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Foundation Course
Spiritual Discernment, Religious Feeling, Sacramental Action
GA 343

29 September 1921 a.m., Dornach

VI. Creative Speech and Language

[ 1 ] My dear friends! Up to now I've been introducing my lectures by indicating what the Anthroposophic path is like, implementing my lectures out of Anthroposophy in order to lead towards the initiation of the renewal of religious life, out of the wishes present in the souls of contemporaries.

[ 2 ] Naturally first of all it is necessary to look more closely at what would be needed for the actual renewal of religious life. I would like to, in order to bring this into a clearer light, still today refer to the relationship, not of religion to Anthroposophy but the reverse, that of Anthroposophy to religion; but I have to say in advance, my dear friends, it is necessary, if we want to understand one another here, for a clear awareness of the seriousness of the relevant question in relation to its meaning in world history. If someone in a small circle sees some or other deficiency, finds this or that imperfection and is not able to perceive its relationship in our world's entire evolution, they will not quite rightly develop in their heart, or have a sense to develop, what is actually needed at present.

[ 3 ] We live in a time where humanity has been deeply shaken and with all the means at its disposal to do something, with all these means humanity has actually failed to move forward. As a result I particularly want to be clear that I believe, even if it perhaps doesn't appear as pertinently—let me quite sincerely and honestly express my opinion on this matter—that I believe the rift between those who have lived for a longer time in pastoral work and those younger ones who stand before this need today, and only enter it today, is far greater. Even though it might not yet be felt so strongly, yet it is still there, and it will appear ever more clearly; I believe that for many the question between older and younger people, if I might express it this way, is to experience its formulation very differently. It seems to me that for the younger ones the formulation as we saw it yesterday, appears no longer to carry the same weight; it has already been dismissed. Let's be quite honest with ourselves, and clear, that there is a difference whether we can, in a sense defend a cause in which we are, or whether it takes strength to get into it. We don't want to have any illusions about that. Of course, when one is older one could say one has the same earnest interest as a youngster.—Yet, we need to take into account all possible subconscious impulses, and for this reason I ask you already, because we are dealing with things of a serious nature, to accept what I want to say today.

[ 4 ] You see, Anthroposophy is quite at the start of its work, and anyone who uses Anthroposophy to develop some or other area, certainly has the experience that all he can still experience for himself in anthroposophical knowledge, the biggest difficulty arrives when he wants to share this with the world. This is just a fact, this is the biggest difficulty. Why? Because today we simply don't have the instrument of speech which is fully suited to concisely express what is seen through Anthroposophy. The Anthroposophist has the expectation that through Anthroposophy not merely such knowledge should come which live within the inner life, which they see as an inner observation, because it is unattainable for the human race in its entirety. For us this must be of foremost importance: What is possible in the human community?—and not: What can the individual demand?—Let us be clear, my dear friends, whoever is an Anthroposophist speaks out of reality, and in me speaking to him I don't feel as if I'm merely speaking in general, but when I speak to such a person it seems that either he is a priest or he should become someone who cares for the soul. Theoretically one can thus in the same manner shape one's endeavours in the most varied human areas. As soon as one enters into such a specialised field, one has to always state the most concrete of opinions which one can only take in. Please observe this. I'm making you aware that Anthroposophy certainly knows it stands at the start of its willing, a will which has to develop quite differently than the way in which it has already stepped in front of the world today. On the other hand, one can see that the world longs very, very strongly for what lies as a seed in Anthroposophy.

[ 5 ] Something exists as a seed in Anthroposophy, which is rarely noticed today. This is the speech formation element itself. If you read Saint Martin's words, who was still a guardian of a religious belief katexochen in the 18th century—Matthias Claudius has translated the work of Saint Martin entitled Errors and Truth which should be republished—if you read Saint Martin, you find him speaking from a certain implicitness that humanity possessed an ancient speech which has been lost, and that one can't actually express in current differentiated languages what could be said about the supersensible worlds, and which should be expressed about the supersensible. So the Anthroposophist often has the feeling he would like to say something or other, but when he tries to formulate it, it leaves him speechless and doesn't come about. Yet Anthroposophy is creative speech. No one is able to meet something in such a way as Anthroposophy—what once was encountered in this way was in olden times and always occurred at the same time as religious formation—no one can encounter anything without a certain theological approach to final things in life like death, immortality, resurrection, judgement, without a certain anticipation of the future, therefore Anthroposophy must in her inward convictions look, at least for a short span of time, into the future and it must to some extent predict what must necessarily happen in the future and for the future of humanity. That is, that mankind is able to strip off all such connections with single individual languages which still exist today, and which more than anything have drawn nations into war and hardship. Ever again one must address the comparison of the Tower of Babylon construction and understand it today when one sees how the world is divided. Anthroposophy already has the power to sense something expressed between the differentiated spoken languages by looking from the original being of the sounds themselves; and Anthroposophy will, and not in the course of many centuries but in a relatively short time—even at is was initially suppressed, it soon rejuvenated—Anthroposophy will, through the most varied languages, not create a type of Yiddish language unit which is an abstraction from another, but it will out of itself creatively enter into the language and become reconciled with what is already in the human language.

[ 6 ] Therefore, I want to tell you that Anthroposophy not only provides formal tasks of knowledge but that Anthroposophy has to face historical creative tasks. You can see what is in the hearts of people today who can create such things. I've been wanting for years to take the most important components in anthroposophical terminology, as paradoxical as this may appear, to try and give words formed out of sound. The time has not been ripe yet to accept this. But it is quite possible.

[ 7 ] For this reason, I must call your attention to the real tasks of Anthroposophy. Why do I feel myself compelled to call your attention to it? Simply from the basis that as soon as mankind is ripe for the perception of the sound, for the word creative power itself, then everything which has up to now been in other spheres, in a more instinctive-animal way taking its course, must in future take place in the spiritual-human sphere. If humanity has come this far then it can sense the truth in a deed, sense what lives in the proclamation, in the message, in the Gospel, because the truth can't be sensed in the Gospel if one doesn't live in the creative power of a language. To really experience the Gospels, my dear friends, means to experience the details of the Gospels in every moment in which one lives, from having really recreated them within oneself.

[ 8 ] Today's tendency is to only basically criticize the Gospels, one can't recreate them; but the possibility for their creation must be reworked. Where are the obstacles? The obstacles lie in already referring to the very first elements which were available for the creation of the Gospels. In fact, Gospel examination is placed on another foundation when the Gospel is thought about this way, than how it needs to happen from the character of the words. You see, under the objections which Dr Rittelmeyer mentioned, not as his but those of others, it is also one which is mentioned besides. It's the objection that it does not interest the religious today whether there are two Jesus children. I can completely understand how, in the religious mood of today, little value is placed in such things. Now there is something else. During the coming days we see, published in the Kommenden Tag-Verlag, how unbelievable the Gospel understanding is regarding the promotion of this "trivial matter"—it is however no small matter—how the power which created the Gospels is promoted by simply referring to a proof of what stands in the Gospels, regarding the two Jesus children. People don't understand the Gospels, they don't know what is written in them. However, the creative power of speech must be drawn out of further sources, and as a result, develop the heart and mind for these sources so that from the heart and mind the first of the four sections which I've given you in the description of the Mass can be given. You see, it doesn't mean the Mass is only being presented symbolically, but that the Mass symbolism becomes an expression for the totality of the pastoral process. If the totality of the pastoral work does not flow together into the Mass as its central focus, then the Mass has no meaning; the coming together of the pastoral ministry in the Mass or the modern symbolism that can be found—we will speak about this more—only then, in the full measure of the four main sections of the Mass, which I have mentioned, can it be fully experienced.

[ 9 ] The reading of the Gospel to the congregation is only a part; the other part is expressed in the sermon. The sermon today is not what it should be, it can't be as it is intellectual because as a rule the preparation for the sermon is only intellectual and arising out of today's education, out of today's theology, can't be anything else. The sermon is only a real sermon when the power of creative speech ensouls the sermon, in other words when it doesn't only come out of its substance but speaks out of the substance of the genius of the language. This is something which must first be acquired. The genius of language is not needed for religiosity which is in one's heart, but one needs the genius of language for the religious process in the human community. Community building must be obligatory for the priest, as a result, elements must be looked for which are supportive of community building. Community building can never be intellectual, because it is precisely the element which creates the possibility of isolation. Intellectualism is just agreed upon by the individual as an individual human being and to the same degree, as a person falls back on his singularity, to that degree does he become intellectual. He can understandably save his intellectualism through faith because faith is a subjective thing of individuals, in the most imminent sense one calls it a thing of the individual. However, for the community we don't just need the subjective, but for the community we need super-sensory content.

[ 10 ] Now, just think deeply enough about how it would be possible for you to effectively bring the mere power of faith to the community, without words. You wouldn't be able to do this, it is impossible. Likewise, you couldn't sustain the community by addressing it through mere intellectualism. Intellectual sermons will from the outset form the tendency to atomise the faithful community. Through an intellectual sermon the human being is thrown back onto himself; every single listener will be rejected by himself. This shakes up in him those forces which above all do not agree but are contradictory. This is a simple psychological fact. As soon as one looks deeper into the soul, every listener becomes at the same time a critic and an opponent. Indeed, my dear friends, regarding the secrets of the soul so little has been clarified today. All kinds of contradictions arise in objection to what the other person is saying when the only method of expression he uses is intellectual.

[ 11 ] This is precisely the element which split people up today, because they are permeated thoroughly with mere intellectualism. You are therefore unable, through the sermon, to work against atomising, if you remain in intellectualism. Neither in the preparation of the sermon, nor in the delivery of the sermon must you, if you want to build community today, remain in intellectualism. Here is where one can become stuck through our present-day education and above all in the present theological education, because in many ways it has become quite intellectual. In the Catholic Church it has become purely intellectual, and all that which is not intellectual, which should be alive, is not given to individuals but has become the teaching material of the church and must be accepted as the teaching material of the church. A result of this is, because everything which the Catholic Church gives freely as intellectual, the priest is the most free individual one can imagine. The Catholic Church doesn't expect people to somehow submit to their intellect, inasmuch as it releases them from what is not referred to as the supernatural. All they demand is that people submit to the teaching material of the church. Regarding this I can cite an actual example.

I once spoke to a theologian of a university, where at that time it paid general homage to liberal principles, not from the church but from liberal foundations. Of course, the theological faculty was purely for the Catholic priesthood. This person I spoke to had just been given a bad rebuke by Rome. I asked him: How is this actually possible that it is precisely you who received this rebuke, who is relatively pious in comparison to the teacher at the Innsbruck University—who I won't name—who teaches more freely and is watched patiently from Rome?—Well, you see, this man answered, he is actually a Jesuit and I'm a Cistercian. Rome is always sure that a man like him, who studies at the Innsbruck University never drops out, no matter how freely he uses the Word, but that the Word should always be in the service of the church. With us Cistercians Rome believes that we follow our intellect because we can't stand as deeply in our church life as the Jesuit who has had his retreat which has shown him a different way to the one we Cistercians take.—You see how Rome treats intellectualism psychologically. As a rule, Rome knows very clearly what it wants because Rome acts out through human psychology, even though we reject it.

[ 12 ] Now, what is important is that above all, the sermon should not remain in intellectualism. All our languages are intellectual, we don't have the possibility at all, when we use common languages, to come away from the intellect. But we must do it. The next thing you come to, with which you need work as purely formative in the power of creative speech, is symbolism, but now formed in the right way, not by remaining within intellectualism but by really experiencing the symbols. To experience symbols indicates much more than one ordinarily means.

[ 13 ] You see, as soon as the Anthroposophist comes to imaginative observation or penetrates the imaginative observation of someone else, he actually knows: The human being who stands in front of him is not the same person he had been before he had seen the light of Anthroposophy. You see, this person, who stands in front of us, is considered by current science to be a more highly developed animal; generally speaking. Everything which science offers to corroborate these views and generally justifies it is by saying a person has exactly as many bones and muscles as the higher animals, which is all true, but science comes to a dead end when one really presents the difference between people and animals. The differences between people and animals are not at all to be referred to through comparative anatomy, whether the whole human being or a single part of it, and an entire animal or part of an animal is similar, but to grasp what is human is to understand what results when human organs are situated vertically while the animal organs lie parallel with the surface of the earth. That one can also observe this in the animal kingdom as far as it proves the rule, is quite right, but that doesn't belong here, I must point out the limitations.

Because the human being is organised according to the vertical plane with his spine, he relates in quite a different way to the cosmos than does the animal. The animal arranges itself in the currents circulating the earth, the human being arranges itself in currents which stream from the centre point of the earth in the direction of the radius. One needs to study the human being's situation in relation to space in order to understand him. When one has completed one's study of the human being's relationship to space, and make it alive once again, as regards to what it means that the human being is the image of God. The human being is not at all what comparative anatomy sees, he is no such reality as anatomy describes him to be, but he is, in as far as he is formed, a realization of an image (Bildwirklichkeit). He represents. He is sent out of higher worlds into conception and birth so that he represents what he brings from before his birth. Out of the divine substance we have our spiritual life before birth. This spiritual life dissolves through conception and birth and achieves a representation in the physical person on earth, an imagination. Imagination, drawn out of the world all, becomes the form of man, but what is drawn out of the world all needs to be understood according to its position in the world all. Every single human organ takes place in the verticalization. The human being is placed into the world by God.

[ 14 ] This happens directly as an inner experience as the human being is grasped by the imagination. One can no longer intellectually say and believe that when I say the words "Man is the image of God" that we are only talking about a comparison. No, the truth is expressed; super-sensibly derived similarities from the Old and New Testaments can be found not as allegorical similarities, but as truths. We need to reach a stage when our words are again permeated by such experiences, that we learn to speak vividly in this way. In the measure to which we in a lively way enter into vivid characterisation, not through contriving something intellectually, we come to the possibility of the sermon, which should be an instruction.

