Lecture 7
Stuttgart,
July 30, 1920
Today I
shall have to continue with some of the topics I
discussed the last time I was here. It is particularly
important, indeed necessary, to stress the connection
between what I have said before and what I wish to add
today. I have explained that the road to spiritual
science calls for recognition to be given to two facts.
One fact is that it is impossible to imagine that matter,
physical substance, can be found to the outer world of
our human environment. This can be clearly understood on
the basis of many different things that can be learned
through spiritual science. Our eyes behold the outside
world, our ears hear the outside world, and we come to
understand nature in a way when we use the intellect to
combine the things we see, hear and Perceive with the
other senses. We then think we know something about outer
nature. Yet we are in error if we think and believe some
form of science will help us to find physical matter and
the laws pertaining to it in that outer nature.
Materialism was in error not because it was speaking of
physical matter but because materialists thought they
could find physical matter and the laws of physical
matter, its infrastructure and essential nature, in the
outside world. People saying they do not want to know
about the outside world because it is a material world,
and that they want to follow the inner mystical path to a
world of the spirit, are therefore materialists just as
much as people who simply interpret the outside world in
materialistic terms. Their search along the path of
mysticism shows that in their view, too, Physical matter
is to be found in the outside world. The people of more
recent times are in error when they look for the
essential nature of matter in the outside world. To put
things right essentially means that we must no longer
look for the nature of matter in the outside world and be
very clear in our minds that however far we extend our
sensory perceptions we shall never discover the nature of
matter and its infrastructure, its laws. It has to be
understood that all that exists in the outside world is
Maya. It is the world of phenomena. Look as we may we
shall never find anything material in that outside
world.
On the
other hand we must grasp a second, quite different fact.
It is that the nature of matter, which materialism is
erroneously looking for in the outside world, may be
found within ourselves. We shall find it particularly if
we become one-sided, abstract mystics. The contents of a
certain mysticism coming to our awareness —
experiences we think we are having — are nothing
but the flame, I would say, that is lit within us by
processes involving our physical organs. Considering the
mysticism of Tauler and of Meister Eckhart, one is right
in thinking that these men had a special faculty for
experiencing these things and interpreting the physical
matter in their bodies when the flame of awareness was
ignited. They found the material world through mysticism.
Until we know that external observation reveals only the
world of phenomena, Maya, and that inward observation
reveals only physical matter and its flame, we cannot get
a clear, true picture of the nature of the world and the
way human beings relate to this world. Physical matter is
not to be found by applying science to the outside world,
it must be sought within us, through mysticism. There we
shall find its laws. The essential nature of gravity is
not to be found with the aid of Atwood's machine. [
Note 51 ] Instead we can
try — in our thirty-second year, or perhaps at
another time in our lives — to become inwardly
aware of gravity, so that we know from inner experience
what it really means to experience gravity. Concrete
inner experience should show us that between the
thirtieth and fortieth year we grow heavier and heavier
inside. We can gain inner experience of a property of
matter that merely comes to expression in mystical
experiences. I have tried to demonstrate the essential
point by saying that anyone finding himself in the midst
of the chaos of the planet, the way modern scientists do,
cannot get a clear idea concerning these things. We see
the plants, the animals, the cloud cover; we see the
glittering light of the stars, we see rivers, hills and
valleys and so on. Yet if someone were to observe the
earth from Mars, for instance, none of these would
matter. An inhabitant of the planet Mars observing the
earth through some instrument or other — we may
well imagine, and it would be in accord with the truth,
though in a different way, that those who inhabit Mars
have the kind of organization that enables them to
observe the earth — would perceive nothing of the
cloud formations, rivers and mountains we see, nothing of
the phenomena relating to the mineral, plant and animal
kingdoms. He would only perceive what goes on inside the
skin of the human beings living on earth. Everything else
would vanish before the eye of an inhabitant of Mars. He
would perceive only what goes on inwardly in the organic
life of human beings and for him that would be the
material world of the earth. When we grow aware of a
mystical element within us it is not what many mystics
think it is but the flame that is cooked inside us. That
is the place where we can find out about the physical
matter of the earth. This form of self-perception takes
us into the sphere of matter and of energy, an area where
the people of the Western world have arrived at exactly
the opposite view over the last centuries.
