V
Stuttgart,
9th April, 1924
The truth
of repeated lives on Earth was once expressed in German literature in
impressive words to which attention has often been called in the
Anthroposophical Movement. At the height of his powers Lessing wrote
his memorable treatise,
The Education of the Human Race,
at the end of which he declares his belief in
repeated lives on Earth. In monumental sentences he declares that the
historical development of humanity can be intelligible only on
the assumption that the individual man passes through many
lives on Earth and carries over into other epochs of evolution what
may have been experienced and accomplished in an earlier epoch. In
this connection, two facts only need be borne in mind: when attempts
are made by historians to explain later events as the effects of
earlier causes, all kinds of reasons are brought forward — the
influence of ideas, of physical happenings, and so forth
— in short, pure abstractions. The truth is that the same
individuals who were living, let us say, at the end of the nineteenth
and beginning of the twentieth century, lived in earlier epochs
as well; they then absorbed what was happening around them or what
was to be experienced from their fellow human beings, carried it all
through the gate of death into the spiritual world in which man lives
between death and rebirth, and brought it down again with them into a
new earthly life. They are therefore themselves the bearers of what
has passed over from one epoch to another in the course of the
evolution of humanity.
The past
is forever being carried over to the future by individual men. This
is the one fact that can fill the soul with a feeling of reverence
when it is taken with due
earnestness. And the other fact is that on reflection, all
of us sitting here will be able to say: We ourselves have lived on
the Earth many times and what we are to-day is the product of those
previous lives. When we survey history and let it shed light upon our
own experiences, the realisation that there are repeated lives on
Earth may well imbue knowledge with a mood of reverence, and
Lessing must certainly have experienced something of the kind
when he wrote: “Why should not every individual man have
existed more than once upon this world? Is this hypothesis so
laughable merely because it is the oldest, because the human
understanding, before the sophistries of the Schools had dissipated
and debilitated it, lighted upon it at once?”
[Translation by F. W. Robertson, 1872.]
And he voices his consciousness of realities such as those indicated
above, in the monumental words: “Is not then all Eternity
mine?”
The line
of spiritual development which could have been introduced into German
culture at that time through Lessing's treatise, was broken. And in
any case its continuance would certainly have been ridiculed by
the mentality of the nineteenth century.
More than
twenty years ago in Berlin, when we were beginning anthroposophical
work within the framework of the Theosophical Society, it was
announced on the programme of the meeting held in connection
with the founding of what was then called the German Section of
the Theosophical Society, that the title of one of the first lectures
I proposed to give would be:
“Practical Exercises for the Understanding of Karma”
(über praktische Karma-Übungen).
It was a matter at that time of introducing the idea of karma with
such forcefulness that it could have become one of the leitmotifs
in the development of the Anthroposophical
Movement. But when I spoke about what I meant by this title to one or
two well-known members of the old Theosophical Society who had come
over to Berlin, there was general opposition. Such a subject was
considered to be quite impossible. And as a matter of fact —
although I am not suggesting that these people were right — it
would have been premature at that time to speak to wider circles
about these intimate esoteric truths. If one wishes to avoid abstract
generalisations and to speak in a concrete way about karma and its
significance in the historical life of mankind, this is not
possible without touching upon matters of a deeply esoteric nature
and making use of the concepts of esotericism. Hence in a certain
respect everything in the way of knowledge that has since been
developed in the Anthroposophical Society was a necessary
preparation, because in the days to which I have referred the members
of this Society were not sufficiently mature.
But sooner
or later the time must come when it is possible to speak concretely
of the truths of karma and their connection with the evolution of
humanity. If we were to wait any longer this would be a grave defect
on the part of the Anthroposophical Society. Hence one of the
intentions expressed at the Christmas Foundation Meeting at the
Goetheanum was to the effect that communication of the findings
of genuine spiritual investigation into these more intimate
questions of the evolution of humanity should no longer be withheld.
