NECESSITY FOR A GENUINE SPIRITUAL
DEEPENING AS
THE RESULT OF FREE KNOWLEDGE
Lecture I.
Stuttgart, 8th September, 1919
Friends,
This evening I
want to speak to you about the cultural life of our present
time; and especially about the basis of the work we are doing
here (Waldorf School, etc.) and of our aims. I shall possibly
have nothing specially new to say to you to-day, but I am
going to give you a kind of comprehensive survey; that is the
sort of thing that ie necessary at the present time.
The keynote
from which I want to speak to-day is to indicate that a
really genuine spiritual deepening is necessary for mankind
at the present time — a spiritual deepening brought
about by means of those new methods of obtaining spiritual
knowledge which are accessible to men of the present age,and
which I have often described.
We have said
again and again that men will not be able to make any further
progress in matters social, if understanding of the facts in
social life does not arise as the result of a spiritual
deepening induced by the new methods of acquiring spiritual
knowledge which are essential to it. It has already been
indicated with what earnestness this spiritual deepening
should be sought with the help of these new methods of
acquiring knowledge — and that only those have a true
understanding for the needs and demands of the present time,
who are able to take seriously to heart all that the call
towards spiritual deepening entails, and who, moreover, have
come to the absolutely firm conviction that in the very
nature of things there can be no possible kind of compromise
with any older methods of entering the spiritual worlds.
Endeavour to compromise here only leads to side tracks. Do
you think it could truthfully be said that in our time men
who presume to be leaders in this or that sphere of life,
really know what a serious striving after the Spirit is? Such
men must not have a feeling merely for theories about the
Spirit, but for the real living power inherent in the Spirit;
but when one speaks of this living spiritual power to-day it
is to many people absolutely and utterly
incomprehensible.
I will just
illustrate what I mean by an example, Not very long ago I got
a letter from a man who takes an active interest in spiritual
things. I am only going to quote the contents as an
illustration and so shall give no name. It says that this man
had got hold of my “Appeal to the Cultural World”
and that he entirely agreed with the idea of the
“Threefold Commonwealth.” The writer goes en to
say that he had got certain useful information from my book
on the “Threefold Commonwealth” and that he had
repeated them in public. But then he saye that the Committee
of the Threefold Commonwealth League had sent him a copy of
the lecture which I gave to the workers at the Daimler
Company, and although he says that he does not venture to
criticise the essential details cf the lecture, on the next
page he finds a great deal to grumble at because the tone of
the lecture should, in his opinion, have been different
— he feels aggrieved that middle class culture, as it
has existed up to now, ie spoken of in rather a derogatory
way — and so on. I need not go into details. Very well,
now,what is the cause of thie? Let us consider the thing as
it really is. Here is a man — and it after all a good
thing that such men exiets — who theoretically agrees
with what is to be found in the “Appeal to the Cultural
World” and has absorbed something of what is contained
in the book on the “Threefold Commonwealth;” who,
moreover,agreee with what I said in the lecture to the
Daimler workers, but who criticies the “tone”
— considers it “demagogic” and so on.
Theoretically, the man agrees with much of the lecture; but
it is no use at all to-day to agree with a thing
theoretically. This man really hast no perception of the true
state of the case; he has no discernment in reference to the
manipulation or application of the thing. If I sit in Dornach
and write an “Appeal to the Cultural World” I
have before my minds eye such men of the present day who can
respond to such an appeal I do not write down any theoriee I
may have evolved — I write in living, vital
relationship with those who can,and who would be able to
understand and grasp it. It is an understanding which comes
as the result of a vital connection, a relationship wherein
there is ever present in the mind, the Spirit which rules at
the present time. And again in the “Threefold
Commonwealth” I do not write in order that the words
may stand there in little printed letters on paper,
eventually to be criticised by theorists. I write for
humanity as it is to-day, in a way that is in
acccrdance with reality. Suppose, now,I go into a hall where
the workers of the Daimler Company are sitting. I know
perfectly well how I ought to speak to these people; I know
how to put things to them because I speak from out of the
living Spirit! Anyone who does his work from out of the
Spirit gives no sort of academic lecture! In academic
lectures people have “thought thinge out,” and
give their personal opinions to their hearere. But a man who
stands within the Living Spirit, speaks out from hie
heart — not up to the stars!
