IV
THE SOUL'S
CONDITION OF THOSE WHO SEEK FOR ANTHROPOSOPHY
Today I would
like to insert certain things which will afterwards make it
possible for us to understand more closely the karmic
connections of the Anthroposophical Movement itself. What I
wish to say today will take its start from the fact that
there are two groups of human beings in the
Anthroposophical Movement. In general terms I have already
described how the Anthroposophical Movement is composed of
the individuals within it. What I shall say today must of
course be taken in broad outline and as a whole; but there
are the two groups of human beings in the
Anthroposophical Movement. The things which I shall
characterise do not lie so obviously spread out ‘on
the palm of the hand,’ as we say. They are by no
means such that crude and simple observation would enable
us to say: in the case of this or that member, it is so or
so. Much of what I shall characterise today lies not in the
full everyday consciousness of the personality, but, like
most karmic things, in the instincts — in the
sub-consciousness. Nevertheless, it does thoroughly impress
itself on the character and temperament, the mode of action
and indeed the real action of the human being.
We have to
distinguish the one group, who are related to Christianity
in such a way that those who belong to it feel their
attachment to Christianity nearest and dearest to their
hearts. There lives in these souls the longing, as
anthroposophists, to be able to call themselves Christians
in the true sense of the word, as they conceive it.
This group
derives great comfort from the fact that it can be said in
the widest and fullest sense: The Anthroposophical Movement
is one that recognises and bears the Christ Impulse within
it. Indeed, for this group, pangs of conscience would arise
if it were not so.
Now as to the
other group: — In the manifestations of their life,
those who belong to it are indeed no less sincerely
Christian. And yet, they come to Christianity from rather a
different angle. To begin with they find great satisfaction
in the anthroposophical cosmology — the evolution of
the earth from the other planetary forms, and so forth.
They find satisfaction in all that Anthroposophy has to say
about Man in general. From this point they are then led
naturally to Christianity. But they do not feel in the same
measure an inward need of the heart, to place Christ in the
central point at all costs.
As I said, these
things work themselves out to a large extent in the
subconsciousness. But whoever is able to practice true
observation of souls will be able to judge the different
individuals in the right way in every single case.
Now the origins
of this grouping go back into very ancient times. You know,
my dear friends, from my
Occult Science
that at a
certain period of earthly evolution the souls took their
departure as it were from the continued evolution of the
Earth and came to dwell on other planets of our system.
Then, during a certain time — during the Lemurian and
Atlantean times — they came down again to Earth. Thus
the souls came down again from the various planets —
not only from Jupiter, Saturn, Mars, etc., but also from
the Sun — to take on an earthly form. And we know how
there arose, under the influence of these facts, what I
described in
Occult Science
as the Oracles.
Now there were
many among these souls who tended through a very ancient
karma to come into that stream which afterwards became the
Christian stream. We must remember, after all, that less
than a third of the population of the earth are professing
Christians to this day. Thus only a certain number of the
individual souls who came down to earth unfolded the
tendency, the impulse, to evolve towards the Christian
stream.
The human souls
came down at different times. There were those who came
down comparatively soon, in the first periods of Atlantean
civilisation. But there were also those who came down
relatively late — whose sojourn, so to speak, in the
pre-earthly, planetary life was long. When we look back
into the life of such a soul — beginning with the
present incarnation — we come perhaps to a former
Christian incarnation and maybe to yet another Christian
incarnation. Then we come to the pre-Christian
incarnations. But we reach comparatively soon the earliest
incarnation of such a soul, whereat we must say: Tracing
the life still farther back from this point, it goes up
into the planetary realms. Before this point, these souls
were not yet present in earthly incarnations.
In the case of
other souls, who have also found their way into
Christianity, it is different. We can go very far back; we
find many incarnations. It was after many incarnations,
pre-Christian and Atlantean too, that these other souls
dived down at length into the Christian stream.