And in line with this, the Anthroposophical Movement will in future
be attentive to what the spiritual Beings desire, not to what
timidity and caution regard as inopportune or untimely.
In this
connection the Christmas Meeting at the Goetheanum was not only of
qualitative significance for the Anthroposophical Movement but
something that was to mark the beginning of deeper and more intensive
anthroposophical work. And it is from this point of
view — which must also become a point of view
of the whole Movement — that I shall speak to you to-day.
We witness
great happenings in history and are aware that the keynotes in
certain domains of life are set by particular personalities. It
should be obvious to us that some historic personality who not so
long ago was the inaugurator of the kind of thinking under the
influence of which we are still living to-day, can only be
understood — as the historical aspect in general
can only be understood — when anthroposophical
investigation penetrates into earlier incarnations of such
personalities. This leads to something else as well. By observing
personalities of whom history tells we become aware of threads of
destiny running through their different lives on Earth and the light
thus shed upon karma helps to make our own personal destiny
intelligible. This is of very great importance.
There must
be no sensationalism in the study of karma; the sole purpose of such
study must be to illumine the circumstances of human life and the
experiences of individual human souls. We see, for example,
that particularly in the last two thirds of the nineteenth century, a
materialistic attitude of soul became general; in certain respects
this attitude continued on into the twentieth century and has helped
to produce the chaos and confusion prevailing in culture and
civilisation to-day. There is a radical difference between the trend
that was perceptible — above all in German spiritual
life — after the close of the first third of the nineteenth
century and the earlier character of this spiritual life. Perceiving
this difference, we naturally ask about its origin. In the last two
thirds of the nineteenth century there are men who cannot fail to
interest us, whose individualities we feel urged to trace back to
their earlier lives on Earth.
The seer
who is able to carry out such investigations is led back, to begin
with, not to Christian but to non-Christian incarnations. It is
natural here — for it tallies approximately with the
indications given of the length of the intervals between successive
lives on Earth — to go back to the very widespread spiritual
movement of Mohammedanism, or Arabism, which arose about half a
millennium after the founding of Christianity. Starting from Asia,
Christianity spread across to Spain and thence to all Western Europe,
having had a slight influence upon civilisation in North Africa; it
also spread across Eastern and Middle Europe, but in its expansion
was flanked, as it were, by Arabism which, with the impulse of
Mohammedanism active within it, forced its way on the one side
through Asia Minor and on the other side through Africa across to
Italy and Spain. And the many wars of which history tells bear
witness to the bitter conflict waged between European civilisation
and Arabism. Here again it is important to ask: What are the
concrete facts underlying the evolution of the human soul?
We will
now consider some of these concrete facts. For example: at the time
when Charlemagne was ruling in very primitive conditions of
civilisation in Europe, brilliant spiritual culture was being
developed at the Court of Haroun al Raschid over in Asia. At this
Court were gathered the greatest minds of that time, men of
outstanding brilliance, whose souls were deeply imbued with oriental
wisdom but who also combined with this wisdom the culture that had
come over from Greece. The spiritual life cultivated at the Court of
Haroun al Raschid embraced Architecture, Astronomy (as it was then
understood), Geography, Mathematics, Poetry, Chemistry, Medicine,
and the most illustrious representatives of all these branches of
learning living at that time had been brought together there.
Haroun al
Raschid was an energetic and active patron, a personality who
provided the foundations for a truly wonderful centre of culture
in the eighth/ninth century A.D. And at
this Court of Haroun al Raschid there was a remarkable personality,
one who in the life spent at the Court would probably not have given
the impression of being an Initiate. But he himself, as well as the
Initiates, knew that in an earlier life on Earth he had been one of
those who were most highly initiated. Thus in a later incarnation, at
the Court of Haroun al Raschid, there lived a personality who did not
appear outwardly as an Initiate but who had been an Initiate in an
earlier life. The others at the Court had at least some knowledge of
this nature of Initiation-life in days of antiquity. The
personality of whom I am speaking was a magnificent organiser
— as we should say nowadays, using a rather unworthy expression
— of all the sciences and arts at the Court of Haroun al Raschid.