It may well be
said that men who themselves are able to follow a thing
theoretically have as a rule no idea that anyone who wishes,
to be active in the Spirit must work outwards from
within that same Spirit in which he actually lives at
that moment. External criticism there may be — but I
assure jou that the lecture which I gave to the Daimler
Company, was understood by those who were present. If
I had spoken as my correspondent would have had me speak,
those men wculd certainly have laughed me out of the hall.
To-day it ie no longer a matter of preserving these ancient
(for they are ancient now) theoretical customs in order to be
able personally to agree or disagree with something; it is
rather a matter of having a living, vital conception cf the
working, of the nature and essence of the Spirit which exists
there in actuality. And so again I have to repeat that the
question of outward similerity in the words and sentences is
not the point. What is of importance is this: from which
realm of the Spirit comes that which is spoken? Men of the
present day have still very very much to learn about these
things. For there is a general belief among men to-day that
when they have got hold of the content of anything, they have
also absorbed the thing itself, whereas, as a matter of fact,
to absorb the content of anything many only mean that one has
got hold of the text and it is possible still to be far, far
away from the Spirit of it.
It is very specially necessary to know just what Spiritual
Science teaches with reference to social matters, shall flow
into our present day materialism. Otherwise the connection of
Anthroposophy with social life will not be understood. To-day
we are living, to a greater extent than we realise, within a
stream of materialistic culture in every department of life,
and when as often to-day, we hear it said that here and there
this materialistic culture is being overcome, that is an
error. In words here and there, there may be a fight against
materialism, but from out of the Spirit, no — there is
no fight. Some idealistic academic manifesto may be issued
— or a book written — but both may very likely
themselves be the product of the spirit of materialism. Above
all things it is necessary to-day to realise what has brought
about present materialism, for if we do not realise how we
have fallen into it, we shall never be able to raise
ourselves out of it!
Well, now, wherein consists the real corruption of the
materialistic impulse of our time? It consists in this, that
things soon burst into flame when some spiritual truth is
emphasised or brought forward as the result of living
experience of spiritual reality. For example, suppose
someone, as a result of practical knowledge, made certain
statements about the animal kingdom; suppose be wished to
make comprehensible the fact that in the animal kingdom and
its evolution, spiritual forces are working. It is quite
possible that through his knowledge of the spiritual forces
which work in the animal kingdom, he might nave to speak in
such a way which would immediately make some group of
Evangelical or Catholic Theologians- blaze up and criticise
him root and branch without once really examining what he
said, just because he had ventured as a result of his
knowledge of the animal kingdom, to speak of the Spirit! Or
again, one might speak. of the necessity for bringing
spiritual forces into the social life of humanity, because
only by first recognising them and then incorporating them
into the social order can any true reconstruction come about.
At once the desire for attack, for aggression, which is
characteristic of the followers of Karl Marx and other
Socialistic is revived — just as in the other case the
particular peculiarities of the Protestant or Catholic
Priests. And the tone of the things said by both sides is not
very different! It should be noticed however, that one
attitude has been cultivated in a sentimental-theological
religious atmosphere (I say that quite kindly) and the ether
in a more tempestuous, uncultured atmosphere! I do not say,
remember, that the last is worse than the first but that
fundamentally the attitude proceeds from the same thing in
both cases.
Whence comes the materialistic spirit of the present day?
