Fall
and Redemption
January 21, 1923
You
have seen from these lectures that I feel duty bound to speak at this
time about a consciousness that must be attained if we are to
accomplish one of the tasks of the Anthroposophical Society.
And to begin with today, let me point to the fact that this
consciousness can only be acquired if the whole task of culture and
civilization is really understood today from the spiritual-scientific
point of view. I have taken the most varied opportunities to try,
from this point of view, to characterize what is meant by the fall of
man, to which all religions refer. The religions speak of this fall
of man as lying at the starting point of the historical development
of mankind; and in various ways through the years we have seen how
this fall of man — which I do not need to characterize in
more detail today — is an expression of something that once
occurred in the course of human evolution: man's becoming independent
of the divine spiritual powers that guided him.
We know in fact that the
consciousness of this independence first arose as the
consciousness soul appeared in human evolution in the first half of
the fifteenth century. We have spoken again and again in recent
lectures about this point in time. But basically the whole human
evolution depicted in myths and history is a kind of preparation for
this significant moment of growing awareness of our freedom and
independence.
This moment is a
preparation for the fact that earthly humanity is meant to acquire a
decision-making ability that is independent of the divine spiritual
powers. And so the religions point to a cosmic-earthly event that
replaces the soul-spiritual instincts — which alone were
determinative in what humanity did in very early times — with
just this kind of human decision making. As I said, we do not want to
speak in more detail about this now, but the religions did see the
matter in this way: With respect to his moral impulses the human
being has placed himself in a certain opposition to his guiding
spiritual powers, to the Yahweh or Jehovah powers, let us say,
speaking in Old Testament terms. If we look at this interpretation,
therefore, we can present the matter as though, from a definite point
in his evolution, man no longer felt that divine spiritual powers
were active in him and that now he himself was active.
Consequently, with respect
to his overall moral view of himself, man felt that he was sinful and
that he would have been incapable of falling into sin if he had
remained in his old state, in a state of instinctive guidance by
divine spiritual powers. Whereas he would then have remained
sinless, incapable of sinning, like a mere creature of nature, he now
became capable of sinning through this independence from the divine
spiritual powers. And then there arose in humanity this
consciousness of sin: As a human being I am sinless only when I find
my way back again to the divine spiritual powers. What I myself
decide for myself is sinful per se, and I can attain a sinless state
only by finding my way back again: to the divine spiritual powers.
This consciousness of sin
then arose most strongly in the Middle Ages. And then human
intellectuality, which previously had not yet been a separate
faculty, began to develop. And so, in a certain way, what man
developed as his intellect, as an intellectual content, also became
infected — in a certain sense rightly — with this
consciousness of sin. It is only that one did not say to
oneself that the intellect, arising in human evolution since the
third or fourth century A.D., was also now
infected by the consciousness of sin. In the Scholastic wisdom of the
Middle Ages, there evolved, to begin with, an ‘unobserved’
consciousness of sin in the intellect.
This Scholastic wisdom of
the Middle Ages said to itself: No matter how effectively one may
develop the intellect as a human being, one can still only grasp
outer physical nature with it. Through mere intellect one can
at best prove that divine spiritual powers exist; but one can
know nothing of these divine spiritual powers; one can only have
faith in these divine spiritual powers. One can have faith in
what they themselves have revealed either through the Old or the New
Testament.
So the human being, who
earlier had felt himself to be sinful in his moral life —
‘sinful’ meaning separated from the divine spiritual
powers — this human being, who had always felt
morally sinful, now in his Scholastic wisdom felt himself to
be intellectually sinful, as it were. He attributed to himself
an intellectual ability that was effective only in the physical,
sense-perceptible world. He said to himself: As a human being I am
too base to be able to ascent through my own power into those regions
of knowledge where I can also grasp the spirit.
We do not notice how
connected this intellectual fall of man is to his general moral fall.
But what plays into our view of human intellectuality is the direct
continuation of his moral fall.
