Foundation Course
Spiritual Discernment, Religious Feeling, Sacramental Action
GA 343
26 September, 1921, Dornach
I. The Relationship of Anthroposophy to Religious Life
[ 1 ] My dear friends! I sincerely thank Licentiate Bock for his welcoming words, and I promise you that I want to apply everything in my power to contribute at least partly, towards all you are looking for during your stay here.
[ 2 ] Today I would like to discuss some orientation details so that we may understand one another in the right way. It will be our particular task—also during the various hours of discussion we are going to have—to express exactly what lies particularly close to your heart for your future work. I hope that what I have to say to you will be said in the correct way, when during the coming discussion hour your wishes and tasks you ask about, will be heard.
[ 3 ] Anthroposophy, my dear friends, must certainly remain on the foundation of which I've often spoken, when I say: Anthroposophy as such can't represent religious education; anthroposophy as such must limit its task as a spiritual science to fructify present culture and civilization and it is not its purpose to represent religious education. Actually, it is quite far from such direct involvement in any way, in the evolutionary process of religious life. Nevertheless, it appears to me to be certainly justified in relation to the tasks you have just set yourselves, that for religious activity something can be extracted out of Anthroposophy. Indirectly it can not only be obtained through Anthroposophy, but it must be extracted, and this must be said; your experience is quite correct that religious life as such needs deepening, which can come out of the source of anthroposophical science.
[ 4 ] I presume, my dear friends, that you want to actively position yourself in this religious life and that you have looked for this Anthroposophic course because you have felt that religious activity has lead you increasingly towards a dead end, and that through the religious work today—with our traditions, with the historic development and others, which we will still discuss—elements are missing which actually should be within it. We notice how just today even important personalities are searching for a new foundation for religious activity, because they believe this is needed in order to progress in a certain direction. I would like to indicate it as a start, how even the most conscientious personalities ask themselves how one can reach a certain foundation of religious awareness, and how then these personalities actually search more or less for a kind of—one can also call it something else—a kind of philosophy. I remind you only how a home is sought for a kind of philosophic foundation for religious awareness. Obviously, one has to, through the current awareness, recognise something absolutely necessary and one should not ignore that an extraordinarily amount has been accomplished this way. However, one can't comprehend, with unprejudiced observation, what is strived for, and come face to face with this: such an effort, instead of leading into the religious life, actually leads out of the religious life.
Religious life, you will sense, must be something direct, it must be something elementary, entirely connected to human nature, which lives out of the elementary, most inward foundation of human nature. All philosophic thinking is a reflection and is distanced from this direct, elementary experience. If I might express a personal impression, it would be this: When someone philosophises about the religious life and believes that a philosophical foundation is necessary for a religious life, then it always seems to me to be similar to when one wants to turn to the physiology of nutrition in order to attain nourishment oneself. Isn't it true, one can determine the exact foundations of nutritional science but that means nothing for nutrition itself. Nutritional science elucidates nutrition, but nutrition must surely have a sound foundation, it must grow roots in reality; only then can one philosophise about nutrition. So also, the religious life must have roots in reality. It must come to existence out of reality, only when it is there can one philosophise about it. It is certainly not possible at all to substantiate or justify the religious life with some or other philosophic consideration.
[ 5 ] That's the one thing. The other one is something which I can best indicate—I always like referring to realities—through a book which had already came into existed several decades ago in Basle, with the title: The Christian Nature of our Theology Today. It is a book by Overbeck. In it he refers to evidence that the current theology is a kind of theology but that it is actually not Christian any longer. Now, when one takes Harnack's book The Being of Christianity and in its arguments everywhere simply exchanges the word "God" in every instance where he has "Christ," then one will not really change anything in the inner content of Harnack's book. This is already expressed in what Adolf Harnack says, that in the Gospels actually only the proclamation of the Father is needed and not those of Christ Jesus, while naturally during the earlier centuries the Christian development of the Gospels was above all regarded according to the proclamations of Christ Jesus. However, if the Gospels are really considered as the actual proclamations of Christ Jesus, then one has to, beside the Father-experience, that means beside the experience of the world in general being permeated by the Godhead, have the Christ-experience as something extra special. One must be able to have both of these experiences. A theology like Adolf Harnack's no longer has both of these experiences, but only a God-experience, and as a result it is necessary for him that what he finds in his imagination of God, he baptises it with the name of Christ; purely out of a historical foundation, because as he is even a representative of Christianity, he calls his God-experience by the name of Christ.
[ 6 ] These incisive, important things exist already. Certainly, they are not made properly clear but they are felt, and I presume that currently, where nearly everything is shaken up in people's minds, a young theology in particular needs to show itself, in how these things can't really be completed, as is seen to some extent today with theologians, without being permeated by the actual being of Christ. Out of this experience such a book as von Overbeck's was created regarding the current Christianity of theology, where basically the answer is given to why modern theology is no longer Christian because it deals with a general philosophising about a world permeated by God, and not in the real sense of the Christ experience creating the foundation for the entire treatment of religious problems. Religious problems are dealt with based only as Father-problems and not actually the Christ experience.
[ 7 ] Today we basically all have an education inculcated in us, derived from modern science, this science which actually only started in the middle of the 15th century but which has entered into all forms of modern people's thinking. One basically can't be different because one has been educated this way from the lowest primary classes, by forming thoughts according to modern science. This has resulted in theology of the 19th century wanting to orientate itself according to the research of modern science. I'd like to say they feel themselves responsible for the judge's chair of modern science and as a result have become what they are today. One can only find a basis of true religiosity today by, at the same time, considering the entire authorisation and also the complete meaning of the scientific element of life.
[ 8 ] To some of you I have possibly already referred to a man who needs to be taken seriously in relation to religious life, Gideon Spicker, who for a long time studied philosophy at the Münster university. He proceeded from a strict Christian conception of the world, which he gradually developed into his philosophy which was never considered a philosophy but more an instrument for the understanding of religious problems. Modern thinking didn't offer him the possibility to find a sure foundation. So we find in his booklet, entitled At the Turning Point of the Christian World Period the hopelessness of modern man which characterised him so clearly, because he says: "Today we have metaphysics without transcendental conviction, we have a theory of knowledge without objective meaning, we have psychology without a soul, logic without content, ethics without liability and the result is that we can't find some or other foundation for religious consciousness."—Gideon Spicker stood very close to the actual crux which lies at the basis of all religious dichotomies in modern mankind. One can take it like a symptom, to indicate where the actual crux, I could call it, lies. If modern man is discerning, if he tries to create an image through his imagination of the world, then at the same time he clearly has the feeling that this discernment doesn't penetrate the depths. Gideon Spicker expressed it like this: "We have a theory of knowledge without objective meaning", which means we have our insights without being in the position to find the power within us to create something really objective out of our assembled insights. So, the modern discerning man sickens because he fails to find the possibility of a guarantee for his knowledge of objectivity in the world, for existence as such. He finds it in what he experiences subjectively in the knowledge, not really out of the thing itself.
[ 9 ] All of this of course, because it is philosophy, has nothing to do with religious experience. Still, one can say that religious life today is certainly under an influence which heads in a similar direction. The kind of humanity which is not in the position to say about knowledge: "in this realization there exists objective existence for me"—such a type of humanity feels this same insecurity rise up at another point, and that is religious life. The insecurity is situated at the same pivotal point where actual religious life exists today. We will see how other problems will huddle around this pivot point. This pivotal point lies in prayer, in the meaning of prayer. The religious person must feel that prayer has real meaning; some or other reality must be connected to prayer. However, in a time epoch when the discerning person fails to come out of his subjective knowledge and fails to find reality in knowledge, in the same time epoch religious people won't find the possibility, during prayer, of becoming aware that prayer is no mere subjective deed, but that within prayer an objective experience takes place. For a person who is unable to realise that prayer is an objective experience, for him or her it would be impossible to find a real religious hold. Particularly in the nature of current humanity prayer must focus on the religious life. Various other areas must focus on prayer. However, a prayer which only has subjective meaning would make people religiously insecure.
[ 10 ] It is the same root which grows out of us on the one side for the insecurity of knowledge, the Ignorabimus, and on the other side in fear; worry, which do not live in prayer in divine objectivity, but which is involved in subjectivity.
[ 11 ] You see, the problem of faith and the problem of knowledge, all problems, which involve people from the theological side, are connected to the same characteristics. Everything which depresses people from the side of direct religious experience, which needs confirmation, which must be maintained, this all comes from the same source. You can hardly answer this question if you don't orientate yourself historically where it will quite clearly show how far we have actually become distanced with our sciences from what we can call Christian today, while on the other hand today there is the constant attempt to proceed by pushing anything Christian out with science. Take everything in the Gospels which is Christian tradition. You can't but say: in this, there is another conception of the human being than what modern science claims. In modern science the human being is traced back to some or other primitive archetypal creature—I absolutely don't want to say that mankind had perhaps developed out of an animal origin—we are referred back to a primitive Ur-human, which gradually developed itself and, in whose development, existed a progression, an advance. Modern humanity is satisfied to look back according to scientific foundations, to the primitive archetypal beings, who through some inherent power, it is said, they created an ever greater and bigger cultural accomplishment, and to behold the unexpected future of this perfection.
If one now places within this evolution, the development of the Christ, the Mystery of Golgotha, then one can in an honest way hold on to the Gospels and say nothing other than: into this He doesn't fit, what fits here is a historic conception which goes around the Mystery of Golgotha and leaves it out, but the Christ of the Gospels don't fit into this conception. The Christ of the Gospels can't be considered in any other way than if one somehow believes what happened in the 18th century especially among the most enlightened, the most spiritual people as a matter of course. Take for instance Saint Martin—I now want to look further from religious development and want to point out someone who was in the most imminent sense a scientist of the 18th century—and that was Saint Martin. He had a completely clear awareness that the human being at the start of his earthly development came from a certain height downwards, that he had been in another world milieu earlier, in another environment and through a mighty event, through a crisis was thrown down to a sphere which lay below the level of his previous existence, so that the human being is no longer what he once had been.
[ 12 ] While our modern natural science points back to a primitive archetypal being out of which we have developed; this observation of Saint Martin must refer back to the fallen mankind, to those human beings which had once been more elevated. This was something, like I said, which to Saint Martin appeared as a matter of course. Saint Martin experienced this fall of mankind as a feeling of shame. You see, if the Christ is placed in such a conception of human evolution, where the human being, by starting his earth existence through a descent and is now more humble than he was before, then the Christ becomes that Being who would save humanity from its previous fall, then the Christ bears mankind again up into those conditions where it had existed before.
[ 13 ] We will see in what modification this imagination must appear to our souls. In any case this involves a disproportion between our modern understanding of mankind's evolution and the understanding of the Gospels; there is always dishonesty when one goes hither and thither and does not confess that one is simultaneously a supporter of modern scientific thinking and also the Christ. This must actually be clear for every honest, particularly religiously honest sensitive person. Here is something where a bridge must be formed if the religious life is to be healthy once again. Without this bridging, religious life will never ever be healthy again. Actually, there are people who come along like David Friedrich Strauss, and to the question "Are we still Christians?" reply with a No, indicating that they are still more honest than some of the modern theologians, whoever and again overlook the radical differences between what the modern human being regards as pure science and the Gospel concept of the Christ. This is the characteristic of modern theology. It is basically the impotent attempt to treat the Christ conception of the Gospels in such a way that it can be validated in front of modern science. Here nothing originates which somehow can be held.
[ 14 ] Yet, theology still exists. The modern pastor is given very little support for his line of work in the kind of theology presented at his schooling currently, from the foundation which has been indicated already and about which we will still come to in the course of our observations. The modern pastor must of course be a theologian even though theology is not religion. However, in order to work, a theological education is needed, and this educational background suffers from all the defects which I've briefly indicated in our introduction today.
[ 15 ] You see, the Catholic Church knows quite well what it is doing, because it doesn't allow modern science to come into theology. Not as if the Catholic Church doesn't care for modern science, it takes care of it. The greatest scholars can certainly be found within the Catholic ecclesiastics. I'm reminded of Father Secchi, a great astrophysicist, I remember people such as Wasmann, a significant zoologist, and many others, above all one can remind oneself of the extraordinarily important scientific accomplishments, worldly scientific accomplishments of the Benedictine order and so on. But what role did modern science play in the Catholic Church? The Catholic Church wants to care for modern science, that there are real luminaries in it. However, people want this modern scientific way to be applied in connection with the outer sensory world, it wants to distance itself strongly from the conceptions of anything pertaining to spirituality, no statements should be made about this spirituality. Hence it is therefore forbidden to express something about the spiritual, because scientists must not enter into this mix when something is being said about the legitimacy of the spiritual life. So, Catholicism relegates science to its boundaries, it rejects science from all that is theology. That it, for instance in modernism, gradually came into it, has caused Catholicism to experience it as dispensable; hence the war against modernism. The Catholic Church knows precisely that in that moment when science penetrates theology, extraordinary dangers lie ahead, and it is impossible to cope with scientific research in theology.
