LECTURE GIVEN 22nd JANUARY 1921 IN DORNACH
Dornach, 22nd January 1921
My
dear friends,
On
the basis of those things which we discussed here in the last
lecture, I should now like to bring forward various details
which may perhaps be of use to you as members of the
Anthroposophical Movement for purposes of defence, whenever
from some corner or other, attacks are made against our
Anthroposophical Movement, and what must now appear in its
train. In recent times, one sees these attacks appearing
everywhere. To-day I will confine myself simply to attacks of a
certain kind, but at the present moment attacks are being
specially directed against our practical undertaking, against
which has to come forth as such from the Anthroposophical
Movement. Far and wide one can hear it said: — “Well,
these people are now founding a ‘Kommende Tag,’ a
‘Futurum’; — what do they mean to do with these
things? They only want to establish such practical things for
the use of those who confess themselves as belonging to the
Anthroposophical view of the world. Economic undertakings are
therefore set on foot, in order that those who confess to an
Anthroposophical world view may acquire a certain power, and in
the first place an economic power.”
If
those who make this reproach were to enter more closely into
what lies at the basis of such undertakings and see how they
proceed out of the whole spirit of the Anthroposophical
Movement, such a reproach could not be made; but, on the other
hand, one cannot deny that, even amongst those human beings who
stand within our Anthroposophical movement, often things are
said which contribute richly to the arising of such
misunderstandings. It is quite impossible, according to the
whole ways and methods by means of which what is here called
Anthroposophy seeks to relate itself to the world, it is
absolutely impossible that such a judgment can be in any way
justified, but that will only be clear to those who can grasp
the spirit of our whole Anthroposophical Movement. This
Anthroposophical Movement reckons with all the forces present
in the evolution of humanity. How often has it been emphasised
that the development of humanity has to undergo certain
points of transition, and that these turning points should be
observed. I should just like to point to one such turning
point, in order to show how little justified is the opinion
that we may have any definite dogma or theory which we seek to
bring to humanity.
It
may of course, occur, as a kind of anomaly, a kind of
out-growth of fanaticism amongst a few members, that they
should think they have to advocate a definite dogma; and
indeed, this may be considered right by many, but it does not
lie in the spirit of the Anthroposophical Movement. For if, in
the spirit of this Movement, we look back into human evolution,
then we find that in olden times, those ancient times in which
an instinctive clairvoyance was prevalent, the whole
disposition of Man's soul was different; man assumed a quite
different place in the world. What was striven for in those
places which we often designate as the Mysteries, in those
ancient epochs of human evolution? Let us for the present leave
all details aside, and just try to grasp the meaning of the
Mysteries.
Those who wore considered ripe and were found suitable for
being received into the Mysteries during their earth-life
— that means in the time between birth and death —
participated in a certain instruction given them by the Guides
in those Mysteries, and that instruction came from what the
Leaders of the Mysteries had to impart concerning the
super-sensible worlds. No Mystery-Leader made any secret of the
fact that, in his opinion, the teachings in the Mysteries
did not proceed only from human beings, but that, through the
special rites carried on in those Mysteries,
super-sensible beings, Divine Spiritual Beings were
present during the celebration of the Mysteries, and with the
assistance of those Gods present therein everything connected
with it was given out. The essential point was this: —
all the arrangements made in the Mysteries were of such a
nature that they attracted, so to speak Divine Spiritual
Beings, who, through the mouths of those who were the Leaders
of the Mysteries, gave instruction to those who were the pupils
therein.
In
those olden times, everything was so organised socially, that
not only were the arrangements made accepted by the Guides and
Pupils of the Mysteries, but even by those who stood outside
the Mysteries and who were not able to share in the life of the
Mysteries. The whole arrangements made as social arrangements
for humanity, were thus accepted.
One
need merely think of old Egypt, and of how those who were the
Leaders in the State received their directions from the
Mysteries. The Mysteries were regarded as the self-understood
place of direction for everything which had to occur within the
social life.
