THE BREAKING-IN OF SPIRITUAL REVELATIONS SINCE THE LAST THIRD OF THE
NINETEENTH CENTURY
THOUGHTS ON NEW YEAR'S EVE
On New Year's Eve it is always fitting to remember how past and future
are linked together in life and in the existence of the world, how
past and future are linked in the whole life of the Cosmos of which
man is a part, how past and future are linked in every fraction of
that life with which our own individual existence is connected, is
interwoven through all that we were able to do and to think during the
past year, and through all that we are able to plan for the coming
year.
The thoughts which, almost in answer to an inward need, we call up
before our souls in reviewing what we have done during the past year,
and what we intend to do next year, should be pervaded with adequate
earnestness and dignity, in accordance with the spirit of
Anthroposophical Spiritual Science, so that we may illumine these
thoughts with the Higher Light which we can receive from Spiritual
Science, through contemplation of the great Cosmic events. How does
this human life of ours stand with regard to past and future? It is
like a mirror. Indeed, comparison with a mirror approaches reality far
more than it may seem to do at first. Striving a little to attain
self-knowledge is indeed like standing before a mirror. We stand,
looking into a mirror and there in that mirror lies the past, of which
we know its reflection is in the mirror. Behind the mirror lies
that into which at first we cannot look, just as it is not possible to
see in space, what lies behind a mirror. Perhaps the question should
be raised here: What is it that corresponds in our world-mirror to the
silver covering at the back which turns the transparent glass into a
mirror? In the ordinary mirror the glass is coated behind so that we
cannot see through it. What constitutes the coating of the
world-mirror that reflects the past for us, and at first keeps the
future hidden from our gaze? The world-mirror is coated with our own
being, with our own human being. We have only to bear in mind that
with the usual means of knowledge we are really unable to see
ourselves, to see what we ourselves are. We cannot see through
ourselves, we see through ourselves just as little as we see through a
mirror. When we look into ourselves, many things are mirrored back to
us, things which we have experienced, things which we have learnt; but
our own being remains hidden from us, because we can see through
ourselves at first just as little as we can see through an ordinary
mirror. Looking at the matter generally, or I might say, in the
abstract, we may consider this comparison with a mirror as I have just
described it. But when we come to details modifications are needed.
Trying to look back on our life through this mirroring process (for
looking back on our life, on what our inner soul reflects, is a
mirroring process), we must confess: What we see mirrored there, is
only a part of our experiences. When you try to look back on your
experiences, you will find that these experiences are continually
subject to interruptions. You look back on what the day has brought
you; but you do not look back on what the preceding night has brought
you. The experiences of the night are an interruption. You look back
on yesterday, you do not look back on the night before yesterday, and
so on. Stretches of nighttime, not filled in by thoughts upon our
experiences, are continually inserting themselves. It is an illusion
to think that we survey our entire life when looking back upon it; we
only piece together to some extent, what the days contain. In reality,
the course of our life comes before us with continual interruptions.