What has bred and cultivated it? Religious Creeds and
avowals. And the fundamental reason why this materialism
pulsates through the social world conceptions to-day is that
they have been apt pupils of what has proceeded from
religious creeds through the centuries. It was very much more
significant than is usually recognised — that in the
year 869, at the Council of Constantinople the Catholic
Church cut out the Spirit from the Creed. Since that lime it
has not been legitimate for catholic erudition to state that
man has a spirit within him, but only that he has a body and
a soul. This was so, through all the Middle Ages, and there
was nothing which learned Catholics of the Middle Ages
dreaded more than pronouncement about the Threefold nature of
man, of man as body, soul and spirit; for the Council of
Constantinople had laid down that man consists of body and
soul, and although in the soul there may be certain
spiritual, qualities and forces, it is not permissible to
speak of an individual spirit. Then the scientists and
philosophers came to believe as a result of this, that when
they divided man up, into body and soul this was purely
scientific without any kind of bias — whereas it was
the influence of that Church Dogma laid down in the 9th
century which led them to do so. Such professors as William
Wundt are, as Psychologists, simply the pupils of Catholic
Dogmatism — but as a rule nobody sees the real
connection that exists.
Why is it that in discussions of universal science one may
not speak of the Spirit? This has come about again as a
result of this Church dogma. Neither may one mention
“soul” — at least not what is truly
“soul” because religious creeds have claimed for
themselves the sole right to speak of the soul, and also of
the spirit to the degree to which it is permitted by this
dogma. It is a monopoly of theirs! And a man is not within
his rights when he speaks of soul and spirit because such
matters are a monopoly of those who speak to humanity from
the standpoint of the religious beliefs and creeds. So there
is nothing left to science per se, to Zoology, Physiology,
Chemistry, Physics, to speak about except “materiel
processes.” When something lights up and they speak of
spirit — they are said to be interfering in what is a
concern of religion! And so there was left to this
unfortunate science nothing except matter, and it grew into
materialism just because religious creeds deprived it of the
possibility of concerning itself with the spiritual.
In this there is something of very vital significance. It is
very important to recognise that the powers which have
brought about materialism are the Ecclesiastical powers of
the West. We owe our materialism to the Churches. And unless
the Churches lose their power as directors of the religious
life of man, materialism is bound to grow stronger and
stronger. It is not possible to indulge in any illusion in
this connection if the question of culture is to be taken
really seriously; and to-day these things simply must be
taken seriously. To-day men must not want to come to
compromise after compromise in their lives, just because of
their human frailties. If in external life we are compelled
to make some compromise, we must be fully aware of it. We
must never imagine that what we are doing perhaps under the
pressure of external force is right: and deliberate
compromises should not be made.
It is above all things essential to create a foundation, a
basis for knowledge which is trustworthy. To-day things must
be sharply and concisely defined. We live at a time when
knowledge of the spiritual world simply must be taken
seriously. The scientific knowledge of the 5th Post Atlantean
period, beginning with Galileo, Giordano Bruno, Kepler,
Copernicus and having in the 19th century one of its most
significant representatives in Julius Robert Mayer, follows
the methods of natural science and sets to work from a
scientific point of view, both are quite different from the
methods and convictions of the creeds and religious avowals
which have come over from ancient times. Between them there
is, moreover, no possibility of union. A spiritual science
which has really arisen out of modern culture must, however,
be founded upon the same basic principles of knowledge as
natural science. What is said in my book “The Mystics
of the Renaissance” must be taken seriously. And if we
do not see the spirit in ail that we observe in the world,
then we are not taking that book seriously. Matter is nowhere
present merely as matter. Concrete matter and concrete spirit
are together, everywhere. And to-day when man says that below
him in the world are the three kingdoms, animal, vegetable,
mineral — he is stating a half truth only, if he does
not recognise that just as from his body downwards exist the
animal, vegetable and mineral Kingdoms, so upwards are to be
found the three kingdoms of the spiritual hierarchies of the
Angels, Archangels and Archai. It is not correct to speak of
the animal, vegetable and mineral kingdoms as lower degrees
towards the physical if it is not realised that up towards
the spiritual exist the three other spiritual kingdoms. For
man as he exists in the physical world is connected, through
his body, with the animal, vegetable and mineral kingdoms,
and through his spiritual and psychic being he is connected
with these three higher kingdoms, which, for perfected human
perception, are just as much spiritual realities as the three
lower kingdoms are real for the physical senses. As long as
man will not recognise that it is through a perception of
external reality itself (unhindered as he must be by any
religious avowal) that he comes to a realisation of the
spiritual — he cannot understand that which must work
as impulse at the present time. A statement for instance like
this — that whales exist, does not prevent us from
affirming at the same time something about the spiritual
world. These are the things which must be deeply thought
about to-day.
