|
I
JUST
now, when I am giving public lectures on the social question here in
Zürich, it is perhaps appropriate that in our study-group we should
occupy ourselves with the inner aspect of the social problem, so
exceptionally important at the present time.
We know that in every human being whom we encounter in the outer
world, who stands before our bodily faculties of perception, we must
recognise beneath the surface the real inner man. We first become
aware of this inner man when we appreciate that fundamentally he is
connected with everything relevant to human life and knowledge that
weaves and surges through the world.
Just think, my dear friends, how different, with regard particularly
to the human being, our anthroposophical conception of the world is
from the ordinary conception! Remember my attempt to give an outline
of the anthroposophical view; recall all you have read in my
Occult Science,
and you will realise the following: the evolution of the
Earth is not only bound up with man, but is conceived as having
emerged from the earlier incarnations, so to speak, of our Earth
planet. Our present Earth-evolution emerged from the Old Moon
evolution, this from the Old Sun, the Old Sun from Old Saturn. Then
consider everything which had to be brought together to carry this
planetary evolution forward to the Earth stage, and you will say:
throughout the whole cosmic process man is never absent. He is
involved in all of it. All the forces and happenings of the cosmos
are focused on man — that is how we must conceive it.
In a conversation between Capesius and the Initiate, in one of my
Mystery Plays,
I have specially tried to show what an
impression it must make on anyone if he realises that all the
generations of the gods, all the power of the universe, are summoned
to the task of placing man in the centre of their creative activity.
I have pointed out, in connection particularly with this entirely
valid conception, how essential it is to emphasise the need for human
modesty — how essential it is to say again and again: “Yes,
if we could consciously experience our whole being in its relation to
the cosmos, and bring our whole being truly to expression, it would
be revealed as a microcosmos! But in fact, how much can we know or
experience or bring to expression of all that we are as man, in the
highest sense?” Whenever we bring clearly before us what we
are, we waver always between pride and modesty. We must certainly not
give way to pride, but neither must we surrender to modesty. It would
be a surrender if, after taking account of our place in the world
from a cosmic standpoint, we were to fail to reckon our human task in
the highest possible terms. We can never think highly enough of what
we ought to be. We can never take seriously enough the deep
sense of cosmic responsibility which must overcome man if he holds in
view the relationship of the whole universe to his human existence.
In the light of Spiritual Science this should certainly remain no
mere idea, no mere fact of knowledge: it should become an experience
— an experience of holy awe in the face of what man ought
to be and yet only in the rarest cases can be. Whenever, too,
we encounter another person, we should be impelled by this experience
to feel: “Standing there, you bring a great deal to expression
in this present incarnation. But you journey from life to life, from
incarnation to incarnation: the succession of your lives bears the
imprint of eternity.” And in many other directions also we can
widen and deepen this experience. From this experience we are led
through Spiritual Science to a true appraisal of human worth, to an
appreciation of human dignity in the context of the world. This
experience can permeate the soul through and through; it can, if it
inspires the entire inner life, bring us into the right mood for
regulating our relationships with other human beings.
All this, which I have just explained, we can regard as a primary
gift of modern Spiritual Science: we learn to appraise rightly all
that is human in the world. That is one point.
Something else will arise in us out of a deeply-felt and not merely
theoretical Spiritual Science. It is this. If we take into account
all the happenings of the world, all the elemental life in earth,
water and air — if we take account also of all that shines down
to us from the stars and breathes from the wind, all that speaks to
us from the several kingdoms of Nature — if we contemplate all
this in the light of Spiritual Science, then we find it connected
through and through with man! Everything will have value for us
because we are able to bring it into connection with the human.