When the Scholastic wisdom
passes over then into the modern scientific view of the world, the
connection with the old moral fall of man is completely forgotten.
And, as I have often emphasized, the strong connection actually
present between modern natural-scientific concepts and the old
Scholasticism is in fact denied altogether. In modern natural science
one states that man has limits to his knowledge, that he must be
content to extend his view of things only out upon the
sense-perceptible physical world. A Dubois-Reymond, for
example, and others state that the human being has limits to what he
can investigate, has limits to his whole thinking, in fact.
But that is a direct
continuation of Scholasticism. The only difference is that
Scholasticism believed that because the human intellect is limited,
one must raise oneself to something different from the intellect
— to revelation, in fact — when one wants to know
something about the spiritual world.
The modern
natural-scientific view takes half, not the whole; it lets revelation
stay where it is, but then places itself completely upon a standpoint
that is possible only if one presupposes revelation. This standpoint
is that the human ability to know is too base to ascend into the
divine spiritual worlds.
But at the time of
Scholasticism, especially at the high point of Scholasticism in the
middle of the Middle Ages, the same attitude of soul was not present
as that of today. One assumed then that when the human being used his
intellect he could gain knowledge of the sense-perceptible world; and
he sensed that he still experienced something of a flowing
together of himself with the sense-perceptible world when he employed
his intellect. And one believed then that if one wanted to know
something about the spiritual one must ascend to revelation, which in
fact could no longer be understood, i.e., could no longer be grasped
intellectually. But the fact remained unnoticed — and this is
where we must direct our attention! — that spirituality
flowed into the concepts that the Schoolmen, set up about the sense
world. The concepts of the Schoolmen were not as unspiritual as ours
are today. The Schoolmen still approached the human being with the
concepts that they formed for themselves about nature, so that the
human being was not yet completely excluded from knowledge.
For, at least in the Realist stream, the Schoolmen totally believed
that thoughts are given us from outside, that they are not fabricated
from within. Today we believe that thoughts are not given from
outside but are fabricated from within. Through this fact we have
gradually arrived at a point in our evolution where we have dropped
everything that does not relate to the outer sense world.
And, you see, the Darwinian
theory of evolution is the final consequence of this dropping of
everything unrelated to the outer sense world. Goethe made a
beginning for a real evolutionary teaching that extended as far as
man. When you take up his writing in this direction, you will see
that he only stumbled when he tried to take up the human being. He
wrote excellent botanical studies. He wrote many correct things about
animals. But something always went wrong when he tried to take up the
human being. The intellect that is trained only upon the sense world
is not adequate to the study of man. Precisely Goethe shows this to a
high degree. Even Goethe can say nothing about the human being. His
teaching on metamorphosis does not extend as far as the human being.
You know how, within the anthroposophical world view, we have had to
broaden this teaching on metamorphosis, entirely in a Goethean sense,
but going much further.
What has modern
intellectualism actually achieved in natural science? It has only
come as far as grasping the evolution of animals up to the apes, and
then added on the human being without being able inwardly to
encompass him. The closer people came to the higher animals, so to
speak, the less able their concepts became to grasp anything. And it
is absolutely untrue to say, for example, that they even understand
the higher animals. They only believe that they understand them.
And so our understanding of
the human being gradually dropped completely out of our understanding
of the world, because understanding dropped out of our concepts. Our
concepts became less and less spiritual, and the unspiritual concepts
that regard the human being as the mere endpoint of the animal
kingdom represent the content of all our thinking today. These
concepts are already instilled into our children in the early grades,
and our inability to look at the essential being of man thus becomes
part of the general culture.
Now you know that I once
attempted to grasp the whole matter of knowledge at another point.
This was when I wrote
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
and its prelude,
Truth and Science,
[Mercury Press, 1993]
although the first references are present already in my
The Science of Knowing: Outline of an Epistemology Implicit in the Goethean World View,
[Mercury Press, 1988]
written in the 1880's. I tried to turn the matter in a completely
different direction. I tried to show what the modern person can raise
himself to, when — not in a traditional sense, but out of free inner
activity — he attains pure thinking, when he, attains this pure,
willed thinking which is something positive and real, when this
thinking works in him. And in
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
I sought, in fact, to find our moral impulses in this
purified thinking.
