is so proud. But woe betide if
this Copernicanism is not confronted by the knowledge that the cosmos
is permeated by soul and spirit. It is this knowledge that Ahriman,
in preparing his earthly incarnation, wants to withhold. He
would like to keep people so obtuse that they can grasp only the
mathematical aspect of astronomy. Therefore he tempts many people to
carry into effect their repugnance to knowledge concerning soul and
spirit in the cosmos. That is only one of the forces of
corruption poured by Ahriman into human souls. Another means of
temptation connected with his incarnation — he also works in
cooperation with the luciferic forces — another of his
endeavors is to preserve the already widespread attitude that for the
public welfare it is sufficient if the economic and material needs of
humanity are provided for. Here we come to a point that is not
willingly faced in modern life. Official science nowadays contributes
nothing to real knowledge of the soul and spirit, for the methods
adopted in the orthodox sciences are of value only for apprehending
external nature, including the external human constitution. Just
think with what contempt average citizens today regard anything
that seems idealistic, anything that seems to be a path leading in
any way to the spiritual. At heart they are always asking: What is
the good of it? How will it help me to acquire this world's goods?
They send their sons to a private school, having perhaps been to one
themselves; they send them on to a university or institute of
advanced studies. But all this is done merely in order to provide the
foundations for a career, in other words, to provide the material
means of livelihood.
And now think of the
consequences of this. What numbers of people there are today who no
longer value the spirit for the sake of the spirit or the soul for
the sake of the soul! They are out to absorb from cultural life only
what is regarded as “useful.” This is a significant and
mysterious factor in the life of modern humanity and one that must be
lifted into the full light of consciousness. Average citizens, who
work assiduously in their offices from morning till evening and then
go through the habitual evening routine, will not allow themselves to
get mixed up with what they call the “twaddle” to be
found in anthroposophy. It seems to them entirely redundant, for they
think: that is something one cannot eat! It finally comes to this
— although people will not admit it — that in ordinary
life nothing in the way of knowledge is considered really useful
unless it helps to put food in the mouth!
In this connection people
today have succumbed to a strange fallacy. They do not believe that
the spirit can be eaten, and yet the very ones who say this,
do eat the spirit! Although they may refuse to accept anything
spiritual, nevertheless with every morsel that passes through the
mouth into the stomach they are devouring the spiritual, but
dispatching it along a path other than the path which leads to the
real well-being of mankind.
I believe that many
Europeans think it is to the credit of their civilization to be able
to say: We are not cannibals! But these Europeans and their American
affinities are, none the less, devourers of soul and spirit! The
soulless devouring of material food leads to the side-tracking of the
spirit. It is difficult to say these things today, for in the
light of such knowledge just think what would have to be said
of a large section of modern culture! To keep people in the state of
being devourers of the soul and spirit is one of Ahriman's impulses
in preparation for his incarnation. To the extent to which
people can be roused into conducting their affairs not for material
ends alone and into regarding a free and independent spiritual life,
equally with economic life, as an integral part of the social
organism — to that same extent Ahriman's incarnation will be
awaited with an attitude worthy of humanity.
Another tendency in modern
life of benefit to Ahriman in preparing his incarnation is all that
is so clearly in evidence in nationalism. Whatever can
separate people into groups, whatever can alienate them from mutual
understanding the whole world over and drive wedges between them,
strengthens Ahriman’s impulse. In reality we should recognize
the voice of Ahriman in what is so often proclaimed nowadays as a new
ideal: “Freedom of the peoples, even the smallest,” and
so forth. But blood relationship has ceased to be the decisive factor
and if this outworn notion persists, we shall be playing straight
into the hands of Ahriman. His interests are promoted, too, by the
fact that people are taken up with the most divergent shades of party
opinions, of which the one can be justified as easily as the other. A
socialist party program and an anti-socialist program can be
supported by arguments of equal validity. And if people fail to
realize that this kind of “proof” lies so utterly on the
surface that the No and the Yes can both be justified with our modern
intelligence — useful as it is for natural science but not for
a different kind of knowledge — if people do not realize that
this intelligence lies entirely on the surface in spite of serving
economic life so effectively, they will continue to apply it to
social life and spiritual life irrespectively. One group will prove
one thing, another it’s exact opposite, and as both proofs can
be shown to be equally logical, hatred and bitterness — of
which there is more than enough in the world — will be
intensified. These trends too are exploited by Ahriman in preparation
for his earthly incarnation.