The fact of the matter is that we have entered upon an epoch
of human evolution wherein man has become a different being
from what he was in earlier periods of the Earth evolution.
Of course Man, at some stage of development, was always to be
found in the Earth. When the great Atlantean flood had
subsided and the first Post Atlantean civilisation developed
out of a much older civilisation, man's body was still
evolving strongly upwards and forwards, this was still the
case in the ancient Persian epoch, the ancient
Egyptian-Chaldean period, and to a certain extent in the
Graeco-Latin period, which lasted until about the middle of
the 15th century. But since that time the progressive
evolution, the forward evolution of the bodily part of man
has been gradually ceasing. The purely corporeal evolution of
humanity is finished. We cannot now say that in future the
bodily evolution of man will proceed and progress as it did
during the first, second and third and fourth evolutionary
epoch, for that it will not do. For the rest of the
Earth-evolution there will be no further evolution of the
human body. It has passed the highest point of forward
evolution and as a body, filled with the forces which
build up corporeality, is facing not a progressive, but a
retrogressive evolution. If by the methods used by spiritual
science, we try to find out why this is so, we have to come
to the conclusion that just as man to-day has entered upon a
relationship to the animal world different from that which
formerly was the case (man had for instance during the
Egyptian-Chaldean epoch much more of the animal nature in him
than he has to-day, he was more instinctive in an animal
sense) — so he is developing another relationship to
the three higher kingdoms of Angels, Archangels and Archai.
Up to the time of our epoch, these three higher kingdoms had
a special interest in concerning themselves with man.
Humanity of the present must begin to realise that these
things are realities. The .Angels, Archangels and Archai,
were in the past vitally interested in man, but in our epoch
this interest is ceasing — it began to cease in the
middle of the 15th century at the beginning of the fifth Post
Atlantean period. It was the ideal of these higher
hierarchies to obtain a perfect human figure and this was not
possible until our epoch, because man had not yet reached the
summit of his bodily perfection. They had to wait. Humanity
to-day with its confused ideas of Divinity which so easily
make men into Atheists, cannot understand that these
spiritual beings standing higher than man, had to wait until
they had brought him to a point where a figure or image of
his perfection was placed before their spiritual eyes. For
this reason instinctive knowledge, perceptions, impulses of
will, arose in men in earlier times as the result of the work
of these Beings. Man could not of his own free will induce
these things in himself — it was a more instinctive
process — and it was the work of these Beings. And
these Beings were vitally interested in the forward
development of man because only when they had succeeded in
bringing him up to the point at which he has been since the
middle of the 15th century, had they the image or figure
before them which was necessary for the sake of their own
evolution. At the present time they have brought man far
enough, and they are no longer interested in him from this
particular point of view. It is for this reason that at the
present time man is so bereft of the Spirit; the spirits have
lost a certain interest in him which they formerly had. For
this reason too he so easily becomes an opponent of all
spiritual knowledge, because the spirits are no longer
working on him. The spiritual beings of the Hierarchies
immediately above us have lost their interest in this
connection, and man must now, out of his own free-will, waken
this interest again. As in earlier times through his body and
his instincts he was instigated as it were to develop towards
the spirit, now, and in future, he must develop towards the
spirit out of his own free knowledge. He must, in a certain
way develop out of himself new “substance” for
the higher beings to use, by seeking for concepts which are
their concepts, but which transcend that which is instinctive
in man. Hence it must become possible for us to confront the
spiritual world in a completely new way. This is a matter
which must naturally be put before humanity it general in a
more guarded form, and yesterday, at the Opening speech at
the foundation of the Waldorf School, I tried to do this. But
just because on the one side there must be discretion and
caution, so on the other side these things must, be sharply,
clearly and definitely pointed out. For if, there were nobody
able to hear the truth about these matters to-day, it would
augur very badly for the spiritual culture of modern times.