[ 15 ] I have often pointed out that when a teacher stands in front of a child and wants to teach him in a popular form about the immortality of the soul, he should do so through an image. He will need to refer to the insect pupa, how the butterfly flies out of it, and then from there go over to the human soul leaving the human body like a pupa shell; permeating this image with a super-sensible truth. I have always, when I deal with this alleged parable, said: there is a big difference whether a teacher said to himself: I am clever and the child is stupid, therefore I must create a parable for the child so that he can understand what I can understand with my mind.—Whoever speaks in this way has no experience of life, no experience of the imponderables which work in instructions. Because the convincing power with which the child grasps it, what I want to teach with this pupa parable, means very little if I think: I am clever and the child is stupid, I must create a parable for him which works.—What should be working firstly comes about within me, when I work with all the phases and power of belief in my parable. As an Anthroposophist I can create this parable by observing nature. Through my looking at the butterfly, how it curls out of the pupa, I am convinced through it that this is an image of the immortality of the soul, which only appears as a lower manifestation. I believe in my parable with my entire life.

This facing of others in life is what can become a power of community building. Before intellectualism has not been overcome to allow people to live in images once again, before then it will be impossible that a real community building power can occur.

[ 16 ] I have experienced the power of community building, but in an unjust field. I would like to tell you about that as well. Once I was impelled to study such things as to listen to an Easter sermon given by a famous Jesuit father. It was completely formulated according to Jesuit training. I want to give you a brief outline of this sermon. It dealt with the theme: How does the Christian face up to the assertion that the Pope would set the Easter proclamation according to dogma, it wouldn't be determined as God's creation but through human creation?—The Jesuit father didn't speak particularly deeply, but Jesuit schooled, he said: Yes my dear Christians, imagine a cannon, and on the cannon an operator or gunner, and the officer in command. Now imagine this quite clearly. What happens? The cannon is loaded, the gunner holds the fuse in his hand, the gunner pulls on the fuse when the command is sounded. You see, this is how it is with the Pope in Rome. He stands as the gunner beside the cannon, holds the fuse and from supernatural worlds the command comes. The Pope in Rome pulls on the fuse and thus gives the command of the Easter proclamation. It is a law from heaven, just like the command does not come from the gunner but from the officer. Yet, something deeper lies behind this, my dear Christians—the father says—something far deeper lies beneath it, when one now looks at the whole process of the Easter proclamation. Can one say the gunner who hears the command and pulls on the fuse, is the inventor of the powder? No. Just as little can one say that the Catholic Pope has instituted the Easter proclamation.

The faithful are drawn by a feeling into the congregation through the use of this image, this representation but obviously in an unjust a field as possible.

[ 17 ] The symbol can be a way for the human heart to actually find the supersensible, but we, like I've indicated with the comparison to the insect pupa, need to learn to live within the symbol; to be able to faithfully take the symbol itself from the outside world. I clearly understand when someone wants to appeal to mere faith as opposed to knowledge. I take this so seriously, that this faith must also manifest and be active in the living of oneself in the face of outer nature, so that the entire outer nature becomes a symbolum in the true sense of the word, an experienced symbolum. My dear friends, before the human being again realizes that in the light not mere comparisons of wisdom live and weave, but that in the light wisdom really live and weave ... (gap in notes) ... light penetrates into our eyes, what is light is then no longer light—with "light" one originally referred to everything which lay at the foundation of human beings as their inner wisdom—because by the light's penetration it becomes inwardly changed, transubstantiated, and each thought which rises within, my dear friends, is changed light in reality, not in a parable. [ 18 ] Don't be surprised therefore that the one who has got to know through appropriate exercises that to some extent outer phenomena describe inner human thoughts, by describing them in light imagery. Do not be surprised because that corresponds to reality.

[ 19 ] Things were far more concretely taken in the ancient knowledge of mankind than one usually thinks. You must also become knowledgeable with the fact that the power which then still lived in the Gospels, have in the last centuries also got lost, like the original revelation of man has really been lost as has the original language been lost. Now I want to pose the question: do we grasp the Gospels today? We only grasp them when we can really live within them and presently, out of our intellectualized time epoch, we can't experience them thus. I know very well about the opposition expressed against my interpretations presented in my various Gospel lectures, from some or other side, and I'm quite familiar that these are my initial attempts, that they need to become more complete; but attempts to enliven the Gospels, these they are indeed.

[ 20 ] I would like to refer back to times, my dear friends, when there were individuals who we today, when you imagine the world order at that time there also existed, those we call chemists. Alchemists they were called in the 12th and 13th centuries, and they were active with the material world which we usually can observe in chemists. What do we do today in order to create a real chemist? Today our preparations for the creation of a chemist is his intellectual conceptions of how matter is analysed and synthesized, how he works with a retort, with a heating apparatus, with electricity and so on. This was not enough, if I may express it this way, for a real chemist, up to the 13th and 14th centuries—perhaps not to take it word for word—but then the chemist had opened the Bible in front of him and was permeated in a way by what he did, in what he did, by what flowed out of the Bible in a corresponding force. Current humanity will obviously regard this as a paradox. For humanity, only a few centuries ago, this seemed obvious. The awareness which the chemist had at that time, in other words the alchemist, in the accomplishment of his actions, was only slightly different to standing at the altar and reading the mass. Only slightly different, because the reading of the mass already was the supreme alchemical act. We will speak about this more precisely in future.

Should one not be creating knowledge out of these facts that the Gospels have lost their actual power? What have we done in the 19th century? We have analysed the Gospels of Mark, John, Luke and Matthew, we have treated them philologically, we have concluded that John's Gospel can be nothing, but a hymn and that one can hardly believe it corresponds to reality. We have compared the various synoptists with one another and we have reached the stage which ties to the famous blacksmith where distillation takes place: what is said iniquitously about the Christ is the truth because you won't find that with mere hymns of praise.—This is the last consequence of this path. On this path nothing else can happen than what has already happened: the destruction of the Gospels will inevitably arise in this way. While we are still so much into discussing the division between knowledge and faith, it will not be sustained if science destroys the Gospels. One must certainly stand within reality and need to understand how to live out of reality, and therefore it is important that the pastor must come to a living meaning of the perceptible representations, the perceptible-in-image representations. The living image must enter into the sermon. That it should be an acceptable, a good image, it obviously must have a purity of mood, of which we will speak about. It's all in the image; the image is what we need to find.

[ 21 ] Now my dear friends, for the discovery of the image you will be most successful with the help of Anthroposophy. Anthroposophy is mocked because of its pictoriality. If you read how the intellectuals—if I may use the word—apply their opposition to my depiction of evolution, you will soon see how easy it is from the intellectual point of view to mock the images which I have to use in my depiction of the Old Saturn-, Sun- and Moon existence. I have to use images otherwise things would fall out of my hands, because only though images I can grasp the reality which has to be searched for. I would like to say, Anthroposophy has in each of its parts definitely a search for images and is for this reason the helper for those who use images. Here lies the real field, where the pastor can firstly benefit much from Anthroposophy. Not as if he has to undertake to believe in Anthroposophy, not as if he has to say: Well now, let's study anthroposophical images and books, then we can use them.—This is no argument. It needs to come, so to speak, to the opposite of what had to develop in philosophy, into an age that lived contrary to Anthroposophy.

[ 22 ] To this I would like to say the following. Philosophers today who are students of a content or a system, or of the belief that a system needs to be established, such philosophers are antiquated; such philosophers have remained behind. Such system-philosophies are no longer possible in the intellectual time epoch. When Hegel presented his purely intellectualism in his last thoughts of the human conception and placed this in his overall system, he had created what I would like to call the corpse of philosophy. Exactly like science studies the human corpse, so can one in Hegel's philosophy in a corpse-like way study what is philosophy—as only that, it is very good. That is why the Hegelian philosophy is so great, because nothing disturbs the flow of intellectualism to really study it. The amazing thing I admire for example, is to develop something pure which is purely intellectualistic. However, after Hegel there can no longer be such endeavours which take thought content to create a philosophic system. That is why people create such awful somersaults. Yes, one can't think of worse somersaults than the philosophy of Hans Vaihinger, called the "As-if" (Als Ob). As if one can have something like a philosophy called: "As if." It is created from experience in the mind, this philosophy of "As if." It is not even a philosophy out of what humanity was, but the last imaginative remnants in humanity, which are translated into thoughts. What philosophers are obliged to study today should be a practice in pure thinking. To study philosophy today is meditative thinking and should not be practiced in any other way. I believe that if one looks at these things in an unprejudiced way, one will soon see that what I have offered in my Riddles of Philosophy as the development of philosophy, that it constantly proposes one can work through the most diverse philosophic systems as an exercise in thinking. One can learn unbelievably much out of the latest systems, in the Hartmann system and the American system linked to the name of James. One can learn unbelievably much in as far as one lets it work on one to such a degree that one asks: How is thinking trained; what does one gain from thought training?—Please forgive the hard words. Nietzsche had already made an effort to introduce such thought training in philosophy.

[ 23 ] This will draw your attention, regarding philosophy, to today's need that man must direct thought content into direct living content, not by positioning oneself as a subject against the truth from outside, but in such a way that truth becomes an experience. Only one who has understood current philosophising in this way will actually be able to understand the contrary; for readers of anthroposophical writing and hearing anthroposophical lectures it does not mean things are to be taken up as dogma. That would be the most incorrect attitude to have. Just think, what is given in Anthroposophy has actually been brought down out of the supersensible, it may have been awkwardly put into words, but when one allows oneself to reach deeper, it will be as if the true philosopher in his thoughts reaches deeper into other philosophies. He would not take anything from other systems, he takes the blame. The image capability for the pictorial, for the sake of clarity, is the first step to educate students in Anthroposophy. When words are encountered which have flowed out of imaginative thinking, when such thoughts are taken up, then it is necessary, in order to really understand them, to raise the pictorial power out of them from soul foundations. Above all, that's what we can do to help Anthroposophy.

[ 24 ] One therefore appeals less by saying: Well, I must first for my own sake become clairvoyant, then I can make some decisions about Anthroposophy.—One appeals in such a way that one firstly, quite indifferently, get to know the content of truth in Anthroposophy; one simply takes the sum of all the images which shows how one or other soul paints it. That is at least a fact which they paint for themselves. One takes this and first allows the inherent truth to remain undecided, but then one tries to find within it, how the person speaks who has such supersensible images, and one will see that this is the best way to enter in to seeing for oneself. With many people who encounter Anthroposophy today it is as if they set the wagon straight but then incorrectly spans the horse to it. (A stenographer's note indicates that a horse was drawn on the blackboard with the wagon positioned in one way, while the horse is drawn with its head towards the wagon and its tail pointing to the road ahead. The original drawing was not preserved.) There is no need for this; that one must first learn to be a seer. It could, in fact happen due to a certain arrogance and then the thing as a whole is passed by. If one has the humility to want to experience the seeing adequately, then one can come to the perception without the fear of receiving a suggestion. The fear of receiving a suggestion can only be had by philosophers alien to reality; which we have for instance with Wund, the latecomer of system philosophers who of course from his point of view, argued: Yes, how would I know if what I've first perceived of the supersensible world and look at it, that it was not suggested to me?—One should reply the Wund: How do you actually know the different between a piece of iron with a temperature of 100 degrees or higher which you can only imagine, or another one which is lying in front of you? You can discuss this for a long time but by looking at it you will never discover whether the iron is really lying in front of you or whether it is suggested; but when you grab hold of it and look at your fingers, then you will find the difference—through life. There is no other criterion.

[ 25 ] It is however an unmistakable criterion, if one places oneself into life in such a way to come into Anthroposophy. One may however not take on the point of view that one knows everything already. In my life I have found that people learn the least when they believe they already know what they should learn.

[ 26 ] It is for instance only possible to be a real teacher when you are a teacher of attitude. How often is it said to teachers in the Waldorf schools—and you have understood, in the course of years it has happened that teaching is characterised by this attitude; it is clearly noticeable—how often is it not said: When one stands in front of a child, then it is best to say to oneself that there is far more wisdom in the child than in oneself, much, much more because it had just arrived from the spiritual world and brings much more wisdom with it. One can learn an unbelievable amount from children. From nothing in the world does one basically learn so much in an outer physical way, as when one wants to learn from a child. The child is the teacher, and the Waldorf teacher knows how little it is true that with teaching, one is the teacher and the child the scholar. One is actually—but this one keeps as an inner mystery for oneself—more of a scholar than a teacher and the child is more teacher than scholar. It seems like a paradox, but it is so.

[ 27 ] You see, Anthroposophy directs us to new knowledge about the world, in many special areas in life, so it is worthy of questions which are thought through ... (Gap in notes). Yes, Anthroposophy appears consistently in this mood, with this attitude. Anthroposophy just can't appear without a religious character as part of it. This must also be stressed about Anthroposophy: Anthroposophy does not strive to appear as creating religious instruction, as building a sect; it strives to give humanity a content to their inner experiences which lets them strive to what comes quite out of themselves, which is expressed with religious characteristics. Anthroposophy is not a religion but what it gives is something which works religiously.

[ 28 ] Very recently I had to speak to a person whose earlier life situation was not quite over confident, but of a joyful nature, and who descended into a deep depression, a depression which had various, even organic, causes. This man is an Anthroposophist, he wanted to speak about his mood to me. I pointed out that a mood comes out of the totality of a person, and one gets a mood out of what one absorbs from the world in that one confronts the world as a human being.

Anthroposophy itself is a person (Mensch). If it wasn't a person, it wouldn't transform us. Out of us it makes us into someone different. It is a person itself, I say it in the greatest earnestness. Anthroposophy is not a teaching, Anthroposophy has an element of being, it is a person. Only when a person is quite permeated by it and Anthroposophy is like a person who thinks, but also feels, senses and has emotions of will, when Anthroposophy thinks, feels and wills in us, when it is really like a complete person, then one can grasp it, then you have it. Anthroposophy acts like a being and it enters present culture and civilization like a kind of being. One experiences this entering as by a kind of being. With this at the same time one can say: Religion—spoken from the anthroposophic stand point—religion is a relationship of human beings to God. However, Anthroposophy is a person, and because it is a person, it has a relationship with God; and like a person has a relationship to God, so it has a relationship to God. Thus, it has the direct characteristic of the religious in itself.