This gives
an indication of the extent to which we have to change
our thinking if the decline is to become an upward
movement again. People think they are materialists or
idealists or spiritualists because they follow a
particular philosophy. That is not the case. We are far
from being spiritualists when we say we contemplate the
inner and not the outer life. It could indeed happen that
someone is concentrating on his inner life and exactly by
doing so comes to observe matter; the way it turns into a
flame inside us. To find the right path it will be
necessary to grasp what I mean, and to do so with the
right inner attitude. The outer world as we perceive it
with the senses offers only phenomena; it does not reveal
the root and origin of the phenomena. Their root and
origin lies inside our own skins. Anything we see outside
should be regarded in the same way as we regard a
rainbow. Anyone who believes a rainbow to be more than
merely a phenomenon, thinking it to be something material
spanning the heavens, is taking the wrong view. In the
same way we are in error If, due to the fact that our
sense of touch is also involved when we perceive the
world around us, we believe we are surrounded by material
things and not mere phenomena. The only difference
compared to a rainbow is that other senses are also
involved. Materiality cannot be found there, however,
just as it does not exist in a rainbow. Everything
outside us is phenomenon. The root and origin of the
phenomena therefore is inside the human skin. The
processes that carry the affairs of the earth from one
age to another take place inside the human skin.
It may seem
highly improbable and paradoxical to modern minds but it
is nevertheless true that the phenomena which surround us
today, and the laws apparent in these phenomena, are not
the outer consequence of material events that occurred
three thousand years before the Mystery of Golgotha. They
are the consequence of what went on inside the bodies of
Egyptians, of Chaldeans and others three thousand years
before the Mystery of Golgotha. Those inner events have
become outer ones. The outside world of those times has
vanished, disappeared. Human bodies hold the germ for a
future that may be reckoned in thousands of years. It is
possible to see this by considering the natural phenomena
of today, drawing a conclusion that may be bold but
nevertheless revealing. People talk about the properties
of the element radium. To someone able to perceive the
reality of the spirit this sometimes sounds like children
talking about something adult minds have long since come
to understand on the basis of different facts. Modern
physicists know that the radium which existed on the
earth's surface up to AD 140 has since disappeared and no
longer is radium. The radium that is found today has only
formed since AD 140. Physicists are actually teaching
this now. These things present themselves to human minds
to force them, as it were, finally to give up the
erroneous ways of thinking which had to be pursued for
centuries for the sake of human freedom.
All this
shows that it is necessary to consider the things
spiritual science working towards anthroposophy presents
to human minds in a totally different way from the way we
usually look at things. It is necessary to abandon mere
theory and consider the reality: to progress at all
levels from abstract intellectual knowledge to active
perceptiveness, to doing things, really doing something
in relation to the world. As I have said before —
but it is essential to make this point with real
forcefulness—people think that some are
materialists nowadays and others are spiritualists. A
spiritualist will say: ‘He's a materialist and has
to be opposed because it is not true that the soul is the
product of physical matter. What the materialist says is
wrong and we have done enough when we have refuted his
arguments. The materialist is in error and therefore must
be opposed.’ That is not the point, however. It is
not a question of logic, of theories. Yet people always
think spiritual science is all theory. Spiritual science
working towards anthroposophy always bases itself on
reality, sometimes of course seeking it in the place
where it is to be truly found: in the true realm of the
spirit. People who look to the outside world and seek to
find matter everywhere by the methods now used in
molecular and atomic theory—it makes no difference
if they see matter as point sources of energy or as tiny
building stones — are not merely subject to an
error in logic that can be refuted. True spiritual
science has nothing to do with purely theoretical
concepts. It is concerned with reality. Anyone looking
for more than phenomena in the outside world Is on the
road not only to logical error but to organic illness
affecting the whole of his person. We should not say that
to follow this road Is an error in logic. We should say
that anyone searching for truth In that direction is on
the road to organic illness, on the road to
feeblemindedness. Spiritual science working towards
anthroposophy often has to change theoretical views into
views that relate to reality. The search for clarity of
ideas and concepts has nothing to do with merely agreeing
or disagreeing with the views of others; it has to do
with sickness and health, very real things in our lives.