We know
that Arabism in its external aspect spread under the impetus of
Mohammedanism across Africa, Southern Europe, Spain and farther into
Europe. We know too of the wars and conflicts that were waged. But
the campaigns came to an end. It is usually considered that Arabism
was driven out of Europe by battles such as those fought by
Charles Martel, at
Xeres de la Frontera.
But there was a tremendously strong
spiritual impulse in, Arabism, and the remarkable thing is that
when it was outwardly beaten back as a political and belligerent
power in Europe, the souls of eminent Arabists, when they had passed
through the gate of death, were intensely concerned in the spiritual
world with the question of how the influence of Arabism could be made
effective in Europe. In the spiritual world the outer form of things
is not of primary importance. Between two successive incarnations of
an individuality there may be little outer resemblance; the
significance lies in the inner nature and character. This is a
difficult idea for our contemporaries to grasp. In an age when it can
be held against a man that he once wrote not unfavourably about
Haeckel and subsequently wrote in a different vein regarded by
pedants as contradictory,
[Dr. Steiner is here referring to criticisms of
his own writings on the subject of Haeckel.]
when such a lack of insight is in evidence,
there will be little understanding of how outwardly different
individuals can be in two successive lives on Earth, although the
same fundamental impulse is at work in both.
The
development of the great Arabist souls between death and a new birth
was such that in the spiritual world they remained connected with the
impulse that had streamed from the East to the West; they remained
connected with their own deeds. In the external world, civilisation
advanced; forms of culture quite different from those
characteristic of Arabism made their appearance. But the souls
of individuals who had been eminent figures in Arabism came again to
the Earth and without carrying over Arabism in its outer form, bore
its inner impulses into a much later age. They appeared as the
bearers of culture in the sphere of language, in the habits of
thinking and feeling and in
the impulses of will of a later age. But in the
souls of these men the impulse of Arabism was working on, and it is
not difficult to see that the stream of spiritual life dominating the
last two thirds of the nineteenth century was deeply influenced by
minds that were the product of Arabism.
Our gaze
turns to the soul of Haroun al Raschid, passing in that life through
the gate of death. Between death and a new birth this soul continues
to develop and appears again in the modern age in quite different
conditions of civilisation. For the individuality of Haroun al
Raschid appears in English spiritual life as
Lord Bacon of Verulam.
In the universality of Bacon's mind we have to
see the rebirth of what Haroun al Raschid had achieved at his
oriental Court in the eighth/ninth century. We know how intensely and
profoundly European culture was influenced by Bacon and has continued
to be so influenced. It is true to say that in scientific
investigation and the scientific approach to things, men still think
as he did. This of course cannot be said of every detail but it is
true of the general trend of the age. If we contemplate the brilliant
achievements of Haroun al Raschid and their influence upon the outer
world, and then, having learnt through spiritual investigation that
he appears again in Lord Bacon of Verulam, we think of the known
course of Lord Bacon's life, we shall certainly find
consistency, similarity — not in the external forms but
in the inner trend of these two incarnations.
I spoke of
a personality who lived at the Court of Haroun al Raschid and in an
earlier incarnation had been an Initiate. It may well
happen — I say this in parenthesis — that
one who was an Initiate in bygone times does not, in a later life,
give the impression of having attained Initiation. When I speak again
and again of a number of ancient Initiates, of teachers and priests
in the Mysteries, you are bound to ask yourselves: Where are
they to be found? Why are they not living among us at the present
time? Now an individuality with great spiritual enlightenment in an
earlier life can work in a later life only through the medium of the
body and the education afforded by that later epoch. But for a long
time now, the character of education has made it impossible for what
once lived in these Initiate-souls to express itself. They are
obliged to operate in quite different forms of life and only those
endowed with a power of intimate observation are able to realise that
men in whom the Initiate is not apparent in the later earthly life
have nevertheless passed through lives during which they reached
Initiation.
