II
A
WEEK ago I was saying that we here, as
anthroposophists, are able to grasp in a much deeper sense all that
is necessary for reaching a judgment on the burning questions of the
present day. We can do much more in this way than is possible in
wider circles. In a sense we can look on ourselves as a kind of
leaven — if I may use the biblical word — so that
everyone in his own situation may try to contribute something, out of
a strong warmth of impulse, towards the needs of the time.
If we recall what has
been said as the keynote of the public lectures, we shall appreciate
that the immediate essential is to strive towards a certain
differentiation — a certain “membering” — of
the social organism. I say always “strive towards”
— there is no question of wanting to effect a revolutionary
change overnight. We must strive towards a differentiation of a great
deal which under modern influences has become centralised. What we
must work for — instead of the so-called unitary State —
is that a certain realm of society, embracing all that has to do with
spiritual life, should unfold freely and independently
alongside the other realms. This realm will include the upbringing of
children, education, art, literature, and also (as I have remarked
already and shall mention in the public lecture to-morrow) everything
concerned with the administration of civil and criminal law.
As a second
“limb” of the social organism we should recognise, but in
a restricted sense, that which has been known as the
“State.” It is precisely on the shoulders of this
“State” that men nowadays want to pile as much as
possible — State schools, State child-care, and so on. That has
been the great tendency of the last four hundred years. And to-day,
under the influence of social ideas and socialistic thinking, people
want to weld economic life into a single whole with political life.
These two realms must be separated once more. The political
State must stand on its own independent ground, as the second sphere
of society; and the same relative independence must distinguish the
realm of domestic economy, where commodities circulate — that
is, economic life.
Now, my dear friends,
we will look at this question from a point of view not easily reached
by anyone outside our movement. And we will carry the matter to a
certain culmination, so that out of this culmination a deeper
understanding of the human situation to-day may spring forth.
Let us look first at
what is called, in an earthly sense, spiritual life. Spiritual life
in this earthly sense embraces everything which in one way or another
lifts us out of our solitary egoism and draws us into community with
other human beings. Let us take, as the most important manifestation
of earthly spiritual life for most people still, that aspect of it
which should bring us into relation with super-earthly spiritual life
— I mean the practice of religion, as this takes its course in
the various congregations.
In the human soul are
needs which cause people to seek each other out; people are united by
experiencing similar needs. The upbringing of a child means that one
soul is caring for another. Anyone who reads a book is drawn out of
the egoistic circle of his individual life, for it is not he alone
who absorbs the author's thoughts; even when he is only half-way
through a book he is already sharing these thoughts with a great
company of other readers. And so, through this kinship of
soul-experience, a certain human community is formed. This is an
important characteristic of spiritual life: it has its springs in
freedom, in the individual initiative of the single human being, and
yet it draws men together, and forms communities out of what they
have in common.
Here, for anyone who
seeks deeper understanding, is a fact to be kept in mind — a
fact which brings every kind of human fellowship into relation with
the central event of earth-evolution — the Mystery of Golgotha.
For since the Mystery of Golgotha everything concerned with human
fellowship belongs in a sense to the Christ Impulse. That is the
essential thing — the Christ Impulse belongs not to single men
but to the fellowship of men. In truth, according to the mind of
Christ Himself, it is a great mistake to suppose that the solitary
individual can establish a direct relation with Christ. The essential
thing is that Christ lived and died, and rose from the dead, for
humanity as a whole. Since the Mystery of Golgotha, therefore, the
Christ Event is immediately relevant (we shall return to this point)
wherever human fellowship unfolds. And accordingly, for anyone who
really understands the world, the earthly spiritual life which
springs from the most individual source, from personal circumstances
and gifts, leads to the Christ Event.
Let us now first
consider this earthly spiritual life — religion, education, art
and so forth — on its own account. We gain through it a certain
connection with other human beings. Here we must distinguish between
the connections we form through our individual destiny and karma, and
those which in this narrow sense are not dependent on our karma. Some
of the connections we establish in the course of life are the direct
outcome of relationships formed in earlier lives; some will bear
karmic fruit in future lives. Human beings form connections with one
another in manifold ways. The connections formed directly through our
karma must be distinguished from the wider connections that arise
when we meet people through joining a society, or a religious body or
a fellowship of belief, and also from those that come through reading
the same book or through common enjoyment of a work of art, and so
on. The people we encounter in these ways on earth are not always
related to us karmically from an earlier life. Certainly, there are
communities which point to a common destiny in earlier lives; but
with the wider groupings of which I have just spoken it is generally
not so. This brings us to a further point.
