NECESSITY FOR A SPIRITUAL DEEPENING
THROUGH FREELY ACQUIRED KNOWKEDGE
Lecture I.
Stuttgart, 8th September, 1919
My dear friends,
This evening I
want to speak to you once more because I consider it
necessary briefly to epitomise a good deal of what is
connected with all that has happened here, has originated
from here, in regard to our present cultural movement. I
should particularly like to speak of all that, as far as its
intentions go, can still lie in what has already happened and
what may happen in future as a result of our activities here.
It may well be
that I shall not have anything particularly out of the common
or new to say to you today, but it is essential to give a
survey of what our souls should have experienced.
The keynote for
what I should like to pay today has of late often been
touched upon here. This keynote is meant as an indication
that a real, genuine, spiritual deepening is necessary for
mankind today — a spiritual deepening through the new
methods of spiritual knowledge possible at the present time,
and frequently enough described by me.
Recently it has
also been said ever and again — we shall never be able
to advance even in social matters if the understanding for
social matters does not proceed from a corresponding
spiritual deepening by the appropriate new means to spiritual
knowledge. And it has been pointed out. how completely,
profoundly serious should be this striving for man's
spiritual deepening with the new means to knowledge, how
only those have a real understanding of modern requirements
who are able to take in earnest what is lying in this call to
spiritual deepening, those who, on the other hall, can
convince themselves that this spiritual deepening, at least
in its most intimate essentials, can never arrive at any
compromise with past ways of entering the spiritual world.
All attempted compromise will lead to a wrong path. Can it
then be said that in our day men having the temerity to take
the lead in any particular sphere — that these men know
how really to take seriously what today is meant by striving
after the spirit? For in this such men ought to have a
feeling not for theorising about the spirit but they should
have a feeling for the real, living activity in the spiritual
and through the spiritual. When, however, this real activity
in and through the spiritual is spoken of today, for many
people it is something entirely incomprehensible.
I will
illustrate what I mean by an example. Now I recently had a
letter. Because I am quoting this letter as an example, I
shall just speak about it in that sense without giving names.
So, then, I recently received this letter from someone active
at present in a spiritual sphere, who to begin with says that
my “Appeal to the Cultural World” has come into his
hands and that he has caught at the idea of a threefold
social order with enthusiasm, The letter goes on to say that
the writer has to thank “The Threefold State” for
valuable information and inspiration which he has repeatedly
acknowledged in public. In addition, however, he informed me
that he had been sent by those running the Threefold
Commonwealth League a copy of the lecture I gave to the
employees of the Daimler works. And now he talks about this
lecture — in the following way: he won't venture to
criticise what is stated objectively in the lecture. But then
over the page he launches into a perfect sermon about it
because he considers the tone of the lecture should have been
different, for example, he feels aggrieved that the hitherto
existing bourgeois culture has been adversely criticised, and
so forth. I won't go into details.
Now what does
all this mean? Today I shall consider the matter entirely
from the point of view of reality.
You see this is
a man — and it is just as well there should be people
like him — who is theoretically in agreement with what is
in the Appeal, who agrees in theory, and indeed has taken in
something of what the book “The Threefold State”
contains — a man who agrees with the content of the
lecture given by me to the employees of the Daimler works but
criticises its “tone” — calling it that of a
demagogue and so on.
What does this
mean? The man is in theoretical agreement with the lecture.
But today it does not help to be in theoretical agreement
with anything. It means that the man has no feeling for the
facts of the case He has no dis8rimination about the way in
which the matter is treated. When in Dornach I sit down and
write an “Appeal to the Cultural World” having before
me, in idea, the men of today who would be able to accept it,
not just putting down something thought out theoretically but
writing in a living connection with those who would be able
or should be able to understand it, then this is something
taken from real conditions. In it there is a thorough
recognition of the ruling spirit of the age. And as to the
writing of “The Threefold State”, this is not done so
that the words might appear there on the paper in their
little printed letters for theorists to criticise, I write
them for the living men of today, I write in the way that one
speaks from one's writing desk to present-day men, in a real
and positive way. Then I go into a hall where the' principal
employees of the Daimler works are sitting. As I am speaking
out of the directly living spirit it is a matter of course
that the moment I enter I should know how I am to speak to
the people, how I am to put what I say. Whoever works today
out of the living spirit will not give an academic lecture.