One of the
most striking examples in this respect
is Garibaldi, the hero of the freedom of Italy. The
elemental forcefulness displayed in a truly remarkable life is in
itself enough to indicate that this personality lived at a level
transcending the conditions of the immediate earthly existence.
He had been an Initiate in an earlier incarnation and became a
political visionary — for that is what he must be called. In an
earlier life he had been an Initiate, filled with impulses of will
which then, in the later life as Garibaldi, he brought to a head in
the way that was possible for a man born in 1807. But think of the
peculiar features of his earthly life. The starting-point for me was
that I observed how Garibaldi's path of destiny in the nineteenth
century was linked with three other men with whom he was connected
and with whom he worked in a way that on the face of it is really not
entirely comprehensible. In the depths of his nature Garibaldi was an
intensely loyal Republican, yet he rejected everything that would
have united Italy under the flag of a Republic. Convinced Republican
though he was, he set out to establish the Empire, and moreover under
Victor Emmanuel.
Occult
investigation has now to concern itself with this enigma: How came it
that Garibaldi was the one responsible for making Victor Emmanuel
King of Italy? — for it was he, Garibaldi, who made him
King. And then our vision falls on two other personalities: Cavour
and Mazzini. The circumstances are remarkable. Garibaldi was
born in 1807 and the others within the space of a few years.
Garibaldi was born in Nice, Mazzini in Genoa, Cavour in Turin, Victor
Emmanuel not far away. All of them were born within a small area.
A concrete
starting-point is needed for researches into karma. It is not much
help to know how clever a man is or what scientific knowledge he has
acquired. Even if someone has written thirty novels in his life, this
fact will not provide a starting-point for penetrating with vision
into earlier lives on Earth. Whether a person limps or has a habit of
blinking is much more important for investigation of an earlier
incarnation. It is precisely by what seem to be insignificant
features in life that the occultist is guided along the paths where
light is shed from one earthly life into earlier incarnations.
And so a
criterion for occult research in the case of Garibaldi was the way in
which, in the nineteenth century, he established relations with the
other three individuals. There was another criterion as well.
Outwardly observed, Garibaldi was a man with a strong sense of
concrete reality, one who stood firmly on his feet, mindful only of
practical exigencies. But in this Garibaldi-life there were intimate
phases, showing clearly that Garibaldi stood at a level above the
conventional experiences of life. While still quite young he took
part in many dangerous sea voyages on the Adriatic, was several times
captured by pirates but on every occasion freed himself again by very
hazardous means. It is also noteworthy that the first time Garibaldi
saw his name in print was when he read in a newspaper the
announcement of his own death-sentence. This is a biographical
incident that does not happen to everybody! The death sentence had
been passed on account of his participation in a conspiracy, but it
was never carried out. Garibaldi fled to South America and there led
an adventurous life, rich in inner experiences and full of vital force.
How very
little the ordinary conditions of earthly existence affected
Garibaldi is shown, for example, by the way in which he contracted
his first marriage — which for many decades was an
exceedingly happy one. How he became acquainted with the woman he
married is a strange story. He was on board ship, still some distance
out at sea, and looking towards the land through a telescope he saw a
woman standing there. He fell in love with her at
once. Falling in love through a telescope is by no
means an everyday occurrence and in such a case the ordinary
bourgeois conditions of life mean nothing! What happened?