It therefore has to be said that a seeker who looks to
phenomena for more than mere phenomena, for physical
matter, is on the road to feeblemindedness, to organic
illness. This is entirely within the sphere of
reality.
In the same
way we cannot simply oppose people who look to find
abstract spirituality within themselves. Someone looking
for the spirit by following the path of mere one-sided
inner mysticism, failing to realize that when he comes to
see through the tissue of this mysticism it is
materiality he finds, is on the way to becoming
infantile, to developing an organic illness taking the
form of childishness. a have given it the name that may
well be given when one perceives this from beyond the
threshold.) If we call this the threshold from the
Physical to the non-physical world, with the Guardian of
the Threshold standing there, the quality we call
inspiration, or genius, on this side may justifiably be
called childishness on the other side of the threshold.
Childishness goes the wrong way in the physical world if
it persists throughout life. Genius on the other hand
means that a certain childlike quality persists in the
background throughout life. Genius is achieved when we
are able to retain into ripe old age a quality of soul
that normally belongs to childhood. This is seen in its
true form from beyond the threshold. If however that
childlike soul quality persists one-sidedly into
subsequent life stages, then this element, which in its
rightful place in the human sphere is genius, becomes
childishness instead. Once again we see that purely
logical ideas must be replaced with ideas relating to
reality as soon as we enter the sphere of spiritual
science. They must be replaced with concepts that not
merely change our views but produce inner organic
changes.
Spiritual
science working towards anthroposophy is a very serious
matter. The seriousness of it is not given full
recognition when people approach the work of spiritual
science with their ordinary mental attitudes. They want
to agree or disagree the way they usually do in the
outside world; they want to continue in their habitual
ways as they approach spiritual science. Spiritual
science working towards anthroposophy can however only be
taught by speaking in the terms of the world beyond.
There words have entirely different meanings. Gravity,
which exerts a downward pull here on earth, exerts an
upward pull in that world. In the spiritual world we have
to speak of what draws us down in a way that makes it the
exact opposite. It is not surprising then that anyone
taking spiritual science seriously is, to begin with,
completely misunderstood by people who want to proceed in
the customary way — a way that was inevitable in
the age of materialism — when they approach
spiritual science. The inevitable result is that things
like those I dared to put to you yesterday are
misunderstood.
Someone
presenting his own views in opposition to Oswald Spengler
would simply refute him. A spiritual scientist finds
himself obliged not to refute Spengler's view in the
usual way. He has to assume points of view rather than
follow a rigid line; he will have to say that Oswald
Spengler speaks from a different point of view, one that
offers no prospects for the immediate future. We do
justice to such phenomena if we do not simply refute them
but show the genius that is in them, speaking with inner
concern about the things one would like to see overcome.
Spiritual science has much more to do with the way in
which we deal with these things than with bald
statements, with the kind of mystical platitude that the
person who produces it even believes to be a particularly
inspired truth. We have to consider these things, for we
are moving into an age where we have to get beyond the
mere contents of intellectual life. This is something I
want to stress over and over again: we must get beyond
the mere content of intellectual life.
Going just
by the content, even a fool would find it relatively easy
to refute Oswald Spengler's ideas. That is by no means
difficult, but it is not what matters. What matters is to
establish the concrete reality of Spengler's work and
show how it can be overcome in a real and concrete way.
