LECTURE FOUR
Spiritual Truths and the Physical World
Dornach, 13 June 1923
If we look at a phenomenon such as H.P. Blavatsky from the
perspective which will have become clear to you, we need to be
concerned first with her personality as such. The other aspect is the
impact she had on a large number of people. Now it is true, of
course, that this impact was in part quite negative. Those who had a
philosophical, psychological, literary, scientific — let us say
a well-educated — bent were glad to be rid of this phenomenon
in one way or another. They could achieve this simply by saying that
she had engaged in dishonest practices and that there was no need to
spend time on something where there was evidence of that sort of
thing.
Then there were those who were in possession of ancient,
traditional wisdom, members of one or another secret society. One
must never forget that numerous events in the world are linked to
actions from such secret societies. They were concerned above all to
find a way to prevent such a depiction of the spiritual world having
a wider impact. Because, as we saw, these things could be read and
promulgated, and in this way the secret societies had been deprived
of a good deal of the power which they wanted to preserve for
themselves. That is why it is members of such societies who are
behind the accusations that Blavatsky engaged in dishonest
practices.
More important for our present purpose, however, is that
Blavatsky's writings and everything else connected with her
personality made a certain impression on a large number of people.
That led to the establishment of movements which describe themselves
in one way or another as theosophical.
I would like you to remember that in these discussions I always
try to present my material in such a way that it should correspond to
the facts. This becomes impossible nowadays in many circles, simply
because of the terminology one has to use. What happens today is that
when a person encounters a word it is very tempting for him to seek a
dictionary definition in order to avoid having to look at the issue
itself. When such literary people hear of theosophy they open a
dictionary — which may well be a dictionary in their minds
— and look up the word. Or they might go as far as to study all
kinds of literature in which a word like theosophy occurs, and then
use that as the basis for their judgement. You have to be aware how
much actually depends on this kind of procedure.
This must always be juxtaposed with the question: How did the
societies which base themselves on Blavatsky come to use the name
Theosophical Society? One thing which did not happen, when it was
founded at the end of the nineteenth century, was to found a
Theosophical Society with the aim of propagating theosophy as defined
in the dictionary. But a body of knowledge about the spiritual world
existed through Blavatsky, which initially was simply there. Then it
was found necessary to cultivate this knowledge through a society and
a society requires a name. It is pure coincidence that the societies
which are based on that called themselves the Theosophical Society.
No one could think of a better name — it's as simple as that.
This has to be clearly remembered. People who have learnt about the
historical development of their given area of study are likely to
have come across the term theosophy. But the term they have come
across has nothing to do with what called itself the Theosophical
Society.
Within the Anthroposophical Society, at any rate, such things
ought to be taken very seriously. There should be a certain drive for
accuracy, so that a proper feeling can develop for the unobjective
scribblings to which these things have gradually given rise.
But there is one question which should particularly concern us:
Why is it that a large number of our contemporaries have felt the
urge to follow up these revelations? Because that will provide us
with the bridge to something of a quite different nature: to the
Anthroposophical Society.
In considering Blavatsky, it is important that her attitude was
what might well be called an anti-christian one. In her
Secret Doctrine
she revealed in one
large sweep the differing impulses and development of the many
ancient religions. But everything which might have been expected as
an objective depiction is clouded by her subjective judgement, the
judgement of her feelings. It becomes abundantly clear that she had a
deep sympathy for all religions in the world other than Judaism and
Christianity, and that she had a deep antipathy towards Judaism and
Christianity. Blavatsky depicts everything which comes from the
latter as inferior to the great revelations of the various pagan
religions: in other words, an expressly anti-christian perspective,
but an expressly spiritual one.
She was able to speak of spiritual beings and spiritual processes
in the same way that one normally speaks of the beings and processes
of the physical world; she was able to discuss aspects of this
spiritual world because she had the capacity to move among spiritual
forces in the same way that contemporary people normally move among
physical-sensory forces.
On that basis she was able to bring to the surface and clarify
characteristic impulses of the various pantheistic religions.
Now we might be surprised by two things. First, that it is
possible at all today for someone to appear who perceives the
salvation of mankind in this anti-christian perspective. And second,
we might be surprised about the decisive and profound influence
exerted by such an anti-christian perspective specifically on people
with a Christian outlook — less so perhaps on those with a
Jewish background. These are two questions we must ponder when we
speak about conditions governing the existence of the contemporary
life of the spirit among the broader masses in general.
In respect of Blavatsky's anti-christian perspective, I want only
to recall that someone who became much better known than she in
Central Europe, among certain circles at least, had as much of an
anti-christian perspective. That was Nietzsche.