Academic lectures are those in which things have been thought
out, the lecturer°s own opinions being thrown in the
face of his audience. Whoever is within the living spirit
speaks, not to the brains of his audience but out of his own
heart.
Now this is
something that for once has to be said. People who themselves
would be able to follow these things in theory have no idea
that anyone wanting to work in the spirit has to work out of
the spirit in which he is at the time embodied. This can be
criticised from the ordinary point of view. I can assure you
that the lecture I then. gave to tile Daimler employees was
understood by those present Had I spoken in the way that
would have pleased the writer, these Daimler people would
have laughed me out of court; nothing would have come of it
except my being laughed down, It is not the point today to
preserve antique — for they are antique
today — theoretical customs so as to be in personal
agreement with the thing or not. Today what matters is to
have a living feeling for the active working and weaving of
the spirit — for the existence of the spirit. Hence I
have always to say — even if in the course of time our
friends bring me things which have been said at some place
which superficially had the ring of much that I give
out — I have to say: It is not important whether or not
the words and sentences sound the same. The point is from
what spiritual angle they come. And there is still a great
deal for present-day people to understand in that respect.
People still think that when they have taken-in the content
of a matter that they have taker-in the matter itself. But
when they have taken-in the content they have taken-in the
words only and can still be a long way from the spirit of the
matter.
It is of
particular importance, my dear friends, to understand this
when what spiritual science has to say about social
conditions should flow into our present materialistic age.
Otherwise it will not be possible for the connection to be
understood between the being; of Anthroposophy and social
activity.
In all branches
of culture today we are living more than we believe Am a wave
of materialism, And what is so often. said now about this
materialistic culture being surmounted in certain spheres is
pure illusion. It may well he that here or there
materialistic culture is fought with words but it is not
fought out of the spirit. A very idealistic academic
manifesto may be launched or a book written, but it is
possible for these things to arise out of a quite
materialistic spirit. Above all it is necessary today to
fathom the following — the actual reason for our getting
into this present materialism. For if we do not understand
that, we shall never work our way out of it.
In what then
does the harmfulness of the present materialistic impulse
consist? It consists in the passions being so quickly aroused
today when the spiritual is made valid through the living
experience of reality. Now assume that someone is prompted by
his experiences to speak about the animal kingdom, assume
that in speaking he wants to make the following
intelligible — in the animal world, in its development,
spiritual forces are working. From knowledge of the spiritual
forces working in the world of the animals, he will perhaps
have to say things that immediately arouse the passions of
one group or other of evangelical or catholic theologians,
who criticise him up hill and down dale without going at all
into the content of what he asserts, simply because he has
the temerity to speak about the spirit out of real knowledge
of the animal world. Or one may speak of the necessity of
bringing spiritual forces into the social life of man because
we can come to a really new social form only by recognising
these spiritual forces and by bringing them into the social
ordering - up flares the Marxist's love of aggression (shared
by many socialists) just as in the other case it was that of
protestant or catholic churchmen. And the tone of these
objections is certainly not very different. One just has to
notice how in the one case — I mean this quite
kindly — there is more of a sentimental, theological and
religious atmosphere, whereas in the other the atmosphere is
more churlish (I won't say that this is any worse than the
sentimental one), but the actual tone in certain cases is
exactly the same.
Now where such
matters are concerned the question has to be asked: Whence
comes the present materialistic spirit? Who is responsible
for it? The answer is that the religious faiths have fostered
it. And its living presence in the social world-outlook is
due solely to the social world-outlook being a true disciple
of what, strictly speaking, has arisen during the centuries
from the religious faiths, It was really more important than
people think that, as I have often told you, in 869 the
Catholic Church denied the spirit at the World Council at
Constantinople. Since then no catholic man of learning dare
talk of the spirit being present in man. They may only say
that man consists of body and soul. Ant. so it was all
through the Middle Ages. Nothing scared the learned ones of
medieval Catholicism more than any mention the trichotomy, in
other words the threefold division of man's being into body,
soul and spirit. For at the Council of Constantinople it was
established that man consists of body and soul, the soul
having certain spiritual forces and attributes. Something of
the spirit is in the soul, but no mention may be made of a
separate spirit. Since then the scientists and philosophers
have believed that on a basis of science “free of
hypotheses” they differentiate only between body and
soul, whereas they are acting merely under the influence of
Catholic dogma. Such worthy professors as Wilhelm Mundt are
simply followers of the Catholic dogma even where their
psychology is concerned, though this is not generally
recognised.