[ 29 ] I will now summarise this finally in some abstract sentences which do however have life in them. What I have said before and what I say now are interrelated and I don't say it without purpose, my dear friends. The first one which is experienced in this way is that one leans to recognise how godly wisdom acts in the child, where it is creative, where it not only comes to revelation in a brain, but where it still shapes the brain. Yes, "if you would not become like little children, you shall never enter into the kingdom of the heavens ..." That is the way to penetrate into what you notice in the deep humility of the child, that which lies before becoming a child, that which even Goethe experienced so lovingly, that he used the word "growing young" (Jungwerden) for entering into the world, like one can say "growing old" (Altwerden). Growing young means stepping out of the spiritual state, into earthly existence. One goes in a certain sense really through childhood and back to such a state where one still had a direct relationship with the divine. The old Biblical questions become quite real: Can one return into the mother's body, to experience a rebirth?—In spirit one can do this. However, in the old way where the Bible lay in front of the alchemists, and the new way which prepares us for handling the world, lies an abyss. The abyss must be bridged over. We will however not find the old ways, because we need to find a new way.

I have often spoken out among Anthroposophists what we might find when we are willing to do some kind of manipulation of nature. The "Encheiresis naturae" (an intervention by the hand of nature—Google) we must accomplish again, but we mustn't say "don't cut your nose to spite your face"; we must be able to take it in the greatest earnest then we will have an ideal , in any case only as an ideal, but an ideal which becomes reality. The laboratory workbench will in a certain sense become an altar, and the outer action in the world will become a service of divine worship and all of life be drenched by the light of acts of worship. [ 30 ] Now for the second thing: Anthroposophy as speech formation. Anthroposophy needs to strive to have such a grasp in the world, that I can apply the reality which I've presented today as an apparent contradictory image: the laboratory bench of the chemist, the physics-chemistry of clinical work must in human experience take on the form of an altar. Work on humanity, also the purely technical work—must be able to become a service of divine worship. That one will only be able to find when one has the good will to cross over the abyss which separates our world from the other side where the Gospels lay before the alchemists.

Sechster Vortrag

[ 1 ] Meine lieben Freunde! Ich bin in meinen Vorträgen bisher davon ausgegangen, Ihnen gewissermaßen zu zeigen, wie der anthroposophische Weg ist, der, indem er sich aus der Anthroposophie heraus vollzieht, dazu führen kann, dasjenige zu veranlassen, was in den Seelen der Zeitgenossen gewünscht werden kann in bezug auf eine Erneuerung des religiösen Erlebens.

[ 2 ] Nun ist ja natürlich dazu vor allen Dingen ein genauer Einblick in dasjenige nötig, was eigentlich Erneuerung des religiösen Lebens sein soll. Und ich möchte, um auf dieses letztere ein gehöriges Licht werfen zu können, heute noch einmal davon ausgehen, wie die Beziehung, jetzt nicht der Religion zur Anthroposophie, sondern umgekehrt, der Anthroposophie zur Religion ist; aber ich muß dem vorausschicken, meine lieben Freunde, daß da doch notwendig ist, wenn wir uns hier verständigen wollen, daß ein deutliches Bewußtsein vorhanden ist von dem großen Ernst der Frage, um die es sich handelt, ich möchte sagen, von der welthistorischen Bedeutung der Frage. Wer heute bloß in einem kleinen Kreise diesen oder jenen Mangel sieht, dieses oder jenes Unvollkommene findet und nicht in der Lage ist, das im Zusammenhang mit unserem gesamten Weltengang zu betrachten, der wird doch nicht recht Herz und Sinn dafür entwickeln, was alles in der Gegenwart eigentlich notwendig ist.

[ 3 ] Wir leben schon in einer Zeit, wo die Menschheit im tiefsten aufgerüttelt ist, und wo mit all den Mitteln das eine oder das andere zu machen ist, aber mit all den Mitteln nicht eigentlich vorwärts zu kommen ist. Das möchte ich insbesondere deshalb auch deutlich gesagt haben, weil ich glaube, wenn es vielleicht auch jetzt noch nicht so stark hervortritt — lassen Sie mich ganz aufrichtig und ehrlich in dieser Beziehung meine Meinung sagen —, weil ich glaube, daß der Riß zwischen denjenigen Persönlichkeiten, die längere Zeit in der Seelsorge darinnenstehen und denjenigen, die als jüngere Leute heute vor der Notwendigkeit stehen, erst in sie einzutreten, ein sehr großer ist. Mag er noch nicht so stark empfunden werden, er ist durchaus da, und er wird immer deutlicher und deutlicher erscheinen; und ich glaube, daß für viele heute schon die Fragen der Älteren und der Jüngeren, wenn ich mich so ausdrücken darf, eine ganz verschiedene Formulierung erfahren. Für die Jüngeren, kommt mir vor, ist diese Frageformulierung, wie wir sie gestern und vorgestern erlebt haben, nicht mehr in demselben Maß vorhanden; sie ist schon abgetan. Seien wir doch ganz ehrlich mit uns selbst, seien wir uns klar, daß es einen Unterschied macht, ob man gewissermaßen eine Sache verteidigt, in der man drinnen ist, oder ob man Kräfte verlangt, um in die Sache erst hineinzukommen. Also darüber wollen wir uns keiner Illusion hingeben. Gewiß, man kann, wenn man älter ist, sagen, ich habe ein ebenso aufrichtiges Interesse wie die Jungen. — Aber wir müssen da mit allen möglichen unterbewußten Impulsen durchaus rechnen; und deshalb bitte ich Sie schon, weil es sich um Dinge so ernster Natur handelt, dasjenige hinzunehmen, was ich heute zu sagen habe.

[ 4 ] Sehen Sie, Anthroposophie steht eben ganz im Anfange ihres Wirkens, und derjenige, der Anthroposophie für das eine oder andere Gebiet ausbildet, hat durchaus die Empfindung, daß er, wenn er auch noch so viel in sich selber an anthroposophischen Erkenntnisinhalten erleben kann, die allergrößten Schwierigkeiten hat, diese heute der Welt mitzuteilen. Das ist einfach ein Faktum, er hat die allergrößten Schwierigkeiten. Warum? Weil heute einfach kein sprachliches Instrument eigentlich voll geeignet ist, dasjenige prägnant auszudrücken, was durch Anthroposophie geschaut wird. Der Anthroposoph hat die Erwartung, daß durch Anthroposophie nicht bloß solche Erkenntnisse kommen können, welche im menschlichen Innern leben, in innerer Anschauung leben, denn das würde das Menschengeschlecht als solches, in der Gesamtheit, nicht eigentlich erreicht haben. Uns muß es ja hauptsächlich darauf ankommen: Was ist in der menschlichen Gemeinschaft möglich? - und nicht: Was kann der einzelne verlangen? — Seien Sie sich doch klar, meine lieben Freunde, derjenige, der Anthroposoph ist, spricht aus der Realität heraus; und indem ich zu Ihnen spreche, fühle ich nicht, als ob ich zu Ihnen bloß allgemein spreche, sondern als ob ich zu solchen Menschen spreche, die entweder Seelsorger sind oder die Seelsorger werden sollen. Es ist doch etwas anderes, für Religion zu sorgen, als bloß Religion zu haben. Also in der Theorie kann man ja seine Dinge in derselben Weise formen für die verschiedensten menschlichen Gebiete. Sobald man aber in ein solches spezielles Gebiet hineingeht, dann muß man sich immer auf den allerkonkretesten Standpunkt stellen, den man nur einnehmen kann. Das bitte ich zu berücksichtigen. Ich mache darauf aufmerksam, daß der Anthroposoph durchaus weiß, daß er mit seinem Wollen im Anfang steht, daß aus diesem Wollen sich ganz anderes entwickeln muß als dasjenige, was heute schon vor die Welt hintreten kann. Auf der anderen Seite sieht man durchaus, daß die Welt manches von dem sehr, sehr stark verlangt, was gerade keimhaft in der Anthroposophie liegt.

[ 5 ] Nun liegt etwas in der Anthroposophie keimhaft, was heute sehr wenig berücksichtigt wird. Das ist das sprachbildende Element selber. Lesen Sie bei einem, der noch ein Bewahrer der religiösen Gesinnung katexochen war, bei Saint-Martin im 18. Jahrhundert — Matthias Claudius hat ja das Werk Saint-Martins «Irrtümer und Wahrheit» ins Deutsche übersetzt, das gerade [neugedruckt werden soll] —, lesen Sie bei Saint-Martin, wie er mit einer gewissen Selbstverständlichkeit davon redet, daß die Menschheit eine Ursprache gehabt hat, und daß die Ursprache der Menschheit verloren gegangen ist, und daß man gar nicht mehr ausdrücken kann in den heutigen differenzierten Sprachen dasjenige, was eigentlich für die übersinnliche Welt ausgedrückt werden sollte und auch ausgedrückt werden könnte. So hat der Anthroposoph heute oftmals das Gefühl, er möchte dieses oder jenes sagen, aber indem er das Wort formulieren will, verschlägt es ihm das Wort, es kommt nicht zustande. Aber Anthroposophie ist sprachbildend. Und niemals kann etwas, was in solcher Art auftritt wie Anthroposophie — und was in solcher Art auftrat, ist in älteren Zeiten immer auch zu gleicher Zeit religionsbildend aufgetreten —, niemals kann so etwas auftreten ohne eine gewisse Eschatologie, ohne eine gewisse Vorausnahme des Künftigen. Es gibt gar keine Möglichkeit, sich mit seinem inneren Erleben in die Menschheitsevolution hineinzustellen, ohne in einer gewissen Weise die Zukunft vorauszunehmen, und so muß Anthroposophie ihrer innersten Gesinnung nach wenigstens für eine kurze, aber welthistorische Spanne Zeit in die Zukunft hineinsehen, und sie muß gewissermaßen voraussagen, was für die Zukunft, für die nächste Zukunft der Menschheit ganz notwendig eintreten muß. Das ist das, daß die Menschheit in die Lage kommt, abzustreifen allen solchen Zusammenhang mit der einzelnen individuellen Sprache, der heute noch besteht, und der mehr als etwas anderes heute die Völker in Krieg und Not hineinbringt. Immer wieder möchte man das Gleichnis vom babylonischen Turmbau richtig verstanden heute aussprechen, wenn man sieht, was die Welt heute entzweit. Es ist schon so, daß Anthroposophie die Kraft hat, gegenüber den differenzierten Lautsprachen wiederum etwas zu spüren, zu schauen von dem ursprünglichen Wesen des Lautes selbst; und Anthroposophie wird, und zwar nicht im Laufe vieler Jahrhunderte, sondern in verhältnismäßig kurzer Zeit - wenn sie zunächst unterdrückt werden sollte, wird sie schon wieder aufleben -, Anthroposophie wird durch die verschiedensten Sprachen hindurch, nicht etwa eine Volapük-Einheitssprache schaffen, die eine Art Extrakt von den anderen ist, sondern sie wird selbstschöpferisch etwas in die Sprache hineinstellen, was auch schon in der Sprache die Menschen versöhnt.

[ 6 ] So muß ich Ihnen sagen, daß sich Anthroposophie nicht bloß formale Erkenntnisaufgaben stellt, sondern daß Anthroposophie sich schon geschichtlich schöpferische Aufgaben stellen muß. Sie sieht, wie in den Herzen der Menschen heute vorhanden ist das Material zu solchem Schaffen. Ich habe schon vor Jahren versuchen wollen, die wichtigsten Bestandteile der anthroposophischen Terminologie, so sonderbar und paradox Ihnen das erscheinen mag, überhaupt in aus dem Laut heraus geformten Worten zu geben. Es war aber immer noch nicht die Reife vorhanden für das Entgegennehmen. Aber möglich ist es durchaus schon.

[ 7 ] Also ich muß Sie da aufmerksam machen auf sehr reale Aufgaben des anthroposophischen Wirkens. Und warum fühle ich mich gedrängt, Sie darauf aufmerksam zu machen? Einfach aus dem Grunde, weil, wenn einmal die Menschheit reif sein wird für das Vernehmen des Lautes, für die wortbildende Kraft selber, dann alles das, was bisher in einer anderen Sphäre, in einer viel instinktiv-tierischeren Weise verlaufen ist, künftig spirituell-menschlich verlaufen muß. Wenn die Menschheit soweit sein wird, dann wird man spüren, wie in der Tat das wahr ist, was in der Verkündigung, in der Botschaft, im Evangelium lebt, denn man kann das Evangelium nicht in seiner Wahrheit empfinden, wenn man nicht die sprachbildende Kraft erlebt. Das Evangelium richtig empfinden, meine lieben Freunde, heißt, die Einzelheiten des Evangeliums in jedem Augenblick, in dem man lebt, auch wirklich in sich selber bilden zu können. Heute kann man im Grunde genommen das Evangelium nur kritisieren, man kann es nicht bilden; aber an dieser Bildemöglichkeit muß gearbeitet werden. Wo liegen die Hindernisse? Ja, die Hindernisse liegen darin, daß man schon die allerersten Elemente zurückweist, welche die Bildemöglichkeit in bezug auf die Evangelien aufbauen.

[ 8 ] Die Evangelienbetrachtung wird in der Tat auf einen anderen Boden gestellt, wenn so gedacht wird über die Evangelien, wie es hier aus der Charakteristik des Wortes heraus geschehen muß. Sehen Sie, unter den Einwänden, welche Dr. Rittelmeyer nicht als die seinigen, sondern als diejenigen, die vorhanden sind, erwähnt, ist auch einer, der, ich möchte sagen, so nebenbei erwähnt wird. Es ist der Einwand, daß es doch den Religiösen heute nicht interessieren könne, ob es zwei Jesusknaben gegeben hat. Ich kann völlig verstehen, wie eigentlich heute, aus der religiösen Stimmung des Tages heraus, wenig Wert auf solche Dinge gelegt wird. Aber nun kommt etwas anderes. Wir werden in der nächsten Zeit in einer Veröffentlichung, die im «Kommenden Tag-Verlag» erfolgen wird, sehen, wie ungeheuer das Evangelien-Verständnis durch diese «Kleinigkeit» es ist aber eben keine Kleinigkeit — gefördert wird, wie die Kraft, die Evangelien zu bilden, gefördert wird, weil einfach der Nachweis geliefert wird, daß in den Evangelien das darinnensteht, was in bezug auf die zwei Jesusknaben gesagt wird. Man kann aber die Evangelien nicht verstehen, wenn man nicht weiß, was darinnen steht. Aber die sprachbildende Kraft muß aus weiteren Quellen hergeholt werden, und dadurch, daß man Herz und Sinn bekommt für diese Quellen, wird man auch wiederum Herz und Sinn bekommen für das erste der vier Stücke, die ich Ihnen bei der Beschreibung der Messe zunächst angeführt habe. Denn sehen Sie, es handelt sich nicht darum, daß die Messe nur im Symbolum dargebracht wird, sondern daß das Symbolum der Messe wiederum ein Ausdruck für das gesamte Seelsorger-Wirken ist. Wenn nicht das gesamte Seelsorger-Wirken so ist, daß es in der Messe als in einem Zentralen zusammenläuft, so hat ja die Messe gar keinen Sinn; und zusammenlaufen kann dasjenige, was Seelsorger-Wirken ist in der Messe oder in einem modernen $Symbolum, das gefunden werden kann — wir werden darüber noch zu sprechen haben —, nur dann, wenn in vollstem Maße diese vier Hauptstücke der Messe, die ich angeführt habe, wirklich auch durchlebt werden.