To-day, my dear friends, one can also impart instruction,
esoteric instruction, which can run in forms similar to those
old Mystery-arrangements; but all that has quite another
meaning to-day. That is because between our epoch and
that ancient epoch, in reference to such things, a significant
turning-point has occurred in the development of mankind. In
those ancient times man was, as it were, destined to receive
the instruction given through the Mysteries and through which
he approached those Divine Spiritual Beings, during his life
here, — between birth and death. Now things are
different. We are living after that turning-point in human
evolution, between birth and death. When these things altered,
that which man then had to learn through the Mysteries
between birth and death; — that, my dear friends, he now
learns to-day, before he descends through conception or
through birth into a physical body. He learns it according to
his Karma, and according to the preparations he had gone
through in a former life on earth. What man undergoes now in
the Spiritual world, between the great Midnight Hour of
existence and his next birth, is something which also includes
that Spiritual instruction.
You
will find what had to be said in another connection
concerning these things, in a cycle which I gave in
Vienna in 1914, on the life between Death and a New Birth; but
that was only indicated there, was only touched upon with a few
strokes. I will now try to characterise it more closely.
Man
to-day experiences something akin to the old Mystery
instruction, before he descends from the pre-existence
condition into his physical body. That is a factor with
which anyone must reckon, who through Spiritual knowledge,
stands in reality to-day. We must not think of a man born
to-day as he was thought of in olden times. In olden times he
was so considered that one could say: “He descends on to
the Earth and is destined to be initiated through the Mysteries
into the knowledge of what he really is as a human
being.”
The
case is not like that to-day. That arrangement was made for
human beings who had gone through a smaller number of earthly
lives than has the man of to-day, who has, of course, taken far
more into his soul in his many incarnations which made it
possible for him to receive certain instruction on the part of
the Divine Spiritual Beings in his pre-existent condition.
My
dear friends, we have to pre-suppose something of this nature
to-day, when we see a child. When we meet a child to-day, we
must realise that we no longer have the task of pouring into
that child that which had to be poured in, in olden times.
To-day it is our task to say: “This child has been
taught, he has only laid a physical body around his
already-instructed-soul; that which was his pre-birthly
instruction from the Gods must make its way through the veils
around that soul, it must be brought out.” That is how we
should think to-day in the sense of pedagogy, if we are to
think in the sense of true Anthroposophical Spiritual Science.
It will then be clear to us that, fundamentally, all our
instruction shall tend to remove those hindrances which lie
around that which the child brings with him into this world
from his pre-birthly existence. It is for that reason that, in
our Waldorf Teaching, such significance is laid on the fact
that the teacher should really regard the child before him as
something like a riddle that he has to solve, — in whom
he must seek that which the child is concealing in himself; he
must not lay the chief importance on anything which he has
undertaken to put into the child. He must never proceed
in any dogmatic way, but all the time he has to consider the
child itself as his teacher, and see how the child through its
special behaviour, betrays the very way in which those veils
are to be broken through; so that, from out of the child
itself, that Divine instruction can come forth. So the Waldorf
pedagogy and didactic consist in eliminating those veils which
are around the child, so that the child can come to itself, and
discover within itself its own Divine instruction. Therefore,
we say we have no need to inoculate into the child anything we
have conceived as a theory — no matter how beautifully it
may be put in our books; we leave that to those who are still
rooted in the ancient traditional religious Confessions. We
leave that to those who want to make children Catholics or
Evangelists or to those who want to make them Jews. That is not
our way, — we do not even want to inoculate
Anthroposophical pedagogy into the children. We simply want to
use what we have learned as Anthroposophy, to make ourselves
capable of evoking into being that living spirit which lives in
the child from its pre-existence. We want through
Anthroposophy to acquire a dexterity in teaching, and not a
number of dogmas, which we teach the children. We want to
become more dexterous ourselves; we want to evolve a didactic
art, so as to make of the child what it has to become. We
ourselves are quite clear that all the other knowledge which is
to-day brought from the most diverse sides, may indeed instruct
the head, but cannot make a person an artist in pedagogy; it
does not affect the whole man, but simply the head.