It is basically quite hopeless if it is expressed in abstract terms: theology we must have but it will be scorched, burnt by modern science.—Where does this come from? That is the next big burning question. Where does this come from?
[ 16 ] Yes, my dear friends, theology as we have it now, is rooted in quite different conditions than those of modern mankind. Ultimately the foundation of theology—if it wants to be correctly understood—is precisely the same foundations as that of the Gospels themselves. I have just expressed a sentence and naturally in its being said, it is not immediately understood, but it has extraordinary importance for our discussions here. Theology as inherited tradition doesn't appear in the form in which modern science appears. Theology is mostly in a form of something handed down, as such it goes back to the earlier ways of understanding. Certainly, logic was later applied to modern theology, which changed the form of theology somewhat; theology no longer appeared as it had been once upon a time. On the other hand, it is Catholicism which actually has something in this relationship which works in an extraordinarily enchanting manner on the more intelligent people and which is firmly adhered to in many Catholic clerics upon studying theology, through what has been handed down as knowledge of the so-called Primordial Revelation (Uroffenbahrung).
[ 17 ] Primordial Revelation! You have to be aware that Catholicism does not merely have the revelation which we usually call the revelation of the New Testament, nor this being only the revelation spoken about in the Old Testament, but that Catholicism—as far as it is theology—speaks about a Primordial Revelation. This Primordial Revelation is usually characterised by saying: that which was revealed by the Christ had been experienced once before by mankind, at that time humanity acquired the revelation through another, a cosmic world milieu. This revelation was lost through the Fall, but an inheritance of this great revelation was still available through the Old Testament and through pagan teachings.—That is Catholic thinking. Once upon a time, before people became sinners, a revelation was made to them; had mankind not fallen into sin, so the entire act of salvation of Christ Jesus would not have become necessary. However, the primordial revelation had been tarnished through humanity falling into the sinful world and in the course of time up to the Mystery of Golgotha the human being increasingly forgot what the primordial revelation had been. To a certain extent in the beginning there still remained glimpses of this primordial revelation, then however, as the generation went further and further away, this primordial revelation darkened, and it had become totally dark in the time of the Mystery of Golgotha which came as a new revelation.
This is what Christianity looks like today—under theological instruction—in Old Testament teaching and above all in the pagan teaching it is seen as a corrupted Primordial Revelation. Catholicism has an insight into what I've often spoken about in Anthroposophy, namely the old Mysteries. In my book Christianity as Mystical Fact I pointed these things out, but, not quite, but only as far as possible because these things are as much unknown as possible in today's world and most people are not prepared for these things. Only, here we can speak about it, and about one point.
[ 18 ] Everywhere in the pagan-religious mysteries there are certain experiences which allowed people to learn more than those communicated outwardly, exoterically, to a large crowd. These experiences didn't happen under supervision but through asceticism, through practice, they happened by the person going through certain experiences; a kind of drama was experienced leading to a culmination, with a catharsis, until the person came to sense the lightening of the divine laws of the world. This is simply a fact and within esoteric Catholicism it engendered an awareness of what existed in the Mysteries. It is even said that modern times are filled with worldly science and that this worldly science must not enter theology with arguments; as a result, we'd rather protect our knowledge of the Mysteries so that worldly science doesn't come in to explain it, because explaining the Mysteries would be a great danger under any circumstances. Catholicism was afraid that scientific involvement would reveal what one could possibly know about such things.
[ 19 ] Now we come to the question: what did the Mysteries actually impart during these olden times? The Mysteries didn't produce a mere theoretical knowledge, it produced an evolution of consciousness, a real transformation of consciousness. A person who had gone through the Mysteries learnt to experience life differently to those people who hadn't gone through them. A person who stands fully awake in the world, experiences outside the sleep state, the outer sense world; he experiences memories, he can through these memories relive his life within himself when after various interruptions he comes to a certain point in his life which lies a couple of years after his birth. With an individual who has gone through hard exercises in the Mysteries, something quite different rises up in his awareness than what he usually can find in his consciousness. In the old Mysteries one expressed this experience as a "rebirth." Why does one call it a rebirth? Because in fact a person goes through a kind of embryonic experience in his consciousness; an awareness comes to the fore in the manner and way the person had lived through during his time as an embryo. During the time of being an embryo, our inner experience is namely of the same kind as are the experiences during thinking, because what is experienced in our senses is only done so through our mother's body. An embryonic experience is woken up, that's why we call it a "rebirth." A person goes back in his embryonic life up to the time of his birth, and so, just like memories rise up, so that what is being experienced also rises up. In this way a person feels himself coming out of a spiritual world, being partially connected to a spiritual world. These were the mysteries of birth, under which time one understood the blossoming of the Mysteries as something which human beings could go through during such an initiation. What he went through during such an initiation was considered a shadowed knowledge of such a state he was in, before he descended into the world of the senses. Thus, through the "rebirth" the human being re-places himself again to a certain extend back into a human form of existence free of sin.
In earlier times, knowledge which was not of this world was called "theology," and this knowledge could be acquired through the return to the wisdom that human beings had had before entering into this world, a wisdom which had been corrupted because people had dragged it into this world.
[ 20 ] I'm sketching these things for you and later we will naturally bring today's considerations to our awareness. Theology in olden times was a gift from the gods, which could only be achieved through such exercises which could lift people out of their senses and bring them at least back to the experience of motherly love, enabling them to take up this wisdom again, this uncorrupted wisdom. This cannot be taken up in the form or modern logical concepts. Within the Mysteries people could not be given logical concepts in the modern sense, they received images. All knowledge which is gained in this way is gained in pictures, images. The more a person actually entered into the real world of existence—not only associated himself with existence—the more he lives into this existence, like when he lives within the existence of motherly love, so much more will consciousness stop living in abstract concepts, so much more will he live in images. Thus, what was designated as "theology" in olden times, in pre-Christian times, visual science, was science living in images. For this reason, I could say: this theology certainly had a similar form of expression as the one living in the Gospels, because in the Gospels we find images, and the further we go back, the more we find that the Gospels are still being expressed in the attitude of the old theology; there is certainly no differentiation between religion and theology. Here theology itself is something which has been received from God, here in theology one looks upon a God, and sees how the theology is given through a communication with God. Here is something which is alive, in theology. Then it came about that theology was experienced differently, somewhat like the conditions in which one lives when you grow older. At that time therefore, in olden times, theology was nourished through the religious life. This particular way of living though-oneself in the world of religious experience, this actually was getting lost to humanity at the same time as the Mystery of Golgotha was occurring.
[ 21 ] So you see, when we look towards the East as it is connected historically to the source of our religious life, we have, we can say, the Indian religious life. What nourishes the Indian religious life? It is nourished through the observation of nature, but the observation of nature was something quite different then to what it is for modern humanity. Nature observation was for all Indians such that one can say: an Indian observed spiritually when looking at nature, but he only observed the spirit which lay beneath the actual being of humanity. The Indian observed the mineral world spiritually, likewise the plant world, animal world; he was aware of the divine spiritual foundation of these worlds; but when he wanted to attain the human world as well, it didn't reveal itself to him. By wanting to access the actual being of the human being in the world, which he had himself, there he found nothing: Nirvana, the entry in nothingness towards what could be perceived in relation to the human being. Thus, the fervour of the Indian's religious life, which certainly was still present at that time, where theology, religion and science were one, was Nirvana. We have an escape from what is perceived from the natural basis of the image-rich consciousness, an escape into Nirvana, where everything that is given to the senses is obliterated. This self-abandonment to Nirvana must be experienced religiously in order to find a possible form for the religious stream of experience for individuals.
[ 22 ] Now, when we consider this religious observation of the world further, with the Persians and later with the Chaldeans, we see how they turn their gaze outward, they don't experience the world like us, they live through a world permeated with spirit, everywhere the spiritual foundation permeates everything, but immobilises it. There is a different disposition with these peoples compared to the Indians. The Indian strived towards mankind and found nothing. The other peoples who lived to the north and west of the Indians didn't strive towards mankind but towards the world, towards the spiritual in the world. They couldn't understand the spiritual world in any other way than to avoid with all their might, what later human evolution could no longer avoid.
[ 23 ] It is unbelievably meaningful, my dear friends, to observe how, on the one hand the old Indian striving came from what he saw, while he, when he strived towards human beings, I might call it, fell into unconsciousness, into Nirvana, while the Old Persian remained in what he was looking at. The divine which is the basis of the mineral, the plant and animal worlds, was understood by the Old Persian and from this came his religious striving; but now he was overcome by fear that he might be urged to seek man, and this turned into abstract thoughts which turned into imagery. This is actually the basic feeling of the near-Asian peoples all the way to Africa. They saw the foundation of nature as being a spiritual world; they didn't see people, but they were afraid to search in people because then they would enter an abstract region, a region into which later, the Romans entered with their religion. Before the Roman time, in the second, third Century there was the aspiration everywhere to avoid entering into abstractions, hence the aspiration to capture what is presented in images. There was even the endeavour to express in images, what one understood, in image form. There was an effort to, in relation to the divine, which one perceives, not to search for it through abstract concepts but in actions made visible; this is the origin of ritual, sacramental action. In this religious area which I'm referring to, is the origin of ritual in worship.
[ 24 ] Now place yourself into this entire development of the old Hebraic peoples; the Judaism which strongly feels the urge for its people's development to enter into what one possesses in one's consciousness. Today I only want to make indications in my presentation in order for us to orientate ourselves. The members of the Hebrew people wanted above all to feel the God on which human nature is based. The Old Indian only sensed God, or the gods, who lay at the basis of sub human nature, and as he tried to penetrate with his consciousness into the human being, there he wanted to rise up into Nirvana. The other, the Persian, Chaldean and Egyptian peoples searched for the connection to the Divine in images and applied these according to their character dispositions, to get up to the human being. So we can see how this urge, as in Judaism, to draw the divine and the human together, to bring the divine in a relationship with the human being, lead to the divine appearing at the same time the foundation of humanity. There was not predisposition to that in the Indian when they sailed into Nirvana; there was no longer a conception that the human consciousness wanted to be reached. For the Indian this personal route to the human soul was to be avoided. This personal route of the human soul had even lead to gradually slipping out of existence into nonexistence, so to speak. The other, the Prussian route, came to a standstill with imagery, remaining in ritual only.
[ 25 ] We see how the Jewish peoples developed, within these strivings, their own special character and this resulted in the impossibility to reach God out of one's own life. One had to wait and see what God himself gave, and it was there that the actual concept of revelation came into being. One had to wait and see what God would give and on the other hand one had to be careful not to search through the route of imagery or symbolism (Bilderweg), which was to be feared. If the route of symbolism was sought, then one arrived at a subhuman God, not at a God who carries humanity. In Judaism the symbolic route was not to be followed, it would not be through ritual an also not through the content of knowledge that one would speak to God. The olden time Jew wanted to meet their god by Him revealing himself, and human beings would communicate in a human way, while from their side, not make outwardly fulfilled sacrifices, but what arises subjectively: the promise—revelation, promise and the contract between both; a judicial relationship one could call it, between the people and their God.
[ 26 ] So the Jewish religion positioned itself and thus the Jewish religion stood in the entire evolution of humanity. therefore, one can say: here already a relationship is the example which is performed in our modern time, where science wants to be beside religion but where science has nothing to say about religion, just like the olden time Jew removed everything which appeared as imagery. This is already performed in Judaism, and precisely in the modern differentiation between knowledge and faith, lies unbelievably much Judaism. In Harnack's The Being of Christianity everything is again based on Judaism. You have to see through this that we get sick with these things.
[ 27 ] Human evolution is penetrated by more and more things. Something is continuously developing which belongs to the Jews in particular: the awareness of personality, which is urged by ego development. With the Greeks there developed a mighty inner world beside the outer world of observed nature but this inner world could raise doubts, because it was observed merely as a world of mythology. Sensing the religious element rising in Hellenism, which lives in Greek mythology, through mythological fantasy, which people are searching for—because it was not to be found in nature—is what rises up in man. The Greek however didn't grasp the actual important point within the human inner life, resulting from mythological fantasy, which the Romans evolved into abstract thinking, which certainly already started with Aristotle, but which was developed particularly in Rome. This abstract way of thinking which is so powerful as to being people to the point of their I, bringing them to self-consciousness, to I-consciousness, this is something which we today still carry in us today and we carry it heavily in us, in the form of modern agnosticism.