Garibaldi steered at once to the land and met a man who was so taken
with him that he invited him home to a meal. This man was the father
of the girl he had seen through the telescope! A slight drawback was
that Garibaldi spoke only Italian, she only Portuguese, but although
neither knew the other's language he made her understand that they
must unite for life. It turned out to be the happiest and also one of
the most interesting marriages imaginable. She shared in all his
undertakings and experiences in South America and once, when a report
reached her that Garibaldi had been killed in one of the many fights
for freedom, she searched every battlefield — as legend
narrates of other women. She lifted every corpse in order to look at
the face but finally discovered on her journeyings that her husband
was still alive. During these adventures she gave birth to her first
child who would have died from cold if she had not bound it with a
sling around her neck and kept it warm against her breast. These are
not ordinary circumstances and the companionship was anything
but a conventional one in the bourgeois sense. Some time after the
death of his wife, Garibaldi married again, this time in perfectly
conventional circumstances. But this marriage — which had not
been arranged through a telescope — lasted no longer than a
day! These happenings and similar features of Garibaldi's life are
clear evidence that there was something quite out of the common about him.
Spiritual
vision revealed to me that in an earlier incarnation
[See
Karmic Relationships: Esoteric Studies - Volume I,
p.194 (lecture XII).]
in the Christian era, this personality had
been an Irish Initiate; he had come over with a mission from Ireland
to Alsace where he taught in a centre of the Mysteries and where he
had as pupils those individualities who were born later on in
approximately the same period and in the same region as he. Now in
various Mysteries where Initiation was attained there was a law
according to which the connection of certain pupils with the teacher
must be so close and strong that the teacher might not desert them
when circumstances brought them together in a later life.
Garibaldi was bound to feel a very strong tie with the individuality
of Victor Emmanuel because the latter had been his pupil in an
earlier Initiation-life. In such a case, theories are of no account.
In a later life what is of real importance is not any external
undertaking, but obedience, even if an unconscious obedience, to that
inner law by which men are brought together in accordance with
impulses working in the intimate processes of historical evolution.
The whole
of Garibaldi's life indicates how the attainments of one who
was an Initiate in a previous life are obliged to express themselves
in a later incarnation because the bodily constitution and the
education provided in a given century do not make it possible for
such a personality to appear outwardly as an Initiate.
The same
applies in the case of the personality who lived at the Court of
Haroun al Raschid and who, when he had gone through the gate of
death, was bound to take a different path from that of Haroun al
Raschid himself. This personality was connected in the very depths of
his soul with all the mysteries of Initiation he had received from
oriental wisdom. He could not follow the path that was taken, more
with an eye to outer renown, by Haroun al Raschid. He was obliged to
take a different path. These paths led to reincarnation in a later
epoch when the two individualities
worked in the currents of civilisation and culture
that were under their own influence — the influence, that is to
say, of Haroun al Raschid and his Counsellor. The soul of this
Counsellor appeared again as Amos Comenius,
who again was not able to bring the
Initiation-principle to outward manifestation but whose forceful and
effective intervention in the world of education in the age that is
also the age of Bacon, shows that profound and significant impulses
were alive in him. And so we see how after his life at the Court of
Haroun al Raschid, the soul who has now become
Amos Comenius is reincarnated with a more inward
vocation; we see how Haroun al Raschid himself reincarnates; and we
see how in these personalities, civilisations, cultures, flow
together. If we contemplate the spiritual life of Europe as it
developed particularly in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, we shall everywhere find Arabism in its new forms.
In everything that has been influenced by Bacon, Arabism is present
in a more outwardly brilliant form. In everything that has been
influenced by Amos Comenius, the deep inwardness of oriental wisdom
can be perceived.
What I am
telling you is not a made-up story. These things are not discovered
by speculation but only by uniting oneself inwardly with the
spirit-entities concerned and by means of inspired investigation
seeking the way from the one earthly life into the other. Through the
incarnation of souls in repeated lives a great deal has been brought
over from Arabism into the modern age. What is all-important is that
the character and purpose of such investigation shall not be
misunderstood. I told you that it is not a question of following
clues that in materialistic life would usually be considered
significant. Nothing much will be discovered by so
doing. — I will give you an example.
I had a
teacher — I have also spoken of him in my
autobiography — who was a really excellent geometrician.