Now what, for instance, has ceased in reference to the nature
of evolving humanity? In earlier times it was quite correct
when it was said of a man that he was “gifted”
that he had “natural tendencies to genius” and to
seek for the primary conditions in his corporeal or bodily
nature. It was right in educating a man to apply oneself
merely to his bodily nature and by developing this in the
right way, the man's genius proceeded from it. His natural
qualities came out, but as we have seen, corporeal or bodily
evolution has ceased and nothing will come by merely
developing the body according to some kind of physical
education. To-day it is to the soul that one must apply
oneself. To-day one must take into account something which
does net proceed from mere physical hereditary evolution, for
nothing more comes out of that now; one must take into
account that which a man has within him because this Earth
life is the repetition of earlier incarnations. To-day we
must face other men with the living consciousness that we
have a soul before us. The “gifts” of the
body per se, have, as it were ceased, and it would be
nonsense to speak of them in regard to future humanity. In
future it will not be possible to say that a man through his
body has a talent for this or the other, but that through his
soul he is gifted in one direction cr another. Now
this is a point of tremendous significance in the life of
present day humanity, for much of what was said in earlier
times about man is false if it is repeated to-day. To-day
when we read about methods of education which are not yet
penetrated by spiritual science, we may knew that they have
been built up out of old beliefs which in their time were
justifiable — beliefs which had reference to the
physiological “gifts” of men. But to-day these a
are of no account and there is no sense in speaking of
anything but gifts, or the soul.
Very well, then, we must begin to educate in a new way, for
this is what the evolution of humanity demands at the present
time. When we speak with old conceptions, we do not speak of
anything which is applicable to modern times. Of course it
sounds well to tell people to-day that it is right to regard
Christ in the same way in which Luther regarded Him! But men
of the present day cannot do this, simply because the
Lutheran view of Christ has no reality nowadays and becomes
falsehood when it is urged upon men. If man of the present
day is to find Christ, he must find Him by direct
perception. Just as through external perception we
discover Nature, so through inner perception, we find the
Christ. It is quite possible for that which spiritual science
has maintained for many years to found an understanding of a
social impulse at that point of time when it is necessary for
civilised humanity.
Things must be considered in their relation to the whole. The
superficiality of life is sufficient to show that it is
necessary to-day to remind men that the most primitive
impulses of their own religious faiths should be taken
seriously. The Christians have a precept that the name of God
must not be lightly uttered. But when someone comes and
speaks of social matters, people say: he makes no mention of
the Christ, therefore what he says is not Christian! But I
assure you that a man is not necessarily Christian just
because he utters the name of Christ in every third line he
speaks! We should speak in such a way that men are permeated
by what is said in a sense that is according to Christ's Will
at the present time. But when one endeavours to speak in this
way, from out of the Spirit of the time, people say: Oh, that
man does not speak about the Christ. He ought to speak in a
more inner way; and then this so-called “inner”
element is brought forward in the most exoteric way possible!