[ Note 1 ]
It is difficult to be more anti-christian than the author of
The Anti-Christ.
It would be
adopting a very superficial attitude not to enquire into the reason
for the anti-christian outlook of these two personalities. But to
find an answer one needs to dig a little bit deeper.
For we need to have a clear understanding that increasing numbers
of people today are becoming divided in their spiritual life,
something which they do not always acknowledge and which they try to
paper over with a certain intellectual cowardice, but which is all
the more active in the unconscious depths of their mind.
One needs to have a clear understanding of the way in which the
European peoples and their American cousins have been influenced by
the educational endeavours of the last three, four, five hundred
years. One need only consider how great the difference really is
between the content of today's secular education and the religious
impulses of humanity. From the time people enter elementary school
all thinking, their whole inner orientation, is directed toward this
modern education. Then they are also provided with what is meant to
satisfy their religious needs. A dreadful gap opens up between the
two. People never really have the opportunity to deal inwardly with
this chasm, preferring instead to submit to the most dreadful
illusions in this respect.
This raises questions about the historical process which led to
the creation of this yawning chasm. For this we have to look back to
those centuries in which learning was the province of those few who
were thoroughly prepared for it. You can be quite certain that a
twelve-year-old schoolgirl today has a greater fund of worldly
knowledge than any educated person of the eleventh, twelfth or
thirteenth centuries. These things must not be overlooked. Education
has come to rely on an extraordinarily intense feeling of authority,
an almost invincible sense of authority. In the course of the
centuries modern education has increasingly comprised only the
knowledge of what can be demonstrated to the outer senses, or by
calculation. By excluding everything else it became possible —
because two times two equals four, and the five senses are so
persuasive — for modern education to acquire its sense of
authority. But that also increasingly gave rise to the feeling that
everything which human beings believe, which they consider to be
right, must be justified by the the knowledge of which modern
learning is so certain. It was impossible to present in a
corresponding fashion any truth from the realms where mathematics and
the senses no longer apply.
How were these truths presented to humanity prior to the existence
of modern learning? They were presented in ritual images. The
essential element in the spread of religion over the centuries lay
not in the sermons, for instance, but in ceremonial, in the rituals.
Try to imagine for a moment what it was like in Christian countries
in the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries. The important thing was for
people to enter a world presented to them in mighty and grandiose
images. All around, frescoes on the walls reminded them of the
spiritual life. It was as if their earthly life could reach as high
as the tallest mountain, but at that point, if one could climb just a
little bit higher, the spiritual life began. The language of the
spiritual world was depicted in images which stimulated the
imagination, in the audible harmonies of music, or in the words of
set forms such as mantras and prayers. These ages understood clearly
that images, not concepts, were required for the spiritual world.
People needed something vividly pictorial not something which could
be debated. Something was required which would allow the spirit to
speak through what was accessible to the senses. Christianity and its
secrets, the Mystery of Golgotha and everything connected with it,
were essentially spoken about in the form of images, even when words
were used in story form. The dogmas were also still understood as
something pictorial. And this Christian teaching remained
unchallenged from any quarter prior to the existence of intellectual
learning, and for as long as these things did not have to be
justified by reason.
Now just look at historical processes in the thirteenth,
fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the urgency with which
human beings begin to experience the drive to understand everything
intellectually. This introduced a critical attitude of
world-historical significance.
Thus, the majority of human beings today are introduced to
religious life through Christianity but alongside that to modern
learning also. As a consequence, the two — Christianity and
modern learning — co-exist in each soul. And even if people do
not admit it, it transpires that the results of intellectual
education cannot be used to prove Christian truths. So from childhood
people are now taught the fact that two times two equals four and
that the five senses must only be used in such a context, and they
also begin to understand that such absolutes are incompatible with
Christianity.
Modern theologians who have tried to marry the two have lost
Christ, are no longer able to speak to the broad spectrum of people
about Christ; at most they speak about the personality of Jesus. Thus
Christianity itself has been able to be preserved only in its old
forms. But modern people are simply no longer willing to accept this
in their souls, and they lose some of their inner security. Why?
Well, just look at the way Christianity has developed
historically. It is extremely dishonest to use rationalism to put
meaning into Christianity, the Mystery of Golgotha and everything
connected with it. One has to talk about a spiritual world if one
wants to speak about Christ. Modern human beings did not have the
means in their innermost being to understand Christ on the basis of
what they had been taught at school, for rationalism and
intellectualism have robbed them of the spiritual world. Christ is
still present in name and tradition, but the feeling for what that
means is gone; the understanding of Christ as a spiritual being among
spiritual beings in a spiritual world has disappeared. The world
created by modern astronomy, biology and science is a world devoid of
spirit.