In future the essential point in characterizing a person
Will be more and more to consider what they are actually
saying rather than to respond in sympathy or antipathy to
what he or she has to say. We should not consider whether
certain contents please or displeases us, but whether
there is a spiritual quality to them. It is more
ImPortant for the overall outcome of world evolution that
there is someone who is an inspired materialist, a genius
in representing materialism, for that calls for a
brilliant mind whilst it often needs very little
intelligence to represent platitudinous mysticism. A
platitudinous mystic may on occasion do more to make the
world materialistic than an inspired materialist. It is
the quality of mind that matters. Recognition of this
fact will count for much more in future than the actual
content. This is something we have to learn. We must not
seek for the spirit as though it were a system of logic;
we must look for its reality. Let me ask you this. Would
it not be possible for You to see that more of the spirit
is alive in an inspired materialist than in a
spiritualist full of platitudes? These are the things
spiritual science working towards anthroposophy must come
to see clearly. It is the reality of the spirit that
matters, not the abstract statements made by one person
or another. People fail to realize how important it is to
consider realities and not theories!
Some of the
things we see in ordinary life simply must be considered
from the point of view of spiritual science today if we
are to get them clear in our minds. Consider the parties
which have formed in public life in our everyday world.
Let us first of all consider the ordinary political
parties. You know that the most miserable, sterile
cliches are to be found in party politics. Yet to some
extent we are all part of this, willy-nilly, unless we
want to withdraw completely from public life or perhaps
cannot have a vote because we are stateless and have not
been given the right to vote anywhere. Everybody who has
the right to vote is forced to support one line or
another, i.e. to work along party lines. Parties are a
fact of life. They go back to better times, to the
English see-saw system when there was the Conservative
Party on one side and the Liberal Party on the other. It
may be said that all the parties that now exist are
different combinations of those two shades. Sometimes the
liberal element which is to the left takes on some colour
from conservatism on the right, and conservatism is
coloured with liberalism from the left, as in the case of
the Social Democrats, or conservatism turns radical, as
we have seen in the present time. All in all it can be
said that the conservative-liberal seesaw is the pattern
on which all our parties are based. That is the picture
one gets when looking at this in an outer way. The most
dreadful things are happening in those party
organizations — everybody would admit this. The
thing exists, however, and the question is why it exists.
What does it rally represent? What in fact are
parties?
Everything
that presents itself in the physical world is an image of
the non-physical world. What is it that exists in the
non-physical world with the result that in the physical
world we have parties as an image of it? The matter can
only be properly understood if we grasp the conditions
which apply when we go across the threshold to the
spiritual world. There we arrive at something very
different, at the real nature of things. Here in the
physical world we are idealists, sceptics, realists,
spiritualists or any other kind of -ists. We are
something that can be summed up in a manifesto, as a
political or sociological system. In short, we are
something-ists. We base ourselves on an abstract notion,
for parties always base themselves on manifestos, systems
and the like, i.e. on abstract notions. As soon as we
cross the threshold to the spiritual world we are no
longer dealing in mere logic and abstract notions, we are
dealing with realities. It is merely that this is not
usually taken seriously. You cannot give your allegiance
to a party programme when you have gone past the Guardian
of the Threshold, you can only hold to the essential
spirit of things, for there everything has to do with the
essential spirit. You can merely hold to a spirit of the
higher hierarchies and say: That is the one I follow, the
one I unite with. Let others present their affairs in
their own way, I am uniting with that one, I take his
side. The term 'to side with one or another' achieves
very real significance then; it is no longer merely
abstract. Being human we are inclined to say that as soon
as we look beyond the threshold we find three essential
spirits: the Christ, Ahriman and Lucifer. It is of course
possible to prepare oneself carefully to gain
comprehension of the spiritual world and then to say: I
choose Christ's party, or Ahriman's or Lucifer's Party.
It is however also possible to obscure the issue, being
badly Prepared, and choose Ahriman but call him Christ.