[ 9 ] Nun ist die Vorlesung des Evangeliums für den heutigen Menschen ja nur ein Teil, der andere Teil ist dasjenige, was in der Predigt zum Ausdruck kommt. Und die Predigt ist heute nicht das, was sie sein soll, kann es nicht sein, weil sie intellektualistisch ist, weil in der Regel die Vorbereitung zur Predigt nur eine intellektualistische ist und sie auch aus der heutigen Bildung heraus, aus der heutigen Theologie heraus, nicht anders sein kann. Die Predigt ist erst eine wirkliche Predigt, wenn die sprachbildende Kraft in einer gewissen Beziehung den Prediger durchseelt, wenn er also nicht nur aus seiner Substanz, sondern aus der Substanz des Genius der Sprache heraus spricht. Das ist aber etwas, was der Mensch sich erst aneignen muß. Man braucht nicht diesen Genius der Sprache für die Religiosität, die man in seinem eigenen Herzen hat, aber man braucht diesen Genius der Sprache für das religiöse Wirken in der menschlichen Gemeinschaft. Gemeinschaftsbildend muß dasjenige sein, was dem Seelsorger obliegt; daher müssen die Elemente gesucht werden, die gemeinschaftsbildend auftreten können. Gemeinschaftsbildend kann niemals das Intellektualistische auftreten, denn das ist gerade dazu da, damit wir die Möglichkeit haben, uns als Menschen abzusondern. Intellektualistisches wird eben von dem einzelnen Menschen als einzelner Mensch abgemacht, und in demselben Maße, in dem der Mensch auf sich als Einzelmensch zurückverwiesen wird, in demselben Maße wird er intellektualistisch. Er kann sich in diesen Intellektualismus hinein wohl retten selbstverständlich den Glauben, denn der Glaube ist eine subjektive Sache des Einzelnen, er ist sogar im eminentesten Sinne die Sache des Einzelnen zu nennen. Aber für die Gemeinsamkeit brauchen wir nicht bloß dieses Subjektive, sondern für die Gemeinsamkeit brauchen wir den übersinnlichen Inhalt.

[ 10 ] Nun denken Sie nur einmal tief genug darüber nach, wie es Ihnen möglich sein soll, eine bloße Kraft des Glaubens ohne das Wort in der Gemeinsamkeit zur Geltung zu bringen. Das können Sie nicht, das ist unmöglich. Aber Sie können auch nicht die Gemeinsamkeit aufrechterhalten, wenn Sie aus der Intellektualität heraus sprechen. Daher werden intellektualistische Predigten von vornherein die Tendenz haben, die Gläubigen-Gemeinschaft zu atomisieren. Durch die intellektualistische Predigt wird der Mensch auf sich selbst zurückgewiesen, jeder einzelne, der zuhört, wird auf sich selbst zurückgewiesen. Das aber rüttelt in ihm diejenigen Kräfte auf, die vor allen Dingen nicht zustimmen, sondern widersprechen. Das ist einfach eine psychologische Tatsache. Sobald wir nämlich tiefer in unsere Seele hineinschauen, ist jeder Zuhörer zu gleicher Zeit ein Kritiker, ein Widersprecher. Ja, meine lieben Freunde, über die Geheimnisse der Seele ist man eben heute so wenig aufgeklärt. Sofort erglänzen alle Widersprüche, die man einwenden kann gegen das, was der andere sagt, wenn der andere in intellektualistischen Formen allein sich ausdrückt.

[ 11 ] Das ist ja überhaupt das Element, das die heutige Menschheit zersplittert, daß sie durch und durch überall vom bloßen Intellektualismus durchsetzt ist, Sie kommen daher in der Predigt zu keiner Möglichkeit, antiatomisierend zu wirken, wenn Sie beim Intellektualismus stehenbleiben. Weder in der Vorbereitung zur Predigt, noch in dem Ausführen der Predigt dürfen Sie heute, wenn Sie gemeinschaftsbildend sein wollen, bei dem Intellektuellen stehenbleiben, und bei dem bleibt man stehen, wenn man aus unserer heutigen Bildung heraus kommt, insbesondere aus der theologischen Bildung, denn die ist in vieler Beziehung ganz intellektualistisch geworden. Sie ist auch auf katholischem Felde rein intellektualistisch, denn alles dasjenige, was nicht intellektualistisch, was Leben sein soll, ist dort nicht dem einzelnen Menschen übergeben, sondern ist Lehrgut der Kirche und muß als Lehrgut der Kirche angenommen werden. Daher kommt auch die Erscheinung, daß in bezug auf alles dasjenige, was die katholische Kirche für den Intellekt freigibt, der katholische Priester der freieste Mensch ist, den man sich nur denken kann. Die katholische Kirche verlangt gar nicht, daß der Mensch in bezug auf seinen Intellekt irgendwie sich füge; insofern gibt sie ihn frei in bezug auf dasjenige, was nicht auf das Übersinnliche sich bezieht. Sie verlangt nur, daß er sich in bezug auf das übersinnliche Lehrgut fügt. Auch darüber kann ich Ihnen ein Beispiel aus dem Leben geben. Ich sprach einmal mit einem Theologen einer Universität, wo man in der damaligen Zeit im allgemeinen liberalen Grundsätzen huldigte, nicht von der Kirche her, sondern von der Universität her liberalen Grundsätzen huldigte. Nun waren natürlich an der theologischen Fakultät lauter katholische Priestergelehrte. Derjenige, mit dem ich sprach, hatte eben von Rom einen argen Rüffel bekommen. Ich sagte zu ihm: Ja, wie kommt das eigentlich, daß gerade Sie einen Rüffel bekommen, der Sie verhältnismäßig fromm lehren im Verhältnis zu einem Lehrer an der Innsbrucker Universität — ich will jetzt den Namen nicht nennen —, der viel freier redet und dem von Rom aus sehr geduldig zugesehen wird? — Ja sehen Sie, antwortete mir der Betreffende, der ist aber Jesuit, und ich bin Zisterzienser. Rom ist immer sicher, daß ein Mann wie der, der dort an der Innsbrucker Universität lehrt, nie abfallen wird, so frei er auch das Wort gebraucht, sondern immer das Wort in den Dienst der Kirche stellen wird. Bei uns Zisterziensern glaubt Rom, daß wir auch unserem Intellekt folgen, weil wir nicht so tief mit dem Leben drinnenstehen können [in der Kirche] wie der Jesuit, der seine Exerzitien hinter sich hat, die ihn in ganz anderer Weise halten, als es bei uns Zisterziensern der Fall ist. — Sie sehen, wie durchaus psychologisch Rom den Intellektualismus schon behandelt. Rom weiß in der Regel sehr gut, was es will, denn Rom handelt schon aus einer gründlichen, wenn auch von uns abzuweisenden Menschenpsychologie heraus.

[ 12 ] Nun, um was es sich handelt, ist, daß man vor allen Dingen in der Predigt nicht stehenbleibt bei dem Intellektualismus. Alle unsere Sprachen sind intellektualistisch, wir haben gar nicht die Möglichkeit, wenn wir heute die gebräuchlichen Sprachen nehmen, aus dem Intellektualismus herauszukommen. Aber wir müssen es. Und das nächste, wodurch man herauskommt, wodurch man mitwirkt an der reinen Gestaltung der sprachbildenden Kraft, das ist der Symbolismus, aber jetzt in richtiger Weise gestaltet, um nicht wiederum intellektuell stehenzubleiben, sondern Symbole wirklich zu erleben. Symbole erleben, damit ist viel mehr gesagt, als man gewöhnlich meint.

[ 13 ] Sehen Sie, sobald der Anthroposoph zur imaginativen Anschauung kommt oder die imaginative Anschauung eines anderen durchdringt, sie aufnimmt, weiß er eigentlich: Der Mensch, der vor ihm steht, ist nicht mehr dasselbe, was der Mensch früher war, bevor man ihn im Lichte der Anthroposophie gesehen hat. Sehen Sie, dieser Mensch, der vor uns steht, wird ja von der heutigen Wissenschaft als das höher entwickelte Tier angesehen; das wird er im allgemeinen. Aber: Alles, was die Wissenschaft zur Erhärtung dieser Anschauung vorbringt und was sich am allermeisten dadurch rechtfertigt, daß man sagt, der Mensch habe geradesoviele Knochen und geradesoviele Muskeln wie die höheren Tiere, alles das ist ja wahr; aber die Wissenschaft ist sogleich in einer Sackgasse, wenn man nun das eigentlich Unterscheidende des Menschen vom Tiere vorbringt. Dieses Unterscheidende des Menschen vom Tier liegt gar nicht darin, daß man hinweist in komparativer Anatomie, wie der ganze Mensch und die einzelnen Teile dem ganzen Tier oder den einzelnen Teilen des Tieres ähnlich sind, sondern Erfassen des Menschlichen heißt, zu begreifen, was dadurch gegeben ist, daß der Mensch mit dem Organe des Rückgrates eine vertikale Lage hat, während dasselbe Organ beim Tier eine der Erdoberfläche parallele Lage hat. Daß man das auch im Tierreich beobachten kann, insofern es sich aus dieser Regel herausstellt, ist durchaus richtig, aber das gehört nicht hierher, ich muß die Grenzpunkte herausgreifen. Dadurch aber, daß der Mensch hinorganisiert ist auf die Vertikale mit dem Rückgrat, ordnet er sich in einer ganz anderen Weise in den Kosmos ein als das Tier. Das Tier ordnet sich in Strömungen ein, die um die Erde herum laufen, der Mensch ordnet sich in Strömungen ein, die zum und vom Mittelpunkt der Erde in der Richtung des Radius laufen. Man muß des Menschen Lage im Raum studieren, wenn man den Menschen verstehen will. Das aber, wenn man zu Ende studiert des Menschen Lage im Raum, macht, daß einem wieder lebendig wird, was es heißt, der Mensch ist Gottes Ebenbild. Der Mensch ist überhaupt nicht das, was die komparative Anatomie sieht, er ist nicht eine solche Wirklichkeit, [wie die Anatomie ihn beschreibt,] sondern er ist, insofern er Gestalt ist, eine Bildwirklichkeit. Er bildet ab. Er wird hereingeschickt aus höheren Welten zu Konzeption und Geburt so, daß er dasjenige, was vor der Geburt ist, abbildet. Aus der Substanz des Göttlichen heraus haben wir vor der Geburt unser Geistleben. Dieses Geistleben löst sich auf durch Konzeption und Geburt und erlangt im physischen Menschen auf Erden sein Abbild, Bild, Imagination. Imagination, aus dem Weltenall herausgeholt, wird die menschliche Gestalt, aber man muß sie begreifen, aus dem Weltenall herausgestellt, in ihrer Lage zum Weltenall. Alle einzelnen Organe im Menschen nehmen teil an der Vertikalisierung. Das Haupt des Menschen hat seine Form durch die Vertikalisierung. Der Mensch ist von Gott in die Welt hereingestellt.

[ 14 ] Das tritt unmittelbar als ein inneres Erlebnis auf, indem die Imagination den Menschen ergreift. Und man kann dann nicht mehr intellektualistisch sagen und glauben, wenn ich das Wort ausspreche «Der Mensch ist Gottes Ebenbild», das sei nur als ein Gleichnis ausgesprochen. Nein, es wird die Wahrheit ausgesprochen, und in den wirklich der übersinnlichen Welt entnommenen Gleichnissen des Alten und Neuen Testamentes liegen eben nicht Gleichnisse von der Art von allegorischen Gleichnissen, sondern es liegen darin Wahrheiten. Und wir müssen dazu kommen, wieder unsere Worte von einem solchen Erleben zu durchtränken, daß wir lernen, in dieser Weise anschaulich zu sprechen. In dem Maße, in dem wir lebendig übergehen ins anschauliche Charakterisieren, nicht aber, indem wir intellektualistisch etwas ausklügeln, erringen wir uns die Möglichkeit der Predigt, die ja eine Unterweisung sein muß.

[ 15 ] Ich habe oft darauf hingewiesen, daß ein Lehrer, wenn er einem Kinde gegenübersteht und diesem Kinde in populärer Form die Unsterblichkeit der Seele beibringen will, so soll er sie ihm beibringen durch ein Bild. Er soll es hinweisen darauf, wie die Insektenpuppe da ist, wie der Schmetterling herausfliegt, und er soll davon übergehen dazu, wie des Menschen Seele im Tode den Menschenleib wie eine solche Puppenhülle verläßt; ganz ins Bild soll er hineindrängen dasjenige, was eine übersinnliche Wahrheit ist. Aber ich habe auch immer, wenn ich dieses angebliche Gleichnis auseinandersetzte, gesagt: Es ist ein großer Unterschied, ob ein Lehrer sich nun hinstellt und sagt: ich bin gescheit und das Kind ist dumm, also muß ich ein Gleichnis bilden für das Kind, damit es auf seine Art das versteht, was ich durch meinen Verstand verstehe. — Wer so spricht, hat keine Erfahrung vom Leben, hat keine Erfahrung von den Imponderabilien, die im Unterweisen wirken. Denn die überzeugende Kraft, mit der das Kind das ergreift, was ich ihm mit diesem Puppengleichnis beibringen will, ist eine sehr geringe, wenn ich so denke: ich bin gescheit, und das Kind ist dumm, ich muß für das Kind ein Gleichnis bilden, das wirkt. - Dasjenige, was wirken soll, das entsteht erst, wenn ich selbst an mein Gleichnis mit allen Fasern meiner Kraft glauben kann. Ich kann es als Anthroposoph, in mir formt sich das Gleichnis, indem ich die Natur anschaue. Indem ich den Schmetterling sehe, wie er aus der Puppe kommt, bin ich dadurch wiederum überzeugt, daß da das Bild der Unsterblichkeit der Seele sich gestaltet, das hier nur auf einer unteren Stufe erscheint. Ich glaube an mein Gleichnis mit meinem ganzen Leben. Dieses Gegenüberstehen dem anderen im Leben, das ist dasjenige, was als gemeinschaftsbildende Kraft auftreten könnte, Und ehe nicht der Intellektualismus soweit überwunden wird, daß der Mensch wiederum in Bildern leben kann, ehedem ist es unmöglich, daß eine wirklich gemeinschaftsbildende Kraft auftritt.