Anthroposophy grasps the whole human being and makes him a
manipulator of that artistic dexterity, (as I might call it)
which should be displayed to the pupils. Therefore, we use
Anthroposophy in order to become more dexterous teachers, but
not to bring it to the child. We are quite clear as to this:
— the spirit does not consist of a number of ideas, of
concepts; it is a living thing, and it appears in each
individual child in a quite special and individual way, if only
we ourselves are able to bring to its consciousness what each
child brings to the Earth with its birth here. My dear friends,
we would impoverish this Earth, if we only sought to bring to
the children things which can be comprised in a sum of dogmas;
while on the contrary we make the Earth richer if we cultivate
and cherish that which the Gods have given to the child
and which it brings with it to the
Earth. That which is the living spirit then appears in
ever so many human individualities; — not that which some
wish to bring as Anthroposophy to these human children in order
to make them uniform, but that which brings to life that living
spirit which dwells in them. That is our object, and for that
reason we have absolutely no interest in bringing
Anthroposophical dogma to the children. That is one of the
practical outcomes of Anthroposophical Spiritual Science.
This special didactic, this special pedagogic art, is quite
different from anything which human beings have thought of till
now, for they have only been able to think, for instance
“I believe in a certain dogma; that therefore is the best
which we can give to our children.” It does not interest
us at all to bring any dogmas to the children, for we know that
each child brings his own message when he appears on the Earth
through the Gate of Birth, and we should destroy that message
if we tried to meet it with dogma of any kind. The spirit does
not need to be cultivated in an abstract way; when one is able
to get it free and bring it to life, the living spirit itself
is then there, instead of a series of dogmas.
All
our “opinions” are only there as a means of
awakening the living spirit in humanity and to keep it quite in
a state of continual development; that is why it is quite a
wrong idea spread abroad that in the Waldorf School or in
anything else which we cultivate pedagogically, we wish to
carry on Anthroposophy in a dogmatic way. We do not wish to do
so in the Waldorf School, nor do we want to impress
Anthroposophy dogmatically on any Science. On the contrary, in
every single Science we want to bring out the individual nature
of that Science. We are quite convinced that it is essential to
create something in the world through Anthroposophy which
will extinguish all dogma and bring out the individual nature
of each particular sphere. From this point of view, it was
needful that those attacks springing up from all corners should
be repelled, whenever they turn on our bringing Anthroposophy
as Dogma into any Science, or pedagogy.
And
now, in what concerns our practical undertakings we find people
saying, with remarkable unanimity during the last few weeks in
Germany, as also in Switzerland and many other places, —
because of the recent publications of the “Kommenden
Tag” and the “Futurum,” — “Well,
these undertakings are all conducted by Anthroposophists
combining together so that they can have their own economic
undertakings, and so on. Other people perhaps nay be
admitted to these undertakings and concerns, but they will
certainly have no voice in the administration,” and so on
and so on. Now if we wanted to do things of this kind, it would
contradict the very principle on which we stand, i.e. we have
to keep the development of humanity in all its details clearly
before our minds, and not ask for something absolutely complete
and correct, but just ask ourselves: “What ought to take
place to-day?” Then we must pay attention to the second
turning-point in the evolution of humanity. To-day various
affairs, but especially economic affairs are developed amongst
humanity from a certain principle of inertia. Formerly these
arrangements were born in a tiny circle, usually in a tiny
territory. To-day, because they are as a rule State economic
concerns, we find, in the place of the individual undertakings
of the past, that we have imperial concerns, which have
consequently become gigantic, although we find them now
springing up from inertia. To-day one speaks of National
Economy, thereby welding two things together, the peculiar
Group-Spirit which holds a race together, a Group-Spirit is
externally, I might say, embodied in the blood. Now the
world-relationships have for a long time been of such a nature
that, with every kind of Group-Community which expresses itself
in the blood, modern economics can have nothing whatever to do,
— that is, if they are to be based on sound
relationships. So to-day, something is strongly expressed in an
economic relationship when the Rhine boundaries are discussed,
because it is desired to have on one side of the Rhine a
different economic arrangement to what exists on the other
side, because of the different racial and national
considerations. These national considerations have all
arisen from different forces, and to-day have nothing whatever
to do with that which constitutes world-economy
(Weltwirtschaft). These things have reached a certain crisis in
the course of the last third of the 19th Century. Then only did
these turning-points in evolution, in the evolution of
humanity, become so obvious.