Towards the end of our
time in the super-sensible world, between death and a new birth, when
we reach the period just before our next incarnation, we enter into
relations — as far as we are ripe for them — with Angels,
Archangels and Archai, and with the higher Hierarchies as well. But
also we come near to other human souls, due to be incarnated later
than ourselves — souls which have to wait longer, one may say,
for their incarnations. During this period we have a whole range of
super-sensible experiences to go through, according to our individual
stage of development, before we are plunged again into earthly life.
And the forces we thus receive place us on earth in the situation
which will enable us to find our way into those experiences of
earthly spiritual life of which I have just spoken.
The essential point to
grasp is that our spiritual life on earth — all that we
experience through religion, or through upbringing and education,
through artistic impressions and so on — is not determined
solely by earthly circumstances. Our earthly spiritual life takes its
character from the experiences we have had in super-sensible realms
before birth. Just as an image in a mirror indicates what is being
reflected, so does earthly spiritual life point to what the human
being has experienced before entering his physical body.
Nothing on earth
stands towards the super-sensible world in so intimate, real and
living a relationship as this earthly spiritual life — which
indeed shows aberrations, many aberrations ... but these very
aberrations have a relation full of meaning to all that we experience
— certainly, in a quite different way — in the
super-sensible. This connection with pre-earthly life places spiritual
life on earth in a quite special situation. Nothing else in earthly
life is so closely bound up with our life before birth!
This is a fact to
which the spiritual investigator is bound to draw particular
attention. He distinguishes spiritual life from man's other earthly
activities, because super-sensible observation shows him that
spiritual life on earth has its roots and impulse in the life before
birth. So for the spiritual investigator this earthly spiritual life
marks itself off from other human experiences.
It is different with
what can be called, in a strict sense, political life, the life of
civic rights, which brings administrative order into human affairs.
You see, however hard one may try to discover, with the most exact
methods of spiritual science, the deeper connections of political
life ... one can find no relation between this political life and the
super-sensible. Political life is entirely of the earth! We must
clearly understand what this signifies.
For example, what
shall we take as a preeminently earthly type of legal relationship?
The relation to property, to ownership. If I own a plot of land, then
it is solely by political means that I am given an exclusive right
and tenure of the land. It is this which enables me to exclude all
others from using the land, building on it, etc. So it is with
everything that has to do with public law. The sum total of public
law, together with the means taken to protect a society from external
interference — all that makes up political life in the strict
sense.
This is the genuine
earth-life — the life connected solely with impulses which take
their course between birth and death. However much the State may
imagine itself to be God-given ... the truth to which all religious
creeds, in their deeper meaning, bear witness is as follows. The
first truth was conveyed by Christ Jesus when in the old phraseology
he said: “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and
to God the things that are God's.” Faced with the pretensions
of the Roman Empire, He wished above all to separate everything to do
with political life from all that bears the imprint of the
super-sensible. But when the purely earthly State seeks to make itself
the bearer of a super-earthly impulse — when, for example, the
State seeks to assume responsibility for religious life, or for
education (this last responsibility, unfortunately, is taken for
granted in our day) — then we have the situation characterised
by the deeper teachings of religion, when they said: Wherever an
attempt is made to mix the spiritual-super-sensible with the
earthly-political, there rules the usurping Prince of this world.
What is the meaning of
the “usurping Prince of this world?” You know, perhaps,
my dear friends, that people have thought a great deal about this,
without getting anywhere. Only through spiritual science can one
reach the meaning. The usurping Prince of this world rules whenever
an authority which should be concerned only with the ordering of
earthly affairs arrogates to itself the spiritual — and seeks
also, as we shall see later, to assimilate economic life. The
rightful Prince of this world is he for whom the political realm
includes only those things which belong wholly to the life between
birth and death.
So we have come to an
understanding of the second “limb” of the social
organism, in the sense of spiritual science. It is the realm
orientated towards those impulses which run their course between
birth and death.