Thus numerous souls grew up who, for these reasons, had quite
specific needs. Time really does progress, and the people of today
are not the same as people in earlier ages. You must have said to
yourselves: Here I meet with a certain number of others in a society
to cultivate spiritual truths. Why do you, each single one of you, do
that? What drives you? Well, the thing which drives people to do this
is usually so deeply embedded in the unconscious depths of their soul
life that there is little clarity about it. But here, where we want
to reflect on our position as anthroposophists, the question has to
be asked.
If you look back to earlier times, it was self-evident that
material things and processes were not the totality, but that spirits
were everywhere. People perceived a spiritual world which surrounded
them in their environment. And because they found a spiritual world
they were able to understand Christ.
Modern intellectualism makes it impossible to discover a spiritual
world, if one is honest, and as a consequence it is impossible to
understand Christ properly. The people who try so hard to rediscover
a spiritual life are very specific souls driven by two things. First,
most souls who come together in the kind of societies we have been
talking about start to experience a vague feeling within themselves
which they cannot describe. And if this feeling is investigated with
the means available in the spiritual world it turns out to be a
feeling which stems from earlier lives on earth in which a spiritual
environment still existed. Today, people are appearing in whose souls
something from their previous lives on earth remains active. There
would be neither theosophists nor anthroposophists if such people did
not exist. They are to be found in all sections of society. They do
not know that their feeling is the result of earlier lives on earth,
but it is. And it makes them search for a very specific path, for
very specific knowledge. Indeed, what continues to have an effect is
the spiritual content of earlier lives on earth.
Human beings today are affected in two ways. They can have the
feeling that there is something within them which affects them, which
is simply there. But even though they might know a great deal about
the physical world they cannot describe this feeling because nothing
which was not of a spiritual nature has been carried over. If,
however, in the present I am deprived of everything spiritual, then
what has come over from a previous life remains dissatisfied. That is
the one aspect.
The other effect which lives in human beings is a vague feeling
that their dreams should really reveal more than the physical world.
It is of course an error, an illusion. But what is the origin of this
illusion, which has arisen in parallel with the development of modern
learning? When people who have had the benefit of a modern education
gather together in learned circles they have to show their cultural
breeding. If someone starts to talk about spiritual effects in the
world people adopt an air of ridicule, because that is what being
cultured demands. It is not acceptable within our school education to
talk about spiritual effects in the world. To do so implies
superstition, lack of education.
Two groups will then often form in such circles. Frequently
someone plucks up a little courage to talk about spiritual things.
People then adopt an air of ridicule. The majority leave to play
cards or indulge in some other worthy pursuit. But a few are
intrigued. They go into a side-room and begin to talk about these
things, they listen with open mouths and cannot get enough of it; but
it has to be in a side-room because anything else shows a lack of
education. The things which a modern person can learn there are
mostly as incoherent and chaotic as dreaming, but people love it all
the same. Those who have gone to play cards would also love it,
except that their passion for cards is even stronger. At least that
is what they tell themselves.
Why do human beings in our modern age feel the urge to investigate
their dreams? Because they feel quite instinctively, without any
clear understanding, that the content of their thoughts and what they
see depicted in the physical world is all very nice, but it does not
give them anything for their soul life. A secret thinking, feeling
and willing lives in me when I am awake, they feel, which is as free
as my dream life is free when I am sleeping. There is something in
the depths of the soul which is dreamt even when I am awake. Modern
people feel that, precisely because the spiritual element is missing
from the physical world. They can only catch a glimpse of it when
they are dreaming. In earlier lives on earth they saw it in
everything around them.
And now those souls are being born who can feel working within
themselves not only impulses from their previous lives on earth, but
what took place in the spiritual world in their pre-earthly
existence. This is related to their internal dreaming. It is an echo
of life before birth.
But not only do the historical processes deny them the spirit; an
educational system has been constructed which is hostile to the
spirit, which proves the spirit out of existence.
If we ask how people found a common interest in such societies as
we are describing here, it is through these two features of the soul;
namely, that something is active both from their previous earth lives
and from their pre-earthly existence. This is the case for most of
you. You would not be sitting here if these two things were not
active in you.