For
intellectualistic thought, such a thing as I have just
mentioned is exceedingly misleading. For one might easily
be led to suppose that those who by the judgment of
present-day civilisation would be considered as
particularly able minds, are the very ones who have had
many incarnations. But this need not by any means be the
case. On the contrary, people who have excellent faculties
in the present-day sense of the word — people who are
well able to enter into modern life may often be the very
ones for whom we find comparatively few past incarnations
on the earth.
Perhaps I may
here remind you of what I said at the time when the
anthroposophical stream which we now have in the
Anthroposophical Movement was inaugurated. I may remind you
of what I said at the Christmas Foundation Meeting, when I
spoke of those individualities with whom the Epic of
Gilgamesh is connected. [See
World History in the Light of Anthroposophy.
Rudolf Steiner Press, 1977.] I
explained certain things about such individualities. We
find, as we look backward, that they had had comparatively
few incarnations. But there were other individualities
again who had many incarnations
Now, my dear
friends, for those human souls who come to Anthroposophy
today — no matter whether there are still other,
intermediate incarnations or not — that incarnation
is important, which falls roughly into the 3rd or 4th or
5th century after Christ. (We find it nearly always, spread
out over a fairly long period, — two to three
centuries. Sometimes it is later — even as late as
the 7th or 8th century). Above all things, we must look
into the experiences of these souls in that early Christian
time. We then find a subsequent incarnation when all these
experiences were fastened or confirmed. But I will connect
what now I have to say today most definitely with what we
may describe as the first Christian incarnation.
Now in the case
of all these souls, the important thing is: According to
all their past conditions, their former lives on earth, how
were they to relate themselves to Christianity? You see, my
dear friends, this is a very important karmic question.
Later on we shall have to consider other, more subsidiary
karmic questions; but this question is so to speak a
cardinal question of karma, because, passing over many
other subsidiary things, it is through their deepest,
innermost experiences in former incarnations —
through what they underwent with respect to
world-conceptions, religious beliefs and the like —
that human beings come into the Anthroposophical Society.
With respect to the karma of the Anthroposophical Society,
this must therefore be placed into the foreground. What
have the souls in this Society experienced, in matters of
Knowledge, World-conception and Religion?
Now in those
early centuries of Christian evolution, one could still
take one's start from traditions of knowledge — which
had existed ever since the founding of Christianity —
about the Being of Christ Himself. In these traditions, He
who lived as Christ in the personality of Jesus was
regarded as a Dweller on the Sun, a Being of the Sun,
before He entered into this earthly life. We must not
imagine that the attitude of the Christian world to these
truths was always as negative as it is today. In the first
centuries of Christianity they still understood the
Gospels, certain passages of which speak so distinctly of
this Mystery. They understood that the Being who is called
Christ had come down into a human body from the Sun. How
they conceived it in detail is less important for the
moment; the point is that this conception was still theirs.
It certainly went as far as I have just described.
At the same time,
in the epoch of which I am now speaking, the possibility of
really understanding such a conception had dwindled very
much. It was hard to understand that a Being coming from
the Sun descends on to the Earth. Above all, many of the
souls who had come into Christianity having a large number
of earthly incarnations behind them — far back into
Atlantean times — could no longer fully understand
how Christ can be called a Being of the Sun. The very souls
who in their old beliefs had felt themselves attached to
the Sun-Oracles, and who thus revered the Christ even in
Atlantean times inasmuch as they looked upward to the Sun
— the souls therefore who according to the saying of
St. Augustine were ‘Christians before Christianity
was founded upon Earth,’ *
Christians as it were of the Sun — these very
souls, by the whole character of their spiritual life,
could find no real understanding of the saying that Christ
was a Sun-Hero. Therefore they preferred to hold fast to
that belief which — without such interpretation,
without this cosmic Christology — simply regarded
Christ as a God, a God from unknown realms, who had united
Himself with the body of Jesus. Under these conditions,
they accepted what is related in the Gospels. They could no
longer turn their gaze upward to the cosmic worlds in order
to understand the Being of the Christ. They had learned to
know Him only in the worlds beyond the Earth. For even the
Mysteries on Earth — the Sun-Oracles — had
always spoken to them of Christ as a Sun-Being. Thus they
could not find their way into the idea that Christ —
this Christ beyond the Earth — had really become an
earthly Being.
