THE DOGMA OF REVELATION AND THE DOGMA OF EXPERIENCE
THE SPIRITUAL MARK OF THE PRESENT TIME
A NEW YEAR CONTEMPLATION
Meeting you today with New Year Greetings, I should like to express
the wish that each one of you may realize in the depth of his soul how
great and insistent are the demands of the present moment as regards
the evolution of mankind, and that, as a result of this realization,
each one in his own place may co-operate as far as he can, in bringing
to fulfilment that of which mankind stands in such need. At this time
of year, expressing as it does symbolically the meeting of past and
future, I should like, by way of introduction to our New Year
contemplation, which rightly is also a contemplation of the whole
course of time, to recall some passages from essays which I wrote more
than thirty years ago and which are shortly to be published. Although
connected with personal experiences, these essays have a definite
significance if we want to look into the whole spiritual condition of
the present day. My purpose in writing them was, as you will notice,
to rouse the conscience of the German people, to give expression to
that which could be perceived even then, as fundamentally lacking in
the spiritual life of the German nation. I will read to you some
passages from one of these essays entitled The Spiritual Mark of
the Present Day. These passages refer to what was taking place
more than thirty years ago, to a past which was then the present. I
wrote in the very midst of the spiritual life prevailing at that time,
amid symptoms which showed themselves most markedly in the life of
thought of the German nation. I wrote: It is with a shrug of the
shoulders that our generation recalls the period when a philosophic
current ran through the whole spiritual life of the German people. The
mighty impulse of the times, seizing men's minds at the end of last
century (i.e., the eighteenth century) and the beginning of
this one, and boldly facing the highest imaginable tasks, is now
looked upon as a regrettable aberration. If anyone dares to raise an
objection when the conversation turns upon Fichte's fantasies, or
Hegel's insubstantial play of thoughts and words, he is regarded by
his listeners as a mere amateur, who has as slight an idea of the
spirit of modern scientific investigation, as he has of the
thoroughness and seriousness of philosophic methods. Kant and
Schopenhauer at best are tolerated by our contemporaries. It is
apparently possible to trace back to Kant the somewhat scanty
philosophic crumbs used by modern science as foundational; and
Schopenhauer, besides his strictly scientific works, also wrote a few
things in a light style, on subjects accessible to people with a
limited spiritual horizon. An open mind for that striving towards the
loftiest heights of the world of thought, an understanding for that
soaring of the spirit which in the realms of science went parallel
with our classic period of culture this is lacking now. The
serious side of this phenomenon only appears when we take into
consideration that a persistent turning away from that spiritual goal
implies for the German people the loss of their own Self, a breaking
away from the Spirit of the Nation. For that striving sprang from a
deep need in the German nature. It does not enter our mind to wish to
deny the manifold mistakes and one-sided fallacies which Fichte,
Hegel, Schelling, Oken, and others, committed in their bold inroads
into the kingdom of idealism. But the impulse which in all its
grandeur inspired them should not be misunderstood. It is the impulse
most fitting for a nation of thinkers. The German nation is not
characterized by that living sense for immediate reality, or the
outward aspect of Nature, which enabled the Greeks to create their
wonderful and imperishable works of art. Among the Germans there is
instead, an unceasing urge of the spirit toward the cause of things,
toward the apparently hidden, deeper origins of the Nature which
surrounds us. Just as the Greek spirit found expression in its
wonderful world of plastic forms, so the German, more concentrated
within himself, less open to Nature but on that account more with his
own heart, cherishing intercourse with his own inner world, sought his
conquests in the world of pure thought. The way, therefore, in which
Fichte and his successors looked upon the world and life was truly
German. This is why their teachings were so enthusiastically received;
this is why, for a time, they held the whole life of the nation
enthralled. This is why we must not break with their spiritual
leading. Our solution of the difficulty should be to overcome
mistakes, while continuing the natural course of development on the
lines laid down at that time. Not what these spirits found or thought
to find, is of lasting value, but how they faced the problems.