Now we come to the
third, the economic realm. Just think, my dear friends, how economic
life draws us into a particular relation with the world. You will
readily understand what this relation is if you compel yourselves to
imagine that it were possible for us to be entirely absorbed in
economic life. If that could happen, what should we be like? We
should be thinking animals, nothing else. We are not thinking animals
for the reason that besides economic life we have a life of rights
— a political life — and a knowledge of the spirit, an
earthly spiritual life. Through economic life we are thus plunged,
more or less, into the midst of human relationships. And because of
this interests are kindled — precisely in this field of human
relations we are able to develop interests which in the true sense of
the word are fraternal. In no other realm than that of economic life
are fraternal relationships so easily and obviously developed among
human beings.
In the spiritual life
... what is the ruling impulse in earthly spiritual life?
Fundamentally, it is personal interest — an interest arising
out of the soul-nature, certainly, but none the less egoistic. Of
religion, people demand that it shall make them holy. Of education,
that is shall develop their talents. Of any kind of artistic
representation, that it shall bring pleasure into their lives, and
perhaps also stimulate their inner energies. As a general rule, it is
egoism, whether of a grosser or more refined sort, which leads a
person — quite understandably — to seek in spiritual life
whatever satisfies himself.
In the political life
of rights, on the other hand, we have to do with something which
makes us all equal before the law. We are concerned with the relation
of man to man. We have to ask, what our right should be. No question
of rights exists among animals. In this respect, also, we are raised
above the animals, even in our earthly affairs. But if we are
connected with a religious community, or with a group of teachers,
then — just as much as in civic relationships — we come
up against personal claims, personal wishes. In the economic sphere,
it is through the overcoming of self that something valuable, not
derived from personal desires, comes to expression —
brotherhood, responsibility for others, a way of living so that the
other man gains experience through us.
In the spiritual life
we receive according to our desires. In the sphere of rights we make
a claim to something we need in order to make sure of a satisfactory
human life as an equal among equals. And in the economic sphere is
born that which unites men in terms of feeling: that is, brotherhood.
The more this brotherhood is cultivated, the more fruitful economic
life becomes. And the impulse towards brotherhood arises when we
establish a certain connection between our property and another's,
between our need and another's, between something we have and
something another has, and so on.
This fraternity, this
brotherly relation between men which must radiate through economic
life if health is to prevail there, may be thought of as a kind of
emanation rising from the economic sphere — and in such a way
that if we absorb it into ourselves we are able to take it with us
through the gate of death and carry it into the super-sensible life
after death.
On earth, economic
life looks like the lowest of the three social spheres, yet precisely
from this sphere arises an impulse which works on into super-earthly
realms after death. That is how the third member of the social
organism presents itself in the light of spiritual science. Its
character is such that in a certain sense it drives us into regions
below the human level; yet in fact this is a blessing, since from the
fraternity of economic life we carry through the gate of death
something which remains with us when we enter the super-sensible
world. Just as earthly spiritual life points backward, like a
mirrored image, to super-sensible spiritual life before birth, so does
economic life, with all that arises from its influence on men —
social interests, feeling for human fellowship, brotherhood —
so does economic life point forward to super-sensible life after
death.
Thus we have
distinguished the three social spheres, in the light of spiritual
science: spiritual life, pointing back to super-sensible life before
birth; political life, bound up with the impulses which take their
course between birth and death; and economic life pointing forward to
the experiences we shall encounter when we have passed through the
gate of death.
Now, just as it is
true that the being of man belongs not only to earthly but to
super-earthly realms — that he bears in himself the fruits of
his pre-natal life in the super-sensible, and develops in himself the
seeds (if I may use this image) of the experiences that will be his
in the life after death — just as it is true that in this
connection human life is threefold, unfolding on earth between these
two reflections of the super-earthly, so in truth must the social
organism be itself “three-membered,” if it is to serve as
foundation for human soul-life as a whole.
For those,
accordingly, who through spiritual science understand man's place in
the cosmos, there are much deeper reasons for recognising that the
social organism must have a threefold structure, and that if
everything is centralised, if everything is piled on to a chaotically
jumbled social life, then man is bound to degenerate ... as indeed in
modern life he has, in some respects, which has led on to the
frightful catastrophe of the last four years.