[ 28 ] My dear friends, basically there is no spiritual teaching other than modern materialism. This sounds like an extraordinary paradox and yet it is so. What the modern materialistic thinker carries in his head is quite spiritualized, so spiritualised that it is quite abstract and has no connection to reality any more. That's Romanism in full swing. We actually have become unbelievably spiritual in the course of the 19th century, but we deny this spirituality because we maintain that through this spirituality, we can understand matter. In reality our souls are in a spiritualised content, right into our ideas are we spiritualised, but we maintain that through all of this we can only understand a material world. Thus, human beings have grasped their ego through this spiritualisation, but as a result they have become separated from the world. Today humanity must again look for its connection to the world, the search need to be for inner knowledge, there needs to be the possibility to not only have "knowledge without objective meaning" but knowledge with objective meaning, in order for knowledge to reveal the being of the world, and on the other hand to authenticate what is hidden within the human being as objective.
[ 29 ] You see, the Greeks had a great advantage compared to the oriental world, they could to draw together their innermost nature so to speak. From within themselves they could draw a content, but this content could first only attach as filled with fantasy, imagination. However, there was something the Greeks didn't know. They had brought the development of humanity to internalisation but didn't attach it to the inner life. The internalisation and the hardening continued in the Roman times and beyond, and man had to learn—today still we need to learn to understand—how one can attach what is within, what permeates this inner being. The Greeks could think about their gods in grandiose fantasy images but what the Greek could not do, was to pray. The prayer only cam about later and for prayer the possibility had to be found of connecting the one praying, to reality. To this we must connect those times in which prayer was not merely spoken, not merely thought or not merely felt, but in which prayer became one with the sacramental ritual. Then again Catholicism knows quite well why they don't separate themselves from ritual, from the sacrificial act, from the central sacrifice of the mass.
We'll talk more about these things.
Erster Vortrag
[ 1 ] Meine lieben Freunde! Ich danke Herrn Lizentiat Bock herzlich für seine Begrüßung, und ich verspreche Ihnen, daß ich mit allem, was in meinen Kräften ist, dazu beitragen will, daß Sie während dieses Ihres Aufenthaltes hier wirklich, wenigstens teilweise, dasjenige finden können, was Sie suchen.
[ 2 ] Heute möchte ich zunächst einiges Orientierendes besprechen, damit wir uns im richtigen Sinne verstehen können. Denn das wird ja besonders unsere Aufgabe sein —- auch in den verschiedenen Diskussionsstunden, die wir halten werden —, daß wir uns genau aussprechen werden über dasjenige, was eigentlich Ihnen für ihr zukünftiges Wirken ganz besonders auf dem Herzen liegt. Und ich hoffe, daß das, was ich Ihnen werde zu sagen haben, gerade dadurch in der richtigen Weise wird gesagt werden können, wenn ich in den nächsten Diskussionsstunden Ihre Wünsche und die Aufgaben, die Sie sich stellen, werde vernehmen können.
[ 3 ] Anthroposophie, meine lieben Freunde, muß ja durchaus ehrlich auf dem Boden stehenbleiben, von dem ich oftmals gesprochen habe, indem ich sagte: Anthroposophie als solche kann nicht religionsbildend auftreten; Anthroposophie als solche muß sich die begrenzte Aufgabe stellen, als Geisteswissenschaft die gegenwärtige Kultur und Zivilisation zu befruchten, und es kann nicht in ihren Absichten liegen, selber religionsbildend aufzutreten. Eigentlich liegt es ihr ganz fern, in irgendeiner Weise in den Entwickelungsprozeß des religiösen Lebens als solchen unmittelbar einzugreifen. Dennoch ist es, wie mir scheint, durchaus berechtigt gegenüber den Aufgaben, die Sie sich gerade gesetzt haben, daß wir für das religiöse Wirken dasjenige suchen, was aus Anthroposophie gewonnen werden kann. Denn daß mittelbar durch die Anthroposophie gerade für das religiöse Wirken nicht bloß viel gewonnen werden kann, sondern auch gewonnen werden muß, das muß gesagt werden; und Ihre Empfindung ist jedenfalls ganz richtig, daß das religiöse Leben als solches eine Vertiefung braucht, die nur aus den Quellen der anthroposophischen Wissenschaft kommen kann.
[ 4 ] Ich nehme an, meine lieben Freunde, daß Sie sich wirkend in dieses religiöse Leben hineinstellen wollen, und daß Sie diesen anthroposophischen Kurs gesucht haben, weil Sie fühlen, daß man mit dem religiösen Wirken gewissermaßen immer mehr und mehr in eine Sackgasse hineinkommt, und daß in diesem religiösen Wirken heute — durch unsere Traditionen, durch die geschichtliche Entwickelung und durch manches andere, das wir ja noch besprechen werden — Elemente fehlen, die eben darin sein müßten. Wir sehen ja, wie gerade die heute vielleicht bedeutsamsten Persönlichkeiten, welche für das religiöse Wirken eine neue Grundlegung suchen, weil sie glauben, daß man einer solchen bedarf, in einer ganz bestimmten Richtung sich bewegen. Und ich möchte darauf hinweisen als erstes, wie gerade die gewissenhaftesten Persönlichkeiten sich fragen, wie man zu einer sicheren Fundierung des religiösen Bewußtseins kommt, und wie dann diese Persönlichkeiten eigentlich alle mehr oder weniger suchen nach einer Art - man kann es schon nicht anders nennen —, nach einer Art von Philosophie. Ich erinnere Sie nur daran, wie etwa Heim gerade eine Art philosophische Grundlegung für das religiöse Bewußtsein sucht. Gewiß, man muß das aus dem heutigen Zeitbewußtsein heraus durchaus als etwas absolut Notwendiges anerkennen, und man darf nicht übersehen, daß auf diesem Wege ja außerordentlich viel geleistet wird. Aber man kann sich dennoch nicht enthalten, bei unbefangenem Hinsehen auf dasjenige, was da angestrebt wird, zu der Ansicht zu kommen: Solch ein Bestreben führt ja eigentlich statt in das religiöse Leben hinein, aus diesem religiösen Leben heraus. — Denn das religiöse Leben, Sie werden es fühlen, es muß ein unmittelbares sein, es muß etwas sein, was elementar mit der ganzen Menschennatur zusammenhängt, was elementar aus den innersten Gründen dieser menschlichen Natur heraus lebt. Alles philosophische Nachdenken ist ja Reflexion und entfernt sich von diesem unmittelbaren elementaren Erleben. Und wenn ich eine persönliche Empfindung ausdrücken darf, so ist es diese: Wenn jemand über das religiöse Leben philosophiert und glaubt, eine philosophische Grundlegung nütze etwas für das religiöse Erleben, so kommt mir das eigentlich immer so vor, wie wenn man die Ernährungsphysiologie dazu verwenden möchte, um zur Ernährung selbst zu kommen. Nicht wahr, man kann noch so richtig die Grundsätze der Ernährungswissenschaft feststellen, das gibt ja für die Ernährung selbst nichts. Die Ernährungswissenschaft klärt auf über die Ernährung, aber die Ernährung muß doch in der Realität fundiert sein, sie muß in der Wirklichkeit wurzeln; erst dann kann man über die Ernährung philosophieren. So muß auch das religiöse Leben in der Wirklichkeit wurzeln. Es muß in der Realität bestehen, und erst wenn es da ist, kann man darüber philosophieren. Aber fundieren, begründen kann man das religiöse Leben ganz gewiß nicht mit irgendeiner philosophischen Erwägung.
[ 5 ] Das ist das eine. Das andere ist etwas, was ich am besten dadurch bezeichnen möchte - ich weise immer gern auf Realitäten hin -, daß vor jetzt schon mehreren Jahrzehnten gerade in Basel ein Buch entstanden ist, welches den Titel trägt: «Über die Christlichkeit unserer heutigen Theologie» — das Buch ist von Overbeck -, worin der Nachweis geführt wird, daß die moderne Theologie zwar eine Theologie ist, aber eben nicht mehr eigentlich christlich ist. Und nun, wenn man Harnacks Buch «Das Wesen des Christentums» nimmt und bei den Auseinandersetzungen, die er dort gibt, überall statt des Namens «Christus» einfach «Gott» hinsetzt, so würde man an dem inneren Gehalt dieses Harnackschen Buches «Das Wesen des Christentums» nichts besonderes ändern. Das drückt sich ja schon darin aus, daß Adolf Harnack sagt, in die Evangelien gehöre eigentlich nur die Verkündigung vom Vater hinein und nicht die des Christus Jesus, während natürlich die früheren Jahrhunderte der christlichen Entwickelung in den Evangelien vor allen Dingen die Verkündigung des Christus Jesus selber gesehen haben. Aber wenn man in den Evangelien wirklich die eigentliche Verkündigung des Christus Jesus sieht, dann muß man neben dem Vater-Erlebnis, das heißt neben dem Erlebnis eines die Welt allgemein durchwirkenden Gottes, das Christus-Erlebnis als ein besonderes haben. Man muß beide Erlebnisse haben können. Ein Theologe wie Adolf Harnack hat nicht mehr die beiden Erlebnisse, sondern nur das eine GottesErlebnis, daher ist er genötigt, dasjenige, was er bei der Vorstellung des Gottes erlebt, auf den Christus-Namen zu taufen; bloß aus dem historischen Grunde, weil er eben ein Vertreter des Christentums ist, tauft er sein Gottes-Erlebnis auf den Namen Christus.
[ 6 ] Diese einschneidenden, bedeutsamen Dinge sind schon durchaus da. Gewiß, man macht sie sich nicht immer in der gehörigen Weise klar, aber gefühlt werden sie, und ich nehme an, daß in der Gegenwart, wo ja alles in den Gemütern der Menschen aufgerüttelt ist, sich insbesondere jungen Theologen zeigen muß, wie man mit diesen Dingen eben nicht fertig werden kann, wie man gewissermaßen heute Theologe sein kann, ohne von dem eigentlichen Wesen des Christus durchdrungen zu sein. Aus diesem Erlebnis heraus ist ja auch solch ein Buch wie das von Overbeck über die Christlichkeit der heutigen Theologie entstanden, worin im Grunde die Antwort gegeben wird, daß die moderne Theologie nicht mehr christlich ist, weil man es nur zu tun hat mit einem allgemeinen Philosophieren über einen die Welt durchziehenden Gott, aber nicht im eigentlichen Sinn das Christus-Erlebnis der ganzen Behandlung der religiösen Probleme zugrundegelegt werden kann. Es wird der Behandlung der religiösen Probleme nur das Vater-Problem zugrundegelegt, nicht eigentlich das Christus-Erlebnis.
[ 7 ] Nun haben wir ja im Grunde heute alle die Erziehung im Leibe, die von der modernen Wissenschaftlichkeit herrührt, von jener Wissenschaftlichkeit, die eigentlich erst seit der Mitte des 15. Jahrhunderts in der modernen Zivilisation zu wirken begonnen hat, die aber heute eingegangen ist in alles Denken der modernen Menschen. Man kann im Grunde gar nicht anders, weil man von der Schule so erzogen wird von der untersten Volksschulklasse her, als in den Formen denken, wie die moderne Wissenschaftlichkeit sie angenommen hat. Daher ist es gekommen, daß auch die Theologie des 19. Jahrhunderts sich orientieren wollte in Gemäßheit dieser Formen der modernen Wissenschaftlichkeit. Ich möchte sagen, sie fühlte sich verantwortlich vor dem Richterstuhl dieser modernen Wissenschaftlichkeit und ist dadurch das geworden, was sie eben heute geworden ist. Man kann eben heute nicht anders den rechten Weg zur Begründung einer echten Religiosität finden, als dadurch, daß man zugleich die ganze Berechtigung und die ganze Bedeutung des wissenschaftlichen Lebens ins Auge faßt.
[ 8 ] Ich habe vielleicht vor einigen von Ihnen schon hingewiesen auf einen in bezug auf das religiöse Leben ernst zu nehmenden Mann, auf Gideon Spicker, der lange Zeit an der Universität Münster Philosophie gelehrt hat, der ausgegangen ist von einem streng christlichen Erfassen der Welt, und der dann immer mehr und mehr hinüber sich entwickelt hat zur Philosophie, der aber niemals eigentlich die Philosophie als etwas anderes betrachtet hat, als ein Instrument zur Erfassung der religiösen Probleme. Aber es gab ihm das moderne Denken nicht die Möglichkeit, eine sichere Grundlage dafür zu finden. Und so finden wir in seinem Büchelchen, das den Titel trägt «Am Wendepunkt der christlichen Weltperiode», die Ratlosigkeit des modernen Menschen von ihm so charakterisiert, daß er sagt: Wir haben heute eine Metaphysik ohne transzendentale Überzeugung, wir haben eine Erkenntnistheorie ohne objektive Bedeutung, wir haben eine Psychologie ohne Seele, eine Logik ohne Inhalt, eine Ethik ohne Verbindlichkeit, und wir können deshalb im Grunde genommen nicht irgendeine Fundierung für das religiöse Bewußtsein finden. — Gideon Spicker stand da sehr, sehr nahe an der eigentlichen Crux, die doch allen religiösen Zwiespälten des modernen Menschen zugrundeliegt. Man kann da wie an einem Symptom zeigen, wo die eigentliche Crux, möchte ich sagen, liegt. Wenn der moderne Mensch erkennt, wenn er also versucht, sich durch Vorstellungen ein Bild von der Welt zu machen, so hat er zugleich das Gefühl, daß dieses Erkennen nicht in die Tiefen eindringt. Gideon Spicker drückt es so aus: «Wir haben eine Erkenntnistheorie ohne objektive Bedeutung», das heißt, wir haben unsere Erkenntnisse, ohne daß wir in der Lage sind, in uns die Kraft zu finden, dasjenige, was wir als Erkenntnisse bilden, auf ein wirklich Objektives zu beziehen. Und so krankt der erkennende Mensch in der modernen Zeit daran, daß er eben nicht die Möglichkeit findet, in seiner Erkenntnis eine Garantie für die Objektivität des Wesens der Welt, für das Dasein als solches zu haben. Er findet sich aus dem, was er subjektiv erlebt in der Erkenntnis, eigentlich nicht richtig heraus.