At the time when this essay was written the German nation had to be
shown these truths, which were threatening to disappear from their
field of vision. We were living then in another age than the present,
an age in which, had we willed it, it might still have been possible
for certain circles to unite with the spirit, then at the beginning of
its decline, and thus to prepare the way for an all-pervading and
lasting development of the human impulse. Indeed, at that time it
ought to have been possible to find such people, amongst those who
called themselves leaders of the nation, amongst those who prepared
the younger generation for later life. There were no experiments,
then, of the kind now coming to the fore in Russia. At that time (in
Germany) those who educated the young, still had the chance of turning
back to the aims and intentions of the old spiritual life, causing it
to rise again in the new form. But no one was willing to listen in the
least to any voice urging that a real, spiritual striving should rise
to life again amongst men. Every opinion that had taken firm hold
amongst the lower or higher ranks of the nation's teachers during the
preceding thirty years, was an attack directed against the aims and
intentions of a spiritual world-conception.
I should recall that when I wrote this essay, I had already published
my views on Goethe's World Conception, on Goethe's scientific
ideas. I had pointed out two great dangers in the domain of thought,
in the field of active scientific investigation. I coined at that time
two expressions defining the two great foes of human spiritual
progress. On the one hand I spoke of the Dogma of
Revelation, and on the other hand of the Dogma of mere
Experience. I wished to show that the one-sided cultivation of
the dogma of revelation, as it had developed in the religious
confessions, was just as pernicious as the continual hammering upon
the so-called dogmas of experience, i.e., continually insisting
only upon all that the external sense-world, the world of material
facts, offers to scientists and sociologists. In the course of time
the task arose of rendering these thoughts more concrete, of pointing
out the real forces behind this or that phenomenon.
What, then, lies behind in everything brought to our notice when the
dogma of revelation is mentioned? Today, in an all-embracing sense,
all that lies behind what we term Luciferic influences in the
course of mankind's evolution. And behind the dogma of experience,
lies everything that we term, again in an all-embracing sense, the
Ahrimanic influences in human evolution. In the present age, he who
wishes to lead men only under the influence of the dogma of
revelation, leads them in the Luciferic direction; he who wishes
instead to lead men, as scientists would do, only according to the
dogma of external sense-experience, leads them in the Ahrimanic
direction. Is it not a fitting New Year's contemplation in these
serious times of ours, to review the last thirty or forty years, and
to point out how necessary it still is today to repeat the call of
that time, to raise it anew, but far more strongly? The outward course
of events during these last thirty or forty years has shown clearly
the justification of that call; for he who without prejudice looks at
what has happened, must say to himself: There would not be
today's misery and want, had that call become a reality in the hearts
of the people of Central Europe at that time. At that time it
sounded in vain. Today the Holy Roman Congregation meets it with the
Decree of the 18th July, 1919, and the chief clergy announce from
their pulpits that Anthroposophy is not to be read in my books because
the Pope forbids it. Information concerning it can be obtained from
the writings of my opponents. This pronouncement takes place
simultaneously with negotiations for the establishment of a Roman
Catholic Nuntiate in Berlin under the auspices of a Berlin Government
with socialistic leanings! Here, again, is something that shows the
spiritual mark of the age. Would that today one could really appeal to
the innermost heart-forces of those who are still capable of feeling
something of the spiritual impulses in human evolution, so that they
may wake up, so that they may see how things really stand. The
all-important thing today is that man should be able to find
himself. But to find our own Self requires confidence in our own
strength of soul. Little is attained amongst men today, by appealing
to this confidence in their own strength of soul. People want, on the
one hand, the support of something which constrains them from
within to think and to will what is right, or, on the other hand,
the support of something which constrains them from without to
think and to will what is right. In some way we always find these two
extremes in men; they never wish to pull themselves together, to
strive with active forces towards the balance between these two
extremes.
Let us reconsider this spiritual mark of the present day, about to
become the social and material mark. Let us reconsider it to some
extent. We hear the old Marxist call rising in the East of Europe:
A social order must be established among men, where everyone can
live according to his individual capacities and needs; a social order
must be evolved where the individual capacities of each man can be
taken into full consideration and where the justifiable needs of every
single person can be satisfied. Taken in the abstract, no
objection whatever can be raised against this saying. But on the other
hand, we hear a personality like Lenin saying: Among people of
today such a social order cannot be founded; it is only possible to
establish a transitory social order; it is only possible to establish
something which is injustice of course in the widest
sense of the word. Injustice is indeed present to an absurd extent in
everything that Lenin and his followers establish. For Lenin and his
followers believe that only by passing through a transitory social
order, can a new human race be produced, a race not yet in existence;
only when the race is there, will it be possible to introduce the
social order where everyone will be able to employ his capacities,
where everyone will be able to live according to his needs. This,
then, is what they are aiming at: the formation of a race of men not
yet in existence, in order to realize an ideal which, as I have said,
can be justified in the abstract.