The opposition which we were faced with once, which suggested
that after every five words or so there ought to have been
some mention of this so-called “inner” element,
was really the outcome of a kind of priggishness, an
“old-maidish” outlook. I would, naturally, rather
not bother any more about it; but it is necessary at the
present time, to allude to it, because this kind of attitude
does much harm to what has to be brought about. I should like
to ask whether this priggishness really tries to get to the
heart of that which must be proclaimed as spiritual truth at
the present time. We must own that all we do individually,
and all we teach individually, must be with the knowledge
that humanity has within it evolutionary impulses which are
different from what they were a comparatively short time ago;
that, as a matter of fact, the guiding Spirits of the
super-sensible world until a short time ago, were specially
interested in bringing men to a certain point of perfection.
But the image of man is completed, and out of his own
inner being man must seek for the union with what is
spiritual, in order that what he produces over and above his
body and his corporeal “gifts” or
“talents” may make him of interest to the spirits
standing above him. If this is not done, then our
civilisation and culture will stagnate and choke and rot.
Anything which tries to revivify what is old cannot save us
from that. The only thing that can save us from that is the
courage to take hold of the spiritual with the same kind of
attitude which men had at the beginning of the 15th century,
when, in the face of the old beliefs, they began to build up
natural science. The point I want to make is this; that we
only set up a right relationship to the spiritual beings
above us when we recognise that with the end of the 19th
century man's former relationship with them ceased and that
since the last third of the 19th century, it has become
necessary for humanity to enter into a new relationship to
the spiritual world. Let us be sure about this point. It is
not necessary to be inhuman when we are sure of something,
but we must be sure. As far as external life is concerned, it
is not possible for man directly to participate in the
collective metamorphosis of humanity. Men have been brought
up to this through that which has remained over from old
impulses, so it is with those men who from pulpits to-day
preach the old creeds. Now of course we can look quite kindly
in this kind of thing ,but oh! for goodness sake, do not let
us take it seriously, as being truth in these present times!
Our attitude should be; “Oh well, let them go on
talking” We should not imagine that it is necessary to
give any weight to discussions from such quarters except of
course in a purely external way in answering their attacks
and so on. [Translator's Note. The German of
this paragraph is very obscure and colloquial and is very
difficult to render in English.]
Now it would, as I have said, be more
agreeable to leave such things unsaid, but this is
impossible, because we are approaching such terribly
difficult times. There is far too much tendency not to take
these things seriously. Of course anyone can say that he
cannot shake himself free from this state of things because
of his position, or something, but, that is no justification,
it is rather an acknowledgment that he is making a
compromise. The important thing to-day is to champion the
Truth even if one only believes this to be necessary from a
consideration of external events. When one considers how it
is that modern humanity has come to be immersed in such a
fearful catastrophe as that of these last years , the cause
is found to lie in nothing else than the fact that men are so
far away from looking at the relationship between facts and
words. There is a tendency to-day just to consider words and
then to believe that one really knows something about the
facts. There is a tendency to repeat phrases unendingly at
the present time, and as a consequence of this, it is not
realised that the facts are not necessarily there at all
— even if the words are.
During these last weeks we have been working
at the course of instruction for the teachers of the Waldorf
School. There we are trying to transform dead pedagogic
systems into a living art of education. And a truth which is
often overlooked simply because people treat words as words
and do not penetrate the reality, came vividly before our
eyes. There came before us fat volumes of papers, printed
stuff, marked “Official” on the outside. One
volume is marked “Curriculum,” that is, a plan of
instruction. And inside we are not only told that in such and
such a class, of such and such a school, such and such things
are to be taught, or (which would still leave an element of
mobility) such and such a subject must be learned up to such
and such a standard — but — one would hardly
believe it — we are actually told how the instruction
is to be given — how the material is to be treated.
Such is to-day the content of official orders of Government!