[ 9 ] Das alles hat selbstverständlich, eben weil es Philosophie ist, mit dem religiösen Erleben nichts zu tun. Dennoch kann man sagen, daß das religiöse Erleben heute durchaus unter einem Einfluß steht, der nach einer ähnlichen Richtung geht. Denn eine Menschheit, welche nicht in der Lage ist, von der Erkenntnis zu sagen: in dieser Erkenntnis ergibt sich mir ein objektives Sein —, eine solche Menschheit fühlt dieselbe Haltlosigkeit dann an einem anderen Punkte auftauchen, und das ist das religiöse Leben. Da taucht dieselbe Haltlosigkeit da auf, wo der eigentliche Angelpunkt des religiösen Lebens heute liegt. Wir werden sehen, wie sich um diesen Angelpunkt die verschiedensten anderen Probleme herumgruppieren. Dieser Angelpunkt liegt in dem Gebet, in der Bedeutung des Gebetes. Der religiöse Mensch muß fühlen, daß das Gebet eine reale Bedeutung haben muß; man muß im Gebet mit irgendeiner Realität zusammenhängen. Aber in einem Zeitalter, in dem der erkennende Mensch aus seiner [subjektiven] Erkenntnis nicht herauskommt und in der Erkenntnis nicht eine Realität ergreifen kann, in demselben Zeitalter findet der religiöse Mensch nicht die Möglichkeit, wenn er betet, sich bewußt zu werden, daß das Gebet nicht bloß eine subjektive Tat ist, sondern daß in diesem Gebet ein objektives Erleben vorhanden ist. Und der Mensch, der sich nicht klar darüber werden kann, daß im Beten ein objektives Erleben vorhanden ist, für den ist es unmöglich, einen richtigen religiösen Halt zu finden. Im Gebete muß sich, gerade für den heutigen Menschen bei seiner Veranlagung, das religiöse Leben konzentrieren. Die verschiedenen anderen Gebiete müssen sich im Gebet konzentrieren. Aber ein Gebet, das nur subjektive Bedeutung hätte, das würde den Menschen religiös haltlos machen müssen.
[ 10 ] Es ist dieselbe Wurzel, aus der heute bei uns auf der einen Seite herauswächst die Haltlosigkeit der Erkenntnis, das Ignorabimus, und auf der anderen Seite die Angst, die Sorge, daß man mit dem Gebete nicht in einer göttlichen Objektivität lebt, sondern vielleicht nur mit seiner Subjektivität beschäftigt ist.
[ 11 ] Sehen Sie, das Glaubensproblem und das Wissensproblem, alle Probleme, die von der theologischen Seite her den Menschen beschäftigen, sie hängen mit dem eben Charakterisierten zusammen. Und auch alles dasjenige, was den Menschen bedrückt von der Seite des unmittelbaren religiösen Erlebens her, das Sicherheit haben muß, Halt haben muß, das rührt auch aus dieser selben Quelle her. Und man kommt gegenüber dieser Frage wohl kaum zurecht, wenn man nicht sich ein wenig geschichtlich orientiert, wo es uns ganz deutlich vor Augen tritt, wie weit wir eigentlich mit der heutigen Wissenschaftlichkeit von dem entfernt sind, was wir die Christlichkeit nennen können, während auf der anderen Seite heute fortwährend das Bestreben vorhanden ist, die Christlichkeit mit der Wissenschaftlichkeit auszusöhnen. Nehmen Sie alles dasjenige, was Evangelium, was christliche Tradition ist. Sie können nicht anders, als sich sagen: darin ist eine andere Auffassung des Menschen als in der modernen Wissenschaftlichkeit. In der modernen Wissenschaftlichkeit wird der Mensch zurückgeführt auf irgendeinen primitiven Urmenschen - ich will gar nicht sagen, daß der sich nun vielleicht gar aus tierischen Vorfahren entwickelt haben soll -, wir werden zurückgeführt auf einen Urmenschen primitiver Art, der sich allmählich entwickelt hat, und in dessen Entwickelung eine Progression, ein Fortschritt liegt. Und die moderne Menschheit ist aus naturwissenschaftlichen Untergründen befriedigt im Hinblicken auf den primitiven Urmenschen, der durch eine gewisse in ihm liegende Kraft, wie man sagt, sich zu immer größerer und noch größerer Kulturvollkommenheit heraufgebildet hat, und dem ungeahnte Zukunften in bezug auf diese Vollendung vor Augen stehen können. Stellt man in diese Entwickelung den Christus hinein, das Mysterium von Golgatha, so kann man, wenn man in ehrlicher Weise an den Evangelien festhält, nicht anders als sagen: da hinein paßt er nicht, da hinein paßt eine Geschichtsauffassung, die gewissermaßen um das Mysterium von Golgatha herumgeht und es ausläßt, aber es paßt nicht eigentlich der Christus der Evangelien in diese Auffassung hinein. Der Christus der Evangelien ist nicht anders denkbar, als wenn man etwas voraussetzt, was noch im 18. Jahrhundert gerade bei den aufgeklärtesten, bei den geistigsten Menschen als eine Selbstverständlichkeit vorhanden war. Zum Beispiel bei Saint-Martin — ich will jetzt absehen von der religiösen Entwickelung und will nur hinweisen auf jemanden, der im eminentesten Sinne Wissenschaftler war für das 18. Jahrhundert, und das war Saint-Martin —, da ist durchaus ein deutliches Bewußtsein vorhanden davon, daß der Mensch im Beginne seiner Erdenentwickelung aus einer gewissen Höhe heruntergestürzt ist, daß er früher in einem anderen Weltmilieu war, in einer anderen Umgebung, und durch ein gewaltiges Ereignis, durch eine Krise heruntergeworfen worden ist in eine Sphäre, die unterhalb seines früheren Daseinsniveaus lag, so daß der Mensch in seiner gegenwärtigen Entwickelung gewissermaßen dasjenige nicht ist, was er einmal war.
[ 12 ] Während also unsere neuzeitliche Naturwissenschaft auf die Entwickelung des primitiven Urmenschen zurückweist, der sich heraufgearbeitet hat, muß diese andere Anschauung, die Anschauung Saint-Martins, zurückweisen auf den gefallenen Menschen, auf den Menschen, der einmal etwas Höheres war. Das ist etwas, wie gesagt, was bei Saint-Martin wie eine Selbstverständlichkeit auftritt, und bei Saint-Martin herrscht etwas, was er wie eine Art Schamgefühl des Menschen über seinen Fall empfindet. Sehen Sie, wenn man den Christus in eine solche [Auffassung der] Menschenentwickelung hineinstellt, wo der Mensch, indem er das Erdendasein beginnt, heruntergestiegen ist und nun niedriger ist, als er einmal war, dann wird der Christus zu demjenigen Wesen, das den Menschen rettet vor dem Zustande des fortlaufenden Fallens, dann trägt der Christus den Menschen wiederum hinauf zu demjenigen Zustande, in dem er früher war.
[ 13 ] Wir werden ja sehen, in welcher Modifikation diese Vorstellung vor unsere Seele treten muß. Aber jedenfalls haben wir es da durchaus zu tun mit einer Inkommensurabilität zwischen unserer modernen Auffassung von der Entwickelung des Menschen und der Auffassung der Evangelien, und es ist immer eine Unehrlichkeit, wenn man hin und her laboriert und sich nicht gesteht, daß man eigentlich nicht zu gleicher Zeit ein Anhänger der modernen naturwissenschaftlichen Denkweise und ein Christ sein kann. Das müßte eigentlich für jeden ehrlichen, insbesondere für den religiös ehrlich empfindenden Menschen klar sein. Da gibt es etwas, was als erstes überbrückt werden muß, wenn das religiöse Leben wieder gesunden soll. Ohne diese Überbrückung gesundet das religiöse Leben nie und nimmermehr. Eigentlich erscheinen einem Leute wie David Friedrich Strauß, der die Frage «Sind wir noch Christen?» mit einem Nein beantwortet hat, doch ehrlicher als manche der neueren Theologen, die immer wieder und wiederum die eigentlich radikale Differenz zwischen dem, was der moderne Mensch als seine Wissenschaft ansieht und der Evangelien-Auffassung des Christus nicht überblicken. Und diesen Charakter trägt ja die moderne Theologie. Sie ist im Grunde genommen der ohnmächtige Versuch, die Christus-Auffassung der Evangelien in irgendeiner Weise so zu behandeln, daß man sich vor der modernen Wissenschaft rechtfertigen kann. Und da entsteht ja nichts, was sich irgendwie halten läßt.
[ 14 ] Ja, aber eine Theologie ist doch da. Der moderne Seelsorger hat eigentlich an der Theologie, die ihm heute die Schule gibt, eine sehr geringe Stütze für sein Amt, aus Gründen, die schon in dem Angedeuteten liegen, auf die wir ja noch zu sprechen kommen im Verlaufe unserer Auseinandersetzungen. Der moderne Seelsorger muß ja natürlich Theologe sein, obwohl ganz gewiß Theologie nicht Religion ist. Aber um zu wirken, braucht man eine theologische Durchbildung, und diese theologische Vorbildung leidet an all den Gebrechen, die ich kurz in dieser Einleitung heute angedeutet habe.
[ 15 ] Sehen Sie, die katholische Kirche weiß ganz gut, was sie tut, indem sie die moderne Wissenschaft nicht in die Theologie eindringen läßt. Nicht als ob die katholische Kirche nicht die moderne Wissenschaft pflegte, die pflegt sie erst recht. Die größten Gelehrten kann man durchaus innerhalb der katholischen Theologenschaft finden. Ich erinnere nur an den Pater Secchi, einen großen Astrophysiker, ich erinnere an solche Menschen wie Wasmann, der ein bedeutender Zoologe ist, und an viele andere wäre zu erinnern, vor allen Dingen wäre zu erinnern an die außerordentlich bedeutsamen wissenschaftlichen Leistungen, weltlich-wissenschaftlichen Leistungen des Benediktinerordens und so weiter. Aber welche Rolle spielt die moderne Wissenschaftlichkeit innerhalb der katholischen Kirche? Die katholische Kirche will, daß die moderne Wissenschaftlichkeit gepflegt wird, daß in ihr wirkliche Koryphäen vorhanden sind. Aber man will diese moderne Wissenschaftlichkeit lediglich betäugen in bezug auf die äußere Sinneswelt, sie soll sich streng fernhalten von der Erfassung von irgend etwas Geistigem, sie soll gar nichts aussagen über dieses Geistige. Ihr ist geradezu verboten, über das Geistige etwas auszusagen; da haben sich die Wissenschaften nicht hineinzumischen, wenn über die Berechtigung des geistigen Lebens irgend etwas gesagt wird. So verweist der Katholizismus die Wissenschaft in ihre Grenzen, er weist sie hinaus aus alle dem, was Theologie ist. Daß sie, wie zum Beispiel im Modernismus, nach und nach doch hineingekommen ist, das hat ja der Katholizismus als etwas sehr Unzukömmliches empfunden; daher sein Kampf gegen den Modernismus. Die katholische Kirche weiß eben genau: In dem Augenblick, wo Wissenschaft in die Theologie eindringt, da liegen außerordentliche Gefahren vor, und man kann unmöglich mit wissenschaftlichen Forschungen in der Theologie zurechtkommen. — Es ist eigentlich im Grunde genommen etwas Trostloses, wenn man es in dieser Abstraktheit ausspricht: Theologie müssen wir doch haben, aber sie wird uns versengt, verbrannt von der modernen Wissenschaftlichkeit. - Woher kommt das? Das ist zunächst die große brennende Frage. Woher kommt das?