Supersensible perception makes us feel, in very truth, that man is
related to everything in the universe. Christian Morgenstern, the
poet, has crystalised in beautiful verses (which I have often spoken
of to our friends in connection with a certain chapter in St. John's
Gospel) the experience which comes over us when we allow the ranking
of the kingdoms of Nature to work on our minds. Then we can say: “The
plant gazes on the lifeless realm of the minerals. ... Certainly it
must feel itself to stand higher in the order of Nature than the mere
lifeless minerals.” But then the plant, gazing on the mineral
which prepares the ground for it, will be impelled also to say: “I
certainly stand higher than you in the ranks of beings, but it is to
you, since I grow out of you, that I am indebted for my existence. In
thankfulness I bow before the ground which lies beneath me.”
And so, again, must we conceive the experience of the animals in
relation to the plants, and again in the human realm, where man in
the course of his evolution is raised to a higher level. He must gaze
down with awe and reverence at that which in a certain sense stands
beneath him — not merely formulating all this intellectually,
but so that the weaving pulse of life in all things becomes for him a
real cosmic soul-experience. [Christian Morgenstern:
We Found a Path.
The Washing of the Feet.]
This is how a genuine Spiritual Science should lead us on. Thus it
enables us to establish a living relationship between humanity and
all other existences.
Now a third point. Spiritual Science does not talk endlessly, in a
pantheistic way, about “spirit” underlying everything.
No, Spiritual Science does not only talk about spiritual reality; its
aim is to let the reality of the spirit flow directly into all it
says. It strives to speak in such a way that everyone for whom
Spiritual Science is a living experience knows that, whenever his
thinking touches the spirit, the spirit itself lives and weaves in
his thought. Whoever is breathed upon by the impulse of Spiritual
Science — if I may put it so — will not merely think
about the spirit: he will allow the spirit itself to speak
through his thoughts. The immediate presence of the spirit, the
active power of the spirit — these are what Spiritual Science
leads us to seek.
And now take the feelings which Spiritual Science calls to life in
the depth of the human soul and compare them with the social demand
of which I spoke yesterday — the social demand which in a
certain sense lives in the proletarian consciousness of the present
time. Consider: all that lives to-day in the consciousness of the
workers, as the foundation of their knowledge, is an ideology,
nothing but a web of abstract thoughts! Yes, this is said to be the
essential characteristic of spiritual experience, that it is merely
an ideology: economic happenings are the only reality. From these
happenings, as they run their course, the conflicts of human life
derive; everything that man thinks and learns and creates
artistically arises from them like a smoke, a mist. Everything that
he regards as custom, morality, law and so on — all merely an
ideological shadow-show! And now compare this shadow-show with the
spiritual life which penetrates the soul from the impulse of
Spiritual Science. The aim of our Anthroposophical Spiritual Science
is to carry spirit out as living reality into the world through the
soul of man. This living spirit is banished from that contemporary
outlook which originated with the middle class, and which the
workers, to their misfortune, have taken over. Banished ... and that
which ought to live in men's consciousness, the “spirit in me”
— that exists now merely as ideology.
Consider, again: how much can be understood about humanity, in this
earthly life, through the ordinary senses! Why, in order to gain a
comprehensive view of humanity we have to bring in not only the
evolution of the Earth, but the Moon, Sun, and Saturn evolutions! How
lacking from the modern outlook is that fine feeling for human
dignity which enables us, once we have acquired it from Spiritual
Science, to establish a right relationship when as human beings we
encounter other human beings! Can you suppose for a moment that in
the chaos of social life to-day will be found that right relationship
between man and man which is essential to any real solution of the
social problem? How can such a right relationship possibly emerge
unless it rests on that evaluation of mankind in cosmic terms which
springs only from spiritual knowledge and spiritual experience?
A third point. No true relation to the realm of law and human rights
can be found to-day through the abstract conceptions loved by
economists and political theorists. The only way is to seek for
direct personal contact with the facts and events of the surrounding
world. This third point recalls what I have already indicated:
through Spiritual Science, taken into the soul-life, we must
experience our relationship to all the beings that stand above and
below us in the hierarchical order of the divine and natural worlds.