[* St. Augustine:
Retractationes. I.xiii.3. “When I said [in his
book De Vera Religione] ‘That is in our times
the Christian religion, to know which, is the most secure
and certain salvation,’ it was said in relation to
the name, not in relation to the thing itself, of which it
is the name. For the thing itself, which is now called the
Christian religion, was there among the people of
antiquity, and was not wanting from the beginning of the
human race, down to the time when Christ came in the flesh;
whereafter the true religion, which was always there, began
to be called Christian. For when the Apostles began to
preach Him after the resurrection and ascension into
heaven, and very many believed, first of all at Antioch, as
it is written, they were called Christian disciples (Acts
X1, 26). Therefore I said: ‘This is in our times the
Christian religion,’ not because it was not there in
earlier times, but because in later times it received this
name.” (Tr. from the Latin text).]
These Christian
souls, when they afterwards passed through the gate of
death, came into a strange position, which I may describe
— somewhat tritely perhaps — as follows. These
Christians, in their life after death, came into the
position of a man who knows the name of another man and has
heard many things about him; but he has never made his
acquaintance in person. To such a man it may happen, at a
moment when all the support which served him as long as he
merely knew of the name are taken away, that he is
suddenly expected to know the real person, and his inner
life completely fails him in face of this new situation. So
it was with the souls of whom I have now spoken: those who
in ancient times had felt themselves belonging especially
to the Sun-Oracles. In their life after death, they came
into a situation in which they had to say, ‘Where,
then, is the Christ? We are now among the Beings of
the Sun, where we had always found Him, but now we find Him
not.’ That He was on Earth, this they had not really
received into the thoughts and feelings which remained to
them when they passed through the gate of death. So after
death they found themselves in a state of great uncertainty
about the Christ and they lived on in this uncertainty
about Him. They remained in many respects in this
uncertainty. Thus, if in the intervening time another
incarnation followed, they tended easily to join those
groups of men who are described to us in the religious
history of Europe as the various heretical societies.
Then, no matter
whether they had passed through such another incarnation or
not, they found themselves together again in that great
gathering above the earth, which I described here the other
morning, placing it at the time of the first half of the
19th century. Then it was that these souls among others
found themselves face to face with a great super-sensible
cult or ritual, consisting in mighty Imaginations. And in
the sublime Imaginations of that super-sensible ritual there
was enacted before their spiritual vision, above all other
things, the great Sun-Mystery of Christ. These souls, as I
explained, had as it were come to a blind alley with their
Christianity. And the object was, before they should
descend to earthly life again, to bring them, in
picture-form, at least, face to face with Christ, whom they
had lost — though not entirely — yet to such
extent that in their souls He had become involved in
currents of uncertainty and doubt.
Now these souls
responded in a peculiar way. Not that they found themselves
in a still greater uncertainty through the fact that all
this was enacted before them. On the contrary it gave them
a certain satisfaction in their life between death and a
new birth — a feeling of salvation from many doubts.
But it also gave them a kind of memory of what they had
received about the Christ — albeit in a form that had
not yet been permeated in the true cosmic sense by the
Mystery of Golgotha. Thus there remained in their inmost
being an immense warmth and devotion of feeling towards
Christianity, and at the same time a subconscious dawning
of those sublime Imaginations.