[ 16 ] Ich habe noch gemeinschaftsbildende Kraft erlebt, aber auf unrechtem Felde. Ich will Ihnen auch das erzählen. Ich wurde einmal veranlaßt, um eben solche Dinge zu studieren, eine Predigt zu hören, eine Österpredigt, von einem berühmten Jesuitenpater. Sie war nach aller jesuitischen Schulung gestaltet. Ich will Ihnen einen ganz kurzen Abriß von dieser Predigt geben; sie handelte von dem Thema: Wie hat sich der Christ zu stellen zu der Behauptung, der Papst hätte durch Dogma die österliche Beichte eingesetzt, sie wäre nicht eingesetzt durch Gottes Werk, sondern durch Menschenwerk? — Der Jesuitenpater sprach nicht besonders tief, aber jesuitisch geschult, er sagte: Ja, liebe Christen, stellt euch eine Kanone vor, an der Kanone einen Kanonier und dabei den Offizier, der kommandiert. Stellt euch das ganz deutlich vor! Was geschieht? Die Kanone wird geladen, der Kanonier hat die Zündschnur in der Hand, der Kanonier zieht an der Zündschnur, wenn der Kommandoruf ertönt. Seht ihr, so ist es mit dem Papst in Rom. Er steht als Kanonier an der Kanone, er hält die Zündschnur, und von überirdischen Welten kommt das Kommando. Der Papst in Rom zieht also an der Zündschnur und gibt so das Gebot der österlichen Beichte. Sie ist ein Gesetz vom Himmel, so wie das Kommando nicht vom Kanonier, sondern vom Offizier kommt. Aber noch etwas Tieferes liegt darunter, meine lieben Christen — so sagte der Pater —, noch etwas viel Tieferes liegt darunter, wenn man sich jetzt den ganzen Vorgang der österlichen Beichte anschaut. Kann man denn sagen, der Kanonier, der das Kommando hört und an der Zündschnur zieht, dieser Kanonier habe das Pulver erfunden? Nein. Und ebensowenig kann jemand sagen, der römische Papst hat die österliche Beichte eingesetzt. — Gläubiges Empfinden zog in die Gemeinde ein durch den Gebrauch dieses Bildes, dieses Symbolums, aber selbstverständlich auf einem so unrechten Felde als möglich.

[ 17 ] Das Symbol ist dasjenige, durch das wir den Weg zu den Menschenherzen für das Übersinnliche eigentlich finden, nur müssen wir, so wie ich es in dem Insektenpuppengleichnis angedeutet habe, eben lernen, im Symbol zu leben, das Symbol selber der Außenwelt gläubig entnehmen zu können. Ich verstehe sehr gut, wenn sich jemand auf den bloßen Glauben berufen will gegenüber dem Wissen. Aber ich nehme das so ernst, daß dieser Glaube sich auch in dem Sicheinleben der äußeren Natur gegenüber betätigen muß, so daß die ganze äußere Natur zum Symbolum im echten Sinne des Wortes, zum erlebten Symbolum wird. Und, meine lieben Freunde, ehe denn nicht die Menschen wiederum wissen, daß im Lichte nicht bloß gleichnisweise die Weisheit lebt und webt, sondern daß im Lichte wirklich die Weisheit lebt und webt ... [Lücke in der Nachschrift, siehe Hinweis]. Durch unser Auge zieht das Licht ein, dasjenige, was jetzt Licht ist, ist dann mehr als Licht — mit «Licht» bezeichnete man ursprünglich dasjenige, was allen Sinnen des Menschen als ihre innerste Wesenheit zugrundeliegt —, indem das Licht eindringt, wird es innerlich verwandelt, transsubstantiiert, und jeder Gedanke, der Ihnen aufsteigt, meine lieben Freunde, ist verwandeltes Licht in Wirklichkeit, nicht im Gleichnis.

[ 18 ] Wundern Sie sich daher nicht, daß derjenige, der durch entsprechende Übungen kennengelernt hat gewissermaßen die spirituell äußRerlichen Erscheinungen des Inneren, die menschlichen Gedanken beschreibt, indem er sie in Licht-Bildern beschreibt. Wundern Sie sich darüber nicht, denn das entspricht eben einer Wirklichkeit.

[ 19 ] Viel konkreter als man gewöhnlich denkt sind die Dinge zu nehmen, die wir in den älteren Urkunden der Menschheit finden. Auch damit muß man sich bekanntmachen, daß ja die Kraft, die da noch in den Evangelien liegt, in den letzten Jahrhunderten auch verloren gegangen ist, so wie die Uroffenbarung für den Menschen wirklich verloren gegangen ist und so wie die Ursprache verloren gegangen ist. Ich möchte geradezu die Frage stellen: Haben wir denn heute die Evangelien? Wir haben sie nur, wenn wir sie wirklich erleben können, und wir können sie aus unserem intellektualistischen Zeitalter heraus eben nicht erleben. Ich weiß sehr gut, wie viel gegen die Interpretationen, die in meinen verschiedenen Evangelienvorträgen gegeben worden sind, von dieser oder jener Seite eingewendet worden ist, und ich weiß sehr gut, daß das anfängliche Versuche sind, daß sie vollkommener werden müssen; aber Versuche, die Evangelien wieder lebendig zu machen, sind sie eben doch.

[ 20 ] Ich möchte Sie noch auf die Zeiten zurückverweisen, meine lieben Freunde, wo es solche Menschen gegeben hat, die wir heute, wenn sie sich so in die Weltordnung hineinstellen, wie sie sich dazumal hineingestellt haben, Chemiker nennen. Die Alchimisten, wie man sie im 12. und 13. Jahrhundert nannte, haben sich so beschäftigt mit unserer stofflichen Welt, wie wir heute es gewöhnt sind beim Chemiker zu erblicken. Aber was tun wir heute, damit ein richtiger Chemiker entsteht? Heute also wird aus unseren Voraussetzungen heraus ein richtiger Chemiker entstehen, indem er intellektualistisch aufnimmt, wie man Stoffe analysiert und synthetisiert, wie man mit der Retorte arbeitet, wie man mit Wärmeapparaten arbeitet, mit der Elektrizität und so weiter. Das hätte bei dem rechten Chemiker, wenn ich mich so ausdrücken darf, bis zum 13., 14. Jahrhundert nicht genügt, sondern — vielleicht ist das nicht ganz wörtlich zu nehmen, aber mehr als wörtlich — der Chemiker hatte die Bibel vor sich liegen und war durchdrungen davon, daß er nur in einer richtigen Weise das tat, was er tat, wenn aus der Bibel die entsprechende Kraft herausfloß. Der heutigen Menschheit erscheint das selbstverständlich paradox. Für eine Menschheit, die nur Jahrhunderte zurückliegt, erschien es als das Selbstverständliche. Und das Bewußtsein, das der damalige Chemiker hatte, also der Alchimist, indem er seine Hantierungen vollzog, war nur graduell verschieden von dem Stehen am Altar und dem Messelesen. Nur graduell verschieden, denn das Messelesen war schon die oberste alchimistische Handlung. Wir werden auch darüber noch genauer zu sprechen haben. Aber muß man sich nicht schon aus dieser Tatsache die Erkenntnis bilden, daß das Evangelium seine eigentliche Kraft verloren hat? Was haben wir im 19. Jahrhundert getan? Wir haben das MarkusEvangelium, das Johannes-Evangelium, das Lukas-Evangelium, das Matthäus-Evangelium analysiert, wir haben sie philologisch behandelt, wir haben zunächst herausgefunden, daß das Johannes-Evangelium nur ein Hymnus sein kann, weil man nicht daran glauben konnte, daß das einer Realität entspricht. Man hat die Synoptiker miteinander verglichen, man ist bis zu der Stufe gekommen, die sich an den berühmten Schmiedel knüpft, wo herausdestilliert wird: Was Abträgliches über den Christus gesagt wird, das ist Wahrheit, denn das würde man bei bloßen Lobhymnen nicht finden. — Es ist das nur die letzte Konsequenz dieses Weges. Auf diesem Wege kann sich auch nichts anderes ergeben als das, was sich schon ergeben hat: Die Vernichtung der Evangelien wird sich ganz unweigerlich auf diesem Wege ergeben. Und wenn wir noch so viel diskutieren über die Trennung von Wissen und Glauben, sie wird sich nicht aufrechterhalten lassen, wenn die Wissenschaft die Evangelien vernichtet. Man muß eben durchaus in der Realität darinnenstehen und muß verstehen, aus der Realität heraus auch zu leben, und so handelt es sich darum, daß der Seelsorger kommen muß zu einer lebendigen Bedeutung des anschaulichen Darstellens, des Im-Bilde-Darstellens. In die Predigt muß das lebendige Bild einziehen. Daß es ein erlaubtes, ein gutes Bild sei, dafür muß selbstverständlich die Reinheit der Gesinnung, wovon wir noch zu sprechen haben werden, sorgen. Aber das Bild ist es, was wir finden müssen.

[ 21 ] Und, meine lieben Freunde, zur Auffindung des Bildes wird Ihnen Anthroposophie die beste Hilfe leisten. Sie wird ja wegen ihrer Bildlichkeit verspottet. Lesen Sie dasjenige, was gegen die Darstellung der Evolution in meiner «Geheimwissenschaft» von Intellektualistlingen — wenn ich den Ausdruck prägen darf — eingewendet wird, so werden Sie schon sehen, wie leicht es ist, von den Gesichtspunkten der Intellektualistlinge aus zu spotten über die Bilder, die ich gebrauchen muß zur Darstellung des Saturn-, Sonnen- und Mondendaseins. Ich muß Bilder gebrauchen, sonst würden mir die Dinge aus der Hand fallen, weil ich nur durch Bilder dasjenige von der Wirklichkeit ergreife, was eben gesucht werden muß. Und ich möchte sagen, Anthroposophie ist in jedem ihrer Teile durchaus ein Suchen nach Bildern und ist deshalb eine Helferin für denjenigen, der Bilder braucht. Hier liegt das reale Feld, wo gerade der Seelsorger zunächst sehr viel haben kann von der Anthroposophie. Nicht als ob er die Anthroposophie gläubig übernehmen müßte, nicht als ob er sagen müßte: Nun ja, studieren wir die anthroposophischen Bilder und Bücher und gebrauchen sie dann. - Davon kann nicht die Rede sein. Es muß gewissermaßen zu dem Umgekehrten von dem kommen, wozu in dem Zeitalter, das der Anthroposophie entgegen lebte, die Philosophie sich entwickeln mußte.

[ 22 ] Da möchte ich Ihnen das folgende sagen. Philosophen heute, die eines Inhaltes oder eines Systems Schüler sind, oder die glauben, ein System aufstellen zu sollen, solche Philosophen sind ja heute antiquiert, solche Philosophen sind zurückgeblieben. Alle solche System-Philosophie ist im intellektualistischen Zeitalter ja nicht mehr möglich. Als Hegel im reinen Intellektualismus die letzten Gedanken herausdestilliert hat aus der menschlichen Anschauung und sie hingestellt hat in seinem Gesamtsystem, war damit dasjenige gefunden, was ich nennen möchte den Leichnam der Philosophie. Geradeso wie man wissenschaftlich den Menschen heute am Leichnam studiert, so kann man an der Hegelschen Philosophie leichnamsgemäß dasjenige studieren, was eben Philosophie war — gerade daran sehr gut. Deshalb ist die Hegelsche Philosophie so groß, weil nichts stört, die fortlaufenden Intellektualismen nun wirklich anzuschauen. Das ist das Großartige, was ich daran bewundere zum Beispiel, dasjenige rein auszubilden, was rein intellektualistisch ist. Aber nach Hegel kann es nicht mehr ein solches Bestreben geben, einen Gedankeninhalt hinzustellen, um irgendwelche Philosophie-Systeme auszubilden. Deshalb schießen ja die Leute so furchtbare philosophische Purzelbäume. Ja, man kann sich keinen furchtbareren Purzelbaum denken als den Vaihingerschen mit der Philosophie des «Als Ob». Als ob man etwas hätte von einer Philosophie des «Als Ob». Das ist etwas, was ja absolut herausstellt das Erleben aus allem Geiste, diese Philosophie des «Als Ob». Es ist eben Philosophie nicht mehr so in der Menschheit, wie sie war, als noch die letzten Reste der Imagination in der Menschheit lebten und diese übersetzt wurden in Gedanken. Sondern das, was heute dem Philosophen obliegt, das ist, Philosophie zu studieren, um daran sein Denken zu üben. Philosophie studieren ist heute eine gedankliche Meditation und dürfte gar nicht anders getrieben werden. Ich glaube, wenn man einmal diese Dinge unbefangener sieht, wird man bald sehen, daß ich in den «Rätseln der Philosophie» gerade darauf hinarbeitete, die Entwickelung der Philosophie so zu geben, daß überall dasjenige hingestellt wird, was man heute als eine Gedankenübung an den verschiedensten Systemen der Philosophie durchmachen kann. Man lernt ungeheuer viel gerade an den neuesten Systemen, die ja schon aus der Philosophie hervorgegangen sind, an dem Hartmannschen System, an den amerikanischen Systemen, die sich an den Namen James knüpfen. Man lernt ungeheuer viel, wenn man sie nur insoweit auf sich wirken läßt, daß man sich fragt: Wie wird das Denken geschult, was gewinnt man an Gedankentraining? — Bitte verzeihen Sie das harte Wort. Nietzsche hat schon danach gestrebt, eine solche Gedankentrainierung an der Philosophie zu haben.

