Part Two: The Procedings of
the Conference
On the Right Entry into the Spiritual
World: The Responsibility Incumbent on Us
Lecture
and words of farewell by Rudolf Steiner
1 JANUARY, 8.30 IN THE EVENING
My dear friends!
We are
gathered together for the last time in this Conference from
which much that is strong and important is to go forth for
the Anthroposophical Movement. So now let me shape this final
lecture in a way that connects it inwardly, in its impulse,
with the various prospects thrown open to us by this series
of lectures as a whole,
[ Note 79 ]
but also in a way that will
allow us to gain a sense for the future, especially the
future of anthroposophical endeavour.
When we look
out into the world today we see something that has already
been there for many years: a tremendous amount of
destructiveness. There are forces at work that give us an
inkling of the abysses into which western civilization is
still to plunge. Looking at those individuals who externally
are the cultural leaders in the various fields of life, we
notice how they are enmeshed in a terrible cosmic sleep. They
think, and until recently most people thought, that until the
nineteenth century mankind was childlike and primitive in its
insights and views, and that now that modern science has
entered into all the various fields truth has at last
arrived, truth that must be upheld forever.
People who
think like this are, without knowing it, living in a state of
tremendous arrogance. On the other hand, here and there
amongst mankind today there are some inklings that things are
perhaps not as the majority would like to imagine.
Some time ago
I was able to give a number of lectures in Germany organized
by the Wolff agency.
[ Note 80 ]
The audiences were
exceptionally large, so that people here and there began to
notice that Anthroposophy was something for which people were
looking. All kinds of foolish voices were raised in
antagonism, among them one which was not much more
intelligent than any of the others but which nevertheless
expressed a kind of presentiment. It consisted of a note in a
newspaper referring to one of the lectures in Berlin. This
notice in the newspaper said: Listening to stuff like this
you get the impression — I am quoting the article
approximately — that something is happening not only on
the earth but also in the whole of the cosmos that is calling
mankind to a form of spirituality that is different from what
has existed so far; even the forces of the cosmos, not merely
earthly impulses, are demanding something of mankind; a kind
of revolution in the cosmos which must lead man to strive for
a new spirituality.
So there was
this voice, which was in its way quite remarkable. For it is
true: The proper impulse for what must now go forth from
Dornach must, as I have emphasized from various angles over
the last few days, be an impulse arising not on the earth but
in the spiritual world. Here we want to develop the strength
to follow the impulses coming from the spiritual world. In
the evening lectures during this Christmas Conference I have
spoken about manifold impulses present in historical
development so that your hearts might be opened to take in
spiritual impulses which still have to stream into the
earthly world and are not taken from the earthly world
itself. Everything that has hitherto borne the earthly world
in the right way has had its source in the spiritual world.
And if we are to achieve something fruitful for the earthly
world, we must turn to the spiritual world for the
appropriate impulses.
My dear
friends, this encourages me to point out that the impulses we
are to bear away with us from this Conference must be linked
to a great sense of responsibility.
Let us spend
a few minutes on the great responsibility that is now
incumbent on us as a result of this Conference. In recent
decades it has been possible for someone with a sense for the
spiritual world to wander, in spiritual observation, past
many personalities, gaining bitter sensations with regard to
the future destiny of mankind on earth. It has been possible
to wander past one's fellow human beings in the manner
available to spiritual insight, observing how they lay aside
their physical and etheric bodies in sleep and live in the
spiritual world with their ego and astral body. Wandering
among the destinies of those egos and astral bodies while
human beings slept has, in recent decades, given rise to
experiences which can point to a heavy responsibility
incumbent on the one who can know such things. These souls,
having left behind their physical and etheric bodies between
going to sleep and waking up, were often to be seen
approaching the Guardian of the Threshold.
The Guardian
of the Threshold has entered the awareness of human beings in
many and various ways during the course of human evolution.
Many a legend and many a saga — for this is the form in
which the most important things are preserved, rather than
that of historical records — many a legend and many a
saga tells of the approach by one personality or another to
the Guardian of the Threshold in order to receive instruction
on how to enter the spiritual world and then return once more
to the physical world. Entering rightly into the spiritual
world must bring with it the possibility of returning to the
physical world at any moment with the full ability to stand
on both feet as a practical and thoughtful human being, not
as a dreamer, not as a dreamy mystic.