Ought not enough people, when they hear of such a thing as this, be
able to find themselves, and to grasp the whole seriousness of
the present world-situation? Is it not time for this drowsiness to
cease, when something of this kind appears before us pointing most
significantly to the mark of the present day this drowsiness
which causes us to close our eyes a little, so that we do not grasp
the whole significance of such a matter? Nothing will help us to reach
a concrete insight into these things, except to abandon the
paths of abstraction in the Spiritual life. And for this we must first
really acquire the feeling that where there is only a flow of words
and phrases about spirit and soul, there the talk is mere abstraction.
We must be able to feel when spirit and soul are spoken of as reality.
For example, speaking of human capacities: These arise as
manifestations from out of man's inner being as the individual grows
up. Through some of its leaders, mankind feels itself induced to
develop accordingly these capacities and forces, which come to light
in the growing human being. But in this domain our feelings are to be
trusted only if we definitely perceive in the manifestation of these
forces and capacities, a manifestation of the Divine; if we can say to
ourselves: Man has come into this World of sense-realities out of a
spirit-soul World of Being, and that which externalizes as human
forces and capacities, and which we develop in ourselves and in
others, comes from a spiritual world and is now placed in a physical
human body. Now, consider the spiritual meaning of that which has been
explained in this place for decades; it will show you that with the
incorporation of human capacities and forces in the physical human
body, Luciferic beings were given the possibility of approaching these
human capacities and forces. No work whatsoever can be done in the
sphere of human capacities and forces, be it in the form of
self-activity or in the teaching of others, or in the furtherance of
general culture, without coming into contact with the Luciferic
forces. In that region which man has to go through before he enters
physical existence through birth or conception, the Luciferic Power
cannot directly approach the human capacities and forces. Embodiment
in a physical human frame, is the means by which the Luciferic Powers
are able to reach human capacities and forces. It is only if, without
prejudice we look this fact in the face, that we assume a right
attitude in life towards everything that surges up from human nature
as individual capacities and forces. If we close our eyes to what is
Luciferic, if we deny that it exists, then we succumb to it. Then the
soul falls into that mood which desires above all to deliver itself up
to some coercion from within, so that through all kinds of mystic or
religious forces it can unburden itself of the necessity of calling
upon its own free Self, or of seeking for the Divine in the world,
within the development of its own free Self. Men do not want to think
for themselves, they want some indefinite force from within to
manifest itself, according to which they can argue logically. They do
not want to experience truth; they only want to experience that inner
force compelling them from within, manifesting itself in proof which
does not appeal to experience, but appeals instead to a Spiritual
Power which over-rules man, which compels him to think in this or in
that way about Nature or about mankind himself. Men deliver themselves
over to the Luciferic Powers, by calling up within themselves this
inner compulsion, this inner power.
The means which can be used so that man shall appeal to this inner
compulsion, so that he shall not rise to the free, upright position in
the spiritual world, is to force him to think that there are no such
three members of human nature as Body, Soul and Spirit; to forbid him,
as actually happened in the Eighth Ecumenical Council in
Constantinople, to think that man consists of Body, Soul and Spirit,
and bid him to put away all thoughts concerning the Spirit. These are
inner connections which may not be overlooked any longer. We must face
them today clearly and without prejudice. In the year 869 A.D., it was
decided to forbid the belief in the Spirit in man. It was in that year
that the downward slope towards Lucifer began in European
civilization. And today we have the full result. Long enough has
mankind yielded to the inclination not to experience truth, but to
allow the compulsion of argument, of impersonal argument, to work upon
him. As a result, mankind has fallen into the other extreme. There has
been no real comprehension of human capacities and forces, no one
wanted to own that, as I have just explained, Luciferic forces live in
human capacities and forces, when these are embodied in a physical
human frame. That false point of view the ruling one in
humanity today, concerning individual capacities and forces in human
nature has been the outcome.