[ 23 ] Dies wird Sie darauf aufmerksam machen, daß man selbst in der Philosophie heute genötigt ist, das Denkerische in das Lebendige überzuführen, sich nicht wie ein Subjekt der Wahrheit gegenüberzustellen, die außer einem ist, sondern so, daß die Wahrheit erlebt wird. Erst derjenige, der das Philosophieren der Gegenwart so verstanden hat, der wird eigentlich auch das Umgekehrte verstehen, daß es beim Lesen anthroposophischer Schriften und beim Anhören anthroposophischer Vorträge nicht darauf ankommt, die Dinge wie Dogmen hinzunehmen. Das wäre das Allerverkehrteste, was man tun kann. Denken Sie, daß dasjenige, was da gegeben ist in der Anthroposophie, eigentlich heruntergeholt ist aus dem Übersinnlichen, vielleicht ungeschickt in Worte gedrängt werden kann, aber indem man sich da hineinvertieft, ist es geradeso, wie wenn sich der richtige Philosoph in das Denken anderer Philosophen hineinvertieft. Er nimmt auch nichts auf von den anderen Systemen, er wird daran geschult. Das Bildevermögen für die Bildlichkeit, für die Anschaulichkeit soll zunächst an der Anthroposophie herangebildet werden. Wenn man Worte mitgeteilt bekommt, die aus dem imaginativen Denken herausfließen, wenn man solche Gedanken aufnimmt, so ist man genötigt, um den anderen überhaupt zu verstehen, seine Bildekraft heraufzuholen aus den Untergründen der Seele. Das ist es vor allen Dingen, was wir als Hilfe an der Anthroposophie haben können.

[ 24 ] Man appelliere daher weniger so, daß man sagt: Ja, ich muß erst selbst meinetwillen hellseherisch werden, dann kann ich irgend etwas über Anthroposophie entscheiden. - Man appelliere so, daß man sich zunächst, ganz gleichgültig, was der Wahrheitsgehalt ist, mit der Anthroposophie bekanntmacht, man nehme sie einfach hin als eine Summe von Bildern, die dasjenige geben, wie sich die Welt in dieser oder jener Seele malt. Das ist doch zum mindesten eine Tatsache, daß sie sich so malt. Man nehme das und lasse zunächst die Wahrheitsbedeutung ganz unentschieden, man versuche aber, sich in dasjenige hineinzufinden, wie ein Mensch spricht, der solche Bilder vom Übersinnlichen hat, und man wird sehen, das ist der beste Weg, um selbst ins Anschauen hineinzukommen. Es ist heute wirklich bei vielen Menschen, die zur Anthroposophie herankommen, so, daß sie einen Wagen richtig aufstellen und dann das Pferd falsch daranspannen. (Den Unterlagen des Stenographen ist zu entnehmen, daß an die Tafel ein Pferd gezeichnet wurde, das falsch vor einen Wagen gespannt ist, also mit dem Kopf zum Wagen, die Schwanzseite nach vorn. Die Originaltafelzeichnung ist nicht erhalten.) Das darf eben nicht gemacht werden, daß man glaubt, man muß zuerst das Anschauen haben. Das könnte in der Tat, weil es auf einem gewissen Hochmut beruht, dann allerdings an dem Anschauen ganz vorbeigehen. Wenn man aber die Demut hat, Ergebnisse des Anschauens adäquat erleben zu wollen, dann kann man auch ohne die Furcht, daß man eine Suggestion empfange, durchaus zum Anschauen kommen. Die Furcht, eine Suggestion zu empfangen, können ja nur wirklichkeitsfremde Philosophen haben wie zum Beispiel Wundt, der Spätling der Systemphilosophen, der, natürlich von seinem Gesichtspunkt aus, einwendet: Ja, wie soll ich denn nun wissen, wenn ich zuerst etwas aufgenommen habe von der übersinnlichen Welt und dann selber zum Anschauen komme, daß mir das nicht suggeriert ist? - Man müßte Wundt sagen: Wie weißt du denn eigentlich zu unterscheiden zwischen einem Stück Eisen von 100° Temperatur oder noch mehr, das du dir bloß vorstellst oder das dir einsuggeriert ist, und einem, das vor dir liegt? Du magst noch so lange diskutieren, mit deinem Anschauen wirst du niemals herausfinden, ob das Eisen wirklich vor dir liegt oder ob es suggeriert ist; wenn du es aber [angreifst] und dann deine Finger anschaust, so wirst du durch das Leben die Unterscheidung herausfinden. Ein anderes Kriterium gibt es nicht.

[ 25 ] Es ist aber ein untrügliches Kriterium, wenn man sich so in das Leben hineinstellt, daß man auf eine wirklich reale Weise in die Anthroposophie hineinkommt. [Man darf] sich aber nicht auf den Standpunkt stellen, daß man alles schon weiß. Ich habe in meinem Leben gefunden, daß man am wenigsten lernt, wenn man glaubt, daß man das schon weiß, was man lernen soll.

[ 26 ] Es ist zum Beispiel nur möglich, richtiger Pädagoge zu sein, wenn man Gesinnungspädagoge ist. Wie oft wurde zu den Pädagogen der Waldorfschule gesagt — und sie haben es begriffen, im Laufe der Jahre ist es so gekommen, daß der Unterricht im Zeichen dieser Gesinnung steht; es ist deutlich zu bemerken -, wie oft wurde gesagt: Wenn man einem Kinde gegenübersteht, dann tut man am besten, sich zu sagen, daß in dem Kinde viel mehr Weisheit ist als in einem selber, viel, viel mehr, denn es ist gerade aus der geistigen Welt heruntergekommen und bringt sehr viel Weisheit mit. Man kann Ungeheures von dem Kinde lernen. Von nichts in der Welt lernt man im Grunde so viel auf äußere physische Weise, als wenn man von dem Kinde lernen will. Das Kind ist ein Lehrmeister, und die Waldorfpädagogen wissen, wie wenig richtig es ist, wenn man beim Unterrichten glaubt, man wäre Lehrer und das Kind Schüler. Man ist eigentlich — aber das behält man als ein inneres Mysterium für sich - mehr Schüler als Lehrer, und das Kind ist mehr Lehrer als Schüler. Es scheint paradox, und doch ist es so.

[ 27 ] Aber sehen Sie, Anthroposophie führt uns zu neuen Erkenntnissen über die Welt, auf vielen Spezialgebieten des Lebens, so stand es dankenswerterweise in einer Fragestellung ... [Lücken in der Nachschrift; siehe Hinweis]. Ja, Anthroposophie tritt durchaus mit dieser Stimmung, mit dieser Gesinnung auf. Anthroposophie kann eben nicht auftreten, ohne zugleich einen religiösen Charakter schon in sich zu tragen. Und das muß eben betont werden von der Anthroposophie aus: Anthroposophie strebt nicht danach, religionsbildend, sektenbildend aufzutreten, sie strebt, dem Menschen einen Inhalt seines inneren Erlebens zu geben, aber indem sie danach strebt, ist dasjenige, was sie gibt, ganz von selber mit einem religiösen Charakter ausgestattet. Anthroposophie ist nicht eine Religion, aber was sie gibt, ist so, daß es religiös wirkt.

[ 28 ] Ich hatte vor kurzer Zeit die Notwendigkeit, zu einem Menschen zu sprechen, der aus früheren Zuständen seines Lebens, die eigentlich zwar nicht übermütiger, aber freudiger Natur waren, in eine tiefe Depression hineingekommen ist, eine Depression, die verschiedene, sogar durchaus organische Ursachen hatte. Der Betreffende ist Anthroposoph, er wollte sich über seine Stimmung mit mir besprechen. Ich machte ihn darauf aufmerksam, daß Stimmungen aus dem ganzen Menschen kommen, und man nimmt sie auf aus der Welt, indem man sich als Mensch der Welt gegenüberstellt. - Anthroposophie ist selbst ein Mensch. Wenn sie kein Mensch wäre, würde sie uns nicht verwandeln. Sie macht aus uns einen anderen Menschen. Sie ist selbst ein Mensch, ich sage das ganz in ernstem Sinne. Anthroposophie ist eben nicht eine Lehre, Anthroposophie ist etwas Wesenhaftes, sie ist ein Mensch. Und erst, wenn die Persönlichkeit ganz davon durchdrungen ist und Anthroposophie so hat wie der Mensch, der denkt, aber auch fühlt, empfindet und Willensemotionen hat, wenn die Anthroposophie in uns denkt, fühlt und will, wenn sie wirklich wie ein ganzer Mensch ist, dann hat man sie erfaßt, dann bat man sie. Sie wirkt wie ein Wesen, und sie tritt wie eine Art von Wesen in die gegenwärtige Kultur und Zivilisation ein. Man empfindet sie wie eine Art von Wesen, das da eintritt. Damit ist aber zu gleicher Zeit gegeben, daß man sagen kann: Religion — jetzt vom anthroposophischen Standpunkt aus gesprochen -, Religion ist ein Verhältnis des Menschen zu Gott. Aber Anthroposophie ist ein Mensch, und da sie ein Mensch ist, so hat sie ein Verhältnis zu Gott; so wie der Mensch ein Verhältnis zu Gott hat, so hat sie ein Verhältnis zu Gott. Also sie hat unmittelbar das Charakteristikon des Religiösen in sich.

[ 29 ] Ich fasse das nun zuletzt in einigen abstrakten Sätzen zusammen, was aber durchaus Leben ist. Auch dasjenige, was ich vorhin gesagt habe, sagte ich im Zusammenhang mit dem, was ich jetzt sage, nicht ohne Absicht, meine lieben Freunde. Das erste nämlich, was man erlebt auf diese Art, ist, daß man erkennen lernt, wie göttliche Weisheit wirkt in dem Kinde, wo sie gestaltend ist, wo sie nicht nur in einem Gehirn zur Offenbarung kommt, sondern wo sie das Gehirn noch gestaltet. Ja, «wenn ihr nicht werdet wie die Kindlein, könnt ihr nicht in das Reich der Himmel kommen». Und das ist der Weg, man dringt ein in das, was man in tiefer Demut an dem Kinde bemerkt, in dasjenige, was vor dem Kindwerden liegt, vor demjenigen, was selbst von Goethe noch so lebhaft empfunden wurde, daß er das Wort «Jungwerden» gebraucht hat für das Eintreten in die Welt, so wie man «Altwerden» sagt. Jungwerden, das heißt aus geistigen Zuständen in das irdische Dasein eintreten. Man geht in einer gewissen Weise wirklich durch die Kindheit hindurch und dann zurück zu solchen Zuständen, wo ein unmittelbarer Zusammenhang noch mit dem Göttlichen ist. Die alte biblische Frage wird sehr real: Kann man denn wiederum in der Mutter Leib zurück, um eine Wiedergeburt zu erleben? — Im Geiste kann man es. Aber zwischen der alten Art, wo die Bibel gelegen hat vor dem Alchimisten, und der heutigen Art, wie wir uns vorbereiten für die Hantierungen der Welt, liegt eine Kluft. Die Kluft muß überbrückt werden. Wir werden aber nicht das Alte finden, sondern wir werden ein Neues finden. Ich habe es öfter ausgesprochen unter Anthroposophen, was wir finden werden, wenn wir uns anheischig machen, in irgendeiner Weise Hantierungen an der Natur vorzunehmen. Die «Encheiresis naturae» müssen wir wieder vollziehen, aber wir dürfen nicht sagen «spottet ihrer selbst und weiß nicht wie»; wir müssen sie wieder in vollem Ernste nehmen können, dann werden wir ein Ideal vor uns haben, allerdings nur als Ideal, aber dieses Ideal wird Realität. Der Laboratoriumstisch wird in gewissem Sinne Altar sein, und die äußeren Hantierungen der Welt werden Gottesdienst sein und alles Leben vom Lichte des Gottesdienstes durchzogen sein.

[ 30 ] Und das ist das zweite: Anthroposophie ist sprachbildend. Anthroposophie muß danach streben, so real in die Welt einzugreifen, daß ich diese Realität in dem heute noch paradox erscheinenden Bild ausdrücke: Der Laboratoriumstisch des Chemikers, des physikalisch-chemisch Arbeitenden, des klinisch Arbeitenden, muß in der menschlichen Empfindung die Gestalt eines Altares annehmen. Arbeit an der Menschheit - und im Grunde genommen ist alle Arbeit Arbeit an der Menschheit, auch die rein technische Arbeit - muß werden können ein Gottesdienst. Das wird man aber nur finden, wenn man den guten Willen hat, über den Abgrund hinüberzusetzen, der unsere Welt von jener Zeit trennt, wo das Evangelium vor dem Alchimisten gelegen hat.

Sixth lecture

[ 1 ] My dear friends! In my lectures so far, I have assumed that I would show you, so to speak, what the anthroposophical path is like. This path, which is based on anthroposophy, can lead to what can be desired in the souls of contemporaries with regard to a renewal of religious experience.

[ 2 ] Now, of course, this requires, above all, a precise insight into what the renewal of religious life should actually be. And in order to shed proper light on this latter point, I would like to start today by looking again at the relationship, not of religion to anthroposophy, but the other way around, of anthroposophy to religion; but I must say in advance, my dear friends, that if we are to understand each other here, it is necessary that there is a clear awareness of the great seriousness of the question at hand, I would say, of the world-historical significance of the question. Those who today merely see this or that deficiency in a small circle, find this or that imperfection and are not able to consider it in the context of our entire journey through the world, will not really develop a heart and mind for what is actually necessary in the present.

[ 3 ] We are already living in a time when humanity is deeply shaken, and when one or the other thing can be done with all the means, but actually no progress can be made with all the means. I would like to have said this clearly, especially because I believe that, even if it is not yet so apparent, let me say my opinion quite sincerely and honestly in this regard. I believe that the rift between those personalities who have been involved in pastoral care for a long time and those who, as younger people, are now faced with the necessity of entering it, is a very great one. It may not be felt so strongly yet, but it is definitely there, and it will appear more and more clearly and distinctly; and I believe that for many today the questions of the older and the younger ones, if I may express it this way, are formulated quite differently. For the younger ones, it seems to me, this formulation of questions, as we experienced it yesterday and the day before yesterday, is no longer present to the same extent; it has already been resolved. Let us be completely honest with ourselves, let us be clear that it makes a difference whether one defends, as it were, a cause in which one is immersed, or whether one demands strength to get into the cause in the first place. So let us have no illusions about that. Of course, when one is older, one can say, I have as sincere an interest as the young. But we must take into account all possible subconscious impulses; and therefore, because we are dealing with things of such a serious nature, I ask you to accept what I have to say today.