At a certain period in my fife he began to interest me very
deeply. There was something absolutely original about him, a
one-sidedness that amounted almost to genius; he had other
characteristics as well, but his geometrical talent provided no
pointer to his earlier incarnation. This really first-class
constructive geometrician had a certain external peculiarity
— a club-foot. Now investigations which lead over from one
incarnation into another very often reveal that everything connected
in the one incarnation with the development of the legs is connected,
in another life, with the development of the head. A remarkable
metamorphosis takes place of the inner forces which in one life are
those of the limb-system and in another, those of the head-system.
My
teacher's club-foot became for me the starting-point of occult
investigation. And what transpired? The vision that was focused upon
this defect led me to another personality who also had a club-foot namely,
Lord Byron. I now knew: this has to do with reincarnations
connected in some way with each other. And it turned out that in a
previous incarnation there was something in the souls of both these
men that had led them to common action, although in their last
incarnation, as far as their earthly activity was concerned,
they were not actually, but almost, contemporaries. I stress the
point here that I am not dealing with incarnations as women because
in past epochs life in a man's body was more important. Incarnations
as women are only now beginning to be of importance, although in the
future it will be of very special interest to take account of them.
In considering many historical personalities, however, one often
omits intervening incarnations as women. — You must not
conclude from this that there have been no such incarnations,
but I am speaking now of aspects which lead back first and foremost
to previous incarnations as men. — And so through these two
personalities whose connection with each other I had perceived, I was
led back to a time — it was either in the tenth or eleventh
century A.D. but I have
not been able to determine this exactly — when they had lived
in the East of Europe, in regions that are now part of modern Russia.
They were comrades. At that time the legend of the Palladium
and its changing whereabouts in the world had already reached the
ears of a few. — You know, perhaps, that the Palladium was
regarded as a holy treasure upon which the fortunes of civilisation
depended. According to the legend, this Palladium was first in Troy,
then in Rome and was then transferred with pomp and splendour to
Constantinople by Constantine the Great, who caused a pillar to be
erected over it for his own glorification. At the top of this pillar
was a statue of Apollo. In a chaplet were pieces of wood which
Constantine had caused to be brought from the Cross of Christ.
Everything was done with an eye to his own glorification. The
legend related that the Palladium would at some time be carried
northwards, whither the civilisation centred in Constantinople would
then be transplanted. — This legend came to the ears of the two
comrades of whom I am speaking and they were seized with enthusiasm
to obtain possession of the Palladium in Constantinople. They did not
succeed but they embarked on many adventurous undertakings with
the aim of removing this holy treasure to the North. Especially in
the case of the one who was subsequently reincarnated in the
West as Byron, we see how his enthusiasm for the cause of freedom was
a karmic continuation of the search for the Palladium in the
earlier life. And the same spiritual configuration was to be seen in
the intimate impression made by my geometry teacher upon those who
knew him: here was a sense of freedom in the domain of science.
And so the
paths led from details of secondary
importance — in this case the club-foot — to
earlier incarnations of the personalities in question. When it is a
matter of speaking of the karmas of individuals one must always have
an eye for the inner configuration of life.
Let me
give one more example. — In the eighth/ninth
century A.D., in the
region that we should today call the North East of France, there
lived a personality who in those days would have been considered a
well-to-do landowner. But he was adventurous and went out on
predatory expeditions in the neighbouring provinces. Incredible
as it seems today, such things as the following did happen in those
times. — He would leave his house and estate and wage campaigns
sometimes more, sometimes less successfully in the neighbouring
districts. On returning from one of these expeditions he found that
he had been robbed of his property; another man was in
possession and he had so many soldiers and weapons that the property
could not be wrested from him by its rightful owner. There was no
place to which the latter could go and he became a serf — as it
would have been said later on — of the one who had dispossessed
him. And so a strange relationship developed between these two men.
The former owner of the estate was obliged to reverse his position.
The property that had once been his now belonged to someone else and
he himself was in the position previously occupied by the new owner.