Human needs, needs arising first out of his purely physical nature,
constitute the other pole of man. In his Letters on aesthetics,
Schiller has characterized these needs very finely, contrasting them
with man's abstract logical power. He calls them the basic needs
(Notdurft), whereas he characterizes logical compulsion as
the other power, a power straying into spiritual regions. During that
great period of German evolution, a personality such as Schiller, was
on the point of grasping rightly the polaric contrasts in man. The
time was not yet ripe for saying more than what Schiller, Goethe, and
others like-minded had said. The necessity of building further upon
this beginning has been laid upon our present age. If we continue to
build, Anthroposophical Spiritual Science will arise. He who is only
acquainted with the one-sided power of proof in the spiritual sphere,
only learns to know in life the one-sided power of natural instincts
in human needs. It is easy to imagine that when man with his
capacities and powers enters the physical sense-world through
conception or birth, and Lucifer hovers over him and from that which
man himself ought to possess takes something on one side, the
head-side of the man's being, there remains in man an inferior kind of
power for the exercise of his independence in the sphere of his needs.
Through that which Lucifer on the one hand takes for his own, Ahriman
on the other hand attains the possibility of making his own that which
works in the needs of human nature. The dogma of mere external
sense-experience has paved the way for the complete Ahrimanization of
mankind's sense-life of instinct during the last third of the
nineteenth century. Modern man stands before a terrible fact today
because he does not recognize that salvation lies in the state of
balance between the two extremes, between capacities on the one side,
and needs on the other side. The materialistic spirit in man makes him
look on the body alone as that which produces capacities i.e.,
man looks merely on the Luciferic primal force of capacities. The
capacities become Luciferic owing to their entrance into a human body.
If man believes that capacities spring from the body, then man
believes in Lucifer, and if man believes that needs spring from the
human body, then man believes only in the Ahrimanic side of such
needs.
And what experiment is being made in the East of Europe today under
the guidance of the West? (This guidance is not only evident through
the fact that Lenin and Trotsky are the spiritual disciples of the
West, but also through the fact that Lenin was dispatched into Russia
in a sealed railway carriage by Dr. Helphand, the German official who
accompanied him. So that what is termed Bolshevism, is an article
transported into Russia by a German Administration and the German
military command.) What are they trying to attain in the civilization
of Eastern Europe? An attempt is being made to do away with everything
human, with everything embodied in a human body as human, and to
harness together Lucifer and Ahriman, with the civilization they
represent. Were this to be realized in the East, then the
Manufacturing Company of Lucifer and Ahriman would create a world
excluding everything beneficial to the individual human being, and man
himself would be dovetailed into this Luciferic-Ahrimanic civilization
as part of a machine in the complete working of the machine. But the
parts of a machine are lifeless and allow themselves to be fitted in,
whereas human nature is inwardly alive, permeated by soul, permeated
by spirit. It cannot fit into a merely Luciferic-Ahrimanic
organization, but will perish in it. Only an understanding of
Spiritual Science can grasp what is really taking place today in this
materialistic world which has but the haziest notions of spirit. It is
only the insight of Spiritual Science and its living earnestness which
can explain what the fact implies that, during the last thirty to
forty years, the essential nature of the German people would not turn
back to that German spirituality pointed out in my essay, but that in
this German world of culture, we have at last come to this, that men
of authority have felt it to be the right thing to send to Russia (in
a sealed railway carriage), through a man who stood in their service,
the inaugurators of Lucifer and Ahriman. In our days, it will not do
simply to look around and then go to sleep peacefully, in the presence
of what is actually taking place in the depths of the spirit of the
present time. We ought to feel that we must say: We have
forsaken and trodden under foot that which in the age of Schiller and
of Goethe was created within the Spiritual life of Germany. And we
have the task of beginning where they left off and of building on
further. No better New Year's thought can enter our souls than
the resolution to make this our starting point.
I told you the following some years ago: In the sixties and seventies
of last century an educationist, Heinrich Deinhardt, lived in Vienna,
the place where my essays were put together. This man's spirit led him
from the standpoint of Schiller's Letters on Aesthetics to take
an active part in pedagogics, a science that was then under full sail,
following the materialistic lead of his day. In some fine letters,
printed at the time, explanatory of Schiller's Letters on
Aesthetics, Deinhardt wrote that man should be educated to
recognize the compelling necessity of logic, and of the basic needs
(Notdurft), which only live in instinct. Deinhardt was one
of those who raised the warning cry: We must prevent by means of
education what is bound to happen otherwise. He could not yet
speak with the concepts of Spiritual Science, but he did point out in
his own words the inevitable coming of the Luciferic-Ahrimanic culture
if the Science of Education, the Art of Education were not determined
by this balance. Heinrich Deinhardt had the misfortune to be knocked
down in the street and to break his leg. Quite a simple operation
might have put it right again, but the doctors found he was so
undernourished that the injured parts would not heal. So this man, who
could look so deeply into the events of his day, died owing to a
slight accident. Yes, in Central Europe, men whose will was directed
to bring forth something out of the spiritual, were left to starve!