Throughout
all the thousands of years during which human beings have
striven to enter the spiritual world, this has been the
fundamental stipulation of the Guardian of the Threshold. But
especially in the final third of the nineteenth century
hardly any human beings were to be seen approaching the
Guardian of the Threshold in a state of wakefulness. And even
more so in our own time, when mankind as a whole has the
historical task of passing by the Guardian of the Threshold
in one way or another, do you find, when wandering in the
spiritual world, that souls are asleep when they approach the
Guardian of the Threshold as egos and astral bodies. This
most significant picture meets us today: There stands the
Guardian of the Threshold surrounded by groups of sleeping
human souls who do not have the strength to approach him in a
waking state but who approach him instead while they are
asleep.
Witnessing
this scene, you become aware of a thought which is bound up
particularly with what I would like to call the germination
of a necessary great responsibility. The souls who thus
approach the Guardian of the Threshold in a state of sleep
demand entry into the spiritual world. They demand to be
allowed to wander across the threshold in a state of sleep;
their consciousness is that of a sleeping human being —
which so far as the waking state is concerned remains
unconscious or subconscious. And countless times the voice of
the grave Guardian of the Threshold is heard: For your own
good, you may not cross the threshold; you may not gain
entrance to the spiritual world. Go back! For if the Guardian
of the Threshold were to allow them to enter without more
ado, they could come over into the spiritual world with all
the concepts passed on to them by today's schools, today's
education, today's civilization; with all those concepts and
ideas with which human beings have to grow up nowadays from
their sixth year onwards right, you could say, until the end
of their earthly lives.
These
concepts and ideas have a particular characteristic: If you
enter into the spritual world with them, with the way you
have become with them through present-day civilization and
schooling, you become paralysed in your soul. And on
returning to the physical world you would be void of thoughts
and ideas. If the Guardian of the Threshold did not gravely
reject these souls, if he were not to reject many, many of
today's human souls but were to let them step over into the
spiritual world, then, waking up on their return, waking up
at the decisive moment on their return, they would have the
feeling: I cannot think; my thoughts do not grasp my brain; I
have to live in the world without thoughts. For the world of
abstract ideas which human beings today attach to everything
is such that one can indeed go into the spiritual world with
them but one cannot bring them out again. And when you watch
this scene, which is experienced today by more souls than you
would ordinarily imagine, you say to yourself: If only these
souls could be successfully protected from experiencing also
in death what they are now experiencing in sleep. For if the
inner condition experienced before the Guardian of the
Threshold were to endure for a sufficiently long period of
time, if human civilization were to remain for a long time
under the influence of what can be taken in in schools by way
of what is traditionally passed down by civilization, then
sleep would become ordinary life. Human souls would pass
through the portal of death into the spiritual world and then
be incapable of bringing any strength of ideas with them into
their new life on earth. For though you can enter the
spiritual world with today's thoughts, you then cannot leave
it with them. You can only leave it in a state of soul
paralysis.
You see,
present-day civilization can be founded on the kind of
cultural life that has been nurtured for so long. But life
cannot be founded on it. It would be possible for this
civilization to endure for a while. During their waking
hours, the souls would have no inkling of the Guardian of the
Threshold; then while they slept they would be turned away by
him so that they should not become paralysed; and the final
consequence would be that a human race would be born in the
future without any understanding, without any possibility of
applying ideas to life when they were born in this future
time, so that the faculty of thinking and living in ideas
would have disappeared from the earth. A sick human race,
living only in instincts, would have to populate the earth.
Terrible feelings and emotions alone, without orientation
through the force of ideas, would come to dominate human
evolution.
Indeed, the
soul failing to gain entry into the spiritual world, and
being turned away by the Guardian of the Threshold in the way
I have just described, is not the only sad sight to meet the
one who has spiritual vision. If such a one were to take with
him a human being from eastern civilization on his
journeyings to where the sleeping souls can be observed
approaching the Guardian of the Threshold, then such an
eastern human being would be heard to utter spirit words of
terrible reproach towards the whole of western civilization:
See, if this goes on, then the earth will have fallen into
barbarism by the time those living today return for a new
incarnation; people will live by instincts alone, without
ideas; this is what you have brought about by falling away
from the ancient spirituality of the orient.