What does this mean — if we look at it
in its reality? Well, if you put it in this way that the
official paper gives well-meaning instruction, in all
good-will, how children should be taught, if you put it in
this way, and do not think about it, it is easily to be got
over. But if we think about it — which is a very
uncomfortable job for most people of the present day —
then we must realise that to-day pedagogy — didactics
— are not taught in the training colleges so as to be
grasped and understood, but they are set forth in laws
— in State instructions; just as the Law orders people
not to steal, so by official papers and instructions, people
are ordered how to teach! And people do not realise what that
involves. But as a matter of fact it is only by feeling what
that means that we may find a starting point for an
improvement of matters on healthy lines. It is really only in
modern times that these things have come to such a pitch. But
assuredly fifty people placed in positions where words are
listened to as are the words of the members of the National
Congress at Weimar — fifty people who felt what such a
thing means — would do far more for the healthy
improvement of the world's affairs than all the stale talk
which has been going on at that place during the last few weeks.
There must, I say, be feeling for these
things, and such feeling arises through the inflowing of the
living forces of spiritual knowledge into human hearts and
souls. Mere theory that only makes us agree with something in
an abstract way and does not teach us how to take the Spirit
really seriously, will not do. And to take the Spirit in
earnest, means that when anyone enters a lecture hall he is
one with the spirits and souls of those who are there.
Confessions of faith, or creeds which are theoretically
grasped are to-day of no account whatever. The one and only
thing which matters for the healing of humanity, is the
feeling and perceiving of one's own Self in the Spirit.
The object of beginning our social work here
was to work from out of the Living Spirit. Up to now men have
only got to the point of saying: Oh yes, I am in agreement
with what the words say. Men are clever enough to-day to be
able quickly to come to agreement with words and sentences;
and anyone whose inner spiritual knowledge enables him to
assert that those spiritual beings who up to now have been
working in evolution, have got men to a point where he
represents their ideal of perfection, would be the last to
deny this cleverness. That men are clever, that they have
critical faculties, that intellectually they have got very
far, that in a certain sense they are even a perfect earthly
creation — that is not denied, but just because they
are all these things, they must liberate a new source of
knowledge in themselves, a source that is entirely new. Of
course one who knows spiritual life considers men to-day as
being in a sense perfect beings. But just because they are
perfect in a sense, and because their perfection has come
about through beings other than themselves, they must begin
now to do something of themselves.
It was this that caused me over ten years
ago, to put moral science on a different basis, and in my
“Philosophy of Freedom” to speak about Moral
Fantasies — that is, about what has been created by
man in the domain of the moral — because what has been,
I knew that that which man develops instinctively out of
himself, calling it “Ethic” has nofuture
in front of it.
At the end of my address I have often said
how pleased I should be, if, even in spite of the very
imperfect way in which such matter must inevitably be put, I
succeeded in getting some real response from the hearts of
friends present. For it has never been a point with me to
make this or that theoretically plausible, or clear to you,
but to indicate what must be inculcated into humanity at the
present time.
It is upon these principles that
anthroposophical science, as I try to teach it, is based. If
there were a question of anything else, it would be better to
leave off working for anthroposophy, because of the simple
fact that any single person who teaches spiritual science at
the present time, is pelted with every possible kind of
abuse. That is quite obvious, and it cannot be otherwise,
because things are like this in the present transitionary
epoch. The only thing to d do is to proclaim spiritual
science, to give it out, just because one realises the urgent
necessity of bringing to humanity what lives within it. We
should not speak now merely of a “successive
evolution” but of a sudden change or transformation in
evolution. The development of a plant is by successive
stages, but the transition of the leaf into the coloured
flower petal is an abrupt one. In this sense there has been a
successive evolution of humanity, but the transition from the
time when the evolution of man was directed by divine
spiritual Beings, who brought humanity to the point where he
now stands, to the time when must bestir themselves into
activity, is an abrupt one, and it simply must come about.
And without the recognition of the abrupt transition there is
no crossing the Rubicon of the miseries of modern culture.
Whoever wishes for the sake of convenience to carry over anything
from old channels, can never really enter the region out of which
the impulses of the culture of the future can develop.