Why is it that
when knowledge of the world is in question one should not be
allowed even to speak of the spirit? In part it is due to
this dogma. But neither may one speak of the soul. Of the
real soul it is not permitted to talk because the religious
faiths claim it as their prerogative to speak of the soul
and — so far as their dogma allows — also of the
spirit. It is their monopoly. It does not the long to the
ordinary man's province to speak of soul and spirit; belongs
to those who speak to people from the standpoint of some
religious denomination. What then remains for
science — the unfortunate zoology, physiology, chemistry,
physics — but to speak of material processes? If in any
place something flares up and spirit is mentioned they are
interfering in the affairs of religion. Nothing remains for
this poor science of the world but to become material,
materialistic, since the religious denominations deprive it
of the possibility to touch on anything spiritual.
There is
something very important in this, my dear friends. It is most
important to realise that the very powers responsible for
materialism are the powers of the Western Churches. It is the
Churches we have to thank for materialism. And materialism
will go on increasing in strength if the Churches do not lose
their administrative powers in the various religions and
confessions. If we take our civilisation seriously it will be
impossible for us to entertain any illusions in these
matters. Today it concerns us all to take these matters
seriously. Today we may not out of human weakness venture on
any compromise. If in our ordinary activities we are forced
into making a compromise, this must be done consciously and
not lightly dismissed with a few words. It must be quietly
admitted that it is necessary to yield to superior power. We
must not make a compromise with what we know; we must not
believe a thing to be right that we do at the dictates of
coercion.
Thus it is
necessary to create for our knowledge a foundation that is
once and for all a sure foundation. Today things have to be
given pointed, very pointed emphasis. Here in this sphere are
the things that have to be given such emphasis. For we are
now at a point of time where knowledge concerning the
spiritual world must be treated with seriousness. The
scientific knowledge that has arisen in the fifth
post-Atlantean period, knowledge that began with Galileo,
Giordano Bruno, Kepler, Copernicus, the period of natural
science having in the nineteenth century Julius Robert Mayer
as one of its most outstanding exponents, all this knowledge
followed methods and proceeded from views of natural science
which were quite new in comparison with the methods and views
among the various religions handed down from olden times.
Between the methods of natural science belonging to the
scientific outlook, and the methods of the religious faiths,
there is no possible agreement. Spiritual science, that
spiritual science that has grown out of actual modern
culture, must, however, take stand on the same ground as
natural science. It must deal in all seriousness with what I
wrote in my book “Mysticism and Modern Thought”. Such
things have to be taken with the utmost seriousness. But they
will not be taken seriously if it is not made clear that
spirit is working in all we now observe in the world. Matter
never exists purely as matter, Wherever there is concrete
matter there is at the same time concrete spirit. And when
man today says that he stands in the world as man with the
three kingdoms — animal, vegetable and
mineral — below him, he is stating merely a half-truth
if, at the same time, he does not recognise that just as
below his body there are animal kingdom, plant kingdom and
mineral kingdom, so above there are the three spiritual
kingdoms of the hierarchies of the Angels, Archangels and
Archai. No one has the right to speak of animal kingdom,
plant kingdom and mineral kingdom as being below physical man
if he does not realise that three other kingdoms, spiritual
kingdoms, are above him. For man as a being of the physical
world stands in bodily connection with the three kingdoms of
animal, plant, mineral; through his soul-spiritual being he
stands in connection with the three kingdoms above, which,
for the developed human perception are just as real
spiritually as the three kingdoms below are real physically
for the physical senses. And before it is admitted that we
come to recognition of the spirit through developed
observation, not allowing ourselves to be held back by any
traditional religious faith — just as little as
maintaining there are walruses would hinder us from asserting
something about the spiritual world — before we come to
this, we can never grasp what has to work as impulse into the
present time. These things today must have our earnest
consideration.