So that our evolution
proceeded formerly in such a way that we more and more viewed man as
being too base to act morally, and we extended this baseness also
into our intellectuality.
Expressing this
graphically, one could say: The human being developed in such a way
that what he knew about himself became less and less substantial. It
grew thinner and thinner (light color). But below the surface,
something continued to develop (red) that lives, not in
abstract thinking, but in real thinking.
Now, at the end of the 19th
century, we had arrived at the point of no longer noticing at all
what I have drawn here in red; and through what I have drawn here in
a light color, we no longer believed ourselves connected with
anything of a divine spiritual nature. Man's consciousness of sin had
torn him out of the divine spiritual element; the historical forces
that were emerging could not take him back. But with
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
I wanted to say: Just look for
once into the depths of the human soul and you will find that
something has remained with us: pure thinking, namely, the real,
energetic thinking that originates from man himself, that is no
longer mere thinking, that is filled with experience, filled with
feeling, and that ultimately expresses itself in the will. I
wanted to say that this thinking can become the impulse for moral
action. And for this reason I spoke of the moral intuition
which is the ultimate outcome of what otherwise is only moral
imagination. But what is actually intended by
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
can become really alive only if we can reverse the path that we
took as we split ourselves off more and more from the divine
spiritual content of the world, split ourselves off all the way
down to intellectuality. When we again find the spirituality in
nature, then we will also find the human being again.
I therefore once expressed
in a lecture that I held many years ago in Mannheim that mankind, in
fact, in its present development, is on the point of reversing the
fall of man. What I said was hardly noticed, but consisted in the
following: The fall of man was understood to be a moral fall,
which ultimately influenced the intellect also. The intellect felt
itself to be at the limits of its knowledge. And it is basically one
and the same thing — only in a somewhat different form
— if the old theology speaks of sin or if Dubois-Reymond
speaks of the limits of our ability to know nature. I indicated how
one must grasp the spiritual — which, to be sure, has been
filtered down into pure thinking — and how, from there, one can
reverse the fall of man. I showed how, through spiritualizing the
intellect, one can work one's way back up to the divine spiritual.
Whereas in earlier ages one
pointed to the moral fall of man and thought about the development of
mankind in terms of this moral fall of man, we today must think about
an ideal of mankind: about the rectifying of the fall of man along a
path of the spiritualization of our knowing activity, along a path of
knowing the spiritual content of the world again. Through the moral
fall of man, the human being distanced himself from the gods. Through
the path of knowledge he must find again the pathway of
the gods. Man must turn his descent into an ascent. Out of the purely
grasped spirit of his own being, man must understand, with inner
energy and power, the goal, the ideal, of again taking the fall of
man seriously. For, the fall of man should be taken seriously.
It extends right into what natural science says today. We must find
the courage to add to the fall of man, through the power of our
knowing activity, a raising of man out of sin. We must find the
courage to work out a way to raise ourselves out of sin, using what
can come to us through a real and genuine spiritual-scientific
knowledge of modern times.
One could say, therefore:
If we look back into the development of mankind, we see that human
consciousness posits a fall of man at the beginning of the historical
development of mankind on earth. But the fall must be made right
again at some point: It must be opposed by a raising of man. And this
raising of man can only go forth out of the age of the consciousness
soul. In our day, therefore, the historic moment has arrived
when the highest ideal of mankind must be the spiritual raising of
ourselves out of sin. Without this, the development of mankind
can proceed no further.
That is what I once
discussed in that lecture in Mannheim. I said that, in modern times,
especially in natural-scientific views, an intellectual fall of man
has occurred, in addition to the moral fall of man. And this
intellectual fall is the great historical sign that a spiritual
raising of man must begin.