Thus a
glimpse like this into the spiritual world bears witness to a
strong sense of responsibility for the task of man. And here
in Dornach there must be a place where it is possible to
speak, to those who wish to listen, about every important
direct experience of the spiritual world. Here there must be
a place where the strength is found to point to those little
traces of the spirit not only in the cleverly put together
dialectical and empirical scientific manner of the present
time. If Dornach is to fulfil its task, then it must be a
place where human beings can hear openly about what is going
on historically in the spiritual world and about the
spiritual impulses which then enter into the world of nature
and govern it. Human beings must be able to hear in Dornach
about genuine experiences, genuine forces and genuine beings
of the spiritual world. This is where the School of true
Spiritual Science must be. And we must henceforth not shy
away from the demands of modern scientific thought which
causes human beings to approach the earnest Guardian of the
Threshold in a state of sleep in the way I have described. In
Dornach it must be possible to win the strength, spiritually,
to look the spiritual world in the eye, to learn about the
spiritual world.
Therefore we
shall not let loose a tirade of dialectics on the inadequacy
of present-day scientific theory. Instead I had to draw your
attention to the position in which this scientific theory,
and its consequences in ordinary schools, places the human
being with regard to the Guardian of the Threshold. If we can
face up to this in our soul in all earnestness during this
Conference, then this Christmas Conference will send a strong
impulse into our souls which can carry them away to do strong
work of the kind needed by mankind today, so that in their
next incarnation human beings will be able to encounter the
Guardian of the Threshold properly, or rather so that
civilization as a whole will measure up to the Guardian of
the Threshold.
Compare
today's civilization with that of former times. In all former
civilizations there were ideas, concepts, which were turned
first of all towards the super-sensible world, towards the
gods, towards the world which engendered, which created,
which brought forth. Then with those concepts, which belonged
above all to the gods, it was possible to look down onto the
earthly world in order to understand it with concepts and
ideas which were worthy of the gods. And if souls then
approached the Guardian of the Threshold with these ideas
which had been formed in a manner that was worthy of the gods
and that had a value for the gods, then the Guardian said:
You may pass, for you are bringing with you into the
super-sensible world something that is directed towards this
super-sensible world even during the time of your life on
earth in a physical body; therefore when you return to the
physical, sense-perceptible world sufficient strength will
remain to prevent you from becoming paralysed through having
seen the super-sensible world. Nowadays human beings elaborate
concepts and ideas which, in accordance with the genius of
the times, they want to apply solely to the physical,
sense-perceptible world. These concepts and ideas deal above
all with anything that can be weighed and measured, but they
are not at all concerned with the gods. They are not worthy
of the gods and they are of no value to the gods. That is why
the souls who have fallen entirely under the spell of the
materialism of these ideas which are unworthy of the gods and
valueless for the gods are met, when they cross the threshold
in sleep, by the thundering voice of the Guardian of the
Threshold: Do not step across the threshold! You have misused
your ideas for the sense-perceptible world; therefore you
must remain with them in the sense-perceptible world; if you
do not want to become paralysed in your soul, you cannot
enter with them into the world of the gods.
Such things
have to be said, not because it is necessary to brood upon
them but so that heart and mind and soul may become filled to
the brim with them. Then we may come into the mood that will
be the right mood to bear away from this solemn Christmas
Conference of the Anthroposophical Society. The most
important thing of all is the mood of soul we bear away with
us, a mood of soul for the spiritual world that gives us the
certainty: In Dornach a central point for spiritual knowledge
will be created.
That is why
it was so good to hear Dr Zeylmans speak this morning about a
field which is to be cultivated here in Dornach, the field of
medicine, and to hear him say that it is no longer possible
to build bridges from ordinary science to what is to be
founded here in Dornach. If we have the ambition to make what
grows in the soil of our own medical research into something
that can stand the scrutiny of present-day clinical
requirements, then we shall never achieve any definite goal
in the things that really make up our task, for then other
people will simply say: Well, yes, here is a new method; we
too have initiated new methods once in a while.