We might now ask: Are these interruptions in the course of our life
necessary? Yes, they are necessary. Were there no such interruptions
in the course of our life, or, to speak more correctly, in the
retrospection upon our life's course, then, as human beings, we should
be quite unable to perceive our Ego. We should see the course of our
life filled merely by the world outside, and in our life there would
be no ego-consciousness at all. That we are able to experience, to
feel our Ego, depends on the fact that our life's course is
continually being broken up piece-wise. It is precisely with respect
to this ego-perception, brought about by interruptions in the course
of life, that present-day humanity faces a critical period. When a
human being of today looks back on life and, as has just been
explained, attains his Ego through this looking back, this Ego of
present-day man is, in a certain respect, empty, we only know that we
have an Ego. In earlier periods of earth evolution men knew more. Just
as in ordinary daily life, the dreams of an individual dimly emerge
out of his nightly experiences, so the clairvoyant-atavistic
perceptions of the human beings of earlier periods emerged out of the
Ego. These clairvoyant-atavistic perceptions were dreams only in their
form; what they contained was reality. We may say: The Ego of
present-day man has been emptied of the clairvoyant-atavistic content
which was the support of men of past ages, permeating them with the
conviction that they had something in common with a divine element,
that they were connected with something divine. Out of these
atavistic-clairvoyant visions, there arose in man's sentient life that
which condensed into religious feeling and religious veneration
towards those beings to whom religious cult and religious sacrifice
were dedicated. How does the case stand today? Today the Ego is empty
of these atavistic-clairvoyant visions, and when we look back on the
Ego it is more or less only a point in our soul-life. The content of
this Ego is a firm point of support, but it is nevertheless only a
point. Now, however, we are living in an age in which the point must
again become a circle, an age in which the Ego must again receive a
content. Since the last third of the nineteenth century, the Spiritual
World has made a mighty inroad into our Sense-world, in order that the
Ego may again receive a content. This is why, ever since the seventies
of the nineteenth century, the Spiritual World has willed to re-enter
our physical existence through revelations in a new way. What we are
striving for in Anthroposophical Spiritual Science is this: To receive
with goodwill all that is seeking to enter through spiritual
revelation from another world from a world, however, which
bears within it this world of ours and to clothe these
revelations in terms by which they can be communicated to man. These
revelations are nothing less than that which definitely (in a certain
respect) guarantees the future of mankind. It is not, indeed, a direct
glance behind the mirror, but it is a guarantee for this, viz.,
that when we as human beings, hasten to meet the future i.e.,
hasten to step behind the mirror which means facing the future
then that which we have to do in the future will be able to
come to pass in full power, if we have first tested our forces, if we
have first strengthened them through that, which, by means of
Spiritual Science, reveals itself to us out of the Spiritual World.
Just as in the past, man's Ego was filled with an atavistic
clairvoyant content, which guaranteed his connection with the divine,
so today our Ego must be filled with a new spiritual content, received
in full consciousness, a content which gives us again the link uniting
our soul with the divine Soul-being. The men of the past possessed an
atavistic clairvoyance. The last inheritance of this atavistic
clairvoyance is abstract reflection, the abstract power of cognition
possessed by modern men. It is a much diluted remnant of the early
clairvoyance. The man of today can feel that this dilution, this
logical dialectic dilution of a former atavistic clairvoyance, is no
longer able to support his soul. Then the longing will arise within
him to receive something new into his Ego. But that which has formed
the end in the evolution of mankind from primeval times up to the
present, must now be made the beginning. In olden times, man had
clairvoyant revelations and did not understand them. Today man must
first understand, must exert to the utmost his intellectual
power, must exert to the utmost his reason. If he so exerts it through
that which lies before him in Spiritual Science, then mankind will
again develop the power of receiving the Spiritual clairvoyantly. This
is certainly something that most people today wish to avoid,
viz., to make use of their healthy human reason in order to
understand Spiritual Science. Were it possible to avoid the use of
man's reason, it would also be possible to avoid altogether the
entrance of spiritual revelations into our earthly world.
Thus past and future are linked together on this New Year's Eve, this
Cosmic New Year's Day. For today, what is impending is indeed a kind
of Cosmic New Year's Day. The future stands before us as a formidable
question, not an indefinite abstract question, but as a concrete
question. How can we approach that which, as a question put to
mankind, in the form of a spiritual revelation, is striving more and
more since the last third of the nineteenth century, to enter our
earthly world? And how are we to place it in relation to revelations
of the past? These questions should be livingly experienced. Then we
should feel how important it is to direct our longings towards that
which is presented here as Anthroposophical Spiritual Science. Then we
should realize the earnestness and the dignity of the striving for
Spiritual Science. It is especially needful to have this feeling at
the present time. For we are not dealing with any kind of arbitrary
human will (Willkur); we are dealing with something that
as Cosmic knowledge wills to reveal itself to us from out of the
world's evolution; we are dealing in very truth with what the gods
will to make of man. But here we are faced with the fact that when we
on the one hand turn towards the spirit, on the other hand those who
wish only to worship the past, are drawn away by the Spirit of
contradiction, by the Spirit of opposition. And the more we try with
all our might to grasp the spirit of the future state of man, the more
surely will the people of the past be possessed by the spirit of
opposition. It is to be noticed among people of today that religious
feeling is seeking to assume new life. Groping attempts are numerous.