This is how
matters stand. We have entered an age of human evolution in
which man is a different being from what he was in earlier
periods of the evolution of the Earth. Man has always been in
a state of evolving. When the Great Flood of Atlantis had
subsided and out of a much older culture the first blossoming
of post-Atlantean culture arose in the Old Indian period,
human beings where their physical bodies were concerned made
a great step forward. It was the same in the second
culture-period — the old Persian. Still the same in the
third period, the Egypto-Chaldean; to a certain degree on
into the Greco-Latin period up to the middle of the fifteenth
century of our era. Since then the evolution of man as a
physical being has slowly been losing ground. His bodily
evolution has come to stop. We do not face the future so that
we can say: as the development of the first four
post-Atlantean periods was a rising one, so the future will
also be on the upgrade for the evolution of the human
body — No, it will not be so. For the rest of earthly
evolution there will be no upward trend for the human body.
The human body has gone beyond its zenith in upward
evolution, and as body, filled with physical forces, is
approaching not an upward but a downward development. If out
of the spiritual knowledge gleaned from our literature we ask
why this is so, the answer must be: As we as men have entered
into a different relation with the animal world — for
example, during the Egypto-Chaldean period man had a great
deal more of the animal in him than he has today, life being
more in accord with animal-instinct — so now he is
developing another relation to the three higher kingdoms. Up
to our own time these three higher kingdoms had indeed a
particular interest in concerning themselves with man. People
of the present day will have to begin to understand that in
speaking of these things we are speaking of realities. The
spirits of the hierarchies of the Angels, Archangels and
Archai had a living interest in occupying themselves with
human beings, but now this interest is ceasing. It began to
do so in the middle of the fifteenth century, the beginning
of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. These beings of the higher
hierarchies looked upon it as their ideal to arrive at a
picture of man as a complete human being. This they could not
do up to the present time, for the human being had not
reached the peak of his completion. They had to wait. Today
when there is so confused a representation of God that it
easily becomes atheism, this necessary waiting of the
spiritual beings above man cannot be understood. They have
had to wait until they had brought men to the stage of
presenting a picture of completion. Hence in former times
there arose, in man's subconscious, knowledge, feelings, will
impulses, which were the deeds of these beings. Man could not
produce them of his own free will, he did so instinctively
but they were deeds brought about by these spiritual beings.
These beings were interested in the progress of mankind, for
only when they had succeeded in bringing him to the stage
that he reached in the middle of the fifteenth century did
they have the picture they were obliged to have for the
benefit of their own evolution. Now they have man at this
stage. Now they are no longer interested in him from this
point of view. This is why human beings now are so forsaken
by the spirit — the spirit has in this respect lost
interest in him. He therefore easily becomes an enemy of
spiritual knowledge today because the spirits no longer work
upon him. Among the beings immediately above us in the
hierarchical order this particular interest is wiped out. Man
has now out of his free will to re-awaken this interest. As
formerly he was caused by his body to develop instinctively
towards the spirit, he now, and into the future, develops
towards the spirit through his own powers of recognition. He
has to give the higher beings new materiel to engage upon, by
seeking their support, seeking concepts that are their
concepts, and reach out beyond what is planted into us though
our instincts. We have therefore to seek the means of finding
a quite different attitude to the spirit. Naturally this must
be explained to man today in a wise way — I sought
yesterday to put this into wise words. (At the opening of the
Waldorf School) But just because these things must be said
wisely on the one hand, on the other hand they must be
indicated in clear and precise outline. For were there no
human beings today able in this sphere to stand the truth,
matters would go badly with modern spiritual culture.
What then has
come to an end, for example, in the evolving human being? In
former times it was justifiable to speak of certain people as
being gifted, as having a touch of genius. And quite rightly
the predisposition to this tendency was looked for in the
bodily constitution. Teachers could turn their attention to
the bodily constitution and by developing it correctly could
bring out the genius. All the dispositions of the human being
were thus brought out. From now onwards there is no longer
any bodily development. If in any science of education there
is a desire merely to develop the physical body nothing comes
of it. Today attention must be focused on the soul. Today
account must be taken not merely of what comes from physical
evolution through heredity, for nothing more can come from
that; we have to turn to what in this life on earth man bears
within him as fruits of past earthly lives. We must approach
the developing human being today in the living consciousness
of confronting a soul. Gifts of the body have come to an end,
so that it would be nonsense to speak of them in connection
with mankind of the future. It will no longer be possible to
speak of man being gifted for any particular thing through
the body, but rather that he is so gifted by reason of his
soul. This is something of tremendous importance in the life
of modern man. Much of what was formerly said about man is
false if said today. If today we do not study pedagogic
permeated by spiritual science we shall be studying those
founded on the old belief in a physiologically-gifted
man — right for that time but today no longer so. Today
there is sense only in talking of man being gifted through
his soul.