You see: to grasp
human life in such a way as to realise that every human fellowship is
inwardly related to the whole of humanity and to the wider world
— this is what ought more and more to come home to men from the
deepening of spiritual-scientific knowledge. This is also the true
Christ-Knowledge for our time and the immediate future. That is what
we shall learn if we are willing, today, to listen to the Christ. He
Himself said — I have often quoted it: “I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world.” This means: Christ did
not speak only during His time on earth; His utterance continues, and
we must continue to listen for it. We should not wish merely to read
the Gospels (though certainly they ought to be read over and over
again); we should listen to the living revelation that springs from
His continued presence among us. In this epoch He declares to us:
“Make new your ways of thinking” (as His forerunner, John
the Baptist, said: “Change your thinking”), “so
that they may reveal to you man's threefold nature which demands also
that your social environment on earth shall have a threefold
membering.”
You see, it is
absolutely true to say: The Christ died and rose again for the whole
of mankind; the Mystery of Golgotha is an event which concerns the
whole of humanity. At the present time it is particularly necessary
to be aware of that — at this time when nation has risen
against nation in savage struggle, and when even now, after events
have led on to a crisis, we find no thoughtfulness, no consciousness
of the community of mankind, but on manifold sides a delirium of
victory! Make no mistake: all that we have lived through in the last
four years, all that we are experiencing now and have still to
experience — to anyone who looks below the surface all this
shows that mankind has reached a kind of crisis with regard to
knowledge of the Christ. And the reason for this is that the true
spirit of fellowship, the true relationship between men, has been
lost. And it is very necessary that men should ask themselves: How
can we find our way again to the Christ Impulse?
A simple fact will
show that the way is not always found. Before the Christ Impulse
entered into earth-evolution through the Mystery of Golgotha, the
people from whom Christ Jesus was born looked on themselves as the
chosen people, and they believed that happiness would come to the
world only if all other peoples were to die away, and their own stock
to spread over the entire face of the earth. In a certain sense that
was a well-founded belief, for Jehovah, the God of this people, had
chosen it as his people, and Jehovah was regarded as the one
and only God. In the time before the Mystery of Golgotha this was a
justified perception for the old Hebrew people, since out of this old
Hebrew people Christ Jesus was to emerge. But with the enactment of
the Mystery of Golgotha this way of thinking should have come to an
end. After that, it was out of date: in place of the recognition of
Jehovah should have come the recognition of Christ — the
recognition which compels one to speak always of humanity,
just as, for those who looked up to Jehovah, one people only was in
question. Not to have understood that is the tragic fate of the
Jewish people. To-day, however, we are coming up against all sorts of
reversions. What is it but a reversion when every nation —
though it may suppose itself to be doing something quite different
and may use other names — wants to worship a sort of Jehovah, a
special national goal of its own!
Certainly, the old
religious formulae are no longer used, but the outcome of present-day
mentality is that every nation wants to set up its own national god
and so confine itself within a strictly national existence. And the
inevitable result is that nation rages against nation! We are
experiencing a reversion to the old Jehovah-religion — with the
difference that the Jehovah-religion is breaking up into a multitude
of Jehovah-religions. To-day we are really confronted with an
atavistic reversion to the Old Testament. Humanity is bent on
dividing itself up into separate sections all over the earth —
quite contrary to the spirit of Christ Jesus, who lived and stood for
the whole of humanity. Humanity is trying to organise itself under
the sign of national deities, Jehovah-fashion. Before the Mystery of
Golgotha that was quite proper; now it is a reversion. This must be
clearly understood: the way of nationalism is a reversion to the Old
Testament.
This reversion is
preparing heavy ordeals for mankind, and against it only one remedy
will suffice: to draw near once more to the Christ by the path of the
spirit.
Those concerned with
spiritual science are therefore bound essentially to ask the
question: How, out of the depths of our own hearts and souls, under
the conditions of the present time, shall we find Christ Jesus?
This is a very serious
question (I have often spoken of it before from other points of view
in this group), as you can see from the fact that many official
exponents of Christianity have lost the Christ! There are plenty of
well-known parsons, pastors, etc., who talk about the Christ. The
burden of their discourse is that men can reach the Christ through a
certain deepening of the inner life, a certain inner experience. But
if one comes close to what these people mean by the Christ, one finds
that no distinction is made between this Christ and God in general
— the Father-God, in the sense of the Gospels.