The attempts of Spiritual Science must not be groping. Through such
attempts the real, concrete world of the Spirit ought to be grasped.
Almost like a premonition of what it ought to be, we are faced by
those who say: Mere religious tradition is not enough for us; we
want to have an inner religious experience, we do not only want to
hear the message that, according to tradition, Christ lived and died
in Palestine so many, or so many years ago we want to
experience in our souls the Christ-experience. In many quarters
we find such ideas arising among men, among people who believe that
something of the Christ-experience has arisen in the depths of their
souls.
These are groping attempts, often even questionable attempts, because
at the same time people are content in the egoism of their soul, and
then turn away from all inclination to the Spirit. These longings
after inner spiritual experience are there nevertheless, and even
groping attempts towards such inner spiritual experience, towards a
new interest in the spiritual world, should be recognized. But the
spirit of opposition will surely arise.
To judge by what he himself has printed, such a representative of the
spirit of the past has recently uttered quite remarkable words at
Stuttgart, contrasting attempts, groping attempts, to rouse a new
religious interest, a new religious experience, with attempts to reach
a really new concrete knowledge of the spiritual world, as in the case
of Anthroposophical Spiritual Science. In the Shepherd-Play, performed
at the Waldorf School, one of the shepherds, who has had a spiritual
vision, says that he very nearly lost his power of speech. When I read
the last page of Gogarten's Spiritual Science and Christianity,
I must say that I very nearly lost my power of speech, for it is
indeed surprising that anyone should say such things in the present
age. It is things such as this that, on the Cosmic New Year's Eve,
should stimulate contemplation of the comparison of the past with the
inevitable future. What does this representative of religion really
say? I do not know if the full import has been realized. He says:
Today I ought to say at all times the chief task
is to safeguard the elementary feeling of piety of which I have
spoken. It is almost wholly lacking today. We are occupied with
religious interests with religious
experiences. Since Anthroposophy provides such good
material for interest, and is such a good medium for
experiences, people are helpless and without power of
resistance when they meet it. People know even less of that
fundamental, elementary bond, the bond brought into life by piety,
which drives away every religious interest, and scatters
every religious experience, the bond between God and
creature. And because man knows little of this bond, he knows still
less of that other bond, the unconditioned direct union between God
and man.
Here in the name of religion we see every religious interest
repudiated, every religious experience scattered. A wholly undefined
bond which cannot of course be differentiated, and which
the speaker does not wish to differentiate, takes the place of
religious interest, and of religious experience. We do indeed lose our
power of speech when a teacher of religion says: True piety must
drive away every religious interest and scatter every religious
experience. We have gone so far that we are unable to realize
what it means when an official representative of religion says:
Away with religious interest! Away with religious
experience! You see, apart from the fact that Gogarten does not
know that he himself would be quite unable to speak of religion at
all, if in the past there had never been atavistic religious interests
and religious experience; apart from the fact that he as official
representative of religion, could never have stood before an audience
had not religion entered into the evolution of mankind, through
religious interest and religious experience; apart from all this,
everything I have told you just now proves what I told you before,
that in the present day the very people who consider themselves the
true representatives of religious life, work for the destruction of
all that is essential in religion. Have these men lost every
possibility of understanding what pertains to the human soul? Can
these men no longer understand that when man turns his attention to
anything, attention is guided by interest, and that everything
entering the consciousness of man is based on experience? It seems as
if human beings no longer speak from such consciousness at all, but
only from a spirit of opposition. We should bear this in mind in all
seriousness when we look into the mirror which so mysteriously unveils
the past and conceals the future though in a certain way the
mirror unveils the future, too, in the way I have described.