Now consider this contrast. On the one hand, take that which fills
the consciousness of the proletariat — think how far removed it
is from any experience of the living reality of the spirit in man,
how it has reduced everything spiritual to an ideology! Think how far
removed a truly spirit-permeated valuation of man is from the way of
thinking which the proletarian of to-day applies to man and embodies
in his general outlook! Think, finally, how far removed the almost
universal standards of judgment to-day — the reckoning of
everything in economic terms — are from that appreciation of
extra-human phenomena to which we come when we learn to experience
all that may be drawn from Spiritual Science as to the relationship
of men to these other realms of existence.
Consider a further contrast. Think what mankind has come to as a
result of the intensive invasion of human souls by the materialism of
the past century. On the other hand, think of the hopes that can be
kindled by the knowledge that true Spiritual Science is now able to
find its way into the hearts of men. Put these two facts side by side
and ask yourselves whether a true apprehension of the social problem
will not depend on the grasping by human souls of all that Spiritual
Science has to give.
If you experience rightly these two prospects, the hopeless and the
hopeful, then, my dear friends, anthroposophical activity will become
for you what indeed it should be to-day for all men: a necessity of
life — a necessity which should penetrate all other
preoccupations.
You may say to yourselves: Nothing seems clearer to me in the whole
context of man's recent development than that the social problem has
come to a head; but nothing, also, seems clearer than that men stand
tragically at a loss in face of this social problem. For in this
epoch, when the social problem thrusts itself so forcibly on to the
scene, men are going through one of their hardest ordeals — the
ordeal of having to find their way to the spirit through their own
inner strength. Today we can look for no revelations unless we seek
them freely; for since the middle of the fifteenth century we have
been living in the age of the Consciousness Soul — the age in
which everything is destined to be brought into the light of
consciousness. Let us not be led to complain vainly: “A fearful
catastrophe has fallen on mankind ... why have the gods thrust
mankind into such an appalling disaster! Why did the gods not lead
men clear of it, for it is surely piteous that men should have been
brought to such a pass?” Let us not forget that we are living
in the age when the free spiritual activity of man is due to reach
expression — when the gods, in accordance with their primary
purpose, may not reveal themselves unless the human being, by free
resolve, opens the innermost sanctuary of his soul to receive them.
With regard to the most important aspects of human evolution, and
with regard particularly to Christianity, we stand at a
turning-point. Certainly many people, who are active in social
affairs, have indicated a willingness to accept Christianity —
but only as much of Christianity as serves to remind us of our own
social ideals. But this most important of all impulses, which alone
gives earthly existence its true meaning and purpose, cannot be dealt
with in that way. We must be clear about this: all that has been
generally understood about Christianity, so far, is only a beginning.
It amounts to little more than an acknowledgment of the fact that the
Christ was once present in the man Jesus and passed through the
Mystery of Golgotha. All that Christianity has been able to teach men
in nearly 2,000 years is the simple fact that the Christ descended to
Earth and established a connection with the Earth. Human
understanding was not ripe for more. Only now, in the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch, the epoch of the Consciousness Soul, is
humanity becoming ripe to understand, not merely the fact that the
Christ passed through the Mystery of Golgotha, but the real
significance of this event. Mankind will be able to understand the
content of the Mystery of Golgotha only out of the spiritual
foundations which can be built in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch.
In this study-group I have often remarked how extraordinarily banal
it is to say: “We live in a time of transition.” All
times are times of transition! The point is not to call this or that
period a time of transition; the point is to see what is involved in
a particular change or transition. That is the essential thing: to
perceive what is changing!
I have also remarked here, from many points of view, on the
particular changes which human consciousness and human
soul-development, in the broadest sense, are undergoing in our time.
To-day I should like to draw attention once more to a particular
aspect of man's earthly evolution.