Thus we have to
make a start with a new kind of education. This will help to
advance mankind's present evolution. If we talk in old
concepts we are talking of something not applicable to the
present time. It is certainly very fine today to speak as a
historian to people of how right it was to perceive the
Christ in the way He was perceived by Luther. But modern man
cannot have this perception, for it no longer has any reality
and if upheld only leads to what is untrue. Present-day man
wanting to find the Christ must do so by direct perception.
As we find Nature by perceiving her directly, so we find the
Christ through inner perception. What for many years
spiritual science has been showing us to be of worth should
have made possible a basic understanding of a new social
impulse at this juncture, when a social impulse of the kind
has become necessary through the development of modern
civilised man.
Things must be
considered in their right connection. Outer conditions
sufficiently point to how necessary it is today to remind men
that they should take the most primitive impulses of their
religious faith seriously. Even for Christians the
commandment holds good not to take the Name of God in vain.
But if anyone comes along and speaks about social affairs
people immediately say: He is not speaking of Christ at all,
what he says is not Christian! — Certainly nothing
becomes Christian because in every third line Christ's name
is mentioned. It needs to be given out so that people may be
convinced of its being spoken out of the mood in which Christ
wills it to be spoken at the present time. But when it is
said out of the very spirit of the present and one is at
pains to speak in this way, people come and say: Oh, but he
is not talking of the Christ. He should be speaking with more
depth. Then the so-called depth is put forward in the most
external way possible. You remember the attack that arose
from a certain pernickety tendency implying that it was
actually expected of one to talk continually of inner depths.
Naturally I should find it easier to ignore this pernickety
tendency. But today it is necessary to deal with such things
for they may do great harm to what actually has to come
about. I might ask whether this tendency ia really trying
actively to penetrate what today must prevail as spiritual in
the true sense. We ought to have the courage to say: What we
do individually, for example in teaching, must be done out of
the knowledge that man bears within him different impulses
from those he had a comparatively short time ago; that
actually till a short time ago leading spirits of the
super-sensible world were interested in man's development up
to a certain point. But the picture of a physical man is
complete and out of his own powers he has now to seek union
with the spiritual, so that what he produces in excess to
what arises from his bodily disposition may re-awaken the
interest of the spirits above him. Otherwise our culture will
dry up, sink into oblivion and stagnate. Nothing can save us
which in any sense is warmed-up ancient knowledge. We can be
saved only by beginning to work on the spiritual with the
same courage that in the fifteenth century where the old
faiths were concerned a beginning was made on a new natural
science. This is what I have wished chiefly to develop for
you today, that we look up rightly to certain spirits above
us when we admit that our old relation to them ended with the
end of the nineteenth century, that since the last third of
the nineteenth century it has been necessary for mankind to
enter into a new relation to the spiritual world. Let us
realise this. It is well to realise the following — one
need not immediately become lacking in human feeling if this
is realised, but let it be realised. Where outward things are
concerned man cannot all at once go through all the stages of
his metamorphosis. He is formed by what goes on working out
of old impulses. What still remains of the old impulses
educated the men who from the pulpit today preach the old
beliefs. And why shouldn't we be kindly disposed towards what
comes from that direction? There is no reason why we should
not. But for goodness' sake let us not take it seriously as
the basis for what is truth today, We should just say: These
people were brought up to this, it is true, they cannot
change their calling later in life, so let them talk. But we
should not think it necessary to agree with all they say
except in a conventional way and without discussion.
As I said, it
would be easier not to talk about these things. But we are
approaching such difficult and serious times that it is quite
impossible not to refer to them. There is far too much of the
human weakness of not taking things seriously. Certainly
anyone may say: I cannot change myself nor my profession, and
so on, but he cannot justify himself, he just owns up to
compromising. What is important today is the upholding of
truth even if this truth is considered necessary only from
the point of view of external conditions. When we take note
of how present-day human beings have been rushed into the
fearful catastrophe of these last years, the only reason we
can see for this is that they have so entirely given up
always looking from things to words and from words to things.
So often today people value the words and then believe they
know something of the things. This tendency to develop the
meaningless beyond reason is the prevailing tendency of our
age and, then, not to see that even if the words are there
the matter is not.