But what does this
spiritual raising of man mean? It means nothing other, in fact, than
really understanding Christ. Those who still understood something
about him, who had not — like modern theology — lost
Christ completely, said of Christ that he came to earth, that he
incarnated into an earthly body as a being of a higher kind.
They took up what was proclaimed about Christ in written
traditions. They spoke, in fact, about the mystery of Golgotha.
Today the time has come
when Christ must be understood. But we resist this
understanding of Christ, and the form this resistance takes is
extraordinarily characteristic. You see, if even a spark of what
Christ really is still lived in those who say that they understand
Christ, what would happen? They would have to be clear about the fact
that Christ, as a heavenly being, descended to earth; he therefore
did not speak to man in an earthly language, but in a heavenly
one. We must therefore make an effort to understand him. We must make
an effort to speak a cosmic, extraterrestrial language. That
means that we must not limit our knowledge merely to the earth, for,
the earth was in fact a new land for Christ. We must extend our
knowledge out into the cosmos. We must learn to understand the
elements. We must learn to understand the movements of the
planets. We must learn to understand the star
constellations, and their influence on what happens on earth.
Then we draw near to the language that Christ spoke.
That is something, however,
that coincides with our spiritual raising of man. For why was
man reduced to understanding only what lives on earth? Because
he was conscious of sin, in fact, because he considered himself too
base to be able to grasp the world in its extraterrestrial
spirituality. And that is actually why people speak as though man can
know nothing except the earthly. I characterized this yesterday
by saying: We understand a fish only in a bowl, and a bird only in a
cage. Certainly there is no consciousness present in our civilized
natural science that the human being can raise himself above this
purely earthly knowledge; for, this science mocks any effort to go
beyond the earthly. If one even begins to speak about the stars, the
terrible mockery sets in right away, as a matter of course, from the
natural-scientific side.
If we want to hear correct
statements about the relation of man to the animals, we must already
turn our eye to the extraterrestrial world, for only the plants are
still explainable in earthly terms; the animals are not.
Therefore I had to say earlier that we do not even understand the
apes correctly, that we can no longer explain the animals. If
one wants to understand the animals, one must take recourse to the
extraterrestrial, for the animals are ruled by forces that are
extraterrestrial. I showed you this yesterday with respect to
the fish. I told you how moon and sun forces work into the water and
shape him out of the water, if I may put it so. And in the same way,
the bird out of the air. As soon as one turns to the elements, one
also meets the extraterrestrial. The whole animal world is
explainable in terms of the extraterrestrial. And even more so the
human being. But when one begins to speak of the extraterrestrial,
then the mockery sets in at once.
The courage to speak again
about the extraterrestrial must grow within a truly
spiritual-scientific view; for, to be a spiritual scientist today is
actually more a matter of courage than of intellectuality.
Basically it is a moral issue, because what must be opposed is
something moral: the moral fall of man, in fact.
And so we must say that we
must in fact first learn the language of Christ, the language
ton ouranon, the language of the heavens, in Greek terms. We must
relearn this language in order to make sense out of what Christ
wanted to do on earth.
Whereas up till now one has
spoken about Christianity and described the history of Christianity,
the point now is to understand Christ, to understand him as an
extraterrestrial being. And that is identical with what we can call
the ideal of raising ourselves from sin.
Now, to be sure, there is
something very problematical about formulating this ideal, for you
know in fact that the consciousness of sin once made people humble.
But in modern times they are hardly ever humble. Often those
who think themselves the most humble are the most proud of all. The
greatest pride today is evident in those who strive for a so-called
‘simplicity’ in life. They set themselves above
everything that is sought by the humble soul that lifts itself
inwardly to real, spiritual truths, and they say: Everything must be
sought in utter simplicity. Such naive natures — and they also
regard themselves as naive natures — are often the most proud
of all today. But nevertheless, during the time of real consciousness
of sin there once were humble people; humility was still regarded as
something that mattered in human affairs. And so, without
justification, pride has arisen. Why? Yes, I can answer that in the
same words I used here recently. Why has pride arisen? It has arisen
because one has not heard the words “Huckle, get up!”