The important
thing is that a branch of practical life, such as medicine,
should be taken up into anthroposophical life. I think I
understood rightly this morning that this is what Dr Zeylmans
longs for. Did he not say in connection with this goal that
someone who today becomes a doctor longs for impulses from a
new corner of the universe. Let me tell you that in the field
of medicine the work here in Dornach is to be carried on just
as has that in a number of other fields of anthroposophical
work which have remained within the bosom of Anthroposophy.
With Dr Wegman as my helper, work is already in train on a
system of medicine based entirely on Anthroposophy, a system
which is needed by mankind and which will be presented to
mankind quite soon. Equally it is my purpose to bring about
the closest ties between the Goetheanum and the Clinic in
Arlesheim which is working so beneficially. In the very near
future such ties are to be brought about so that all that is
flourishing there may be truly oriented towards
Anthroposophy, which is indeed the intention of Dr
Wegman.
In what he
said, Dr Zeylmans was indicating with reference to one
particular field what the Vorstand in Dornach will make its
task in all the fields of anthroposophical work. Thus in
future the situation will be clear. No one will say: Let us
first show people eurythmy; if they hear nothing about
Anthroposophy, then they will like eurythmy; and then, having
taken a liking to eurythmy, if they hear that Anthroposophy
stands as the foundation for eurythmy, they will take a
liking to Anthroposophy as well. No one will say: First we
must show people how the medicines work in practice so that
they see that they are proper medicines, and will buy them;
then, if they later hear that Anthroposophy is behind the
medicines, they will also approach Anthroposophy.
We must have
the courage to regard such a method as dishonest. Not until
we have the courage to regard such a method as dishonest, not
until we inwardly detest such a method will Anthroposophy
find its way through the world. So in future here in Dornach
we shall fight for the truth, not fanatically but simply in
an honest, straightforward love of the truth. Perhaps this
will enable us to make good some of what has so sinfully been
made bad in recent years.
With thoughts
which are not easy but which are grave we must depart from
this Conference that has led to the founding of the General
Anthroposophical Society. But I do not think that it will be
necessary for anybody to go away with pessimism from what has
taken place here this Christmas. Every day we have had to
walk past the sad ruins of the Goetheanum. But as we have
walked up this hill, past these ruins, I think that in every
soul there has also been the content of what has been
discussed here and what has quite evidently been understood
by our friends in their hearts. From all this the thought has
emerged: It will be possible for spiritual flames of fire to
arise, as a true spiritual life for the blessing of mankind
in the future, from the Goetheanum which is being built anew.
They shall arise out of our hard work and out of our
devotion. The more we go from here with the courage to carry
on the affairs of Anthroposophy, the better have we heard the
breath of the spirit wafting filled with hope through our
gathering. For the scene which I have described to you and
which can be seen so frequently, that scene of present-day
human beings, the products of a decadent civilization and
education, approaching the Guardian of the Threshold in a
state of sleep, is actually not one which is found amongst
the circle of sensitive anthroposophists. Here on the whole
the circumstance is such that only a warning, one particular
exhortation, resounds: In hearing the voice from the land of
the spirit you must develop the strong courage to bear
witness to this voice, for you have begun to awaken; courage
will keep you awake; lack of courage alone could lead you to
fall asleep.
The
exhortation to be awake through courage is the other
variation, the variation for anthroposophists in the life of
present-day civilization. Those who are not anthroposophists
hear: You must remain outside the land of the spirit, you
have misused ideas for merely earthly objects, you have not
gathered ideas which have value for the gods and which are
worthy of the gods; you would be paralysed on your return to
the physical, sense-perceptible world. But those souls who
are the souls of anthroposophists hear: Your remaining test
is to be that of your courage to bear witness to that voice
which you are capable of hearing because of the inclination
of your soul, because of the inclination of your heart.
My dear
friends, yesterday was the anniversary of the day on which we
saw the tongues of flame devouring our old Goetheanum. Today
we may hope — since a year ago we did not allow even
the flames to distract us from continuing with our work
— today we may hope that when the physical Goetheanum
stands here once more we shall have worked in such a way that
the physical Goetheanum is only the external symbol for our
spiritual Goetheanum which we want to take with us as an idea
as we now go out into the world.