What has to be undertaken to-day is not the
kind of thing that various people here and there think about,
not at least if they are to have any prospect of success;
they are rather the kind of thing that we are doing, for
example, in our Waldorf School. In the Waldorf School
something has been undertaken of which one cannot say
otherwise than that to anyone who takes it really seriously,
it becomes his deepest concern.
I, for example, acknowledge it quite frankly,
that when I look at the spiritual constitution of the
present, day, and see the necessity for collaborating with
the establishment of such a school, there is something in my
heart which I could describe by saying that, this Waldorf
School belongs to that category of things which concerns me
most of ail — and in my life I have concerned myself
with many things! It was a thing which simply had to be
undertaken. And I felt that I had to concern myself with it
not merely because I had any idea that it might somehow prove
not to be successful. It will succeed — but because of
that we must take care that the right elements work towards
its success. It would be quite foolish not to acknowledge
that anxieties exist. But perhaps we have done something for
this special task in that we have had the courage to be
absolutely and unceasingly true and sincere. And in order
that things should not be taken in a one-sided way, I wished
to-day to speak as I nave done. Naturally, in the public
address yesterday I could not strike the same note as to you
to-day. I could not speak to the people who were gathered
together in the public meeting, of the interest which the
higher Hierarchies had in completing a perfect image of man,
and that something new must now come about, etc. But if a
tree is photographed from one side, in order to obtain a
complete picture, it must also be photographed from its
other sides, and so I had to add that which I have said to
you to-day. In our day the Truth must be expressed in a way
that is True. We must learn that we nave not only to advocate
the Truth, but the Truth in a true way. We have come to a
time in human evolution when it is possible for man to
advocate untruly! In many places to-day truths are as cheap
as blackberries — one has only to read them here and
there. And in this connection human culture is, as it were,
complete. But only these perform what is necessary for the
future. who do not only do that which is easy. It is quite an
easy matter to form a conception of even a new world concept,
but those who do this and nothing more, accomplish nothing at
all that works on into the future Truth must be expressed
from out of the soul. To-day it is not merely a question of
the verbal text, but of the spiritual “fluids”
and currents which penetrate through the words. Men have to
acquire a feeling for this nowadays, and they have none at
the present time; they will read pages and pages without
realising at all that the author of them is a liar. Oh,
humanity must acquire the faculty for feeling what the
source of Truth is, and not alone perceive the logic of the
thing. Much more “inner” than those men think who
to-day believe that they are speaking about inner things, is
that which can make humanity really able to work and to act
for the future.
For this reason it has been necessary for
years that facts which have been described should have been
put from as many different points of view as possible —
because only so is it possible to understand them completely
and vitally. We must equip ourselves with an inner longing to
approach world mysteries and feel them inwardly in a true and
vital way. My sole purpose to-day in what I have said, has
been that you should learn to feel in yourselves the
necessity for such a longing and also to make you feel what a
sway Untruth holds in the world to-day among men of our age.
It is Truth, TRUTH, which humanity must champion, with all
the intensity of which hearts and souls are capable. There is
very, very much to be learnt, from such an example as I gave
you at the beginning of this lecture — one may fully
agree with the verbal text of a thing, but not really get
hold of it in any true sense, because it comes from out of
the spirit. Try to understand the teaching in this way and
you will be serving the task which the present time sets you.
You will find out many other things as well, which you have
not yet discovered and a great deal still rests in the bosom
of the present which must be discovered for the healing of
humanity. A great deal too has already been said and has not
been discovered by humanity. Look deeply into these things,
and you will find that this is so; if you try to understand
these things aright, then you cannot fail to help in the
spreading [of] the Truth among men — not merely in an
externally logical form — but Truth in its essence. And
then you will be members of that Order which humanity so
sorely needs, whose motto is “Truly to advocate
Truth” (Die Wahrheit wahr zu
vertreten). It is possible to spread Truth in a false
way and thereby often to do more damage than occurs through
the spread of a lie. It is very well worth while to ponder on
what this means, to cause harm through the proclaiming and
assertion of Truth in a false way.
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