All this was
concentrated into a great longing, that they might now at
last be able to be Christians in the true way. Then when
they descended — when they became young again,
returning to the earth at the end of the 19th or at the
turn of the 19th and 20th centuries — having received
the Christ by way of inner feeling though without cosmic
understanding in their early Christian incarnation, they
could do no other than feel themselves impelled towards
Him. But the impressions they had received in the
Imaginations to which they had been drawn in their
pre-earthly life, remained in them only as an undefined
longing. Thus it was difficult for them to find their way
into the anthroposophical world-conception, inasmuch as the
latter studies the cosmos to begin with and leaves the
consideration of Christ until a later point.
Why did they have
such difficulty? For the simple reason, my dear friends,
that they had their own peculiar relationship to the
question ‘What is Anthroposophy?’ Let us ask:
What is Anthroposophy in its reality? My dear friends, if
you gaze into all those wonderful, majestic Imaginations
that stood there as a super-sensible spiritual action in the
first half of the 19th century, and if you translate all
these into human concepts, then you have Anthroposophy. For
the next higher level of experience — for the
adjoining spiritual world whence man descends into this
earthly life — Anthroposophy was already there in the
first half of the 19th century. It was not on the earth,
but it was there. And if Anthroposophy is seen today it is
seen indeed in that direction: towards the first half of
the 19th century. Quite as a matter of course one sees it
there. Nay, even at the end of the 18th century one sees
it.
For example, one
may have the following experience. There was a certain man
who was once in a peculiar position. Through a friend, the
great riddle of human earthly life was raised before him.
But this his friend was not altogether free of the angular
thinking of Kant (“das kantige Kant'sche
Denken”), and thus it came to expression in a rather
abstract philosophic way. He himself — the one of
whom I am now speaking — could not find his way into
the ‘angular thinking of Kant.’ Yet everything
in his soul stirred up the same great riddle, the great
question of life. How are the reason and the sensuous
nature of man connected with one another? And lo, there
were opened to him — not merely the doors but the
very flood-gates, which for a moment let radiate into his
soul those regions of the World in which the mighty
Imaginations were being enacted. And all this —
entering not through windows or doors but through wide-open
flood-gates into his soul — translated as it were
into little miniatures, came forth as the fairy-tale of the
Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily. For the man of whom I
speak was Goethe.
Miniatures
— tiny reflected images, translated even into a
fairy-like prettiness — descended thus in Goethe's
Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily. We need not
therefore wonder that when it became necessary to give
Anthroposophy in artistic scenes or pictures, (where we too
must naturally have recourse to the great Imaginations), my
first Mystery Play, ‘The Portal of Initiation’
became alike in structure — albeit different in
content — alike in structure to the Fairy Tale of the
Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily.
You see it is
possible to look into the deeper connection even through
the actual things that have taken place among us. Everyone
who has had anything to do with occult matters, knows that
that which happens on earth is the downward reflection of
something that has taken place long, long before in the
spiritual world, though in a somewhat different way,
inasmuch as certain spirits of hindrance are not mingled in
it there.
These souls now,
who were preparing to descend into earthly existence at the
end of the 19th or at the beginning of the 20th century,
brought with them — albeit in their subconsciousness
— a longing also to know something of cosmology,
etc., i.e. to look out upon the world in the
anthroposophical way. But above all things, their heart and
mind were strongly inflamed for Christ. They would have
felt pangs of conscience if this whole conception of
Anthroposophy — to which they found themselves
attracted as an outcome of their pre-earthly life —
had not been permeated by the Christ Impulse. Such was the
one group, taken of course ‘as a whole.’
The other group
lived differently. If I may put it so, the other group,
when they emerged in their present incarnation, had not yet
reached that weariness in Paganism which the souls whom I
described just now had reached. Compared to those others,
they had indeed spent a relatively short time on earth
— they had had fewer incarnations; and in these
incarnations they had filled themselves with the mighty
impulses which a man may have, if through his lives on
earth he has stood in a living connection with the many
Pagan Gods, and if this connection echoes strongly in his
later incarnations. Thus they were not yet weary of the old
Paganism. Even in the first centuries of Christianity the
old Pagan impulses had still been working in them strongly,
although they did incline more or less to Christianity,
which, as we know, only gradually worked its way forth from
Paganism.