[ 4 ] You see, anthroposophy is just at the beginning of its work, and the person who develops anthroposophy for one field or another has the distinct feeling that, however much anthroposophical knowledge he can experience within himself, he has the greatest difficulty in communicating it to the world today. That is simply a fact: he has the greatest difficulties. Why? Because today there is simply no linguistic instrument that is fully suitable for expressing concisely what is seen through anthroposophy. The anthroposophist expects that anthroposophy can lead not only to insights that live in the human soul, in inner vision, for the human race as such, in its totality, would not actually have attained that. For us, the main question must be: What is possible in the human community? and not: What can the individual demand? — Please be clear, my dear friends, that those who are Anthroposophists speak from reality; and as I speak to you, I feel not as if I am speaking to you in general, but as if I am speaking to people who are either pastors or who are to become pastors. It is, after all, something different to care for religion than to merely have religion. Thus, in theory, one can shape things in the same way for the most diverse human fields. But as soon as one enters into such a special field, then one must always place oneself on the most concrete standpoint that one can possibly take. I ask you to take this into account. I would like to point out that the anthroposophist is well aware that he is only at the beginning with his will, that something completely different must develop from this will than what can already be presented to the world today. On the other hand, it is clear that the world very, very strongly demands much of what is germinal in anthroposophy.

[ 5 ] Now there is something in Anthroposophy that is only just beginning to be considered, and it is very little today. This is the language-forming element itself. Read Saint-Martin in the 18th century, who was still a keeper of the religious sentiment in its purest form. Matthias Claudius translated Saint-Martin's work “Errors and Truth” into German, which is currently being reprinted. Read Saint- Martin, how he speaks with a certain matter-of-factness about the fact that humanity had a primal language, and that the primal language of humanity has been lost, and that it is no longer possible to express in today's differentiated languages that which should actually be expressed and could be expressed for the supersensible world. So today the anthroposophist often has the feeling that he would like to say this or that, but when he wants to formulate the word, it eludes him, it does not come about. But anthroposophy is language-forming. And nothing that arises in the way that anthroposophy has — and in ancient times, anything that arose in this way always arose as a religion at the same time — can arise without a certain eschatology, without a certain anticipation of the future. There is no possibility of placing one's inner experience in the evolution of humanity without in some way anticipating the future, and so, at least for a short but world-historical span of time, anthroposophy must, according to its innermost conviction, see into the future and, so to speak, predict what must necessarily happen for the future, for the near future of humanity. This is that humanity will be able to cast off all such connection with the individual language that still exists today and that, more than anything else, brings nations into war and hardship today. Time and again, one would like to express the parable of the Tower of Babel correctly today when one sees what divides the world today. It is indeed the case that anthroposophy has the power to perceive and see something of the original essence of the sound itself, in contrast to the differentiated spoken languages. And anthroposophy will, not over the course of many centuries but in a relatively short time — if it is initially suppressed, it will revive again. Anthroposophy will create through the most diverse languages, not a Volapük unified language, which is a kind of extract from the others, but it will self-creatively put something into the language that also reconciles people in the language.

[ 6 ] Thus I must tell you that Anthroposophy does not merely set itself formal tasks of knowledge, but that Anthroposophy must set itself historically creative tasks. It sees how the material for such work is present in the hearts of people today. Years ago, I wanted to try to express the most important elements of anthroposophical terminology in words formed from sounds, however strange and paradoxical that may seem to you. But the time was not yet ripe for it to be received. But it is already possible.

[ 7 ] So I have to draw your attention to the very real tasks of anthroposophical work. And why do I feel compelled to draw your attention to this? Simply because, once humanity is ready to hear the sound, to perceive the word-forming power itself, then everything that has so far taken place in a different sphere, in a much more instinctive, animalistic way, must in future take place in a spiritual, human way. When humanity has reached that point, then one will feel how true it is that which lives in the proclamation, in the message, in the Gospel, because one cannot feel the Gospel in its truth if one does not experience the power of forming language. To feel the Gospel correctly, my dear friends, means to be able to form the details of the Gospel within yourself in every moment that you live. Today, basically, one can only criticize the Gospel, one cannot form it; but this possibility of forming it must be worked on. Where are the obstacles? Yes, the obstacles lie in the fact that one rejects the very first elements that build up the possibility of forming an opinion about the Gospels.

[ 8 ] Indeed, the consideration of the Gospels is placed on a different footing when one thinks about the Gospels as it must be done here, based on the characteristics of the Word. You see, among the objections that Dr. Rittelmeyer mentions, not as his own, but as those that are present, there is also one that I might say is mentioned in passing. It is the objection that today it cannot interest the religious whether there were two Jesus children. I can fully understand how, today, from the religious mood of the day, little value is placed on such things. But now comes something else. In the near future, we will see in a publication by the Kommenden Tag-Verlag how tremendously this “little thing” promotes our understanding of the Gospels – but it is no little thing – because the power that forms the Gospels is fostered simply by providing evidence that what is said in the Gospels about the two Jesus boys is in them. But you cannot understand the Gospels if you do not know what is in them. But the power to create language must be drawn from other sources, and by developing an appreciation for these sources, you will also develop an appreciation for the first of the four parts that I mentioned first when describing the Mass. For you see, it is not a matter of the Mass being offered only in the Symbolum, but of the Symbolum being an expression of the entire pastoral work. If the entire pastoral work is not such that it converges in the Mass as in a center, then the Mass has no meaning at all; and what is pastoral work can converge in the can be found in a modern $Symbolum, which we will have to talk about later — only if these four main parts of the Mass, which I have mentioned, are truly lived to the fullest.

[ 9 ] Now, for today's people, the reading of the Gospel is only one part; the other part is what is expressed in the sermon. And preaching today is not what it should be, it cannot be because it is intellectualistic, because as a rule the preparation for preaching is only intellectualistic and it cannot be any different from today's education, from today's theology. A sermon is only a real sermon when the language-forming power inspires the preacher in a certain way, when he speaks not only from his own substance but from the substance of the genius of language. But this is something that a person must first acquire. One does not need this genius of language for the religiosity that one has in one's own heart, but one does need this genius of language for religious work in the human community. The task of the pastor must be to build community; therefore, the elements that can appear in a community-building way must be sought. Intellectualism can never be community-building, because it is precisely there to enable us to separate ourselves as human beings. Intellectualism is simply detached from the individual human being as an individual human being, and to the same extent that the human being is referred back to himself as an individual, to the same extent he becomes intellectualistic. He can save himself into this intellectualism, of course, faith, because faith is a subjective thing of the individual, it can even be called the thing of the individual in the most eminent sense. But for the community we need not only this subjective, but for the community we need the supersensible content.

[ 10 ] Now just think deeply enough about how it should be possible for you to bring a mere power of faith to bear in the community without the word. You cannot, it is impossible. But you also cannot maintain the community if you speak from intellectuality. Therefore, intellectual sermons will tend to atomize the community of believers from the outset. In an intellectual sermon, the person is thrown back on himself; each individual who listens is thrown back on himself. But this stirs up in him those powers that, above all, do not agree but contradict. That is simply a psychological fact. For as soon as we look deeper into our soul, every listener is at the same time a critic, a contradiction. Yes, my dear friends, the secrets of the soul are so little understood today. Immediately all the contradictions that can be objected to what the other person says shine through if the other person expresses himself in intellectualistic forms alone.

[ 11 ] This is the element that fragments today's humanity in the first place, that it is permeated through and through by mere intellectualism. You will therefore never be able to have an anti-atomizing effect in your sermon if you stop at intellectualism. If you want to build community, you cannot stop at the intellectual, either in the preparation or in the delivery of the sermon, and that is where you stop if you come from our present-day education, especially from theological education, because in many respects it has become entirely intellectualistic. It is purely intellectual even in the Catholic Church, because everything that is not intellectual, that is, that is meant to be life, is not left to the individual there, but is the teaching of the Church and must be accepted as the teaching of the Church. Hence the phenomenon that in regard to everything the Catholic Church releases for the intellect, the Catholic priest is the freest person one can imagine. The Catholic Church does not demand that man submit in any way with regard to his intellect; in this respect she releases him in regard to everything that does not relate to the supersensible. She demands only that he submit with regard to the supersensible teaching material. I can give you an example from real life about this as well. I once spoke with a theologian at a university where, in those days, liberal principles were generally observed, not from the Church, but from the university's point of view, liberal principles were observed. Now, of course, there were only Catholic priest scholars in the theological faculty. The one I was talking to had just received a severe reprimand from Rome. I said to him: Yes, how is it that you, of all people, who teach relatively piously in comparison to a teacher at the University of Innsbruck – I won't mention the name now – who speaks much more freely and who is watched very patiently from Rome? Yes, you see, the person in question replied to me, but he is a Jesuit and I am a Cistercian. Rome can always be sure that a man like the one teaching at the University of Innsbruck will never fall away, however freely he speaks, but will always put the word in the service of the Church. In our Cistercians, Rome believes that we also follow our intellect, because we cannot be as deeply involved with life [in the church] as the Jesuit, who has completed his spiritual exercises, which hold him in a completely different way than they do for us Cistercians. You see how thoroughly psychologically Rome treats intellectualism. As a rule, Rome knows very well what it wants, because Rome acts from a thorough psychology of man, even if we reject it.

[ 12 ] Now, the point at issue is that, especially in preaching, we do not stop at intellectualism. All our languages are intellectualistic; if we take the languages in current use today, we have no possibility of getting out of intellectualism. But we have to. And the next step is to emerge from intellectualism and to participate in the pure shaping of the speech-forming power. This is symbolism, but now shaped in the right way, so as not to remain intellectually stagnant again, but to really experience symbols. Experiencing symbols means much more than is usually thought.

[ 13 ] You see, as soon as the anthroposophist arrives at an imaginative view or penetrates the imaginative view of another person, he actually knows: the person standing before him is no longer the same as he was before he was seen in the light of anthroposophy. You see, this person standing before us is regarded by today's science as a highly developed animal; that is what he generally becomes. But everything that science presents to substantiate this view, and which is most justified by the fact that it is said that man has just as many bones and just as many muscles as the higher animals, all this is true; but science is immediately at a dead end when one now presents what actually distinguishes man from animals. This distinguishing feature of man from animal does not lie at all in the fact that comparative anatomy shows how the whole human being and the individual parts are similar to the whole animal or the individual parts of the animal, but to grasp what is human is to understand that man has a vertical position with the organ of the spine, while the same organ in the animal has a position parallel to the earth's surface. It is quite true that this can also be observed in the animal kingdom, in that it breaks with this rule, but that does not belong here; I have to pick out the border points. But because man is organized vertically with his backbone, he integrates himself into the cosmos in a completely different way than the animal. The animal integrates itself into currents that run around the earth; the human being integrates itself into currents that run to and from the center of the earth in the direction of the radius. One must study the human being's position in space if one wants to understand the human being. But when one studies the human being's position in space to the end, it becomes clear again what it means that the human being is in the image of God. Man is not at all what comparative anatomy sees; he is not such a reality, but, in so far as he is a form, he is a reality of image. He forms images. He is sent in from higher worlds for conception and birth in such a way that he forms that which is before birth. Out of the substance of the divine, we have our spiritual life before birth. This spiritual life dissolves through conception and birth and acquires its image, picture, imagination in the physical human being on earth. Imagination, taken out of the universe, becomes the human form, but it must be grasped, placed out of the universe, in its relationship to the universe. All the individual organs in the human being take part in the verticalization. The human head takes its form through verticalization. Man is placed in the world by God.

[ 14 ] This comes directly as an inner experience, in that the imagination takes hold of the human being. And then one can no longer say and believe in an intellectualistic way, when I speak the word “Man is made in the image of God”, that it is only spoken as a parable. No, the truth is spoken, and in the parables of the Old and New Testaments, which are truly taken from the supersensible world, there are not parables in the manner of allegorical parables, but there are truths. And we must come to the point where we again imbue our words with such an experience that we learn to speak vividly in this way. To the extent that we vividly characterize in a lively way, but not by intellectually contriving something, we gain the possibility of preaching, which must indeed be an instruction.

[ 15 ] I have often pointed out that when a teacher stands before a child and wants to teach that child the immortality of the soul in a popular way, he should teach it through an image. He should point out how the chrysalis of the insect is there, and how the butterfly flies out of it, and he should go on to show how the human soul leaves the human body like such a chrysalis at death; he should vividly illustrate the supersensible truth. But I have always said, when explaining this alleged parable, that there is a great difference between a teacher who says, “I am clever and the child is stupid, so I have to make a parable for the child so that it understands in its own way what I understand through my intellect.” — Anyone who speaks in this way has no experience of life, no experience of the imponderables that are at work in teaching. For the convincing power with which the child grasps what I want to teach him with this puppet parable is very small if I think: I am clever and the child is stupid, so I have to make up a parable for the child. That which is to be effective only comes about when I myself can believe in my parable with all the fibers of my strength. I can do it as an anthroposophist; the parable forms in me as I look at nature. When I see the butterfly emerge from the chrysalis, I am convinced that the image of the soul's immortality is taking shape here, only at a lower level. I believe in my parable with my whole life. This confrontation with the other in life is what could emerge as a community-building force. And until intellectualism is overcome to such an extent that man can live in images again, it is impossible for a truly community-building force to emerge.