[From the Oberufer Christmas plays.] One simply
fell asleep. Whereas earlier one felt oneself, with full
intensity and wakefulness, to be a sinner, one now fell
into a gentle sleep and only dreamed still of a consciousness of sin.
Formerly one was awake in one's consciousness of sin; one said
to oneself: Man is sinful if he does not undertake actions that will
again bring him onto the path to the divine spiritual powers.
One was awake then. One may have different views about this today,
but the fact is that one was awake in one's acknowledgment of
sinfulness. But then one dozed off, and the dreams arrived, and. the
dreams murmured: Causality rules in the world; one event always
causes the following one. And so finally we pursue what we see in the
starry heavens as attraction and repulsion of the heavenly bodies; we
take this all the way down into the molecule; and then we imagine a
kind of little cosmos of molecules and atoms.
And the dreaming went
further. And then the dream concluded by saying: We can know nothing
except what outer sense experience gives us. And it was labeled
‘supernaturalism’ if anyone went beyond sense
experiences. But where supernaturalism begins, science ends.
And then, at gatherings of
natural scientists, these dreams were delivered in croaking tirades
like Dubois-Reymond's
Limits of Knowledge.
And then, when the dream's last notes
were sounded — a dream does not always resound so agreeably;
sometimes it is a real nightmare — when the dream
concluded with “Where supernaturalism begins, science
ends,” then not only the speaker but the whole
natural-scientific public sank down from the dream into blessed
sleep. One no longer needed any inner impulse for active inner
knowledge. One could console oneself by accepting that there are
limits, in fact, to what we can know about nature, and that we cannot
transcend these limits. The time had arrived when one could now say:
“Huckle, get up! The sky is cracking!” But our modern
civilization replies: “Let it crack! It's old enough to have
cracked before!” Yes, this is how things really are. We have
arrived at a total sleepiness, in our knowing activity.
But into this sleepiness
there must sound what is now being declared by spiritual-scientific
anthroposophical knowledge. To begin with, there must arise in
knowledge the realization that man is in a position to set up the
ideal within himself that we can raise ourselves from sin. And that
in turn is connected with the fact that along with a possible waking
up, pride — which up till now has only been present, to be
sure, in a dreamlike way — will grow more than ever. And (I say
this of course without making any insinuations) it has sometimes been
the case that in anthroposophical circles the raising of man
has not yet come to full fruition. Sometimes, in fact, this pride has
reached — I will not say a respectable — a quite
unrespectable size. For, it simply lies in human nature for pride to
flourish rather than the positive side.
And so, along with the
recognition that the raising of man is a necessity, we must also see
that we now need to take up into ourselves in full consciousness the
training in humility which we once exercised. And we can do that.
For, when pride arises out of knowledge, that is always a sign that
something in one's knowledge is indeed terribly wrong. For when
knowledge is truly present, it makes one humble in a completely
natural way. It is out of pride that one sets up a program of reform
today, when in some social movement, let's say, or in the woman's
movement one knows ahead of time what is possible, right, necessary,
and best, and then sets up a program, point by point. One knows
everything about the matter. One does not think of oneself at all as
proud when each person declares himself to know it all. But in true
knowledge, one remains pretty humble, for one knows that true
knowledge is acquired only in the course of time, to use a trivial
expression.
If one lives in knowledge,
one knows, with what difficulty — sometimes over decades
— one has attained the simplest truths. There, quite
inwardly through the matter itself, one does not become proud. But
nevertheless, because a full consciousness is being demanded
precisely of the Anthroposophical Society for humanity's great ideal
today of raising ourselves from sin, watchfulness — not
Hucklism, but watchfulness — must also be awakened against any
pride that might arise.