You will agree that
Harnack, for example, is a celebrated theologian. He is emulated by
many here in Switzerland. Harnack has published a small book, The
Nature of Christianity; in it he speaks a great deal about the
Christ. But what he says concerning Christ ... why should it apply to
Christ? It could apply just as well to the Jehovah-God. For this
reason the whole book, The Nature of Christianity, is inwardly
untruthful. It would become truthful only if it were hebraicised
— if it were so translated that wherever the word
‘Christ’ stands, ‘Jehovah’ were written
instead.
This is a truth of
which people to-day have scarcely any inkling. From countless pulpits
all over the world Christ is spoken of, and people believe, simply
because they hear the word ‘Christ,’ that the preacher is
really speaking about the Christ. They never come to the point of
thinking: “Strike out the word ‘Christ’ from what
the pastor says and substitute ‘Jehovah’ — that and
nothing less will make it right!” You see, a definite untruth
lies at the root of the deepest ailments of our time.
Do not think that in
saying this I want to accuse or criticise any individual. That is not
so. My wish is simply to bring out the facts. For those persons who
often fall into the deepest inner untruth — one could even say,
into an inner lie — have thoroughly good intentions, in their
own way. It is hard to-day for humanity to reach the truth, since
what I have called an inner untruth has an exceptionally strong
backing of tradition. And this inner untruth, which has come to
prevail in immeasurably wide circles, gives rise to another, so that
in the most diverse realms of life the question is asked: Is anything
still true? Where is any genuine truth left?
For this reason, those
who are striving along the path of spiritual science are specially
moved to ask earnestly: How shall I find the true way to the Christ
— to that unique Divine Being Who may rightly be called the
Christ?
Indeed, if here on
earth our soul-life follows customary lines of development from birth
to death, then we have no inducement to come to the Christ. We may be
as spiritual as we like: we have no inducement to come to the
Christ!
If, without doing a
certain thing — which I will indicate in a moment — we
simply pass on from birth to death, as most people do to-day, we
remain far from the Christ. How, then, do we come to the Christ?
The impulse to take
the way to the Christ — even though it be oft-times an impulse
rising from the subconscious or from an obscure realm of feeling
— must come from ourselves. Any person who is normally healthy
can come to the God whom we have identified with the
Jehovah-principle. Not to find the Jehovah-God is nothing else than a
sort of illness in mankind. To deny God, to be an atheist, means that
you are in some way ill. Anyone who has developed normally and
healthily cannot be a denier of God, for it is merely laughable to
believe that the healthy human organism can have other than a divine
origin. The Ex Deo Nascimur is something which declares itself
to a healthily developed man in the course of human life. For if he
does not recognise — I am born out of the Divine —
then he must have some defect, which expresses itself in the fact
that he becomes an atheist. But to come to that generalised
conception of the Divine, which out of inner falsehood is called
Christ by modern pastors — that is not to come to the
Christ.
We come to the Christ
only — and here I am speaking with special reference to the
immediate present — if we go beyond customary conditions of
health, given by nature. For we know that the Mystery of Golgotha was
enacted on earth because mankind would not have been able to maintain
a worthy human status without the Mystery of Golgotha — that
is, without finding its way to the Christ Impulse. And so we must not
merely discover our human nature between birth and death: we must
rediscover it, if we are to be Christians in the true sense, able to
draw near to the Christ. And this rediscovery of our human nature
must take place in the following way. We must strive for the inner
honesty — we must nerve ourselves to the inner honesty —
to say: “Since the Mystery of Golgotha we have not been born
free from prejudice with regard to our world of thought — we
are all born with certain prejudices.” Directly we regard the
human being as perfect, after the manner of Rousseau or in any other
way, we can by no means find the Christ. This is possible only if we
know that the human being living since the Mystery of Golgotha has a
certain defect, for which he must compensate through his own activity
during his life here on earth. I am born a prejudiced person, and
freedom from prejudice in my thinking is something I have to achieve
during life.