At that time they
received Christianity chiefly through their intellect.
Though indeed it was intellect permeated with inner
feeling, still they received it with their intellect. They
thought a great deal about Christianity. Nor must you
imagine this a very learned kind of thinking. They may
indeed have been relatively simple men and women, in simple
circumstances; but they thought much.
Once again it
matters not whether there was a subsequent incarnation in
the meantime. Such an incarnation will of course have
wrought some changes; but the essential thing is this: When
they had passed through the gate of death, these souls
looked back upon the earth in such a way that Christianity
appeared to them as something into which they had not yet
really grown. They were less weary of the old Paganism;
they still bore within their souls strong impulses from the
old Pagan life. Thus they were still waiting, as it were,
for the time when they should become true Christians.
The very people
of whom I spoke to you a week ago, describing how they
battled against Paganism on the side of Christianity
— they themselves were among the souls who in reality
still bore much Paganism, many Pagan impulses within them.
They were still waiting to become real Christians. These
souls, then, passed through the gate of death. They arrived
in the spiritual world. They passed through the life
between death and a new birth, and in the time which I have
indicated — in the first half of the 19th century or
a little earlier — they came before that sublime and
glorious Imagination; and in these Imaginations they beheld
so many impulses to fire their work and their activity.
They received these impulses paramountly into their
will.
And, if I may say
so, when we now look with occult vision at all that these
souls are carrying today, especially within their will, we
find — above all in their life of will — the
frequent impress of those mighty spiritual
Imaginations.
Now the souls who
enter their earthly life in such condition feel the need,
to begin with, to experience again here upon earth —
in the way that is possible on earth — what they
experienced in their pre-earthly life as a determining
factor for their karmic work. For the former kind, for the
former group of souls, the life in the first half of the
19th century took its course in such a way that
they felt themselves impelled by a deep longing to partake
in that super-sensible cult or ritual. Yet they came to it
— if I may so describe it — in a vague and
mystic mood, so that when they afterwards descended to the
earth, only dim recollections remained to them; albeit
Anthroposophy, transformed into its earthly shape, could
make itself intelligible to them through these
recollections. But with the second group it was different.
It was as though they found themselves together again in
the living after-effect of the resolve that they had made.
For they, even then, had not been quite weary of Paganism.
They still stood in expectation of being able to become
Christians in a true way of evolution. And now it was as
though they remembered a resolve that they had made during
that first half of the 19th century: a resolve
to carry down on to the earth all that had stood before
them in such mighty pictures, and to translate it into an
earthly form.
When we look at
many an anthroposophist who bears within him the impulse
above all to work and co-operate with Anthroposophy most
actively, we find among such anthroposophists souls of the
kind that I have now described. The two types can be
distinguished very clearly.
Now, my dear
friends, perhaps you will say: All that you have here told
us may explain many things in the karma of the
Anthroposophical Society; but one may well grow anxious:
‘What is coming next?’ — seeing that so
many things are being explained about which one might well
prefer not to be torn away from blissful ignorance. Are we
now to set to work and think, whether we belong to the one
type or the other? My dear friends, to this I must give a
very definite answer. If the Anthroposophical Society were
merely to contain a theoretic teaching or a confession of
belief in such and such ideas of cosmology, Christology,
etc. — if such were the character of this Society
— it would certainly not be what it is intended to be
by those who stand at its fountain-head. Anthroposophy
shall be something which for a true anthroposophist has
power to change and transform his life, to carry into the
Spiritual what is experienced nowadays only in unspiritual
forms of expression.
I will ask you
this: Has it a very bad effect upon a child when at a
certain age certain things are explained to him or her?