We need today a strong
inclination to truly grasp the essential being of knowledge so that,
by virtue of a few anthroposophical catchwords like ‘physical
body,’ ‘etheric body,’ ‘reincarnation,’
et cetera, we do not immediately become paragons of pride. This
watchfulness with respect to ordinary pride must really be cultivated
as a new moral content. This must be taken up into our meditation.
For if the raising of man is actually to occur, then the experiences
we have with the physical world must lead us over into the spiritual
world. For, these experiences must lead us to offer ourselves
devotedly, with the innermost powers of our soul. They must not lead
us, however, to dictate program truths. Above all, they must
penetrate into a feeling of responsibility for every single
word that one utters about the spiritual world. Then the striving
must reign to truly carry up into the realm of spiritual knowledge
the truthfulness that, to begin with, one acquired for oneself in
dealing with external, sense-perceptible facts. Whoever has not
accustomed himself to remaining with the facts in the physical sense
world and to basing himself upon them also does not accustom
himself to truthfulness when speaking about the spirit. For in the
spiritual world, one can no longer accustom oneself to
truthfulness; one must bring it with one.
But you see, on the one
hand today, due to the state of consciousness in our civilization,
facts are hardly taken into account, and, on the other hand, science
simply suppresses those facts that lead onto the right path. Let us
take just one out of many such facts: There are insects that are
themselves vegetarian when fully grown. They eat no meat, not even
other insects. When the mother insect is ready to lay her fertilized
eggs, she lays them into the body of another insect, that is then
filled with the eggs that the insect mother has inserted into it. The
eggs are now in a separate insect. Now the eggs do not hatch out into
mature adults, but as little worms. But at first they are in the
other insect. These little worms, that will only later metamorphose
into adult insects, are not vegetarian. They could not be
vegetarian. They must devour the flesh of the other insect. Only when
they emerge and transform themselves are they able to do
without the flesh of other insects. Picture that: the insect
mother is herself a vegetarian. She knows nothing in her
consciousness about eating meat, but she lays her eggs for the
next generation into another insect. And furthermore; if these
insects were now, for example, to eat away the stomach of the host
insect, they would soon have nothing more to eat, because the host
insect would die. If they ate away any vital organ, the insect could
not live. So what do these insects do when they hatch out? They avoid
all the vital organs and eat only what the host insect can do without
and still live. Then, when these little insects mature, they crawl
out, become vegetarian, and proceed to do what their mother did.
Yes, one must acknowledge
that intelligence holds sway in nature. And if you really study
nature, you can find this intelligence holding sway everywhere. And
you will then think more humbly about your own intelligence, for
first of all, it is not as great as the intelligence ruling in
nature, and secondly, it is only like a little bit of water that one
has drawn from a lake and put into a water jug. The human being, in
fact, is just such a water jug, that has drawn intelligence
from nature. Intelligence is everywhere in nature; everything,
everywhere is wisdom. A person who ascribes intelligence exclusively
to himself is about as clever as someone who declares: You're saying
that there is water out there in the lake or in the brook? Nonsense!
There is no water in them. Only in my jug is there any water. The jug
created the water.
So, the human being thinks
that he creates intelligence, whereas he only draws intelligence from
the universal sea of intelligence.
It is necessary, therefore,
to truly keep our eye on the facts of nature. But facts are left out
when the Darwinian theory is promoted, when today's materialistic
views are being formulated; for, the facts contradict the modern
materialistic view at every point. Therefore one suppresses these
facts. One recounts them, to be sure, but actually aside from science,
anecdotally. Therefore they do not gain the validity in our general
education that they must have. And so one not only does not truly
present the facts that one has, but adds a further dishonesty by
leaving out the decisive facts, i.e., by suppressing them.
But if the raising of man
is to be accomplished, then we must educate ourselves in truthfulness
in the sense world first of all and then carry this education, this
habitude, with us into the spiritual world. Then we will also be able
to be truthful in the spiritual world. Otherwise we will tell people
the most unbelievable stories about the spiritual world. If we are
accustomed in the physical world to being imprecise, untrue, and
inexact, then we will recount nothing but untruths about the
spiritual world.