In very ancient times social institutions were determined by the
Mysteries, and were in harmony with the content of their spiritual
teaching. Take an Athenian for example. He revered the goddess
Athene. He was part of a social community which he knew to be
constituted according to Athene's intentions. The olive trees around
Athens were planted by her. The laws of the state had been dictated
by her. Human beings were part of a social community which was in
total accord with their inner beliefs. Nothing the gods had given
them had, as it were, been taken away.
Compare that with modern human beings. They are placed in a social
context in which there is a huge gap between their inner experiences
and the way they are integrated into society. It feels to them as if
their souls are divorced from their bodies by social circumstances,
only they are not aware of it; it is embedded in the subconscious.
Through these impulses from earlier lives on earth and pre-earthly
existence, people feel connected with a spiritual world. Their bodies
have to behave in a way that will satisfy social institutions. It
provokes a persistent subconscious fear that their physical bodies no
longer really belong to them. Well, there are modern states in which
one feels that your clothes no longer belong to you because the tax
man is after them! But in a larger context ones physical body is no
longer ones property either. It is claimed by society.
This is the fear which lives in modern human beings, the fear that
every day they have to give up their bodies to something which is not
connected with their souls. And thus they become seekers after
something which does not belong to the earth, which belongs to the
spiritual world of their pre-earthly existence.
All this takes its effect unconsciously, instinctively. And it has
to be said that the Anthroposophical Society as it has developed had
its origins in small beginnings. To begin with, it had to work in the
most basic way with very small groups, and there is much to be said
about the ways and means in which work took place in such small
groups.
For example, in the first years in Berlin I had to lecture in a
room in which beer glasses were clinking in the background. And once
we were shown into something not unlike a stable. I lectured in a
hall, parts of which had no floor, where one had to be careful not to
tumble into a hole and break a leg. But that is where people gathered
who felt these impulses. Indeed, this movement aimed to make itself
accessible to everyone right from the beginning. Thus the
satisfaction was just as great when the simplest mind turned up in
such a location. At the same time it was no great worry when people
came together in order to launch the anthroposophical movement in
more aristocratic fashion, as happened in Munich, because that, too,
was part of humanity. No aspect of humanity was excluded.
But the important point was that the souls who met in this way
always had the qualities I have described. If such people had not
existed, then someone like Blavatsky would not have engendered any
interest, because it was among such people that she made her mark.
What was most important to them and what corresponded to their
feelings?
Well, the concept of reincarnation corresponded to the one thing
which was active in their souls. Now they could see themselves
straddling the ages as human beings, making them stronger than the
forces which daily tried to rob them of their bodies. This
deep-seated, almost will-like, inner feeling of human beings had to
be met by the teaching of reincarnation.
And the dreamlike, out-of-body experience of the soul, which even
the simplest country person can experience, could never be satisfied
with knowledge which was based only on matter and its processes. That
could only be met by making it clear to them that the most profound
aspect of human nature exists as if it is woven out of dreams, if I
may put it in this radical way. This element has a stronger reality,
a stronger existence than dreams. We are like fish out of water if we
are forced to live our soul life in the world which has been conjured
up for people by modern education. In the same way that fish cannot
exist in air and begin to gasp, so our souls live in the contemporary
environment, gasping for what they need. They fail to find it,
because it is spiritual in nature; because it is the echo of their
experiences in life before birth in the spiritual world. They want to
hear about the spirit, that the spirit exists, that the spirit is
actually present among us.
You have to understand that the two most important concerns for a
certain section of mankind were to learn that human beings live more
than a single life on earth, and that among the natural things and
processes there are beings in the world like themselves, spiritual
beings. It was Blavatsky who initially presented this to the world.
It was necessary to possess that knowledge before it was possible to
understand Christ once again.
As far as Blavatsky was concerned, however — and in saying
this we should emphasize her compassion for mankind — she
realized that these people were gasping for knowledge of the
spiritual world, and she thought that she would meet their spiritual
needs by revealing the ancient pagan religions to them. That was her
initial aim. It is quite clear that this had to result in a
tremendously partisan anti-christian standpoint, just as it is clear
that Nietzsche's observation of Christianity in its present form,
which he had outgrown, led him to adopt such a strong anti-christian
attitude.
This anti-christian outlook, and how it might be healed, is the
topic I want to address in the next lectures. It remains only to
emphasize that what appeared with Blavatsky as an anti-christian
standpoint was absent right from the beginning in the anthroposophical
movement, because the first lecture cycle which I gave was
“From Buddha to Christ”.
Thus the anthroposophical movement takes an independent position
within all these spiritual movements in that, from the start, it
pursued a path from the heathen religions to Christianity. But it
is equally necessary to understand why others did not follow this
path.
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