He (the former owner) and like-minded companions would hold all kinds
of meetings — as we should call such gatherings nowadays
— in the neighbouring forests by night, voicing vehement
resentment against the one who had taken possession of the
property and against conditions where such things were tolerated. The
intense resentment and the things that were said at that time as an
expression of it are an interesting study.
I was able
to follow the paths taken by these two men who passed through the
gate of death in the ninth century and were born again in the
nineteenth. The one who had been an owner of property of which he was
afterwards dispossessed, appeared as Karl
Marx, the founder of socialism in the nineteenth
century. However greatly the outer circumstances differ, speculation
leads nowhere. But by following certain underlying currents we find
in the dispossessed landowner of the ninth century the soul of Karl
Marx in the nineteenth. The one who had persecuted and abased him so
cruelly in that earlier century became his friend Friedrich
Engels. There is no question of sensationalism here
but of understanding life and history from the concatenation of
circumstances in earthly existence.
Such
matters must be taken with deep earnestness, unmixed with any trace
of sensationalism. In this example we have an illustration of
European spiritual life, but it was into this spiritual life that
Arabist trends were inculcated. In the modern age too, a great deal
of Arabism will be found — but in a quite different form.
Now a
predecessor of Haroun al Raschid, one of the earliest successors of
the Prophet Mohammed in the seventh century
A.D. was Muawiyah. He was a remarkable
personality who longed to make conquests in the West but achieved little;
his inner longing for the West could not find fulfilment, but he was still
aware of the urge towards the West when he passed through the gate of
death, and this impulse continued through his life between death and
a new birth. Then this individuality of one of the Prophet's earliest
successors appeared again, exercising a dominant influence upon the
conditions prevailing in the twentieth century. Before the Christmas
Foundation Meeting I had spoken of many things that are confirmed by
what can be known about the repeated lives of a certain personality.
People understood little of what I said on those occasions, for the
power of conviction with which these utterances were made came
ultimately from the observation of karmic relationships through many
lives on Earth. Muawiyah appeared again in our age
as Woodrow Wilson, who carried Arabist abstraction in its most
radical form into external civilisation. In Woodrow Wilson there
appeared an individuality who brought Arabism to very strong
expression in our time, particularly in the famous Fourteen Points.
The calamities for which Woodrow Wilson was responsible can best be
studied by comparing the actual phrasing of those Fourteen Joints
with certain passages in the Koran. You will then find that a great
deal becomes intelligible and you will discover remarkable
things once you have knowledge of the true circumstances.
The fact
is, my dear friends, that the study of history to-day can be
satisfactory from the human point of view only when the concrete
phenomena of repeated lives on Earth are taken seriously, together
with the perception of karma and the inner connections in the
individual earthly lives of men. Since the Anthroposophical Society
has for two decades been prepared for what ought now to be brought
about under the influence of the Christmas Foundation Meeting, the
“Practical Exercises for the Understanding of Karma”
that were announced in 1902 when the
German Section of the Theosophical Society was founded, may surely be
put into practice today with greater and greater thoroughness. These
exercises, devoid of all sensationalism, should form part of our
anthroposophical life, becoming the foundation for greater and
stronger impulses that must be at work within the Anthroposophical
Society. What has now been said ought also to be regarded as an
expression of the fact that esotericism must stream through the
Anthroposophical Movement which is now embodied in the
Anthroposophical Society. But let us also realise with what deep
earnestness these things must be studied. If this earnestness is
present we shall be carrying farther the threads that were beginning
to be woven when, at the end of his treatise on
The Education of the Human Race,
Lessing drew attention to the fact of
repeated lives on Earth. For out of a deeper, more intimate study of
man and of his destiny, humanity must come to realise that through
Spiritual Science we gaze into the true being of man, the being who,
having knowledge of his own nature can utter the words: “Is not
then all Eternity mine?” But the expression of this Eternity in
the concrete facts of karma and of destiny in the historical life of
mankind must be recognised and known.
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