[ 16 ] Ja, meine lieben Freunde, die Theologie, wie wir sie zunächst haben, wurzelt eben in ganz anderen Voraussetzungen als es diejenigen des modernen Menschen eigentlich sind. Schließlich sind schon die Grundlagen der Theologie - wenn sie nur richtig verstanden werden — auch genau dieselben wie die Grundlagen des Evangeliums selber. Ich spreche damit einen Satz aus, der natürlich, indem er so ausgesprochen wird, nicht gleich verständlich sein wird, der aber gerade für unsere Auseinandersetzungen hier von außerordentlicher Wichtigkeit und Bedeutung ist. Die Theologie, wie sie überliefert ist, tritt eben gar nicht in der Form auf, in der die moderne Wissenschaftlichkeit auftritt. Die Theologie ist zum großen Teil auch in ihren Formen etwas Überliefertes; sie führt als solche zurück in frühere Auffassungsweisen der Menschen. Gewiß, man hat später ja die moderne Logik auf die moderne Theologie angewendet, dadurch ist die Form der Theologie etwas verändert worden; man sieht dadurch nicht mehr recht zurück auf dasjenige, was Theologie einmal war. Wiederum ist es der Katholizismus, der eigentlich in dieser Beziehung etwas in sich hat, was außerordentlich berückend wirkt auf die mehr intelligenten Leute, und festgehalten werden viele Kleriker im Katholizismus, wenn sie Theologie studieren, durch dasjenige, was ihnen da überliefert wird als die Kunde von der sogenannten Uroffenbarung.
[ 17 ] Uroffenbarung! Man muß sich nämlich klar sein darüber, daß der Katholizismus nicht bloß die Offenbarung hat, von der man gewöhnlich spricht als der Offenbarung des Neuen Testamentes, und auch nicht nur die Offenbarung, von der man gewöhnlich als von der Offenbarung des Alten Testamentes spricht, sondern der Katholizismus — soweit er Theologie ist — spricht von einer Uroffenbarung. Und es wird diese Uroffenbarung zumeist so charakterisiert, daß gesagt wird: Dasjenige, was durch Christus offenbart worden ist, das ist den Menschen schon früher einmal offenbart worden; damals haben die Menschen diese Offenbarung in einem anderen, in einem kosmischen Weltenmilieu bekommen, und durch den Sündenfall ist diese Offenbarung verlorengegangen, aber eine Erbschaft dieser Uroffenbarung war noch vorhanden durch das Alte 'Testament und durch die heidnischen Lehren. — Das ist katholische Auffassung. Es war einmal, bevor der Mensch sündig geworden ist, an den Menschen eine Offenbarung ergangen; hätte sich der Mensch nicht in die Sünde geworfen, so wäre die ganze Erlösungstat des Christus-Jesus nicht nötig geworden. Aber die Uroffenbarung ist getrübt worden, indem der Mensch heruntergestiegen ist in die sündige Welt, und im Verlaufe der Zeit bis zu dem Mysterium von Golgatha hat der Mensch immer mehr und mehr das vergessen, was der Inhalt der Uroffenbarung war. Gewissermaßen im Anfange erglänzte der Inhalt dieser Uroffenbarung noch, dann aber, als die Generationen weiter- und weiterschritten, verdunkelte sich diese Uroffenbarung, und sie war völlig verdunkelt in der Zeit, als durch das Mysterium von Golgatha die neue Offenbarung kam. - So sieht das Christentum — wo Theologie gelehrt wird — heute noch in den alttestamentlichen Lehren und vor allen Dingen auch in den heidnischen Lehren eine korrumpierte Uroffenbarung. Der Katholizismus hat schon eine Einsicht in das, worüber ich ja oftmals in der Anthroposophie gesprochen habe: in die alten Mysterien. In meinem Buche «Das Christentum als mystische Tatsache» habe ich auf diese Dinge hingedeutet, aber, nicht wahr, nur soweit es eben geht, weil die Dinge ja der heutigen Welt so unbekannt wie nur möglich sind und die meisten Menschen auf diese Dinge gar nicht vorbereitet sind. Aber hier können wir genauer darüber sprechen, namentlich über einen Punkt.
[ 18 ] Es gab überall in den heidnisch-religiösen Mysterien gewisse Erfahrungen, durch welche die Leute mehr erfuhren, als eben äußerlich, exoterisch, der großen Menge mitgeteilt werden konnte. Dieses Erfahren aber geschah nicht durch Unterweisung, sondern es geschah durch Askesis, durch Übung, es geschah, indem der Mensch gewisse Erlebnisse durchmachte; er erlebte eine Art Dramatik mit einem Höhepunkt, mit einer Katharsis, bis er hinkam zu einem Erleben des Aufleuchtens der göttlichen Weltgesetze. Dies ist einfach eine Tatsache, und es gibt schon innerhalb des esoterischen Katholizismus ein Bewußtsein davon, daß so etwas wie diese Mysterien vorhanden war. Aber man sagt eben, die moderne Zeit ist von weltlicher Wissenschaft erfüllt, und diese weltliche Wissenschaft hat in die Theologie nicht hineinzureden; daher bewahren wir lieber unser Wissen von den Mysterien, damit nicht die weltliche Wissenschaft herankommt und diese Mysterien erklärt. Denn das Erklären der Mysterien würde unter allen Umständen eine große Gefahr sein. Der Katholizismus fürchtet sich davor, die Wissenschaft herankommen zu lassen an dasjenige, was man über solche Dinge wissen kann.
[ 19 ] Nun handelt es sich um die Frage: Was haben denn die Mysterien eigentlich vermittelt in jenen alten Zeiten? Die Mysterien lieferten nicht bloß eine theoretische Erkenntnis, sie lieferten eine Umwandlung des Bewußtseins, eine richtige Umwandlung des Bewußtseins. Der Mensch, der durch die Mysterien gegangen war, lernte die Welt anders zu erleben als derjenige, der nicht durch die Mysterien gegangen war. Der Mensch, der wachend in der Welt drinnensteht, erlebt außerhalb des Schlafzustandes die äußere Sinneswelt, er erlebt seine Erinnerung, er kann durch die Erinnerung sein eigenes Leben innerlich zurückerleben, wenn auch vielleicht mit vielfachen Unterbrechungen, bis zu einem gewissen Punkt seines Lebens, der ein paar Jahre nach der Geburt liegt. Bei dem Menschen nun, der in den Mysterien durch harte Übungen gegangen war, leuchtete in sein Bewußtsein etwas ganz anderes herein als das, was er in seinem gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein haben konnte. Man drückte das in den alten Mysterien dadurch aus, daß man das, was der Mensch da erlebte, eine «Wiedergeburt» nannte. Warum nannte man das eine Wiedergeburt? Weil in der Tat bei dem Menschen dadurch ein Bewußtsein auftrat von einer Art embryonalen Erfahrens; ein Bewußtsein trat auf von der Art und Weise des Lebens, das der Mensch durchmacht während der Embryonalzeit. Nun ist es während der Embryonalzeit so, daß der Mensch innerlich nur so erlebt, wie wir sonst Gedanken erleben, während er dasjenige, was die Sinne wahrnehmen, durch den mütterlichen Leib erlebt. Dieses scheinbar mittelbare, aber eigentlich viel unmittelbarere Erleben der Welt, das wurde in dem Mysterienschüler erweckt. Ein embryonales Erleben wurde erweckt; deshalb nannte man dies die «Wiedergeburt». Man ging die Zeit des embryonalen Erlebens durch bis zur Geburt, und so, wie sonst Erinnerungen auftauchen, so tauchte durch das, was da erlebt wurde, auf, daß der Mensch sich herauskommend fühlte aus einer geistigen Welt, wie noch halb zusammenhängend mit einer geistigen Welt. Das waren die Mysterien der Geburt, und darunter verstand man in der Zeit der Blüte der Mysterien dasjenige, was der Mensch durch eine solche Einweihung erhalten konnte. Dasjenige, was er durch eine solche Einweihung erhielt, das betrachtete man als ein abgeschattetes Wissen von einem solchen Zustande, [in dem der Mensch war,] bevor er in die Sinneswelt heruntergefallen ist. Also durch die «Wiedergeburt» versetzte man sich in einer gewissen Weise zurück in eine sündenfreie menschliche Daseinsform. Und man nannte [in früherer Zeit] nur das Wissen «Theologie», das nicht von dieser Welt war, sondern das nur zu gewinnen war durch Zurückgehen auf ein Wissen, das der Mensch vor [dem Eintreten in] diese Welt hatte, und das korrumpiert worden ist, indem der Mensch in diese Welt eingezogen ist.
[ 20 ] Ich schildere Ihnen diese Dinge, und wir werden sie natürlich später in bezug auf unser heutiges Bewußtsein zu betrachten Kaben. Theologie war [in der alten Zeit] eine Gabe Gottes, die nur erlangt werden konnte durch solche Übungen, die den Menschen aus der Welt der Sinne heraushoben, ihn wieder zurückbrachten wenigstens bis zu dem Erleben im mütterlichen Leibe, und ihn dadurch fähig machten, dasjenige [Wissen] wiederum aufzunehmen, das noch unkorrumpiert war. Aber das kann man nicht so aufnehmen, daß man es [in der Form] moderner logischer Begriffe bekommt. In den Mysterien bekamen die Leute nicht logische Begriffe im modernen Sinn, sondern sie bekamen Bilder. Alles Wissen, das auf diese Weise errungen wird, wird in Bildern, in Anschauungen errungen. Je mehr man nämlich in die wirkliche Welt des Daseins hineintaucht — nicht bloß «herumgeht» im Dasein —, je mehr man drinnenlebt im Dasein, so wie man auch im mütterlichen Leibe im Dasein drinnenlebt, desto mehr hört das Bewußtsein auf, in logisch abstrakten Begriffen zu leben, desto mehr lebt es in Bildern. Daher war dasjenige, was «Theologie» bei den Alten war, die Theologie der vorchristlichen Zeit, bildhafte Wissenschaft, Wissenschaft, die in Bildern lebte. Und deshalb darf ich sagen: Diese Theologie war durchaus einer solchen Ausdrucksform ähnlich, wie sie in den Evangelien lebt. Denn in den Evangelien finden wir eben auch Bilder, und je weiter wir zurückgehen, desto mehr finden wir, daß in den Evangelien noch gesprochen wird in der Haltung der alten Theologie; da ist durchaus nicht eine Differenzierung vorhanden zwischen Religion und Theologie, da ist die Theologie selbst etwas, was man von Gott empfängt, da sieht man in der Theologie hinauf zu Gott, da sieht man, wie einem die Theologie gegeben ist durch einen Verkehr mit Gott. Da ist es etwas Lebendiges, Theologie zu haben. Dann ist das gekommen, daß die Theologie [anders] erlebt wurde, etwa wie die Zustände, in die man sich hineinlebt, indem man älter wird. Damals also, in alten Zeiten, nährte sich die Theologie aus dem religiösen Erleben. Und diese besondere Art des Sich-Hineinlebens in die Welt [des religiösen Erlebens], sie ging eigentlich für die Menschheit äußerlich verloren in derselben Zeit, in der das Mysterium von Golgatha sich vollzogen hat.
[ 21 ] Sehen Sie, wenn Sie nach dem Orient blicken, mit dem ja durchaus die Quellen unseres religiösen Lebens in historischer Beziehung zusammenhängen, haben Sie, sagen wir, das indische religiöse Leben. Woraus nährt sich denn dieses indische religiöse Leben? Es nährt sich aus der Naturwahrnehmung, aber die Naturwahrnehmung war für die Inder eben ganz etwas anderes, als sie es für den modernen Menschen ist. Diese Naturwahrnehmung war für den Inder durchaus so, daß man sagen kann: Er nahm, indem er die Natur beobachtete, geistig wahr, aber er nahm nur solches geistig wahr, das unterhalb der eigentlichen Wesenheit des Menschen lag. Er nahm geistig wahr die mineralische Welt, die pflanzliche Welt, die tierische Welt, er war sich sogar einer göttlich-geistigen Grundlage dieser Welt bewußt; aber wollte er zu dem Menschlichen selbst kommen, dann enthüllte sich ihm das nicht in seiner Welt. Da, indem er das eigentliche Wesen des Menschen heraufbringen wollte in die Welt, die er hatte, da ergab sich ihm nichts: Nirwana, Eintritt ins Nichts gegenüber dem, was [in bezug auf den Menschen] wahrgenommen werden konnte. Daher diese Inbrunst [des indischen religiösen Lebens], das durchaus noch in dem Zeitalter lag, wo Theologie, Religion und Wissenschaft eins waren, für das Nirwana. Wir haben da eine Flucht aus dem, was aus der Naturgrundlage mit dem alten Bilderbewußtsein wahrgenommen wird, eine Flucht in das Nirwana hinein, wo alles verweht, was den Sinnen gegeben ist. Dieses Sichhingebenwollen an das Nirwana muß man ganz religiös [nach-Jempfinden, um eine der möglichen Formen zu haben für die religiösen Empfindungsströme der Menschen.