Now during the
last weeks we have had to get busy with the course for
teachers at the Waldorf School. It has been our intention to
change what is a dead science of education into a living art
of education. There has appeared livingly before our eyes
truth that is often overlooked because words are left as just
words. In the course of our necessary explanations we have
indeed seen, for example, fat printed tomes with
“Official Gazette” outside; then there are
extracts from the Official Gazette. Or there is a label
“Curriculum” on some thick volume. Curriculum
— and you not only find inside: some particular class
of some particular school this or that shall be taught or
what might be less rigid: a certain subject should be learnt
for a certain purpose. No, there is actually to be found,
though it is hardly credible: how one should teach, how the
subject should be treated. That today is actually the content
of a regulation, the content of “State
regulations”.
What does all
this mean when grasped in the light of reality? Let us put it
into these words: In an official gazette it is ordered, with
all good-will and fatherly care, how instruction should be
given — and if you don't think about it you can let it
pass. But when you do think of it — and what an
uncomfortable business this is for most people today —
the idea comes into one's head: Today in our higher schools
people are not taught pedagogics nor didactics so that they
may understand them but pedagogics are decreed by law. As
laws are enacted that people should not steal, they are
commanded by law through official gazettes, through official
decrees, how they should teach. And what underlies this is
not even felt. And, actually having a feeling for this modern
innovation is the only thing able to promote a cure for the
conditions. Fifty men standing at a place where their words
were heard in the way words spoken by the members of the
Weimar National Assembly were heard fifty — men able to
feel the anomaly of this pedagogic law-giving, would mean
more for the healing of the world than all the insipid
chatter spoken these last months at that place.
Feeling must be
there for this, and this feeling will come only by the forces
of spiritual knowledge coming back livingly into men's souls,
into men's hearts. Not mere theories allowing us to agree to
things theoretically, which teach us nothing about taking the
spirit in earnest. Taking the spirit in earnest means if we
enter a hall whether we are one in soul and spirit with those
who are in it. Today theoretical confessions of faith are
nothing, the only thing to heal man is feeling, experiencing
himself in the spirit.
You see, this
was in view when a beginning was made here to work socially,
to work out of the living spirit. Up to now
men have only arrived at the stage of saying: I agree with
this or that, agree as far as the words, the sentences go.
That men today are clever enough to be able easily to come to
terms with the content of a sentence is certainly not denied
by one who ventures from inner knowledge of the spirit to
assert that the spiritual beings, who till now have been
working in evolution, have brought man so far that he has
attained their ideal of completion. It is not denied that men
today are clever, that they can criticise that they have
advanced a long way intellectually, that in a certain way
they are indeed complete creations from the earthly point of
view. Just because they are all this, however, they have to
tap a new source in themselves, an entirely new source.
It is true that
those who know spiritual life hold modern men to be a
finished product. But just because the are so, because they
have reached completion through other beings, they have to
start now on making something of themselves.
It was this
that decades ago caused me to place the science of morals on
a new basis and to speak of “moral intuition” in
my “Philosophy of Spiritual Activity”, in other words,
to speak of man's creative power in the sphere of morals.
This was because it was clear to me that there was no future
for what man develops instinctively out of himself,
what has always been called Ethics.
At the end of
my lectures here I have often voiced how glad I should be, in
spite of the imperfect way in which all this has necessarily
to be given out, to succeed in finding an echo in the hearts
of friends, to find a really responsible echo. For the
important point for me is never to make any particular thing
plausible merely in theory but to interpret what the signs of
the times are wanting at present to imprint into man. It is
not my concern whether any assertion I make is astonishing or
not, I am interested only in what is really necessary for the
present time.
You see it is a
fact, isn't it, that these principles lie at the basis of
Anthroposophy as I represent it? With any other principle it
would perhaps be better to abstain from working for
Anthroposophy; to refrain for the simple reason that,
naturally, granted,what lives in mankind today, the
individual who upholds spiritual science will. be a target
for all manner of unpleasantness. That goes without saying.