And how can I achieve
it? The one and only way is this: instead of taking an interest
merely in my own way of thinking, and in what I consider
right, I must develop a selfless interest in every opinion I
encounter, however strongly I may hold it to be mistaken. The more a
man prides himself on his own dogmatic opinions and is interested
only in them, the further he removes himself, at this moment of
world-evolution, from the Christ. The more he develops a social
interest in the opinions of other men, even though he considers them
erroneous — the more light he receives into his own thinking
from the opinions of others — the more he does to fulfil in his
inmost soul a saying of Christ, which to-day must be interpreted in
the sense of the new Christ-language.
Christ said:
“Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my
brethren, ye have done it unto me.” The Christ never ceases to
reveal Himself anew to men — even unto the end of earthly time.
And thus He speaks to-day to those willing to listen: “In
whatever the least of your brethren thinks, you must recognise that I
am thinking in him; and that I enter into your feeling, whenever you
bring another's thought into relation with your own, and whenever you
feel a fraternal interest for what is passing in another's soul.
Whatever opinion, whatever outlook on life, you discover in the least
of your brethren, therein you are seeking Myself.”
So does the Christ
speak to our life of thought — the Christ Who desires to reveal
Himself in a new way — the time for it is drawing near —
to the men of the twentieth century. Not in such a way that people
should speak in Harnack's style of the God who may equally well be
the Jehovah-God, and is in fact nothing else, but so that it may be
known: Christ is the God for all men. We shall not find Him if we
remain egotistically bound up with our own thoughts, but only if we
relate our own thoughts to those of other men, if we expand our
interest to embrace, with inner tolerance, everything human, and say
to ourselves: “Through the fact of my birth I am a prejudiced
person; only through being reborn into an all-embracing feeling of
fellowship for the thoughts of all men shall I find in myself the
impulse which is, in truth, the Christ Impulse. If I do not look on
myself alone as the source of everything I think, but recognise
myself, right down into the depths of my soul, as a member of the
human community” — then, my dear friends, one way to the
Christ lies open. This is the way which must to-day be characterised
as the way to the Christ through thinking. Earnest
self-training so that we gain a true perception for estimating the
thoughts of others, and for correcting bias in ourselves — this
we must take as one of life's serious tasks. For unless this task
finds place among men, they will lose the way to the Christ. This
to-day is the way through thinking.
The other way is
through the will. Here, too, people are much addicted to a
false way, which leads not to the Christ but away from Him. And in
this other realm we must find again the way to the Christ. Youth
still keeps some idealism, but for the most part humanity to-day is
dry and matter-of-fact. And men are proud of what is often called
practical technique, though the expression is used in a narrow sense.
Humanity to-day has no use for ideals which are drawn from the
fountain of the spirit. Youth still has these ideals. Never was the
life of older people so sharply severed from the life of the young as
it is to-day. Lack of understanding among human beings is indeed the
great mark of our time.
Yesterday I spoke of
the deep gulf which exists between the proletariat and the
middle-class. Age and youth, too — how little they understand
each other to-day! This is something we ought to take most seriously
into account. We may try to reach an understanding with youth on the
ground of its idealism ... yes, that is all very well, but to-day
efforts are made to drive the idealism out of young people. The aim
is to do this by depriving youth of the imaginative education which
is given by fairy-tales and legends, by all that leads away from dry
external perceptions. All the same — it will not be too easy to
drive all the youthful, natural, primitive idealism out of young
people! But what is this youthful idealism? It is a beautiful thing,
a great thing — but it ought not to be all-sufficient for human
beings, for this youthful idealism is in fact bound up with the Ex
Deo Nascimur, with that aspect of the Divine which is identical
with the Jahve aspect. And that is just what must not remain
sufficient, now that the Mystery of Golgotha has been enacted on
earth. Something further is required — idealism must spring
from inner development, from self-education. Besides the
innate idealism of youth, we must see to it that in human society
something else is achieved — precisely an achieved
idealism: not merely the idealism that springs from the instincts
and enthusiasm of youth, but one that is nurtured, gained by one's
own initiative, and will not fade away with the passing of youth.
This is something which opens the way to the Christ, because —
once more — it is something acquired during the life between
birth and death.
Feel the great
difference between instinctive idealism and achieved idealism! Feel
the great difference between youthful enthusiasm and the enthusiasm
which springs from taking hold of the life of the spirit and can be
ever and again kindled anew, because we have made it part of our
soul, independently of the course of our bodily existence —
then you will grasp this second idealism, which is not merely the
idealism implanted in us by nature. This is the way to the Christ
through willing, as distinct from the way through
thinking.