It is the aim of Anthroposophical Spiritual Science to serve religious
interest, and to give a content to religious experience. With what
result? In the course of this year (1919) the question was brought
forward before the Holy Roman Congregation whether the teaching that
is termed theosophical is in keeping with the teaching of the Catholic
Church, and whether it is permissible to belong to theosophical
societies, to attend theosophical meetings, and to read theosophical
papers and periodicals. The answer was: No, in every case,
No, in omnibus. This is the spirit of opposition,
of contradiction, and the Jesuit Zimmermann interprets it more
particularly by applying this veto of the Holy Roman Congregation to
Anthroposophy also. I need not set Zimmermann's writings before you in
detail. You all know the wind that blows from a certain quarter
against Anthroposophical Spiritual Science, and that it is the breath
of the Spirit of contradiction. The Spirit carried in this wind can be
felt in the following words, penned by that same Zimmermann, who for
years spread abroad the lie that I was a renegade priest:
Through the defection of their General Secretary, Dr. Rudolf
Steiner, who took along with him most of the members, the Theosophical
Society picked up again to some extent in the course of years, and now
owns about twenty-five lodges, one-fifth of which are certainly
somewhat dormant, and publishes at Dusseldorf, as its official organ,
Das Theosophische Streben (The Theosophic Endeavour). The
followers of Steiner, who named his theosophy
Anthroposophy after his exit, complained recently that he
was becoming unproductive, that he had no new visions,
that he always lectures upon the same things, that he would soon have
to throw himself into something new, etc. This paves the way for
another article dealing in the same intelligent fashion with the
Threefold Social Organism. You see what Spirit of truth
backs up this Jesuit? A Jesuit does not merely represent his personal
opinion, but the opinion of the Catholic Church. He speaks only as a
member of the Catholic Church. What he says represents the opinion of
the Catholic Church. We must judge such things from a moral point of
view. We must ask whether anyone who deals with truth as this man does
a man, moreover, held in high esteem by a particular religious
community, can be held in high esteem by the true spirit of humanity.
As long as questions of this kind are not considered with due
earnestness, we have not arrived at the right understanding of the
Cosmic New Year's Eve. At the present moment, it is essential to reach
this right understanding. It is essential for us to extend our
sympathies alas, our sympathies often arise from egoistic
sources to the great human relations, and to feel for the whole
of mankind that human sympathy which impels us to make a spiritual
movement like this effectively fruitful for the evolution of mankind.
May you experience, my dear friends, at this very time, that it is the
Spirit of the Cosmos itself, which for decades has been seeking
entrance. May you experience during the coming night, that this Spirit
which seeks to enter humanity, shall here so be served that the souls
of those, who will to feel with and who will to think with
Anthroposophical Spiritual Science, may feel their union with this new
Spirit which wills to enter the world the Spirit which alone
can bring to the earthly world, the world that is destroying itself
the new upbuilding impulse out of Heaven. In this hour, a
symbolic hour every year, demanding that we experience it as the
decisive hour between past and future in this hour may you
unite your souls with the new Spirit; may you so experience in your
souls the contact of the past year with the coming year, that the
Cosmic Year which is passing away, may contact itself with the dawning
Cosmic Year.
But the passing Cosmic Year will still send many an after-effect into
the future; destructive forces into the spheres of Spirit, of Equity,
of Economics. Therefore it is all the more needful, that as many men
as possible shall be seized in the innermost depths of their souls by
the New Year of the Spiritual Future, and shall develop a Will which
may be the foundation of a new spiritual world, a world to be built
into the future evolution of mankind. Those who care for the future of
mankind are not those who would kill religious interest, who would do
away with religious experience, but those only, those alone who can
see how, through the intellectuality of our age, the old religious
interest has faded away, the old religious life has been crippled.
Those only care for the future, who see how a new interest must seize
mankind, how new religious experience must spring up in mankind, so
that man may bring into the Cosmos new germs for a future existence.
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