Again, what will be of
particular advantage to him is the short-sighted, narrow conception
of the Gospel that is so prevalent today. You know how necessary it
has become in our time to deepen understanding of the Gospels through
spiritual science. But you also know how widespread is the motion
that this is not fitting, that it is reprehensible to bring any real
knowledge of the spirit or of the cosmos to bear upon the Gospels; it
is said that the Gospels must be taken “in all their
simplicity,” just as they stand. I am not going to raise the
issue that we no longer possess the true Gospels. The
translations are not faithful reproductions of the authentic Gospels,
but I do not propose to go into this question now. I shall merely put
before you the deeper fact, namely that no true understanding of
Christ can be reached by the simple, easy going perusal of the
Gospels beloved by most religious denominations and sects today. At
the time of the Mystery of Golgotha and for a few centuries'
afterward, a conception of the real Christ was still possible,
because accounts handed down by tradition could be understood with
the help of the pagan, luciferic wisdom. This wisdom has now
disappeared, and what sects and denominations find in the
Gospels does not lead people to the real Christ for whom we seek
through spiritual science, but to an illusory picture, at most to a
sublimated hallucination of Christ.
The Gospels cannot lead to
the real Christ unless they are illumined by spiritual science.
Failing this illumination, the Gospels as they stand give rise to
what is no more than hallucination of Christ's appearance in
world history. This becomes very evident in the theology of our time.
Why does modern theology so love to speak of the “simple man of
Nazareth” and to identify the Christ with Jesus of Nazareth
— whom it regards as a man only a little more exalted than
other great figures of history? It is because the possibility of
finding the real Christ has been lost, and because what people glean
from the Gospels leads-to hallucination, to a kind of illusion. An
illusory conception of Christ is all that can be` gleaned
through the way in which the Gospels are read today — not the
reality of Christ. In a certain sense this has actually dawned
on the theologians and many of them are now describing Paul's
experience on the way to Damascus as a “vision.” They
have come to the point of realizing that their way of studying
the Gospels can lead only to a vision, to hallucination. I am not
saying that this vision is false or untrue, but that it is merely an
inner experience, unconnected with the reality of the
Christ being. I do not use the word “illusion” with the
side-implication of falsity, but I wish only to stress that the
Christ Being is here a subjective, inner experience, of the same
character as hallucination. If people could be brought to a
standstill at this point, not pressing on to the real Christ but
contenting themselves with a hallucination of Christ, Ahriman's aims
would be immeasurably furthered.
The influence of the
Gospels also leads to hallucinations when one Gospel alone is taken
as the basis of belief. Truth to tell, this principle has been
forestalled by the fact that we have been given four Gospels,
representing four different aspects, and it does not do to take each
single Gospel word-for-word on its own, when outwardly there are
obvious contradictions. To take one single Gospel word-for-word and
disregard the other three is actually dangerous. What you find in
sects whose adherents swear by the literal content of the Gospel of
St. Luke alone or that of St. John alone is an illusory conception
arising from a certain dimming of consciousness. With the dimming of
consciousness that inevitably occurs when the deeper content of the
Gospels is not revealed, people would fall wholly into Ahriman's
service, helping in a most effective way to prepare for his
incarnation, and adopting toward him the very attitude he
desires.
And now another
uncomfortable truth for humankind today! Living in the arms of their
denominations, people say: “We do not need anthroposophy or
anything of the kind; we are content with the Gospels in all their
simplicity.” They insist that this is said out of
“humility.” In reality, however, it is the greatest
arrogance! For it means that such persons, making use of ideas which
have been presented to them through their birth and surge out of
their blood, are deigning to rule out the deeper treasures of wisdom
to be discovered in the Gospels. These “humblest” of
human beings are generally the most arrogant of all, especially in
the sects and denominations. The point to remember is, however, that
the people who do most to prepare for the incarnation of Ahriman are
those who constantly preach. “All that is required is to read
the Gospels word-for-word-nothing more than that!”
Strange to say, in spite of
their radical differences, the two parties play into each other's
hands: those whom I called “devourers of soul and spirit”
and those who demand the literal, word-for-word reading of the
Gospels. Each party plays into the hands of the other, furthering the
preparation of Ahriman's incarnation. For if the outlook
of the “devourers of soul and spirit” on the one side and
that of professed Christians who refuse to enter into the deeper
truths of the Gospels on the other were to hold the day, then Ahriman
would be able to make all human beings on the earth his own. A good
deal of what is spreading in external Christianity today is a
preparation for Ahriman's incarnation. And in many things which
arrogantly claim to represent true belief, we should recognize the
preparation for Ahriman's work.
Words nowadays do not
really convey the innermost reality of things. As I have often told
you, far too much store is set upon words — for words do not
necessarily lead to that reality; nowadays indeed it is rather a case
of words separating people from the real nature of things in the
world. And this they do most of all when people accept ancient
records such as the Gospels with “simple
understanding” — as the saying goes. But there is a far
truer simplicity in trying to penetrate to the in dwelling spirit of
things and to understand the Gospels themselves from the
vantage ground of the spirit.
As I told you, Ahriman and
Lucifer will always work hand in hand. The only question is which of
the two predominates in human consciousness at a particular epoch of
time. It was a preeminently luciferic culture that persisted until
after the Mystery of Golgotha — a culture inspired by the
incarnation of Lucifer in China in the third millennium B.C. Many influences of this incarnation continued to
radiate and were still powerful in the early Christian centuries;
indeed they are working to this day.
