Address
at the Christmas Assembly, December 21, 1919
Dear children!
Several weeks ago, when we all came
to this school for the first time, I visited you more often. Then
there were a few weeks when I had to be quite far away from here, but
each morning when I got up and went to work, I wondered,
“What are my dear Waldorf children and their teachers doing
now?” This thought came to me often during the day. And now, in
the festive Christmas season, I have had the privilege of being able
to visit you again. I went into all your classes and asked many of
you, “Do you love your teachers?”
[“Yes!” shout the children.]
And you see, you answered me warmly, just like that. And then I said
to you, “That is an especially nice Christmas gift for me!”
And it is a nice Christmas gift for
me. You see, dear children, I have to think about how you have been spending
your days since Herr Molt gave us the gift of
this Waldorf School. After resting from evening until morning in the
divine spirit that watches over your souls from the time you go to
sleep until the time you wake up, and after you have washed and
dressed and gotten all ready, you come up here to this beautiful
schoolhouse. And I believe that many of you, maybe even all of you,
look forward to everything that will be here for you in this
beautiful schoolhouse. [“Yes!” shout the children.]
Dear children, you have reason to
look forward to it. You see, while I was away from you I thought of
you often, and in my thoughts I wondered, “What are my dear
Waldorf children doing?” And I also said to myself,
“They will be doing just fine, because they have nice capable
teachers, and these nice capable teachers approach them with real
love and are working very hard so that something good will come of
the children.” And then I had to think of how you look forward
to coming up here and of the love you show for your teachers. These
teachers have to work long and hard to be able to teach you all the
good and beautiful things that will make good and capable people out of you.
And you know, my dear children, I
was especially pleased when I was in the classes and some children
would come in playing the part of Ruprecht
[Ruprecht: in the
European tradition, the Moorish helper of St. Nicholas, who carries a
black sack and administers symbolic punishments to children who
have been bad during the past year.]
or of little angels, and they sang and talked about the child Jesus, about
the holy Christ Child. It was beautiful and grand that you could speak about
the Christ with such love, and that you could listen with such love.
And do you know
where your teachers get all the strength and ability they need so
that they can teach you to grow up to be good and capable people?
They get it from the Christ, whom we think about at Christmas. We
think about how He came into the world to bring joy to all people,
and you gave some beautiful presentations about Him today.
You see, my dear children, there are
beings on earth that are not like human beings — for example,
the animals around us — and we might often think that we should
envy these animals. You can look up and see the birds flying, and
perhaps then you might say, “Oh, if only we could fly, too!
Then we would be able to soar into the air.” We human beings
cannot fly like the birds because we have no wings. However, dear
children, we can fly into the element of the spiritual, and we have
two wings to fly there. The wing on the left is called “hard
work,” and the other wing on the right is called “paying
attention.” We cannot see them, but these two wings —
hard work and paying attention — make it possible for us to fly
into life and become people who are really ready for life. If we work
hard and pay attention as children, and if we have teachers that are
as good and capable as yours, then what makes us fit for life will
come to us, and on the wings of hard work and paying attention we will
be able to fly into life, where the love of our teachers carries us.
You know, you can
sometimes think that there are things that are more fun than
learning. But that is not really true; there is no greater joy than
learning. You see, when you enjoy something that lets you be
inattentive and does not make you work hard, then the joy is over
immediately. You enjoy it, and then the joy is gone. But when you
enjoy what you can learn, when you are flying on the wings of hard
work and paying attention, then my dear children, something stays
behind in your souls. (Later on you will know what the soul is.)
Something stays in your soul, and you can enjoy that over and over
again. When we have learned something good and proper, it comes back
again and again; we enjoy it again and again with a joy that never
stops. But the other fun things, the ones that come only from
inattentiveness and laziness, they come to an end.
You see, because many of you —
all of you, I would like to believe — want to work hard and pay
attention to what your nice teachers are giving you, I was so glad to
see your love for your teachers streaming out of your eyes when I saw
you again. And so that you do not forget it, I would like to ask you
again, “Don't you all sincerely love your
teachers?” [“Yes, we do!” shout the
children.] Now, that is what you should always say. That is what you
should always feel, and then the spirit whose earthly life and birth
we remember at Christmas time, the Christ spirit, will take joy in you.
Now, my dear children, when you have
felt your teachers' love all day long up here, then you can go home
again and tell your parents about what you have learned, and your
parents will be glad and say to themselves, “Well, our children
are going to grow up to be good and capable people.”
Make sure to write
that in your souls, for now is a good time to do that. When we think
of the great festival that reminds us that the Christ entered our
world to bring comfort and joy to all human beings who turn their
hearts and souls toward Him, then we can also inscribe in our souls
the intention to become good human beings. Because the power of
Christ is helping you, you will become what you write in your souls
today, what you seriously intend to become. And when I come again and
see that you have made even more progress, when I come again and see
that you can once again show me that you have taken love for your
teachers into your hearts and kept it there, then I will again be
very glad. My warmest Christmas wish for you today is that this love
will grow ever more perfect in you, and that you may continue to
unfold the left wing of the human soul, which is hard work, and the
right wing, which is paying attention.
And now that I have spoken to the
children, let me still say a few words to those who have accompanied
them here. What I just said to the children flows from a deeply
satisfied heart, because I really have received the most beautiful
Christmas greeting from them. When I came into the school, what
wafted toward me was something I would like to call the good spirit
of this school. It was the really good spirit, the good and unifying
spirit, that brings teachers and children together
here.
You see, in these days a Christmas
mood was resting on all the serious teaching that was taking place,
and it was deeply satisfying to perceive this Christmas mood, into
which the revelation of Christ speaks, if I may put it like that, in
all the corridors and especially in the classrooms. This was no mere
supplement to the regular lessons. You could feel that our faculty
managed to warm and enlighten everything that was being presented to
the children's souls and hearts and understanding with the real, true
spirit of Christ. Here, in accordance with the wishes of the divine
spirit, we do not speak the name of Christ after every sentence
— for “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God
in vain!” — but it is nonetheless true that this spirit
of Christ is with us in all our individual subjects and in every
teaching activity. This is something that can readily be felt,
especially at this time of year. Perhaps you too have been able to
feel it in what came to meet you out of this Christmas assembly.
And finally, to
conclude my Christmas greeting, I would like to appeal to the
children whom you have sent here. I hope their progress pleases
you.
Children, when you
enter these rooms with the other boys and girls, recall that you are
meant to love each other warmly, to love each and every other one. If
love prevails among you, you will thrive under the car e of your
teachers, and your parents at home will have no concerns and will
have loving thoughts of how you are spending your time
here.
There is something
we may say today, ladies and gentlemen, which should resound, as the
spirit of this school, from every word and glance the children bring
home to you who have sent them here, as an echo of what is meant to
permeate all of our human journeying on earth since the mystery of
Golgotha took place, to permeate all human work and activity, and
especially all activity in which the spirit has work to do. May the
words that ring in our souls today weave through everything that
human beings do out of self-understanding, weave like a warming
breath of air or beam of sunlight:
The revelation of the divine from heavenly heights,
And peace to human beings on earth who are of good Will!
[Luke 2:14.]
Our great ideal is to cultivate this
good will in the children of the Waldorf School. Our concern must be
to find the governance of the spirit of the world in our work, in
everything we do. May the Christmas message, “The revelation of
the spirit of God from the heavenly heights, and peace to human
beings on earth who are of good will,” trickle down into all
the work of the Waldorf School as well. May the school's working
strength be governed by brotherly love and by the peace that inspires
and supports all work! That, dear ladies and gentlemen, is my
Christmas greeting to you today.
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