[ 22 ] Dann, wenn wir das religiöse Anschauen der Welt etwas weiter herauf bei den Persern und bei den späteren Chaldäern betrachten, sehen wir: sie wenden den Blick hinaus, sie erleben die Welt nicht so wie wir, sie erleben eine durchgeistigte Welt, sie erleben überall in den Dingen die geistigen Untergründe, aber sie halten sie fest. Es ist eine andere Charakteranlage bei diesen Völkern als bei den Indern. Die Inder streben nach dem Menschen hin, und den finden sie nicht. Die anderen Völker, die nördlich und westlich von Indien lebten, streben nicht nach dem Menschen hin, sondern sie streben nach der Welt, nach dem Geistigen in der Welt hin. Sie können dieses Geistige der Welt nicht anders erfassen, als indem sie mit aller Kraft das vermeiden, was in der späteren Menschheitsentwickelung nicht mehr vermieden werden konnte.
[ 23 ] Es ist ungeheuer bedeutsam, meine lieben Freunde, wahrzunehmen, wie auf der einen Seite der alte Inder herausstrebt aus dem, was er sieht, weil er, wenn er nach dem Menschen strebt, ich möchte sagen, in die Bewußtlosigkeit fällt, in das Nirwana, während der Urperser stehenbleibt in dem, was er sieht. Das Göttliche, das der mineralischen, der pflanzlichen, der tierischen Welt zugrundeliegt, wird von dem Urperser ergriffen, nach dem geht sein religiöses Streben, aber nun überfällt ihn die Angst, er könnte gedrängt werden, den Menschen zu suchen, und das würde ihn zu einer abstrakten Gedankenauffassung desjenigen geführt haben, was er da in Bildern wahrnahm. So ist eigentlich die Grundempfindung dieser vorderasiatischen Völker bis herüber nach Afrika. Sie sehen auf dem Grund der Natur eine geistige Welt; sie sehen den Menschen nicht, aber sie haben auch Angst, den Menschen zu sehen, denn sie fühlen, sie kommen da in eine abstrakte Region hinein, in die Region, in die später die Römer hineingekommen sind mit ihrer Religion. Wir haben vor der römischen Zeit, im zweiten, dritten Jahrtausend, überall das Bestreben, das Hineinkommen in die Abstraktheit zu vermeiden, dafür aber das Bestreben, dasjenige zu erfassen, was sich in Bildern ergibt. Und man sucht eben, dasjenige, was man in Bildern erfaßt, selber in Bildern auszudrücken, man sucht, die Beziehung zum Göttlichen, das man erschaut, nicht durch abstrakte Begriffe, sondern in Bildhandlungen zu finden; das ist der Ursprung des Kultus. Auf diesem religiösen Gebiet, auf das ich hindeute, da ist der Ursprung des Kultus.
[ 24 ] Und nun stellen Sie sich in diese ganze Entwickelung das alte hebräische Volk hinein, das Judentum, das vermöge seiner Volksentwickelung den Drang stark verspürt, den Menschen nun hineinzustellen in dasjenige, was man im Bewußtsein hat. Ich will heute nur andeutend sprechen, damit wir uns orientieren. Der Angehörige des hebräischen Volkes wollte vor allen Dingen den Gott, der der menschlichen Natur zugrundeliegt, erfühlen. Der Inder hat nur den Gott oder die Götter gefühlt, die der untermenschlichen Natur zugrundeliegen, und als er heraufgedrungen ist mit seinem Bewußtsein zum Menschlichen, da wollte er aufgehen im Nirwana. Die anderen, die persischen, chaldäischen, ägyptischen Völker suchten die Verbindung mit der Gottheit im Bilde und vermieden es infolge ihrer Charakteranlage, bis zum Menschen heraufzudringen. Und so können wir sehen, wie im Judentum dieser Drang, das Göttliche mit dem Menschlichen zusammenzubringen, das Göttliche mit dem Menschen in ein Verhältnis zu bringen, [dazu führt,] daß das Göttliche zu gleicher Zeit als die Grundlage des Menschlichen selbst erscheint. Dazu war keine Veranlagung da im Indischen, da segelte man hinein ins Nirwana; man hatte keine Vorstellungen mehr, wenn man [zum Bewußtsein] des Menschlichen kommen wollte. Es mußte [im Indischen] vermieden werden dieser Eigenweg der menschlichen Seele. Dieser Eigenweg der menschlichen Seele hat eben dazu geführt, gewissermaßen aus dem Dasein heraus ins Nichtdasein hineinzugleiten. Der andere, der persische Weg, ist bei Bildern stehengeblieben, er ist beim bloßen Kultus stehengeblieben.
[ 25 ] Wir sehen das jüdische Volk gewissermaßen mitten in diesen Bestrebungen drinnen seine besondere Eigenart entwickeln, und da ergab sich zunächst die Unmöglichkeit, aus dem Eigenleben heraus zum Gott zu kommen. Man mußte abwarten, was der Gott selber gab, und es entstand da der eigentliche Offenbarungsbegriff. Man mußte abwarten, was der Gott gab, und auf der anderen Seite wollte man sich hüten, den Bilderweg zu suchen, den man fürchtete, Wenn man den Bilderweg sucht, kommt man zu einem untermenschlichen Gott, nicht zu dem das Menschliche tragenden Gott. Der Bilderweg sollte nicht gesucht werden [im Judentum, und] nicht durch Kultushandlungen wollte man mit dem Gotte sprechen, aber auch nicht durch Erkenntnisinhalt. Der alte Jude wollte den Gott so erkunden, daß der Gott sich offenbaren sollte, und der Mensch sollte menschlich mit dem Gott verkehren, indem er seinerseits nun nicht Opferhandlungen in Anschlag brachte, die sich im Äußeren vollzogen, sondern etwas, was nur aus der Subjektivität hervorgeht: das Versprechen — Offenbaren, Versprechen, und der Vertrag zwischen beiden, ein juristisches Verhältnis, möchte man sagen, zwischen dem Menschen und seinem Gott.
[ 26 ] So stellte sich die jüdische Religion hinein und so steht die jüdische Religion drinnen in der ganzen Entwickelung der Menschheit. So daß man sagen kann: Da ist schon dasjenige Verhältnis vorgebildet, das noch in unsere moderne Zeit sehr hereinspielt, wo man die Wissenschaft beseitigen möchte [aus der Religion], so daß die Wissenschaft nichts zu sagen habe [in der Religion], ebenso wie der alte Jude alles wegtat, was in Bildern vorhanden war. Das alles ist im Judentum schon vorgebildet, und gerade in der modernen Unterscheidung zwischen Wissen und Glauben liegt ungeheuer viel Judentum. In Harnacks «Wesen des Christentums» ist alles wieder aufgenommen aus dem Judentum. Das muß man durchschauen, daß wir an diesen Dingen kranken.
[ 27 ] Immer mehr und mehr drangen in die Menschheitsentwickelung andere Dinge ein. Immer mehr entwickelte sich dasjenige, was dem Juden eigen war: das Persönlichkeitsbewußtsein, das nach der IchEntwickelung hindrängt. Beim Griechen entwickelte sich neben dem äußeren Naturanschauen eine mächtige innere Welt, aber sie war eine Welt, deren Gültigkeit man bezweifeln konnte, weil man sie bloß als eine Welt des Mythologischen anschaute. Fühlen Sie im Griechentum, im religiösen Element des Griechentums, dieses Aufleuchten, das durch die griechische Mythologie, durch die mythologisierende Phantasie lebt, die den Menschen zu finden sucht — den man nicht in der Natur finden kann — durch dasjenige, was im Menschen aufsteigt. Aber der Grieche erfaßt noch nicht den eigentlichen Schwerpunkt im menschlichen Inneren, daher die mythologisierende Phantasie, die dann der Römer überführt in das abstrakte Denken, das ja allerdings schon bei Aristoteles beginnt, aber in Rom besonders ausgebildet wird. Dieses abstrakte Denken, das dann mächtig genug ist, den Menschen auf den Punkt seines Ich zu stellen, den Menschen zum Selbstbewußtsein, zum Ichbewußtsein zu bringen, das tragen wir heute noch in uns, und wir tragen es schwer in uns in [der Form des] neuzeitlichen Agnostizismus.
[ 28 ] Meine lieben Freunde, es gibt keine geistigere Lehre im Grunde genommen als den modernen Materialismus. Das scheint ein sonderbares Paradoxon zu sein, und doch ist es so. Dasjenige, was der moderne materialistische Denker in seinem Kopf trägt, das ist ganz vergeistigt, so vergeistigt, daß es überhaupt abstrakt ist, daß es gar keinen Bezug mehr hat zur Wirklichkeit. Das ist ausgelebtes Römertum. Wir sind eigentlich ungeheuer geistige Menschen geworden im Laufe des 19. Jahrhunderts, aber wir verleugnen diese Geistigkeit, indem wir behaupten, durch diese Geistigkeit nur die Materie begreifen zu können. Wir haben in Wirklichkeit in der Seele einen ganz durchgeistigten Inhalt, bis zur Idee vergeistigt, aber wir behaupten, daß wir durch all das nur eine materielle Welt begreifen können. So hat der Mensch sein Ich durch diese Vergeistigung ergriffen, das Selbstbewußtsein ist so stark geworden, aber er hat sich [dadurch] von der Welt getrennt. Heute muß er wiederum den Zusammenhang mit der Welt suchen, er muß ihn suchen in der Erkenntnis, er muß die Möglichkeit haben, nicht nur eine «Erkenntnis ohne objektive Bedeutung» zu haben, sondern eine Erkenntnis mit objektiver Bedeutung, so daß er im Erkennen erleben kann das Sein der Welt, und auf der anderen Seite muß er das haben, was dem Innern des Menschen verbürgt das Objektive.
[ 29 ] Sehen Sie, die Griechen haben gegenüber der orientalischen Welt einen großen Vorsprung gehabt, sie haben gewissermaßen das Innere zusammennehmen können. Sie haben aus diesem Innern heraus zu einem Inhalt kommen können, aber der Inhalt befestigte sich erst bis zum Phantasievollen. Aber etwas haben die Griechen nicht gekonnt. Sie haben zwar die Entwickelung der Menschheit zur Verinnerlichung gebracht, aber nicht bis zu der Befestigung im Inneren. Die Verinnerlichung, die Verhärtung ist im Römertum und in alle dem, was dann gekommen ist, noch weitergegangen, und man müßte verstehen lernen — wir sind heute noch in der Notwendigkeit dieses Verstehenlernens darin —, wie man nun im Innern dasjenige befestigt, was dieses Innere seinsdurchdrungen macht. Der Grieche konnte Götter denken in grandiosen Phantasiebildern, aber was der Grieche nicht konnte: er konnte nicht beten. Das ist das Wichtige: der Grieche konnte nicht beten. Das Gebet ist eigentlich erst später gekommen; und für das Gebet muß gesucht werden die Möglichkeit, in ihm Realitäten zu erfassen. Dazu muß angeknüpft werden an diejenigen Zeiten, in denen das Gebet nicht bloß gesprochen, nicht bloß gedacht oder nicht bloß gefühlt worden ist, sondern in denen das Gebet eins war mit der Opferhandlung. Und wiederum weiß der Katholizismus sehr gut, warum er sich vom Kultus, von der Opferhandlung, von der zentralen Opferhandlung, von dem Meßopfer nicht trennt. Nun, über diese Dinge werden wir dann weiter verhandeln.
First Lecture
[ 1 ] My dear friends! I would like to thank Mr. Bock for his kind words of welcome, and I promise you that I will do everything in my power to help you find what you are looking for during your stay here.
[ 2 ] Today I would like to begin by discussing a few introductory points so that we can understand each other in the right sense. For our task, in particular – also in the various discussion sessions that we will hold – will be to express ourselves precisely about what is actually closest to your hearts for your future work. And I hope that what I will have to say to you can be said in the right way, if I am able to hear your wishes and the tasks you have set yourselves during the next discussion sessions.
[ 3 ] Anthroposophy, my dear friends, must remain absolutely honestly on the ground of which I have often spoken, saying: Anthroposophy as such cannot act as a religion-forming force; as a spiritual science, it must set itself the limited task of enriching present-day culture and civilization, and it cannot be its intention to present itself as a religion-forming force. In fact, it is far from its intention to intervene in any way in the developmental process of religious life as such. Nevertheless, it seems to me that it is entirely justified, in view of the tasks you have set yourself, that we seek out what can be gained from anthroposophy for religious work. For it must be said that, indirectly, through anthroposophy, not only much can be gained for religious work, but must be gained; and your feeling is certainly quite right that religious life as such needs a deepening that can only come from the sources of anthroposophical science.