As
we have just tried to explain, in olden times man entered
physical existence uninstructed by the Gods, and he had to be
taught through the Mysteries. To-day he enters already taught,
and that which is in his soul has only to be brought to his
consciousness. In ancient times, as regards the social and
economic life of mankind, things were so arranged that a
man was born into a definite social connection, into a certain
group, according to just those forces which worked in him
before his birth. It was not only the principle of physical
heredity which lay at the basis of the oldest forms of
inequality, which we find, for instance, in the oldest caste
divisions; — in the old caste division the Leaders of the
social orderings operated things according to the way in which
man, before his birth or conception was destined for a certain
Group of his fellow-human beings. In those times when fewer
earthly incarnations lay behind the earthly soul, then, because
of his fewer earthly incarnations on Earth, a man was born into
a quite definite Group, and in that one definite Group alone
could he develop socially. A man who, for instance, belonged to
a certain caste in Old India, belonged to it because of
what his soul had gone through in the Spiritual world; and,
because of the small number of his incarnations, if he had been
transferred to another caste he would have degenerated in his
soul. It was not only the blood-inheritance which lay at the
basis of the Caste system, but something which I must call
Spiritual pre-determination. Man has long grown out of that.
Between our Age and that old epoch there is in this respect
another turning-point. People to-day still bear within them
marks of a Group-nature, but that if simply a phantom-image.
People are born into certain nations, and also into a certain
class of society, but in the great number of people growing up
in a certain epoch one can already see, even in
childhood, that such a predetermination from a
pre-earthly existence no longer prevails to-day. To-day human
beings are instructed by the Gods in their pre-natal existence,
and the stamp of a definite Group is no longer impressed upon
them. The last relic of this still lingers in physical
heredity. In a sense, one might say that to belong with one's
consciousness to a Nationality is a piece of inherited sin and
is something which should no longer play a, part in the soul of
man.
On
the other hand, there is the fact, which does play a definite
role in our modern epoch, that man, as he grows up, grows away
from all the Group-forms; yet within the economic life he
cannot remain without a Group-education, because, with
reference to the economic life, the individual can never be
dominant. That which constitutes the Spiritual life, springs
from the deepest part of man's inner being, within which he can
acquire, not only a certain harmony of his capacities, but
should perfect and maintain them through a certain schooling.
But that which constitutes a judgement in the sphere of
economics can never proceed from a single human being. I have
given you instances of this, and I have shown you how an
economic judgment suet always fall into error when it proceeds
from one single man. I will give another example, taken from
the second half of the 19th Century.
I
have told you that at a definite time, in the middle and second
half of the 19th Century, in Parliaments and other corporate
bodies the discussions everywhere centered round the Gold
Standard. Those speakers who at that time spoke in favour of a
Gold Standard — you could have heard them everywhere,
— were really clever people. I do a not say that
ironically, because the people who at that time appeared as
practical and Theoretical speakers in Parliaments and other
assemblies really were very clever, and what they said really
belongs to the best utterances of Parliament concerning the
Gold Standard in the various Countries. But almost everywhere
they pointed to one thing with great sagacity, — to the
fact that the Gold Standard will set Free-Trade on its feet
again, and do away with all Customs Duties. If one reads to-day
what was then said about the beneficial effects of the Gold
standard on Free-Trade, one has real joy in seeing how clever
those people were; but, my dear friends, the very opposite
appeared of what all the cleverest people said. As a
consequence of the Gold Standard, prohibitive tariffs
appeared everywhere. You see that the cleverness in the
economic life which proceeded out of single personalities, was
not able to help man. That could be proved in the most diverse
spheres; because the fact is, that although what a man knows
about nature or about another man makes him competent to judge
as a single individual, no man is competent to judge as a
single individual when it comes to the sphere of economics. A
man cannot have a judgment on economic things in the concrete,
as a single individual. An economic judgment can only arise
when human beings unite together, associate together, and
support each other mutually, when there is co-operation in
their associations. It is not possible for a single man to have
a sound judgment which can pass into economic activity.
Just the contrary happens when a man has a scientific judgment.