We follow a spiritual entity, however — everything
is of the essence beyond the threshold! We are always
dealing with realities there, not with anything by way of
a programme or system.
These words
I say to characterize the relationship of the human being
to the non-physical world are weighty words. In one
particular respect it is not yet possible to say the
final word on the subject, because that would be too
provocative. Very few people on this earth however are
aware that basically it is an illusion to follow party
lines, to accept the abstract notions of parties. There
is no reality to it and when we begin to follow something
that is real we must in fact follow something that lies
in the spiritual world beyond the threshold. There is
however one party that may immediately be characterized
as being well aware of this secret and indeed acting upon
it. This was said in public in the course of lectures
given at Karlsruhe in 1911 [ Note 52 ] and has brought me the
hatred of the party in question. These are the Jesuits.
They know very well that to follow a party programme
— forgive me for using a term commonly used in
Germany—is nonsense. One follows a spiritual entity
in the non-physical world! That is why their exercises
start with the Jesuit having to visualize the spirit whom
he is to follow in the Society of Jesus, forming a
military corporation for him. When I say that the last
word cannot yet be said, I want to hold back concerning
the nature of what is called 'Jesus' there. The point is
to show that Jesuitism forms a party that follows a
spiritual entity and that Jesuits are very well aware
that to follow some party or other that goes no further
than a programme to be followed in the physical world is
a nonsense. The effectiveness of the Society of Jesus is
due to the fact that it trains its followers to be the
soldiers of a spiritual entity. The do not say this is
right and this is wrong. They say: ‘It is part of
the mission of the spiritual entity I am following; I
shall defend it. I shall oppose anything that is not part
of the Mission of the spiritual entity I am following,
even if it is logically defensible; it is just as
possible to defend what Lucifer and Ahriman are about as
it is to defend the things Christ is about. There are
exactly three logical defenses and they are all equally
valid.’
We
therefore have the strange phenomenon that the Jesuits
are of course aware that anthroposophy is taking a
spiritual line that is wholly defensible and yet they
oppose it. They know full well that logical argument is
no effective opposition, for it merely means playing with
logic. They know that they are facing an adversary in
this battle of minds and they will use all available
means. It is therefore pointless to join battle by
refuting the refutations of the Jesuits. They know
exactly what objections we can raise; the fact that they
know them and consider them to be fair makes no
difference, however, for they follow another spirit than
the one anthroposophy must now follow for the weal of
humankind. As soon as one is in the realm of the spirit
it is reality that counts. What counts is that one really
gets a clear understanding of the spiritual paths, using
the whole human being in arriving at such understanding
— which certainly can be achieved with healthy
common sense nowadays—and not the human dwarf who
tends to be the end product of the kind of educational
establishments we have today.
The parties
which exist in physical life are therefore caricatures of
something that rightfully exists in the spiritual world.
That is what is so difficult about it. Things appearing
in the physical world may be a reflection of something of
genuine significance in the spiritual world. In the
physical world it is pernicious and abominable, because
every world has its own laws, and today we face the
growing necessity to work our way up into the spiritual
world again. The first stage consists of caricatures of
spiritual life appearing in physical life; of people
setting up party banners and following party idols when
in fact they should be giving their allegiance to
spiritual entities. It is truth and reality when it
occurs in the non-physical world, and a lie and illusion
when it occurs here in the physical world. You see I am
not using empty words when I tell you that what matters
is to transform purely theoretical things into the
reality whenever we wish to speak of the truths that
exist beyond the threshold.
Mere
refutation of materialism will not achieve anything,
because the situation is like this where the human being
is concerned: In their whole make-up human beings are
really spirit and soul. This element of spirit and soul
exists even before we are conceived, before we are born.
It has evolved out of our previous earth incarnation; it
has gone through the spiritual world. It now assumes
flesh, creating a physical Image of itself that consists
of nervous system, skeletal system, blood system. So we
now have two things: the human being in soul and spirit
and the human being of flesh and bone that is its image.