[ 4 ] I assume, my dear friends, that you want to become actively involved in this religious life and that you have sought out this anthroposophical course because you feel that with religious work is, to a certain extent, leading more and more to a dead end, and that in this religious work today — through our traditions, through historical development and through many other things that we will discuss — elements are missing that should be there. We see, of course, how perhaps the most significant personalities today, who are seeking a new foundation for religious work because they believe that it is needed, are moving in a very specific direction. And I would like to point out first of all how precisely the most conscientious personalities are asking themselves how to arrive at a secure foundation for religious consciousness, and how then these personalities are actually all more or less searching for a kind of - one cannot call it anything else - a kind of philosophy. I will just remind you how, for example, Heim is currently seeking a kind of philosophical foundation for religious consciousness. Of course, from today's point of view, this must be recognized as absolutely necessary, and one must not overlook the fact that an extraordinary amount is being achieved in this way. But one cannot help but come to the conclusion when looking at what is being striven for without prejudice: such an endeavor leads not into religious life, but out of it. — For religious life, you will feel, must be a direct one, it must be something that is fundamentally connected with the whole of human nature, that lives fundamentally from the innermost foundations of this human nature. All philosophical reflection is, after all, reflection and moves away from this direct, elementary experience. And if I may express a personal feeling, it is this: when someone philosophizes about religious life and believes that a philosophical foundation is useful for religious experience, it always seems to me as if one would like to use the physiology of nutrition to get to the nutrition itself. No matter how correctly one can establish the principles of nutritional science, it does not give anything for the nutrition itself. Nutritional science explains nutrition, but nutrition must be rooted in reality; it must be rooted in reality; only then can one philosophize about nutrition. In the same way, religious life must be rooted in reality. It must exist in reality, and only when it is there can one philosophize about it. But one can certainly not found or establish religious life with any kind of philosophical consideration.
[5] That is one thing. The other is something that I would best describe – I always like to point out realities – by saying that several decades ago, a book was written in Basel that bears the title “On the Christianity of Our Present-Day Theology” – the book is by Overbeck – in which the proof is given that modern theology is indeed a theology, but is no longer actually Christian. And now, if you take Harnack's book 'The Essence of Christianity' and, in the arguments he presents there, simply substitute the name 'God' for the name 'Christ' throughout, you would not change the inner content of Harnack's book 'The Essence of Christianity' in any significant way. This is already expressed in the fact that Adolf Harnack says that only the proclamation of the Father actually belongs in the Gospels and not that of Christ Jesus, whereas, of course, the earlier centuries of Christian development saw in the Gospels above all the proclamation of Christ Jesus Himself. But if one really sees the actual proclamation of Christ Jesus in the Gospels, then one must have the Christ experience as a special experience, in addition to the Father experience, that is, in addition to the experience of a God who is universally interwoven with the world. One must be able to have both experiences. A theologian like Adolf Harnack no longer has both experiences, but only the one experience of God, and so he is compelled to baptize what he experiences in the presentation of God with the name of Christ; merely for the historical reason that he is a representative of Christianity, he baptizes his experience of God with the name of Christ.
[ 6 ] These incisive, momentous things are already there. Of course, they are not always properly realized, but they are felt, and I suppose that in the present time, when everything is being shaken up in people's minds, young theologians in particular must be shown how these things cannot be dealt with, how one can, as it were, be a theologian today without being imbued with the actual essence of Christ. It was precisely this experience that led to the writing of a book like Overbeck's on the Christianity of today's theology, in which the answer is basically given that modern theology is no longer Christian because one is only dealing with a general philosophizing about a God that pervades the world, but in the proper sense the Christ-experience cannot be taken as the basis for the whole treatment of religious problems. Only the Father-problem is taken as the basis for the treatment of religious problems, not actually the Christ-experience.
[ 7 ] Now, basically, today we all have the education in our bodies that stems from modern science, from that scientific approach that has actually only begun to take effect in modern civilization since the middle of the 15th century, but which has now been incorporated into all thinking of modern people. Basically, one cannot help it, because one is educated by the school from the lowest elementary school class onwards, to think in the forms that modern science has adopted. That is why it has come about that even 19th-century theology wanted to orient itself in accordance with these forms of modern science. I would like to say that it felt responsible before the judgment seat of this modern science and has thereby become what it has become today. Today, there is no other way to find the right path to establishing genuine religiosity than by considering the entire justification and the entire significance of scientific life.
[ 8 ] Perhaps I have already pointed out to some of you that Gideon Spicker, who taught philosophy at the University of Münster taught philosophy for a long time, who started out from a strictly Christian understanding of the world, and then developed more and more towards philosophy, but never actually regarded philosophy as anything other than an instrument for understanding religious problems. But modern thinking did not give him the opportunity to find a secure basis for it. And so in his little book, which bears the title “At the Turning Point of the Christian World Period,” we find the perplexity of modern man characterized by him in such a way that he says: Today we have a metaphysics without transcendental conviction , we have a theory of knowledge without objective meaning, we have a psychology without soul, a logic without content, an ethic without commitment, and therefore we cannot, in principle, find any foundation for religious consciousness. Gideon Spicker was very, very close to the actual crux that underlies all the religious conflicts of modern man. One can show, as if it were a symptom, where the actual crux lies. When modern man recognizes, when he tries to form a picture of the world through ideas, he also has the feeling that this knowledge does not penetrate into the depths. Gideon Spicker puts it this way: “We have an epistemology without objective meaning,” that is, we have our insights without being able to find the strength within us to relate what we form as insights to something truly objective. And so the modern man of knowledge suffers from the fact that he cannot find the possibility of having in his knowledge a guarantee for the objectivity of the essence of the world, for existence as such. He cannot really find his way out of what he experiences subjectively in knowledge.
[ 9 ] All this has, of course, precisely because it is philosophy, nothing to do with religious experience. Nevertheless, it can be said that religious experience today is definitely influenced by a similar tendency. For a human race that is not in a position to say of knowledge: in this knowledge an objective existence presents itself to me — such a human race then feels this same groundlessness emerging at a different point, and that is in religious life. The same groundlessness emerges where the actual pivot of religious life lies today. We shall see how the most diverse other problems are grouped around this pivot. This pivot lies in prayer, in the meaning of prayer. The religious man must feel that prayer must have a real meaning; in prayer one must be connected with some reality. But in an age in which the cognizant man cannot get out of his [subjective] cognition and grasp a reality in that cognition, in the same age the religious man does not find the possibility, when he prays, to realize that prayer is not merely a subjective act, but that there is an objective experience in that prayer. And for the person who cannot realize that there is an objective experience in prayer, it is impossible to find a proper religious footing. For today's man, with his disposition, religious life must be concentrated in prayer. The various other areas must be concentrated in prayer. But a prayer that had only subjective significance would have to make man religiously homeless.
[ 10 ] From the same root grows, on the one hand, the instability of knowledge, the ignorabimus, and on the other hand, the fear and worry that one does not live in a divine objectivity with prayer, but perhaps only deals with one's own subjectivity.
[ 11 ] You see, the problem of faith and the problem of knowledge, all the problems that occupy people from the theological point of view, are connected with what has just been characterized. And also everything that oppresses people from the side of direct religious experience, which must have certainty, must have support, also comes from this same source. And we can hardly get to grips with this question if we do not take a brief look at history, where it is brought home to us very clearly how far we have actually come, with today's scientific approach, from what we can call Christianity, while on the other hand there is a constant endeavour today to reconcile Christianity with science. Take everything that is the Gospel, that is Christian tradition. You cannot help but say to yourself: there is a different conception of man in it than in modern science. In modern science, man is traced back to some primitive primeval man - I do not want to say that he may have developed from animal ancestors - we are traced back to a primitive man of a primitive kind, who has gradually developed, and in whose development there is a progression, a progress. And modern humanity is satisfied from a scientific point of view with regard to primitive man, who, through a certain inherent power, as it is said, has developed into ever greater and greater cultural perfection, and who can face undreamt-of futures in relation to this perfection. If we place the Christ in this development, the Mystery of Golgotha, then, if we adhere honestly to the Gospels, we cannot but say: He does not fit into this, a conception of history fits into this, which to a certain extent bypasses the Mystery of Golgotha and leaves it out, but the Christ of the Gospels does not really fit into this conception. The Christ of the Gospels can only be conceived if one presupposes something that was still taken for granted in the 18th century, especially by the most enlightened and spiritual people. For example, in Saint-Martin — I will now refrain from religious development and will only point to someone who was a scientist in the most eminent sense for the 18th century, and that was Saint-Martin —, there is a clear awareness that man, at the beginning of his earthly development, has fallen from a certain height , that he was formerly in a different world environment, in a different setting, and that a tremendous event, a crisis, threw him down into a sphere that was below his former level of existence, so that man in his present development is, so to speak, not what he once was.
[ 12 ] Thus, while our modern natural science points to the development of primitive man, who worked his way up, this other view, the view of Saint-Martin, must point to fallen man, to man who was once something higher. This, as I said, is something that appears as a matter of course in Saint-Martin, and in Saint-Martin there is something that he feels like a kind of human sense of shame about his fall. You see, if you place the Christ in such a [concept of] human development, where man, by beginning his earthly existence, has descended and is now lower than he once was, then the Christ becomes the being who saves man from the state of continuous falling, then the Christ carries man up again to the state in which he was earlier.
[ 13 ] We shall see in what modified form this conception must be presented to our minds. But in any case, we are dealing here with an incommensurability between our modern conception of the development of the human being and the conception of the Gospels, and it is always dishonest to labor back and forth without admitting that one cannot actually be a follower of the modern scientific way of thinking and a Christian at the same time. This should actually be clear to every honest person, especially to those who feel religiously honest. There is something that must be bridged first if religious life is to recover. Without this bridging, religious life will never recover. Actually, people like David Friedrich Strauß, who answered the question “Are we still Christians?” with a No, seem more honest to me than some of the newer theologians, who again and again fail to see the actually radical difference between what modern man regards as his science and the gospel view of Christ. And this is the character of modern theology. It is basically the powerless attempt to treat the gospel view of Christ in some way that can be justified to modern science. And nothing comes of it that can be maintained.
[ 14 ] Yes, but there is a theology. The modern pastor actually has very little support for his office in the theology that is taught in school today, for reasons that lie in what has already been hinted at, and which we will of course still discuss in the course of our arguments. Of course, the modern pastor must be a theologian, although theology is certainly not religion. But to be effective, one needs a theological education, and this theological education suffers from all the ailments that I have briefly mentioned in this introduction today.
[ 15 ] You see, the Catholic Church knows very well what it is doing when it does not allow modern science to penetrate into theology. Not that the Catholic Church does not cultivate modern science, it cultivates it all the more. The greatest scholars can certainly be found among Catholic theologians. I need only mention Father Secchi, a great astrophysicist, or people like Wasmann, who is an important zoologist. Many others could be mentioned, and above all the extraordinarily significant scientific achievements of the Benedictine order and so on. But what role does modern science play within the Catholic Church? The Catholic Church wants modern science to be cultivated, and for true luminaries to be present in it. But it wants this modern science to be limited to the external world of the senses; it is to strictly refrain from grasping anything spiritual; it is not to say anything about this spiritual. It is positively forbidden to say anything about the spiritual; the sciences have no business interfering when anything is said about the justification of spiritual life. Thus Catholicism puts science in its place, it excludes it from everything that is theology. That it has, as for example in modernism, gradually but surely come into it, that is something that Catholicism has perceived as highly objectionable; hence its fight against modernism. The Catholic Church knows full well: the moment science invades theology, there are extraordinary dangers, and it is impossible to get along with scientific research in theology. It is actually quite bleak when you put it in such abstract terms: we still have to have theology, but it is being scorched, burned by modern science. Where does this come from? That is the big burning question for now. Where does it come from?
[ 16 ] Yes, my dear friends, theology as we have it at present is rooted in completely different assumptions than those of modern man. After all, the foundations of theology – if only properly understood – are exactly the same as the foundations of the gospel itself. I am stating a proposition that, of course, will not be immediately understandable when stated in this way, but which is of extraordinary importance and significance precisely for our discussions here. Theology, as it has been handed down, does not appear at all in the form in which modern science appears. To a large extent, theology is also handed down in its forms; as such, it leads back to earlier ways of thinking in people. Of course, modern logic was later applied to modern theology, and as a result the form of theology has changed somewhat; as a result, people no longer look back properly at what theology once was. Again, it is Catholicism that actually has something in this respect that has an extraordinarily captivating effect on more intelligent people, and many clergymen are held in Catholicism when they study theology, by what has been handed down to them as the knowledge of the so-called original revelation.