But now that we are facing
an incarnation of Ahriman in the third millennium after Christ,
Lucifer's tracks are becoming less visible, and Ahriman's
activities in such trends as I have indicated are coming into
prominence. Ahriman has made a kind of pact with Lucifer, the import
of which may be expressed in the following way. Ahriman, speaking to
Lucifer, says: “I, Ahriman, find it advantageous to make use of
‘preserving jars.’ To you I will leave people's
stomachs, if you will leave it to me to lull them to sleep —
that is to say to lull their consciousness to sleep where their
stomachs are concerned.”
You must understand what I
mean by this. The consciousness of those human beings whom I
have called devourers of soul and spirit is in a condition of dimness
so far as their stomachs are concerned; for, by not accepting
the spiritual into their human nature, they drive straight into the
luciferic stream everything they introduce into their stomachs. What
people eat and drink without spirituality goes straight to
Lucifer!
And what do I mean by
“preserving jars?” I mean libraries and institutions of a
similar kind, where the various sciences pursued by human beings
without really stirring their interest are preserved; these sciences
are not really alive in them but are simply preserved in the books on
the shelves of libraries. All this knowledge has been separated from
human beings. Everywhere there are books, books, books!
Themselves students, when they take their doctor's degree, have to
write a learned thesis which is then put into as many libraries as
possible. When the students want to take up some particular post,
again they must write a thesis! In addition to this, people are
forever writing, although only a very small proportion of what they
write is ever read. Only when some special preparation has to be made
do people resort to what is moldering away in libraries. These
“preserving jars” of wisdom are a particularly
favorable means of furthering Ahriman's aims.
This kind of thing goes on
everywhere. It could only be to some purpose if people took a really
live interest in it, but they do not, its existence is entirely
separate and apart. Just think — if one were so disposed one
might well despair — just think, for example, of a lawsuit
where a lawyer has to be engaged to plead the case. The time comes
when one has to discuss the matter. Documents pile up! The lawyer has
them all there in a dossier, but when one starts talking, this lawyer
has no inkling of the circumstances. The papers are turned over and
over without getting anywhere; the lawyer has no connection at all
with the documents. Here is one portfolio full of them, there
another. The number of documents grows and grows but as for interest
in them — that is simply nonexistent! These professional
people make one despair when one has dealings with them; they really
know nothing about the matter at issue, have no connection with it,
for everything remains in the documents. These are the little
preserving jars and the libraries are the big preserving jars of soul
and spirit. Everything is preserved in them but human beings do
not want to connect themselves with it, to permeate it with
their interest. And finally there arises the mood which does not want
the head to play any part in a professed view of the world. But after
all, the head, or some element of the head, is necessary for any
understanding! What people like is to base their religious
faith, their view of the world, on the heart alone. The heart must
play a part, of course; but the way in which people today often speak
of their religion reminds me of a saying much quoted in the district
where my youth was spent. It was to this effect: “There is
something very special about love. If you buy it, you buy the heart
only and the head is thrown in gratis.” This is more or less
the attitude which people today like to adopt in their view of life;
they would like to take in everything through the heart, as they say,
without exerting the head at all. The heart cannot beat without the
head, but the heart is well able to take things in if by
“heart” here one really means the stomach! And then, what
ought to be achieved through the head is supposed to be thrown in
gratis, especially where the most important things in life are
concerned. It is very important indeed to pay heed to these matters,
because in observing them it becomes evident what earnestness must be
applied to life at this juncture, how necessary it is to learn from
the illusions to which even the Gospels may give rise, and how dearly
humankind today loves those illusions.
Truth is beyond the reach
of the kind of knowledge for which people aspire today. They feel on
secure ground when they can reckon by means of figures, when they can
prove things by statistics. With statistics and figures Ahriman has
an easy game; it suits him admirably when some erudite scholar points
out, for example, that conditions in the Balkans are due to the fact
that the population of Macedonia consists of so many Greeks, so many
Serbs, so many Bulgarians. Nothing can stand up against figures
because of the faith that is reposed in them; and Ahriman is only too
ready to exploit figures for his purposes. But later on one begins to
see just how “reliable” such figures are! Admittedly,
figures are sometimes a means of proof, but if one goes beyond them
and investigates more closely, one often notices things like the
following. In the statistics of Macedonia, for example, a
father may be put down as a Greek, one son as a Serb, another son as
a Bulgarian; so the father is counted in with the Greeks, one son
with the Serbs, and the other with the Bulgarians. What would really
help one to get at the truth, however, would be to discover how it
has happened that in the same family one is said to be Greek, one
Serbian, and one Bulgarian, and how this affects the figures —
rather than simply accepting the figures that people find so
satisfactory today. If the father is Greek then naturally the
sons are Greek too. Figures are means whereby people are led astray
in a direction favorable to Ahriman for his future incarnation in the
third millennium A.D.
We shall speak of these
things again in the lecture tomorrow.
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