I said just now: Through Spiritual Science we seek not merely to
entertain thoughts about the Spiritual, but to let the living reality
of the spirit reveal itself in our thinking. Similarly, we can recall
the words of Christ Jesus: “I am with you always, even unto the
end of the world.” The right way to grasp Spiritual Science is
not to believe that the entire substance of Christianity is contained
once for all in the Gospels, but to recognise that the Christ is in
truth present at all times, even unto the end of the world. And
present not as a dead force, calling merely for belief, but as a
living power which increasingly reveals itself. And in our epoch what
is this revelation? The content of modern anthroposophical Spiritual
Science. Spiritual Science is concerned not merely to talk about the
Christ, but to utter what the Christ wishes to say to men in our
time, through the medium of human thoughts.
So we can say: In those ancient times, when the life of men was still
largely instinctive, when in their souls something of the old,
atavistic clairvoyance survived, then the Spiritual found utterance
in the human soul. It was active still in human thoughts and in the
human will. Truly, the gods dwelt in men. To-day, however, they dwell
in human beings after a different fashion. One might put it in the
following way. In ancient times the gods had a certain task with
regard to the Earth's evolution: they had set its fulfilment before
themselves as a goal. They accomplished their purpose by inspiring
men with their own powers, and breathing imaginations into the human
soul. But — strange as it may seem — these primal aims
for the Earth's development are now fulfilled. They were fulfilled,
fundamentally, by the end of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. Since
then the spiritual Beings of the higher Hierarchies (whom in our
sense we may call the gods) stand in a different relationship to
human souls.
Once, the gods came in search of men in order to realize their
purpose for the Earth with men's help. To-day it is men who must seek
out the gods; by their own inner activity they must raise themselves
to the gods. The human being must reach such a relationship to the
gods as to achieve his aims, his consciously conceived aims, with the
help of divine powers. That is the right thing in the epoch of the
Consciousness Soul. In earlier times the aims of men were
unconscious, instinctive, just because the conscious purpose of the
gods was working in them. Human aims must now become ever more
conscious: then they will be infused with powers capable of raising
them into the sphere of the gods, so that human aims may be inspired
with divine energies.
My dear friends, give thorough thought to these words. Much lies in
them. They point to the necessity which from our time onwards should
draw forth an elemental striving from the depths of human nature. We
can cultivate this in various realms of the soul. Above all we must
seek to deepen social life by bringing Spiritual Science to bear on
human relationships. Because in earlier times the gods were directly
concerned with the evolution of mankind, and sought through men to
realize their aims — for this very reason men were much more
closely related to one another than they are to-day. It had to be so.
To-day human beings are in a certain sense driven apart, and they
have to seek quite a different relationship to one another. But first
they have to learn about this. From a purely external point of view
you can see everywhere that one human being knows very little about
another. Spiritual Science is only beginning to show how human nature
and human worth stand in their cosmic setting. In daily life one man
knows little about another; he does not penetrate into the depths of
his fellow man's soul. That is the general rule. Through a deepening
of social life a new understanding of man must be found, and must
permeate human development.
Instead of having eyes only for the man of flesh, apprehending him in
a naturalistic way, devoid of the spirit, we must reach the stage of
a spirit-filled social organism, wherein the activity of the gods in
other men can be recognised.
But we shall not attain to this unless we do something about it. One
thing we can do is to strive to deepen our own life of soul. There
are many paths to that. I will mention only one, a meditative path.
From various points of view, and with various aims, we can cast a
backward glance over our own lives. We can ask ourselves: How has
this life of mine unfolded since childhood? But we can do this also
in a special way. Instead of bringing before our gaze what we
ourselves have enjoyed or experienced, we can turn out attention to
the persons who have figured in our lives as parents, brothers and
sisters, friends, teachers and so on, and we can summon before our
soul the inner nature of each of these persons, in place of our own.
After a time we shall find ourselves reflecting how little we really
owe to ourselves, and how much to all that has flowed into us from
others. If we honestly build up this kind of self-scrutiny into an
inner picture, we shall arrive at quite a new relationship to the
outer world. From such a backward survey we retain certain feelings
and impressions. And these are like fertile seeds planted in us —
seeds for the growth of a true knowledge of man. Whoever undertakes
again and again this inward contemplation, so that he recognises the
contribution which other persons, perhaps long dead or far distant,
have made to his own life, then when he meets another man, and
establishes a personal relationship with him, an imagination of the
other man's true being will rise before him.