In a scientific judgment, if it proceeds out of the whole man,
he can give a comprehensive judgment; but in concrete
economics and in economic trade the point is that one man
knows one part, the second knows another part, the third knows
something else. The producer in one department knows something,
the consumer in the same department knows something else; what
they each know must flow together, and then can arise a
Group-judgment in the sphere of Economics. In other words, the
old Forms are done away with, and a Group-judgment, a
collective judgment must arise. Human beings must form
themselves into Groups of their own accord, and these must
comprise associations of the economic life. From the
understanding of a necessary evolving force in evolution it
comes about, that this associative life of economics must be
taken up by humanity, and take the place of the old
group-connections which are still propagated to-day in humanity
as an inherited sin. When we consider this; we must
indeed say: — As regards knowledge, in ancient times
humanity came untaught to Earth, but in the Mysteries, they
then received their wisdom. Now human beings
descend to Earth instructed, and we have so to arrange
our didactics that we can draw out of them that which the Gods
have taught them.
In
reference to the economic arrangements, formerly human beings
were pre-determined, as it were; a stamp from the Gods was
imprinted on them, and so they were born into a certain Caste,
or into one Group or another. That is also past. To-day human
beings are born without that stamp; they are in a sense put as
single isolated individuals into humanity, and now they must
bring ahout their own Group- forms by means of their
Spirituality. It is really not a case of bringing such human
beings as profess Anthroposophy; that simply depends upon
what the Gods have taught them before their birth, and whether
in their former incarnations they have been found ripe for that
Divine instruction so that now we can draw forth Anthroposophy
from them, — Anthroposophy is in far more people to-day
than one thinks, but so many are too lazy to draw forth from
themselves that which is in them, or perhaps their school
instruction was so organised that the veils cannot be
dissolved, and so they cannot attain their consciousness.
In
the practical sphere, and especially in the economic sphere, it
would be absurd to bring human beings together simply because
they are Anthroposophists. We study Anthroposophy in order to
obtain insight into the way in which human beings are seeking,
from out of their group consciousness, the group-formation
which they must seek as a result of their former incarnations.
They must be given the opportunity of forming Groups and of
carrying out what lies in germ in the development of humanity.
So you see it can never be a question of grouping together
human beings because they live in a definite dogma, but those
human beings who, through their previous life on earth are
called upon to find themselves in groups, to those should be
given the possibility of associating themselves in these
groups. In these things, as soon as we pass from the abstract
into the concrete, we find an extraordinary number of riddles,
— I might almost say mysterious things; because, whether
a man belongs to one group or another, is by no means a simple
matter. The longing people now have for simplicity, shows
itself in extraordinary ways. I have been informed of something
concerning a lecture which the worthy Frohmeyer has just held,
“Theosophy and Anthroposophy” in which he says at
the end, — “his own personal relationship to
Christianity reminds him of the well-known fact that it
unfortunately always annoys these people that what is so great
can yet he so simple.”
He
means apparently that the Anthroposophists are annoyed that the
great is so simple. That is, as simple as the laziness of the
Rev. Frohmeyer would like to have it, for he will not endeavour
to realise the greatness in all its differentiation. One always
has to translate these things into their proper language. That
is something which is our especial task; we must translate
things into their true-speech.
Of
course, there can be no question of throwing at anyone's head
this doctrine of the instruction of man before his birth, of
his being born into Groups in ancient times and no longer being
born into Groups now-a-days; but we can permeate ourselves with
these truths, and we shall then find a possibility of showing
our methods as time goes on, of showing how far removed we are
from introducing any dogma into our schools, or of bringing
people into economic associations because they admit amongst
themselves the truth of certain dogmas.