We have here
laid the Foundation Stone. On this Foundation Stone shall be
erected the building whose individual stones will be the work
achieved in all our groups by the individuals outside in the
wide world. Let us now look in spirit at this work and become
conscious of the responsibility about which I have spoken
today, of our responsibility towards the human being who
stands before the Guardian of the Threshold and has to be
refused entry into the spiritual world.
Certainly it
should never occur to us to feel anything but the deepest
pain and the deepest sorrow about what happened to us a year
ago. But let us not forget that everything in the world that
has any stature has been born out of pain. So let us
transform our pain so that out of it may arise a strong and
shining Anthroposophical Society by dint, my dear friends, of
your work.
For this
purpose we have immersed ourselves in those words with which
I began, in those words with which I wish to close this
Christmas Conference, this Christmas Conference which is to
be for us a festival of consecration not merely for the
beginning of a new year but for the beginning of a new
turning point of time to which we want to devote ourselves in
enthusiastic cultivation of the life of spirit:
Soul of Man!
Thou livest in the limbs
Which bear thee through the world of space
In the spirit's ocean-being.
Practise spirit-recalling
In depths of soul,
Where in the wielding will
Of world-creating
Thine own I
Comes to being
Within God's I.
And thou wilt truly live
In the World-Being of Man.
For the Father-Spirit of the heights holds sway
In depths of worlds begetting being.
Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones!
Let there ring out from the heights
What in the depths is echoed
Speaking:
Ex Deo nascimur.
The spirits of the elements hear it
In East, West, North, South,
May human beings hear it.
Soul of Man!
Thou livest in the beat of heart and lung
Which leads thee through the rhythm of time
Into the realm of thine own soul's feeling.
Practise spirit-awareness
In balance of the soul,
Where the surging deeds
Of the world's becoming
Thine own I
Unite
With the World-I.
And thou wilt truly feel
In the Soul-Weaving of Man.
For the Christ-Will in the encircling round holds
sway
In the rhythms of the worlds, bestowing grace on the
soul.
Kyriotetes, Dynamis, Exusiai!
Let there be fired from the East
What through the West is formed
Speaking:
In Christo morimur.
The spirits of the elements hear it
In East, West, North, South,
May human beings hear it.
Soul of Man!
Thou livest in the resting head
Which from the grounds of eternity
Opens to thee the world-thoughts.
Practise spirit-beholding
In stillness of thought,
Where the eternal aims of Gods
World-Being's Light
On thine own I
Bestow
For thy free willing.
And thou wilt truly think
In the Spirit-Foundations of Man.
For the world-thoughts of the Spirit hold sway
In the being of worlds, craving for light.
Archai, Archangeloi, Angeloi !
Let there be prayed from the depths
What in the heights will be granted
Speaking:
Per Spiritum Sanctum reviviscimus.
[ See
footnote 1. ]
At the turning of the time
The Spirit-Light of the world
Entered the stream of earthly being.
Darkness of night
Had held its sway,
Day-radiant light
Streamed into souls of men:
Light that gives warmth
To simple shepherds' hearts,
Light that enlightens
The wise heads of kings.
Light Divine
Christ-Sun
Warm thou our hearts,
Enlighten thou our heads,
That good may become
What we from our hearts would found
What we from our heads would direct
In conscious
Willing.
And so, my dear friends,
[ See
footnote 2. ]
bear out with you into the world your warm
hearts in whose soil you have laid the Foundation Stone for
the Anthroposophical Society, bear out with you your warm
hearts in order to do work in the world that is strong in
healing. Help will come to you because your heads will be
enlightened by what you all now want to be able to direct in
conscious willing. Let us today make this resolve with all
our strength. And we shall see that if we show ourselves to
be worthy, then a good star will shine over that which is
willed from here. My dear friends, follow this good star. We
shall see whither the gods shall lead us through the light of
this star.
Light Divine
Christ-Sun,
Warm thou
Our hearts,
Enlighten thou
Our heads!
Footnotes:
1. According to
the shorthand report, the final words of the verse were
not spoken on this occasion.
2. In the following
sentences, as in the gathering on 25 December 1923 at
which the Foundation Stone was laid in members' hearts,
Rudolf Steiner once again changed from the formal mode of
address to the more intimate ‘Du’.
(Tr.)
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