When we are thinking the usual abstract thoughts, what is
it that thinks in us? Not the human being of soul and
spirit. It is particularly when we think abstract
thoughts, above all using earthly logic, that the
Physical brain in us is thinking. It is important to know
that when materialists say that the brain does the
thinking they are quite correct as far as abstract
thoughts ar concerned. The physical brain is an image of
the spiritual brain, and this image creates an image,
abstract thinking being merely an image. It may thus be
said that when it comes to abstract ideas the physical
brain does the thinking.
This is
simply a special case of what I have said before.
Materialism has merely found out that the brain is
thinking the thoughts that from the middle of the 15th
century onwards have become standard in Western
civilization. The materialism presented by Moleschott,
Buechner and that fat man Vogt [ Note 28 ] cannot be simply refuted
by saying it is wrong. It is quite appropriate for human
beings who, from the middle of the 15th century onwards,
have turned more and more to mere materialism. Human
beings of the Western world are in the process of
becoming beings that think only with the physical brain.
The prophets of such physical brain thinking, Moleschott
and Buechner, merely stated what Western humankind was
going to be. They were wrong only in so far as they
applied this to humankind as a whole. What they said
applies only to people living after the middle of the
15th century, and in their case it does apply. People
have got used to thinking only with their brains; it is
the common way of thinking nowadays. Everything to be
found in our ordinary literature, in the whole of modern
science, is material thinking, is that kind of thinking.
The materialists are quite right, and we could say that
Buechner and Vogt would have been unfair to their
colleagues if they had said that they thought with the
spirit. That is not the case; they think merely with
their brains. This cannot be argued against, and it has
to be recognized that the road to materiality is not
merely a false philosophy but something with a very real
effect. That is also the reason why, when something like
spiritual science working towards anthroposophy appears
on the scene, those people will say: ‘These are
thoughts beyond comprehension; they cannot be
grasped.’ Well, they want to think with their
brains: the thoughts of spiritual science are however
thought with a soul and spirit element that has torn
itself away from the brain. People must make efforts to
tear their soul and spirit away from the brain with the
help of thoughts that have been produced in this way;
they must think those thoughts through. People must make
an effort to think those thoughts through, to use the
opportunity that still exists of tearing the element of
soul and spirit away from the physical aspect of the
brain. This element is on the way to being chained to the
physical brain. People must tear themselves free. It is
not a question therefore of right views and wrong views
but of a process. The thoughts of spiritual science
working towards anthroposophy are given to the world in
the hope that people who are still capable of handling
the old faculty of tearing themselves away that lies in
them, will indeed make use of it and try and understand
thoughts that are independent of the physical body, so
that their souls may grow free of the body. It is
therefore a question of having the will to understand
anthroposophy; anthroposophy is intended to tear the
element of spirit and soul away from the physical body.
Our mission therefore is not merely to refute views that
are wrong; but we must face the fact that very many
people want to slither into them, want to be sheer matter
and want to think, use their will and feel out of matter.
We want to give spiritual science working towards
anthroposophy to the world as something real, so that
spirit and soul may be torn away from matter. The aim is
to prevent the possibility of people losing their spirit
and soul, for they now run the risk of slithering
entirely into the ahrimanic sphere. People face the risk
of losing soul and spirit and of losing themselves as
human beings when the material world vanishes into
nothingness, as I have described on an earlier
occasion.
It is not a
question therefore of replacing the old with the new, but
to become active in the search for truth. This saves the
soul from slithering into mere materiality; it saves the
spirit and soul element from slithering into the
ahrimanic sphere, where egoity would be lost. It is not a
question therefore of refuting materialism, but of saving
humankind from materialism coming true. Materialism is in
the process of developing into something that is true
rather than false. When People say that materialism is
wrong they are not talking about what really matters. No,
we have to say that materialism is coming to be more and
more right; in our present culture it is coming to be
more and more right. We may well find that by the
beginning of the 3rd millenium humankind will have
developed in such a way that materialism is the correct
view. It is not a question of refuting materialism, for
it is in the process of becoming right. It is a question
of making it not right, because it is on the way to
becoming a fact and no longer merely a wrong theory.