[ 16 ] I have also seen community-building power in action, but in the wrong field. I will tell you about that too. I was once induced to study such things by listening to a sermon, an Austrian sermon by a famous Jesuit priest. It was shaped according to all Jesuit training. I will give you a very brief outline of this sermon; it was about the topic: How should a Christian relate to the assertion that the Pope has established the Easter confession by dogma, that it is not established by God's work but by man's work? The Jesuit priest did not speak particularly deeply, but, trained in the Jesuit way, he said: Yes, dear Christians, imagine a cannon, a gunner at the cannon and an officer giving orders. Imagine this very clearly! What happens? The cannon is loaded, the gunner has the fuse in his hand, the gunner pulls the fuse when the command is given. Do you see, it is the same with the Pope in Rome. He stands as a gunner at the cannon, he holds the fuse, and the command comes from the supernatural world. So the Pope in Rome pulls the fuse and thus gives the command of Easter confession. It is a law from heaven, just as the command does not come from the gunner, but from the officer. But there is something even deeper to it, my dear Christians – the Father said – something much deeper when you look at the whole process of Easter confession. Can we say that the gunner who hears the command and pulls the fuse is the one who invented gunpowder? No. And just as little can anyone say that the Roman Pope has instituted the Easter confession. - Believing feeling moved into the community through the use of this image, this symbol, but of course in such an unjust field as possible.

[ 17 ] The symbol is the means by which we actually find the path to the human heart for the supersensible. However, as I indicated in the insect pupa parable, we must learn to live in the symbol, to be able to faithfully take the symbol itself from the outside world. I understand very well when someone wants to rely on mere belief rather than knowledge. But I take it so seriously that this belief must also be active in the way we live in relation to the outer world, so that all of outer nature becomes a symbolum in the truest sense of the word, an experienced symbolum. And, my dear friends, until people know again that in the light not only does wisdom live and move in a figurative sense, but that in the light wisdom really lives and moves... [gap in the transcription, see note]. The light enters through our eye, that which is now light is then more than light – originally, “light” was used to describe that which underlies all of man's senses as their innermost essence – by entering the light, it is transformed inwardly, transubstantiated, and every thought that arises in you, my dear friends, is transformed light in reality, not in parable.

[ 18 ] Therefore, do not be surprised that someone who, through appropriate exercises, has come to know the spiritual external phenomena of the inner being, so to speak, describes human thoughts by describing them in light images. Do not be surprised at this, because it corresponds to reality.

[ 19 ] The things we find in the older documents of humanity are to be taken much more concretely than one usually thinks. One must also realize that the power that still lies in the Gospels has been lost in the last few centuries, just as the original revelation for man has been truly lost and just as the original language has been lost. I would like to ask the question: Do we have the Gospels today? We only have them if we can really experience them, and we cannot experience them from our intellectual age. I am well aware of the objections that have been raised from this or that quarter against the interpretations given in my various lectures on the Gospels, and I am well aware that they are initial attempts that must become more complete; but they are attempts to make the Gospels come alive again.

[ 20 ] I would like to refer you back to the times, my dear friends, when there were people like those whom we today, when they place themselves in the world order as they did in those days, call chemists. The alchemists, as they were called in the 12th and 13th centuries, were so concerned with our material world as we are accustomed to seeing in the chemist today. But what do we do today to produce a real chemist? Today, based on our prerequisites, a real chemist will emerge by taking on an intellectual approach to how substances are analyzed and synthesized, how to work with the retort, how to work with heating apparatus, with electricity, and so on. That would not have been enough for the real chemist, if I may put it that way, until the 13th or 14th century, but – perhaps this is not to be taken quite literally, but more than literally – the chemist had the Bible in front of him and was imbued with it, so that he only did what he did in a right way when the corresponding power flowed from the Bible. To modern man, this seems, of course, paradoxical. To a human race only centuries behind us, it seemed the most natural thing in the world. And the consciousness that the chemist of that time had, the alchemist, in carrying out his work, was only slightly different from standing at the altar and reading the mass. Only slightly different, because reading the mass was already the highest alchemical act. We shall have to speak more about this, too. But does this fact not lead us to the realization that the Gospel has lost its true power? What did we do in the 19th century? We analyzed the Gospel of Mark, the Gospel of John, the Gospel of Luke, the Gospel of Matthew; we treated them philologically, and we first discovered that the Gospel of John can only be a hymn, because it was impossible to believe that it corresponds to reality. The synoptics were compared with each other, and we have arrived at the stage linked to the famous Schmiedel, where it is distilled: What is said about Christ that is detrimental is truth, because you would not find that in mere praise. — It is only the last consequence of this path. On this path, nothing else can result but what has already resulted: The destruction of the Gospels will inevitably result from this path. And no matter how much we discuss the separation of knowledge and faith, it will not be sustainable if science destroys the Gospels. One must be thoroughly grounded in reality and understand how to live out of reality, and so it is imperative that the pastor come to a living sense of vivid representation, of pictorial representation. The living image must enter into the sermon. That it is a permissible and good image must, of course, be ensured by the purity of intention, which we will discuss later. But it is the image that we must find.

[ 21 ] And, my dear friends, anthroposophy will provide you with the best help in finding the image. It is, after all, ridiculed because of its pictorial nature. Read the objections raised by intellectualists (if I may coin the term) to the presentation of evolution in my 'Geheimwissenschaft' (Occult Science), and you will see how easy it is to ridicule the images I have to use to describe the existence of Saturn, the Sun and the Moon from the point of view of intellectualists. I must use images, otherwise the things would fall out of my hands, because I only grasp that part of reality through images that needs to be sought. And I would like to say that anthroposophy is in every respect a search for images and is therefore a helper for those who need images. This is the real field in which the pastor in particular can initially gain a great deal from anthroposophy. Not that he should accept it devoutly, not that he should say: Well, let us study the anthroposophical images and books and then use them. - That is out of the question. It must, as it were, come to the opposite of what philosophy had to develop into in the age that lived towards anthroposophy.

[ 22 ] I would like to say the following to you. Philosophers today who are disciples of a content or a system, or who believe that they have to set up a system, such philosophers are antiquated today, such philosophers are backward. All such system philosophy is no longer possible in the intellectualist age. When Hegel, in pure intellectualism, had distilled the last thoughts out of human contemplation and set them forth in his system, what was found was what I might call the corpse of philosophy. Just as one studies man scientifically today from the corpse, so one can study from the corpse of Hegel's philosophy what was precisely philosophy — very well from that point of view. That is why Hegel's philosophy is so great: because nothing disturbs the continuous intellectualism. That is the great thing that I admire about it, for example, to develop purely what is purely intellectualistic. But after Hegel there can no longer be such an endeavor to present a thought-content in order to develop any system of philosophy. That is why people are doing such terrible philosophical somersaults. Yes, one cannot imagine a more terrible somersault than Vaihinger's with his philosophy of “as if”. As if there were anything of a philosophy of “as if” in it! This is something that absolutely excludes the experience of all spirit, this philosophy of “as if”. It is no longer philosophy in humanity as it was when the last remnants of imagination still lived in humanity and were translated into thoughts. Rather, what is incumbent on the philosopher today is to study philosophy in order to practice his thinking. Studying philosophy today is a form of mental meditation and should not be done any differently. I believe that once one sees these things more impartially, one will soon see that in “Riddles of Philosophy” I was working towards presenting the development of philosophy in such a way that what can be found in the most diverse systems of philosophy today can be studied as a mental exercise. One learns an enormous amount precisely from the newest systems, which have already emerged from philosophy: Hartmann's system and the American systems associated with the name James. One learns an enormous amount if one only allows them to have their effect on oneself to the extent of asking oneself: How is thinking trained, what does one gain in thought training? — Please forgive the harsh word. Nietzsche already strove to have such a training of thought through philosophy.

[ 23 ] This will make you aware that even in philosophy today one is compelled to translate the thinking into the living, not to confront the truth as a subject, which is outside oneself, but in such a way that the truth is experienced. Only someone who has understood the philosophy of the present will also understand the opposite: when reading anthroposophical writings and listening to anthroposophical lectures, it is not a matter of accepting things like dogmas. That would be the most foolish thing to do. You should think of what is given in anthroposophy as having been brought down from the supersensible realm. It may be expressed in words awkwardly, but by immersing oneself in it, it is just the same as when the true philosopher immerses himself in the thinking of other philosophers. He does not absorb anything from the other systems, he is trained in them. The ability to form images and pictures should first be developed through anthroposophy. When one is told words that flow out of imaginative thinking, when one absorbs such thoughts, one is compelled, in order to understand the other person at all, to draw one's power of imagination out of the depths of the soul. Above all, this is what we can get from anthroposophy as a help.

[ 24 ] Therefore, one should not appeal by saying: Yes, I must first become clairvoyant for my own sake, then I can decide something about anthroposophy. Rather, one should appeal to it in such a way that one first familiarizes oneself with anthroposophy, regardless of the truth of it, and simply accepts it as a collection of images that show how the world is painted in this or that soul. That it does paint itself in this way is at least a fact. Take this and leave the question of its truth undecided for the moment. Try to penetrate the way of speaking of someone who has such images of the supersensible, and you will see that this is the best way to gain insight yourself. Today, many people who approach anthroposophy really do set up a chariot correctly and then harness the horse to it incorrectly. (From the stenographer's notes, we can see that a horse was drawn on the blackboard, wrongly harnessed to a cart, i.e. with its head towards the cart and its tail facing forwards. The original drawing on the blackboard has not been preserved.) We must not think that we must first have the act of observation. Because it is based on a certain arrogance, this could in fact bypass the act of observation altogether. But if one has the humility to want to experience the results of looking, then one can also come to looking without fear of receiving a suggestion. Only unrealistic philosophers, such as Wundt, for example, the latecomer among the system philosophers, who objects, from his point of view, of course: Yes, but how am I to know, when I have first received something from the supersensible world and then come to see it myself, that it is not suggested to me? Wundt would have to be told: How do you actually know how to distinguish between an iron piece with a temperature of 100° or more that you merely imagine or that is suggested to you, and one that is actually lying in front of you? No matter how long you discuss, you will never find out by looking whether the iron is really in front of you or whether it is suggested; but if you touch it and then look at your fingers, you will find out the distinction through life. There is no other criterion.

[ 25 ] But there is an unmistakable criterion for entering into anthroposophy in a truly real way. But one should not take the position that one already knows everything. In my life I have found that one learns least when one believes that one already knows what one should learn.

[ 26 ] For example, it is only possible to be a true teacher if one is a teacher of conviction. How often have Waldorf school teachers been told — and they have grasped it, over the years it has come about that teaching is characterized by this attitude; it is clearly noticeable — how often have they been told: When you When you are faced with a child, it is best to tell yourself that there is much more wisdom in the child than in yourself, much, much more, because it has just come down from the spiritual world and brings with it a great deal of wisdom. You can learn an enormous amount from a child. There is nothing in the world from which you can learn so much in an outward, physical way as you can from a child. The child is a teacher, and Waldorf teachers know how wrong they would be if they thought of themselves as teachers and the child as a pupil. Actually, we are more pupil than teacher, and the child is more teacher than pupil. It seems paradoxical, but it is so.

[ 27 ] But you see, anthroposophy leads us to new insights into the world, in many specialized areas of life, as was fortunately stated in one of the questions... [gaps in the transcript; see note]. Yes, anthroposophy does indeed appear with this mood, with this attitude. Anthroposophy cannot appear without already carrying a religious character within it. And this must be emphasized by anthroposophy: Anthroposophy does not strive to appear as a religion or to form a sect. It strives to give people content for their inner experience, but in striving to do so, what it gives is endowed with a religious character all by itself. Anthroposophy is not a religion, but what it gives is such that it has a religious effect.

[ 28 ] Recently I had the need to speak to a person who, due to earlier circumstances in his life, which were not actually of a boastful but rather of a joyful nature, had fallen into a deep depression that had various, even thoroughly organic causes. The person in question is an anthroposophist and wanted to discuss his mood with me. I pointed out to him that moods come from the whole person and are taken up from the world by placing oneself as a human being in relation to the world. Anthroposophy is itself a human being. If it were not a human being, it would not transform us. It makes a different human being out of us. It is itself a human being, I say this in all seriousness. Anthroposophy is not just a doctrine, Anthroposophy is something essential, it is a human being. And only when the personality is completely imbued with it and Anthroposophy is like a person who thinks, but also feels, senses and has volitional emotions, when Anthroposophy in us thinks, feels and wills, when it is truly like a whole person, only then have we grasped it, then we have bathed in it. It works like a being and enters present-day culture and civilization as a kind of being. It is felt like a kind of being entering the scene. At the same time, however, this means that one can say: religion – now speaking from the anthroposophical point of view – religion is a relationship between human beings and God. But anthroposophy is a human being, and because it is a human being, it has a relationship with God; just as a human being has a relationship with God, so anthroposophy has a relationship with God. Thus it has the characteristic of the religious directly within itself.

[ 29 ] I will now summarize what I have just said in a few abstract sentences, but it is absolutely life. I did not say what I said earlier in connection with what I am saying now without intention, my dear friends. The first thing one experiences in this way is that one learns to recognize how divine wisdom works in the child, where it is formative, where it not only comes to manifestation in a brain, but where it still shapes the brain. Yes, “unless you become like little children, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven”. And that is the way: one penetrates into what one perceives in deep humility in the child, into that which lies before becoming a child, before that which was felt so vividly even by Goethe that he used the word “becoming young” for entering the world, just as one says “becoming old”. To become young means to enter earthly existence from spiritual states. In a certain sense, one really does go through childhood and then back to those states where there is still a direct connection with the divine. The old biblical question becomes very real: Can one go back into the mother's womb to experience rebirth? — In spirit one can. But there is a gulf between the old way, when the Bible lay before the alchemist, and the present way in which we prepare ourselves for the work of the world. This gulf must be bridged. We shall not find the old way, but we shall find a new one. I have often said among anthroposophists what we will find if we undertake to manipulate nature in any way. We must carry out the 'Encheiresis naturae' again, but we must not say 'mock it and do not know how'; we must be able to take it again in full earnest, then we will have an ideal before us, but only as an ideal, but this ideal will become reality. The laboratory table will in a sense be an altar, and the outer labors of the world will be divine service, and all life will be permeated by the light of divine service.

[ 30 ] And that is the second thing: anthroposophy is language-forming. Anthroposophy must strive to intervene in the world so powerfully that I express this reality in an image that still seems paradoxical today: the laboratory table of the chemist, the physical-chemical worker, the clinically working person, must take on the form of an altar in the human perception. Work for humanity – and basically all work is work for humanity, even purely technical work – must be able to become a service to God. But this will only be found if one has the good will to cross over the abyss that separates our world from the time when the gospel lay before the alchemist.