Do not ask to-day for
abstract ways to the Christ; ask for these concrete ways. Seek to
understand the way through thinking, which consists in becoming
inwardly tolerant towards the opinions of mankind at large, and
developing social interest for the thoughts of other men. Seek also
for the way through willing — there you will find nothing
abstract, but an inescapable need to cultivate idealism in
yourselves. And if you cultivate this idealism, or if you introduce
it into the education of young people — which is particularly
necessary — then you will have something which inspires men not
to do only what the outer world impels them to do. For from this
idealism arises the resolve to do more than the sense-world
suggests — to act out of the spirit. When our actions spring
from this achieved idealism we are acting in accordance with the
intentions of the Christ, Who did not descend from worlds above the
earth in order to achieve merely earthly ends, but came down to the
earth from higher realms in order to fulfil a super-earthly purpose.
We shall grow towards Him only if we cultivate idealism in ourselves,
so that Christ, Who represents the super-earthly within the realm of
earth, can work through us. Only in achieved idealism can there be
realised the intention of the Pauline saying about Christ: “Not
I, but Christ in me.”
Anyone who refuses to
develop this second idealism through a rebirth of his moral nature
can say only: “Not I, but Jehovah in me.” But whoever
cultivates this second idealism, which must essentially be
cultivated, he can say: “Not I, but Christ in me.”
These are the two ways
through which we can find the Christ. If we pursue them, we shall no
longer speak in such a way that our speech is an inward lie. Then we
shall speak of Christ as the Divine Power active in our rebirth
— while Jehovah is the Divine Power active in our birth.
People to-day must
learn to appreciate this distinction, for it is this which leads also
to genuine social feeling, a genuine interest in our fellow-men.
Whoever develops an achieved idealism in himself, he will have love
for human-kind. You may preach as much as you like from pulpits,
telling men they ought to love one another: it is like preaching to a
stove. The most excellent exhortations will not persuade the stove to
heat the room. It will heat the room all right if you stoke it with
coal — there is no need to preach to it that its ovenly duty is
to heat the room. In just the same way you can keep on preaching to
men — love, love, love ... that is mere sermonising, mere
words. Strive rather that men should experience a rebirth of
idealism, that besides instinctive idealism they should achieve in
their souls an idealism which persists throughout life, then ... then
you will kindle a warmth of soul in the love of man for man. For as
much as you nurture an idealism in yourselves, by so much will you be
led in your soul life away out of egoism towards a concern for other
men.
And if you follow this
twofold way, the way through thinking and the way through willing,
which I have shown you with regard to the renewal of Christianity,
there is one thing you will certainly experience and discover. Out of
a thinking which is inwardly tolerant and interested in the thoughts
of others, and out of a willing reborn through the achievement of
idealism, something unfolds. And this can be described only as a
heightened feeling of responsibility for every action one
performs.
Anyone with an
inclination to examine the unfolding of his soul will feel in
himself, if he follows the two ways — it is a feeling different
from anything encountered in the course of an ordinary life which
does not follow the two ways — this heightened and refined
sense of responsibility towards everything one thinks and does. This
heightened feeling of responsibility will impel one to say: Can I
justify this that I am doing or thinking, not merely with reference
to the immediate circumstances of my life and environment, but in the
light of my responsibility towards the super-sensible spiritual world?
Can I justify it in the light of my knowledge that everything I do
here on earth will be inscribed in an akashic record of everlasting
significance, wherein its influence will work on and on? Oh, it comes
powerfully home to one, this super-sensible responsibility towards all
things! It strikes one like a solemn warning, when one seeks the
two-fold way to Christ — as though a Being stood behind one,
looking over one's shoulder and saying repeatedly: “Thou art
not responsible only to the world around thee but also to the
Divine-Spiritual, for all thy thoughts and all thy
actions.”
But this Being who
looks over our shoulder, who heightens and refines our sense of
responsibility and sets us on a new path — he is the one who
first directs us truly to the Christ, Who went through the Mystery of
Golgotha. It is of this Christ-Way, how it may be found and how it
reveals itself through the Being I have just described, that I wanted
to speak to you to-day. For this Christ-Way is most intimately
connected with the deepest social impulses and tasks of our time.
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