Certain
people are trying to ignore these things. They want to
make It as easy as possible for others, telling them to
see how wrong materialism is and inviting them to turn to
an abstract mysticism that Will give them everything they
need. We could take up such abstract mysticism, but that
would encourage materialism to become real and not mere
theory. We do not have to overcome materialism because it
is wrong, using words that remain theory; we have to
overcome it because it is right and we must fight against
it being the right thing. This puts another face on
things, and this is also where we find ourselves in the
reality of the spiritual world — not with theories,
but with a living approach to the truth that in the
cosmic scheme of things is an active deed. People find it
unpalatable to have to listen to such things, yet that is
the light in which everything should be regarded, even
individual events. Believe me, the old methods of combat
are finished with; everything that could be the habitual
way in the past Is now finished. We must consider things
in the light of the spirit.
What is
conservatism? What is liberalism? Here on earth they are
caricatures of the spiritual world. Conservatives are
followers of Ahriman, liberals of Lucifer. Having passed
the Guardian of the Threshold one can see how the whole
of conservatism is running after Ahriman and the whole of
liberalism after Lucifer. That may seem peculiar to the
sophisticated people of today. It is however because this
seems so peculiar that spiritual science working towards
anthroposophy is so difficult to understand. We shall
never understand spiritual science by merely thinking it;
we shall only come to understand it if every one of its
concepts makes us suffer and rejoice, when we feel lifted
up and cast down, when we want to despair over a word, or
think we shall be redeemed because of a word, when we see
destiny at work in what normally appears as a shadowy
theory just as we see it at work in things that are done
in the outside world, when what spiritual science working
towards anthroposophy has to say goes beyond being mere
words and becomes reality. Then, when the inner impulse
alive in this spiritual science is understood and felt,
it will be rightly seen why things that for a time were
maintained as mere theory, because people first had to
come to know about them, must now become reality, why we
have to be serious about the reality that lives in the
words of spiritual science working towards anthroposophy.
It will be seen that the necessity arises in our age to
make the substantial essence of those words come to
reality.
It is still
the case that what is really intended with such a Waldorf
School is not at all seen in the light of reality, that
it is far too little considered in the sense which I have
tried to characterize for you. Believe me, this is not to
touch your hearts, nor to gain a little more support.
Things have been said that had to be said now because
humankind must know them. That is why I have said the
things I have been saying. I merely wish that the
opportunity would arise to say these things to a
sufficiently large number of people, so that these people
develop an inner impulsiveness where they take words as
realities and do not merely listen in the belief that one
is speaking theories.
This is
what I have wanted to put to you on these two occasions.
It will have to happen that outer events follow not on
the external contents of spiritual science as it is
presented, but out of inner impulses. Fighters like the
Jesuits know very well what many followers of
anthroposophy still fail to realize: that spiritual
science working towards anthroposophy is a reality. Since
they have come to realize this—they have done so
for some time now, from about 1906 or 1907 — since
they have come to realize it they are opposing this
spiritual science with increasing vigour. Many
anthroposophists have no idea of the methods that are
used, the sheer ingenuity, because there is a refusal to
be really sure in one's mind of the seriousness of the
situation. Words will only evoke a little bit of the
things one really wishes people to take to heart; I have
tried, however, to present just a little of it to you on
these two occasions. If we reflect on what has been said,
if we progress from reflection to feeling, to letting it
become part of the whole of our being, there will be an
end to abstract mysticism and to modern science. It will
become the essential inner nature of the human being, it
will be the power that releases spirit and soul again
from physical matter, it will overcome a materialism that
unfortunately is not wrong but is indeed true.
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