How
strongly that is made a point of in our Waldorf school at
Stuttgart, you can see from the simple fact that we have no
interest in bringing Anthroposophy to the children. We want to
have a method of instruction which can only be gained through
Anthroposophy; but that is a purely objective affair. Those
children, or rather their parents, who wish them to have
instruction from a Catholic Priest in the Catholic religion
— for them a Catholic priest can come to the Waldorf
school; — and for those who want to he taught the
Evangelical religious instruction, the Evangelical minister can
come to the school. We place no hindrance whatever in the way
of these men. But it became necessary in recent times, when so
many parents, especially those from the proletariat, do not
want their children instructed either in the Catholic or
Evangelical views, to ask whether they perhaps would like their
children to have a free religious instruction born of an
Anthroposophical education. It then at once became evident that
those who would otherwise have been educated without any
religion whatever, and would not have entered any religious
confession, were very numerous; but these came to a so-called
Anthroposophical religious class which did not teach
Anthroposophy, but was simply born of Anthroposophy. These
children proved to be more industrious in their religious
instruction than was the case with the others taught by the
Catholic or Evangelistical clergy; but that we could not help,
that was the business of the Catholic or Evangelical Priests.
Gradually a number of children passed over from the one
religious instruction to the other. I believe it was the
Evangelical teacher who finally said: — “In the
near future I shall have no one left in my class, they are all
running away from me!” But that again was most certainly
not our fault; there was never any question of teaching dogma
of any kind to those children. We have no interest in doing
that. We knew that if our method succeeded in removing the
veils around the children, they would then have the best
instruction, — that which was given to them in the
Spiritual world before their descent on to the Earth. Of
course, certain confessions are strongly interested in
darkening this instruction, not to let it appear. Whoever e.g.
can compare the extraordinary relation between what stands in
the Papal Encyclical and what transpires in the Spiritual world
knows that the Divine religious instruction which children
enjoy before their descent is absolutely not what many
religious confessions would like them to have to-day. This is
especially to be noticed in the Catholic Church; because the
Catholic Church, as compared with the Evangelical, has always
preserved a more super-sensible influence through its
ritual and Ceremonies. But super-sensible influence can
appear in various ways, and one can say: it may be an error
when it deviates from the truth, it may also be an error when
it is the direct opposite of the truth.
Regarding now what concerns the practical undertakings, —
naturally I cannot betray here what is discussed in our
business meetings, which often last till 3:30. but I can give
you the assurance, that in the meetings of the Futurum and
Kommenden Tag, Anthroposophy is not discussed, but things of
quite another nature. There are things which must be treated
only in the most practical manner; how one should manage things
in this or that sphere, etc. Here theoretic Anthroposophy plays
no role, except that what is discussed should grasp the
economic life in as clever a manner as one does when one makes
ones thoughts mobile so that they can contact the
reality, as happens through a living grasp of the Spirit of
Anthroposophy.
One
need therefore merely point out, that neither in the Statutes
of the “Kommenden Tag” nor of the
“Futurum,” are there any Anthroposophical dogmas,
— merely economic things; the only question is how to
make these undertakings better than similar undertakings
to-day. That is one of the points which must be defended,
because it is one of the attacks which now crop up from every
corner, and will do, do so more and more, unless we put our
affairs clearly and energetically before the world. What I have
to say recently in Stuttgart is true; it has not yet been
learnt in the Anthroposophical Movement how to be attentive to
realities. Our opponents are different. They organise and will
prove their organisation. We must unconditionally fail unless
we are conscious of this, and can make as strong efforts for
the good as are now being made for the bad.
Thus to-day I wanted to bring up one of the points in reference
to which you will hear definite attacks against our practical
undertakings. If you open your ears, and this is necessary
(figuratively I mean), you will hear: and many things will have
to be defended in this direction. I wanted to-day to say what
could enthuse the soul when it becomes necessary to defend in
this direction. This enthusing-of-the-soul can come, when we
know what it meant in olden times that man came to Earth
uninstructed by the Gods; he now comes instructed before birth
and his whole life must be ordered thereto. Also what it means
that man was formerly determined by the will of the Gods into
Castes, Classes, Peoples, Tribes, etc. That disappeared after
the turning-point which lies behind us. Man is now destined
from Economic necessities to form Groups in Earth-life. That
happens in Economic Associations. A right knowledge of the
Earth-development of the Spiritual evolution of man and their
connections, shows how what we call the “Three-fold
Commonwealth” is not merely a political programme, but
the result of what flows from a real knowledge of human
evolution as a Necessity for the Present and the immediate
Future.
Of
these things, more to-morrow.
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