It cannot be otherwise, for so it is,today,in period of
transition. The point in question is to uphold spiritual
science, to herald spiritual science because one sees the
pressing necessity just at this time of bringing man what is
heralded through spiritual science. One may not speak simply
of gradual evolution, we have to speak of sudden changes in
evolution. Plants develop successively but the transition
from green leaf to the coloured petal of the flower is
abrupt. Thus man has developed gradually, successively, but
the transition from the time when divine-spiritual beings led
his development, bringing him to a state of completion, to
the time when he himself takes the initiative — this
transition is abrupt and it has to be achieved. Unless he
acknowledges this abrupt transition no one will cross the
Rubicon of the modern cultural impasse. Whoever always wants
things because it is easy to swim in familiar waters will
never reach the spheres out of which the impulses of future
culture can evolve.
Truly, things
to be undertaken today if they are to contain promise are not
of the kind we can observe around us, they should be of the
kind that, for example, the Waldorf School is. In the Waldorf
School something has been embarked upon about which it cannot
but be said that whoever taken it seriously has a heavy task
for life. For example, I candidly own that when I consider
how the present time is constituted spiritually and see the
necessity of cooperating in the founding of this school, I
can only describe what is in my heart by saying that,
manifold as are cares I have had up to now, this Waldorf
School belongs to the very greatest of them all.But that does
not hold one back from such an undertaking. Not because I
believe it will be a failure — for it will be a
success — but because we shall have always to concern
ourselves about the right thing being done to promote this
existence of these cares. Perhaps, however, we have done
something towards this special task by taking pains, even
when discussing this matter, to be truthful, unreservedly
truthful. I have wanted to speak to you in this way so that
things are not taken one-sidedly. Naturally I could not
strike the same note in the opening address yesterday. I
could not talk to the people assembled there of the interest
of the higher hierarchies, nor of man's image being perfected
so that something else must arise, and so forth. But if one
side of a tree is photographed then to give a complete
picture the other side must be photographed too. For this
reason I have had to add what I have said to you today. What
is true today must be expressed in accordance with the truth.
For this maxim must be learnt today — we have not only to
present the truth, we have also to present the truth in a
true way. For today we have come to an epoch in human
evolution when truth can be spoken untruthfully. Man must
learn to speak the truth truthfully. In many spheres today
are as cheap as blackberries, they are there for the picking.
Where this is concerned, human culture is at its peak. Those
alone fulfil the task for the future, however, who do not do
only what is easy; to link together just any kinds of
concepts into a new world-conception is easy. Those who do it
are not creating anything to work on into the future; those
alone bring about what is fruitful who speak of what is true
out of the truth of their own souls. Words are not enough
today, what is important is the spiritual essence permeating
the words. Hence we must call up in us today a certain
feeling, and people are very far from such a feeling. Today
pages can be read without any realisation that the writer is
a lying rascal. And to remedy this men must cultivate the
faculty of being sensitive not only to what is logical but
also to the well-spring of truth. More deeply inward than
those believe who speak of inwardness — more deeply
inward will be what is able to qualify men really to work for
the future, really to do something, if only to the most
modest extent, to carry mankind on into the future.
Hence
throughout the years it has been necessary, my dear friends,
that the matters discussed among us should be discussed from
the most various points of view. It is only by this that we
have the possibility of experiencing them with strength and
completeness. We must equip ourselves with this inner longing
to enter into cosmic secrets and we must have a strong and
true feeling for them. In saying this today I am merely
wanting you to learn to feel within you the necessity for
this longing and to realise all the untruth so prevailing in
our time between man and man. Let truth prevail! One would so
like to proclaim this craving over and over again to men out
of the solicitude of one's deepest heart.
Much, very
much, will be learnt from the kind of thing I made my point
of departure, namely, that because a matter comes from the
spirit anyone may completely agree with it without being able
to follow the actual words. Try to understand this way of
learning and you will further the task the present time
imposes upon you. You will find many things different from
what you have up to now found them, and much still rests in
the womb of time that has to be found if mankind is to arrive
at a state of health. All that has been said has not yet been
found. Whoever sees into how things work today knows only too
well that it has not been found by mankind through what has
been said. If you help towards right understanding of what is
said you will not again fail to help the truth to be spread
in a true way among men and not simply in an external logical
form. Then only will you be members of the order we
need — the order the motto of which is to uphold truth
truthfully. The secret of this is that truth can be spread
abroad in a way that is not true, which often does more harm
than the spreading of actual lies. This, my dear friends, is
worthy of your consideration — what it means to bring
about harm by making truth prevail in a way that is untrue.
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