[ 17 ] Primal Revelation! For it must be clearly understood that Catholicism has not only the Revelation which is usually spoken of as the Revelation of the New Testament, nor only the Revelation which is usually spoken of as the Revelation of the Old Testament, but Catholicism, so far as it is theology, speaks of a Primal Revelation. And this original revelation is usually characterized in such a way that it is said: that which has been revealed through Christ has already been revealed to people once before; at that time, people received this revelation in a different, cosmic world environment, and through the Fall this revelation was lost, but an inheritance of this original revelation was still present through the Old Testament and through pagan teachings. This is the Catholic view. Once upon a time, before man sinned, a revelation was made to man. If man had not thrown himself into sin, the whole act of redemption by Christ Jesus would not have been necessary. But the Primordial Revelation was obscured, because man descended into the sinful world, and in the course of time, up to the Mystery of Golgotha, man has more and more forgotten the content of the Primordial Revelation. To some extent, the content of this original revelation still shone at the beginning, but then, as the generations progressed and advanced, this original revelation darkened, and it was completely darkened at the time when the new revelation came through the Mystery of Golgotha. Thus, even today, in the teachings of the Old Testament and, above all, in the teachings of the heathens, Christianity, wherever theology is taught, sees a corrupted original revelation. Catholicism already has an insight into what I have often spoken of in anthroposophy: the ancient mysteries. In my book “Christianity as Mystical Fact” I have hinted at these things, but, you see, only as far as it goes, because the things are so unknown to the modern world as possible and most people are not prepared for these things at all. But here we can talk about it in more detail, namely about one point.
[ 18 ] There were certain experiences everywhere in the pagan-religious mysteries, through which people learned more than could be communicated to the masses in an external, exoteric way. This experience did not come through teaching, but through asceticism, through practice, through the individual undergoing certain experiences; he experienced a kind of drama with a climax, with a catharsis, until he came to an experience of the illumination of the divine laws of the world. This is simply a fact, and there is already an awareness within esoteric Catholicism that something like these mysteries existed. But it is said that modern times are filled with secular science, and that secular science has no business interfering in theology; so we prefer to keep our knowledge of the mysteries hidden, lest secular science should come along and explain them. For explaining the mysteries would be a great danger under all circumstances. Catholicism is afraid of letting science approach what can be known about such things.
[ 19 ] Now the question is: What did the mysteries actually convey in those ancient times? The mysteries did not just provide theoretical knowledge; they provided a transformation of consciousness, a real transformation of consciousness. A person who had gone through the mysteries learned to experience the world differently than someone who had not gone through the mysteries. A person who is awake and aware of the world experiences the external sensory world outside of sleep; he experiences his memory and, through memory, can inwardly relive his own life, albeit perhaps with many interruptions, up to a certain point in his life, which is a few years after birth. In the case of a person who had undergone rigorous training in the mysteries, something quite different from what he could have in his ordinary consciousness shone forth into his consciousness. In the old mysteries, this was expressed by calling what the human being experienced a “rebirth”. Why was it called a rebirth? Because in fact a consciousness of a kind of embryonic experiencing arose in the human being; a consciousness arose of the way of life that the human being goes through during the embryonic period. Now, during the embryonic period, the human being experiences inwardly only as we otherwise experience thoughts, while he experiences through the maternal body what the senses perceive. This seemingly indirect, but actually much more direct, experience of the world was awakened in the mystery school student. An embryonic experience was awakened; that is why it was called 'rebirth'. One went through the time of embryonic experience up to birth, and just as memories otherwise arise, it emerged through what was experienced that the person felt like they were emerging from a spiritual world, as if still half connected to a spiritual world. These were the mysteries of birth, and in the time of the flowering of the mysteries, this is what people understood to be what a person could receive through such an initiation. What he received through such an initiation was regarded as a shadowed knowledge of the state [in which man was] before he fell down into the sense world. Thus, through “rebirth,” one placed oneself in a certain way back into a sinless human form of existence. And in the past, only knowledge that was not of this world was called “theology”; it could only be gained by going back to knowledge that man had before [entering] this world, and that had been corrupted when man entered this world.
[ 20 ] I am describing these things to you, and we will of course discuss them later in relation to our present consciousness. Theology [in ancient times] was a gift from God that could only be attained through such exercises, which lifted man out of the world of the senses, brought him back at least to the experience in the mother's womb, and thereby enabled him to absorb that [knowledge] which was still uncorrupted. But you can't absorb it in such a way that you receive it in the form of modern logical concepts. In the mysteries, people did not receive logical concepts in the modern sense, but they received images. All knowledge that is gained in this way is gained in images, in intuitions. The more one plunges into the real world of existence – not just “wanders around” in existence – the more one lives in existence, just as one lives in existence in one's mother's womb, the more consciousness ceases to live in logically abstract concepts, the more it lives in images. Therefore, what “theology” was in the ancient world, the theology of pre-Christian times, was a pictorial science, a science that lived in images. And that is why I may say: this theology was very similar to the form of expression that lives in the Gospels. For in the Gospels we also find images, and the further back we go, the more we find that in the Gospels there is still speaking in the attitude of ancient theology; there is absolutely no differentiation between religion and theology, there theology itself is something that one receives from God, there one looks up to God in theology, one sees how theology is given through a communion with God. It is something living to have theology. Then it came about that theology was experienced differently, somewhat like the conditions one lives into by growing older. So in those days, in ancient times, theology was nourished by religious experience. And this special way of living oneself into the world [of religious experience] was actually lost to humanity externally at the same time that the Mystery of Golgotha took place.
[ 21 ] You see, if you look to the Orient, with which the sources of our religious life are historically connected, you have, let us say, Indian religious life. What does this Indian religious life feed on? It draws from the perception of nature, but the perception of nature was quite different for the Indians than it is for modern man. This perception of nature was so complete for the Indian that one can say: He perceived spiritually by observing nature, but he perceived spiritually only that which lay below the actual being of man. He perceived spiritually the mineral world, the plant world, the animal world; he was even aware of a divine-spiritual foundation of this world. But when he wanted to come to the human being itself, then this did not reveal itself to him in his world. Since, in his desire to bring the actual essence of man into the world that he had, nothing presented itself to him: Nirvana, entry into nothingness in the face of what could be perceived [in relation to man]. Hence this fervor [of Indian religious life], which was still in the age when theology, religion and science were one, for Nirvana. We have here an escape from what is perceived from the natural foundation with the old pictorial consciousness, an escape into Nirvana, where everything that is given to the senses is blown away. This desire to surrender to Nirvana must be felt quite religiously [in order to have one of the possible forms for the religious currents of feeling in people.
[ 22 ] Then, when we look a little further back at the religious view of the world of the Persians and the later Chaldeans, we see that they turn their gaze outwards; they do not experience the world as we do. They experience a spiritualized world and see the spiritual foundations everywhere in things, but they hold on to them. These peoples have a different character than the Indians. The Indians strive towards the human being, and they do not find it. The other peoples who lived north and west of India do not strive towards the human being, but towards the world, towards the spiritual in the world. They cannot grasp this spiritual of the world otherwise than by avoiding with all their strength that which could no longer be avoided in the later development of humanity.
[ 23 ] It is tremendously significant, my dear friends, to perceive how, on the one hand, the ancient Indian strives out of what he sees because, when he strives for the human being, I would say he falls into unconsciousness, into nirvana, while the ancient Persian remains in what he sees. The divine that underlies the mineral, plant and animal world is grasped by the ancient Persian; that is the goal of his religious quest. But now he is seized by the fear that he might be pushed to seek the human being, and that would have led him to an abstract conception of that which he perceived in images. This is actually the basic feeling of these Near Eastern peoples as far as Africa. They see a spiritual world at the basis of nature; they do not see the human being, but they are also afraid to see the human being, because they feel that they are entering into an abstract region, into the region that the Romans later entered with their religion. Before the Roman era, in the second and third millennia, there was a widespread tendency to avoid entering into the abstract, but to grasp what arises in images. And one seeks to express that which one grasps in images in images themselves; one seeks to find the relationship to the divine that one beholds, not through abstract concepts, but in pictorial actions; that is the origin of cultus. In this religious realm to which I am alluding, there is the origin of cultus.
[ 24 ] And now imagine the ancient Hebrew people in this whole development, Judaism, which, due to the development of its people, strongly feels the urge to place the human being in that which is in consciousness. Today I will only speak in terms of hints so that we may orient ourselves. The members of the Hebrew people wanted above all to sense the God who underlies human nature. The Indians sensed only the God or gods that underlie subhuman nature, and when they advanced with their consciousness to the human, they wanted to merge into Nirvana. The other peoples, the Persian, Chaldean, and Egyptian peoples, sought the connection with the deity in the image and avoided, due to their character, to penetrate to the human. And so we can see how, in Judaism, this urge to bring the divine together with the human, to bring the divine into a relationship with the human, leads to the divine appearing at the same time as the basis of the human itself. There was no predisposition for this in the Indian, there one sailed into Nirvana; one no longer had any ideas when one wanted to come to the [consciousness of] the human. This idiosyncratic path of the human soul had to be avoided. This idiosyncratic path of the human soul has led to a kind of sliding out of existence into non-existence. The other, the Persian path, stopped at images, it stopped at mere cult.
[ 25 ] We see the Jewish people developing their special character in the midst of these endeavors, and the first thing that arose was the impossibility of coming to God through their own efforts. They had to wait and see what God Himself gave, and this is how the actual concept of revelation came about. One had to wait and see what the God gave, and on the other hand, one wanted to be careful not to seek the pictorial path, which one feared. If one seeks the pictorial path, one comes to a subhuman God, not to the God who bears humanity. The pictorial path should not be sought [in Judaism, and] one did not want to speak to God through cultic acts, but also not through cognitive content. The ancient Jew wanted to explore God in such a way that God should reveal himself, and man should communicate with God in a human way, not by means of sacrificial acts that took place on the outside, but rather through something that arises only from subjectivity: the promise—reveal, promise, and the contract between the two, a legal relationship, one might say, between man and his God.
[ 26 ] This is how the Jewish religion entered and is situated in the development of humanity as a whole. So that one can say: The relationship is already prefigured there that still plays a great role in our modern times, where one would like to eliminate science [from religion], so that science has nothing to say [in religion], just as the old Jew did away with everything that existed in pictures. All this is already prefigured in Judaism, and there is an enormous amount of Judaism precisely in the modern distinction between knowledge and faith. In Harnack's “Essence of Christianity” everything is taken over from Judaism. We must see through this, that we are suffering from these things.
[ 27 ] More and more other things penetrated into the evolution of mankind. More and more, that which was peculiar to the Jew developed: the consciousness of personality, which strives for ego development. In the Greek, a mighty inner world developed alongside the external observation of nature, but it was a world whose validity could be doubted because it was merely seen as a world of mythology. Do you feel in Greekness, in the religious element of Greekness, this illumination that lives through Greek mythology, through the mythologizing imagination that seeks to find the human being - who cannot be found in nature - through that which arises in the human being? But the Greeks did not yet grasp the actual center of gravity within the human being, hence the mythologizing imagination, which the Romans then transferred into abstract thinking, which of course already begins with Aristotle, but is particularly developed in Rome. This abstract thinking, which is then powerful enough to put the human being at the center of his or her self, to bring the human being to self-awareness, to self-consciousness, we still carry this within us today, and we carry it heavily within us in the form of modern agnosticism.
[ 28 ] My dear friends, there is no doctrine that is more spiritual at heart than modern materialism. This seems to be a strange paradox, and yet it is so. What the modern materialistic thinker carries in his head is completely spiritualized, so spiritualized that it is abstract, that it no longer has any connection to reality. This is the result of Romanism. We have actually become tremendously spiritual people in the course of the 19th century, but we deny this spirituality by claiming that we can only understand matter through this spirituality. In reality, our soul contains a thoroughly spiritualized substance, spiritualized to the point of an idea, but we claim that through all this we can only comprehend a material world. Thus, through this spiritualization, man has grasped his ego, self-awareness has become so strong, but he has separated himself from the world. Today he must seek the connection with the world again, he must seek it in knowledge, he must have the possibility of having not only a “knowledge without objective meaning” but a knowledge with objective meaning, so that in knowing he can experience the being of the world, and on the other hand he must have what guarantees the objective for the inner life of the human being.
[ 29 ] You see, the Greeks had a great advantage over the Oriental world; they were able to gather their inner selves together, so to speak. From this inner core they were able to arrive at a content, but the content first took hold in the realm of the imaginative. But there is one thing the Greeks could not do. They brought humanity to a state of interiorization, but not to the point of anchoring in the inner being. This interiorization, this hardening, continued in Romanism and in all that followed, and we still need to learn to understand how to anchor in the inner being that which permeates the inner being with being. The Greeks could think of the gods in grandiose fantasies, but what they could not do was pray. That is the important thing: the Greeks could not pray. Prayer only came later; and for prayer, we must seek the possibility of grasping realities in it. To do this, we must go back to the times when prayer was not just spoken, not just thought or not just felt, but when prayer was one with the sacrificial act. And again, Catholicism knows very well why it does not separate itself from the cult, from the sacrificial act, from the central sacrificial act, from the sacrifice of the Mass. Now, we will discuss these things further.