This example could be multiplied many times. Those who write like the
Jesuit, Father Zimmermann, whom I mentioned yesterday, will probably
not die of hunger. Those will not die of hunger who wrote the
following: In No. 6 of the weekly paper, Dreigliederung des
Sozialen Orgaeismus (The Threefold Social Organism) it is boasted
that the new impulse (a pet phrase of the Anthroposophists
and of the Dreigliederung people) rests upon the fullness of Steiner's
spiritual knowledge. The head of the Waldorf-Astoria cigarette factory
in Stuttgart founded the Free Waldorf School for the
children of employees and managers, a school founded on the impulses
of all the thoughts that had come from Dr. Steiner's Anthroposophical
Spiritual Science. In that school Anthroposophy is to be the
artistic method of education. Those who mock and tread
into the dust what is being willed out of the spirit will surely not
die of hunger, even in these hard days.
But it is indeed necessary to receive into our souls New Year impulses
that prevent us from passing by sleepily and heedlessly, what is
actually going on, impulses that make us accept sternly the stern
intention of Anthroposophical Spiritual Science. In our own ranks,
too, I see many who would like to doze over things that reveal
themselves out of full compassion, out of compassion for that which is
happening in our times and which, left to itself, must lead to
downfall! There are persons lacking courage who join the
Anthroposophical Society and then say: Yes, Spiritual Science is
something I like, but I do not want to have anything to do with social
activity; it has no place in it. Such members might take an
example from our adversaries. The Jesuit, Father Zimmermann, follows
everything we do. He concludes the article mentioned above, with the
sentence, The weekly paper, The Threefold Social Organism
e.g., No. 8, of course holds the opinion that the
Church is conspiring against the historical task of the
self-determination of the individual. In other articles, too,
the Jesuit, Father Zimmermann, shows how seriously he takes all we do.
It would be well if those who are in our Society would also take
things seriously, in the right way. The spies who are on the outlook
for any weak spot which they can expose in Anthroposophical Spiritual
Science, and in all that proceeds from it, are not few in number. I
think you know that I am not so foolish as to tell you what follows,
out of mere vanity, and so I venture to refer to it. On the side of
our adversaries the wish naturally arises to find a point of attack
here or there. It is well, therefore, to read the following passage in
Dr. Rittelmeyer's essay: Steiner, War and Revolution:
I happened to have a talk recently with a young Swedish
scientist in economics, who had had the strict schooling of the
economists of Cassel. He told me that he had read Steiner's book very
carefully, from end to end, with the expectation of unmasking him as
an amateur; but he had been unable to find any mistake. In our
circles we ought to consider such matters more seriously. The
foundation on which we ought to build is the knowledge: Here something
is willed, something that has nothing to do with the rambling talk of
Theosophy, current elsewhere. Here we build upon the same strict
insight into things as is demanded from any other accepted science.
Were this really felt, then we should understand why the event took
place which Father Zimmermann terms a defection. You know that it was
no defection, but that we were thrown out because it was impossible to
bring any earnestness into that society of mystic wishy-washy talk, no
real earnestness was wanted there. They only wished to go on
chattering in the same way they had chattered for years, particularly
in connection with subjects about which all possible things can be
said with no knowledge of the spiritual world. What our age most
sorely needs is the greatest earnestness in the sphere of Spiritual
life.
Today, New Year's day, with my visit drawing to an end, I wished to
speak to you again of this deep earnestness. My most heartfelt desire
is that into our ranks may come the New Year wish it is a wish
each one can shape for himself that through the souls and
hearts of our friends, eyes may in some degree be opened to that which
is needed so sorely, to that which, out of the Spirit alone, is able
to help humanity. No salvation is to be found in any external
organization. Something new must be stamped upon human evolution.
These facts must become known, and to feel that these facts must
become known is indeed the most worthy New Year's thought that could
rise in your hearts. This year, 1920, will hold in store many an
important decision, if enough people can be found who are able to
recognize the needs of mankind, as I have pointed them out today. 1920
will bring misery and suffering if such men cannot be found, if those
only take the lead who wish to work on in the old way.
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