Until a certain age is reached, the children do not know
whether they are French or Germans, Norwegians, —
Belgians or Italians. At any rate this whole way of
thinking has little meaning for them until a certain age.
One may say, they know nothing of it in reality. We need
only put it radically: — You will surely not have met
many Chauvinist babies, or even three-year old Chauvinists!
... It is only at a certain age that we become aware: I am
German, I am a Frenchman, I am an Englishman, I am a
Dutchman and so on. Yet in accepting these things, do we
not grow into them quite naturally? Do we say it is a thing
unbearable, to discover at a certain age of childhood that
we are a Pole or a Frenchman, or a German or a Russian or a
Dutchman? We are used to these things, we take them as a
matter of course. But this, my dear friends, is in the
external realm of the senses. Anthroposophy is to raise the
whole life of man to a higher level. We must learn to bear
different things, things which will only shock us in the
life of the senses if we misunderstand them. And among the
things we are to learn to recognise there is this too:
— We must grow just as naturally and simply into the
self-knowledge which is to realise that we belong to the
one type or the other.
By this means
too, the foundation will be created for a right estimation
of the other karmic impulses in our lives. Hence it was
necessary, as a kind of first direction, to show how the
individual — according to the special manner of his
pre-destination — stands in relation to this
Anthroposophy, to this Christology, and in relation to the
greater degree of activity or passivity within the
Anthroposophical Movement.
Of course there
are transitions too, between the one type and the other.
These however are due to the fact that that which comes
over from the previous incarnation into the present is
still irradiated by a yet earlier incarnation. Especially
with the souls of the second group, this is often the case.
Many things still shine over from their genuinely heathen
incarnations. For this reason they have a very definite
pre-disposition to take the Christ in the sense in which He
must truly be taken, namely as a Cosmic Being. But what I
am now saying shows itself not so very much in the ideal
considerations; it shows itself far more in the practical
things of life. The two types can be recognised far better
by the way in which they tackle the detailed situations of
life than by their thoughts. Thoughts indeed have no great
significance — I mean, the abstract thoughts have no
such great significance for man. So, for instance (needless
to say, the personal element is always to be excluded here)
we shall frequently find the transition types from the one
to the other among those who somehow cannot help carrying
over the habits of non-anthroposophical life into the
Anthroposophical Movement. I mean, those who are not even
inclined to take the Anthroposophical Movement so very
seriously, and those above all who are always grumbling in
the Anthroposophical Movement, finding fault with the
anthroposophists. Precisely among those who are always
finding fault with the conditions in the Anthroposophical
Movement, especially with the personalities and all the
little petty things, we find the transition types,
flickering from the one into the other. For in such cases
the intensity of neither of the two impulses is very
strong.
Therefore, my
dear friends, at all costs — even though it may
sometimes mean a searching of conscience and character
— we must somehow find it possible, each one of us,
to deepen the Anthroposophical Movement in this direction,
approaching such realities as these and thinking a little
earnestly on this: How do we, according to our own
super-sensible nature, belong to the Anthroposophical
Movement? If we do this, there will arise a purer
conception of the Anthroposophical Movement; it will become
in course of time an ever more spiritual conception. What
we have hitherto maintained in theory — and it need
not go so very deep, when we merely stand for it as a
theory — this we shall now apply to real life. It is
indeed an intense application to life, when we learn to
place ourselves, our own life, into connection with these
things. To talk a lot of karma, saying that such and such
things are punished or rewarded thus and thus from one life
to the next, need not strike so very deep; it need not hurt
us. But when it reaches so to speak into our own flesh and
blood — when it is a question of placing our own
present incarnation, with the perfectly definite
super-sensible quality that underlies it — then indeed
it goes far nearer to our being. And it is this deepening
of the human being which we must bring into all earthly
life, into all earthly civilisation through
Anthroposophy.
This, my dear
friends, was a kind of Intermezzo in our studies, and we
will continue from this point next Friday.
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