. You see, if one grasps in
this way the ideal whose reality can become conscious to the
Anthroposophical Society, and if what arises from this consciousness
becomes a force in our Society, then, even in people who wish us the
worst, the opinion that the Anthroposophical Society could be a sect
will disappear. Now of course our opponents will say all kinds of
things that are untrue. But as long as we are giving cause for what
they say, it cannot be a matter of indifference to us whether their
statements are true or not.
Now, through its very
nature, the Anthroposophical Society has thoroughly worked its
way out of the sectarianism in which it certainly was caught up at
first, especially while it was still connected to the Theosophical
Society. It is only that many members to this day have not noticed
this fact and love sectarianism. And so it has come about that even
older anthroposophical members who were beside themselves when
the Anthroposophical Society was transformed from a sectarian one
into one that was conscious of its world task, even those who were
beside themselves have quite recently gone aside again. The Movement
for Religious Renewal, when it follows its essential nature,
may be ever so far removed from sectarianism. But this Movement for
Religious Renewal has given even a number of older
anthroposophists cause to say to themselves: Yes, the sectarian
element is being eradicated more and more from the
Anthroposophical Society. But we can cultivate it again here!
And so precisely through anthroposophists, the Movement for Religious
Renewal is being turned into the crassest sectarianism, which
truly does not need to be the case.
One can see how, therefore,
if the Anthroposophical Society wants to become a reality, we
must positively develop the courage to raise ourselves again into the
spiritual world. Then art and religion will flourish in the
Anthroposophical Society. Although for now even our artistic forms
have been taken from us [through the burning of the Goetheanum
building on the night of December 31, 1922], these forms live on, in
fact, in the being of the anthroposophical movement itself and
must continually be found again, and ever again.
In the same way, a true
religious deepening lives in those who find their way back into the
spiritual world, who take seriously the raising of man. But what we
must eradicate in ourselves is the inclination to sectarianism, for
this inclination is always egotistical. It always wants to
avoid the trouble of penetrating into the reality of the spirit and
wants to settle for a mystical reveling that basically is an
egotistical voluptuousness. And all the talk about the
Anthroposophical Society becoming much too intellectual is
actually based on the fact that those who say this want, indeed, to
avoid the thoroughgoing experience of a spiritual content, and would
much rather enjoy the egotistical voluptuousness of soulful reveling
in a mystical, nebulous indefiniteness. Selflessness is necessary for
true anthroposophy. It is mere egotism of soul when this true
anthroposophy is opposed by anthroposophical members themselves
who then all the more drive anthroposophy into something sectarian
that is only meant, in fact, to satisfy a voluptuousness of soul that
is egotistical through and through.
You see those are the
things, with respect to our tasks, to which we should turn our
attention. By doing so, we lose nothing of the warmth, the artistic
sense, or the religious inwardness of our anthroposophical striving.
But that will be avoided which must be avoided: the
inclination to sectarianism. And this inclination to
sectarianism, even though it often arrived in a roundabout way
through pure cliquishness, has brought so much into the Society
that splits it apart. But cliquishness also arose in the
anthroposophical movement only because of its kinship — a
distant one to be sure — with the sectarian inclination. We
must return to the cultivation of a certain world consciousness so
that only our opponents, who mean to tell untruths, can still call
the Anthroposophical Society a sect. We must arrive at the point of
being able to strictly banish the sectarian character trait from the
anthroposophical movement. But we should banish it in such a
way that when something arises like the Movement for Religious
Renewal, which is not meant to be sectarian, it is not gripped right
away by sectarianism just because one can more easily give it a
sectarian direction than one can the Anthroposophical Society itself.
Those are the things that
we must think about keenly today. From the innermost being of
anthroposophy, we must understand the extent to which anthroposophy
can give us, not a sectarian consciousness, but rather a world
consciousness. Therefore I had to speak these days precisely
about the more intimate tasks of the Anthroposophical Society.
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