This is something which must emerge as an inward and truly heartfelt
social demand, bound up with this present time and necessary to the
future development of mankind. So must Spiritual Science reveal its
practical power to kindle and enrich human life.
This subject has a further aspect. In earlier times all
self-knowledge, all introspection, was a much simpler affair, for a
deeply inward social impulse is now emerging — and not only
because of the enhanced awareness of some people concerning property
or poverty. This impulse shows itself, for example, in the following
way. Nowadays we pay very little attention to the fact that
throughout life a constant process of ripening goes on. Inwardly
honest men, such as Goethe, feel this. Even in his latest years
Goethe was still eager to learn. His inward growth continued; he felt
he had not finished with the task of becoming a man. And in looking
back on his youth and prime he saw in all that had come to him then a
preparation for the experiences brought by old age. Nowadays people
very seldom think in that way — least of all when taking
account of man as a social being. Everyone, as soon as he is twenty,
wants to belong to some corporate body and — in the favourite
phrase — to exercise his democratic judgment! It never occurs
to anyone that there are things in life worth waiting for, because
increasing ripeness comes with the years. Men to-day have no idea of
that!
That is one thing we must learn, my dear friends — that all
stages of life — and not only the first two or three decades of
youth — bring gifts to man.
And there is something else we must learn. We are not concerned only
with ourselves, but with people at other stages of life; and
particularly with children, as they are born and grow up. A
consequence of human evolution is that much which used to unfold of
itself in the soul now has to be attained by extraordinary exertion —
by a striving for supersensible knowledge, or at least for a real
knowledge of life. It is the same with the child as with people in
general — a great deal in his own being remains hidden from
him. And this applies not only to the experiences that will come in
later life. A great deal that was formerly revealed through atavistic
clairvoyance now remains hidden from a person who pays attention only
to himself, who seeks for knowledge only within himself. It remains
hidden from the cradle to the grave. This is also a consequence of
the state of consciousness belonging to our age. We can strive for
clear insight, yet much remains hidden — and precisely in the
realm where we need to see clearly. This is a special characteristic
of our time: we enter the world as children, bearing some quality
which is important for the world, for the social life of humanity,
for the understanding of history. But we cannot reach a knowledge of
this, not in childhood, or in maturity, or in old age, if we remain
shut up in ourselves. Knowledge of it, however, can be reached in a
different way. We can reach it if we look at the child with
finely-tuned spiritual perception, and realise that in the child is
revealed something which the child does not and cannot ever know, but
which can be understood by the soul of another person who in
old age gazes on the child. It is something revealed through the
child — not to the child himself and not to the man or woman
whom the child becomes — but to the other person who
from a later age looks with real love on his youngest contemporaries.
I draw special attention to this, my dear friends, so that from this
characteristic of our age you may see how a social impulse, in
the broadest sense, weaves and surges through our time. Is there not
something profoundly social in this necessity: the necessity which
ordains that life becomes fruitful only when age seeks its highest
goal through fellowship with youth — the fellowship not merely
of this or that man with another, but of the old with the very young?
This social fellowship is called for by the innermost spirit and
sense of our time. And in this way Spiritual Science, by speaking to
people who are already prepared to some extent through acquaintance
with its other branches, can lead to a deeper grasp of the social
problem. As persons marked out by knowledge of Spiritual Science, you
have before you all a great social task if you take the force of
feeling which social questions stir in you and make it a means of
working for mankind to-day. Carry your enthusiasm into the social and
socialistic discussions of the present time, kindle and deepen in
yourselves the social feeling and understanding which should prevail
between man and man — then you will be discharging a truly
anthroposophical task in the social realm.
We will speak further of this next week, when we shall again have a
group lecture in between the two public lectures.
|