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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Anthroposophy and Christianity
GA 155

13 July, 1914 Norrköping

I'd like to ask your forgiveness, first of all, for being unable to speak to you tonight in your native language. But friends who have been attending my lectures to members of the Anthroposophical Society this week have assured me that it would be all right to speak to you on a spiritual scientific subject in German.

The local members have also suggested the underlying theme of this evening's talk; I am to speak on the relationship of spiritual science—or anthroposophy, as it may also be called—to Christianity. In order to do so, I must first say something about the nature and significance of what is meant by spiritual science, about the point of view from which I shall be speaking.

This spiritual science is not trying to found either a new religion or a new religious sect of any kind. It hopes to be able to fulfill the tasks required spiritually of our contemporary culture.

Several hundred years ago, the dawning of the modern scientific age signified an advance in human cultural life which can be compared to the steps we must now take in mankind's development if further progress is to be made. Natural science opened the modern age for mankind through the knowledge of external physical laws. Spiritual science should play a similar role in the present and near future in recognizing the laws of the realms of soul and spirit and applying them to ethical, social, and all other aspects of cultural life.

Although it is still misunderstood and misrepresented—and understandably so—it can trust the power and effectiveness of its truth when it considers the course of natural science at the beginning of the modern age. Natural scientists, too, had to face prejudices hundreds and even thousands of years old. But truth possesses powers which always help it to victory against any hostile forces.

Now that we have mentioned the trust the spiritual scientist has in the truth and effectiveness of his work, let us turn to the nature of that research which is the basis for this spiritual science.

The spiritual scientist's way of looking at things is wholly in keeping with the methods of natural science. However, it must certainly be clear that since spiritual science covers an entirely different field from the external sense-perceptible field covered by natural science, researching the spiritual realm requires a fundamental modification of the natural scientific approach. The methods of spiritual science are in keeping with those of natural science in the sense that any unprejudiced person trained in natural science can accept the premises of spiritual science. However, as long as the natural scientific method is conceived one-sidedly, as all too often happens today, then prejudice will be heaped upon prejudice when it comes to applying the natural scientific approach to spiritual life. Granted, natural scientific logic must be applied to what most concerns man but which is most difficult to investigate for that very reason. Granted, this way of thinking must be applied to the very being of man himself. Granted, in spiritual science man must examine his own nature, making use of the only tool that he has at his disposal—himself. The premise of spiritual science is that in becoming an instrument of investigation into the spiritual world, man has to undergo a transformation that enables him to look into the spiritual world, something he cannot do in ordinary life.

I'd like to start with a comparison from natural science, not to prove anything but just to make it clear how the spiritual scientific way of looking at things rests entirely on the premises of natural scientific thinking. Let us take water as an example drawn from nature. Suppose we are looking at the qualities of water as we find it around us. Then along comes the chemist and applies his methods to the water, breaking it down into hydrogen and oxygen. Well, what is he doing to the water? As you all know, water doesn't burn. The chemist takes hydrogen out of the water, and hydrogen is a gas that burns. No one just looking at water can tell that it contains hydrogen and oxygen, which have totally different properties from water.

As spiritual science shows, it is equally impossible for us to see the inner qualities of another person. Just as the chemist can split water into hydrogen and oxygen, the spiritual scientist, by means of an inner process which must be prepared in the soul's very depths, is able to distinguish between the external physical and soul-spiritual aspects of what confronts him outwardly as a human being. He is interested initially in examining, from the spiritual scientific viewpoint, the soul-spiritual aspect as something separate from the bodily nature. No one can discern the real facts of the soul-spiritual from looking at the merely external bodily nature, any more than the nature of hydrogen can be discerned without first extracting it from water.

Nowadays it very often happens that as soon as one begins to say this sort of thing one hears: “This conflicts with monism, which must be adhered to at all costs.” Well, monism can't keep even chemists from splitting water into two parts. It's no argument against monism when something that can actually happen does happen—for instance, when the soul-spiritual is recognized as distinct from the bodily nature by applying the methods of spiritual research.

These methods, however, cannot be applied in laboratories or hospitals, but are processes that have to take place in the soul itself. They are not miraculous qualities; they are faculties which we possess to a certain degree in daily life. But they have to be infinitely heightened if we are to become spiritual researchers.

I don't want to beat around the bush with all kinds of general statements, so I'll come right to the point. We are all familiar with the soul capacity known as memory, and are aware of how much depends on it. Imagine waking up some morning with no idea of where we've been and who we are. We would lose everything that makes us human. Our memory, which has possessed inner coherence ever since early childhood, is essential to our life as human beings. The study of memory leaves contemporary philosophers perplexed. There are already some among them who go so far as to turn away from the monistic-materialistic view when it comes to looking at memory. In precise research they find that, although sensory perception (if one may refer to an activity of soul in this way) is superficially bound to the body, it will never be possible to say that memory is bound to the body at all. I am just calling this to your attention. Even the French philosopher Bergson, a man who certainly shows no tendency to delve into anthroposophy, has pointed to the spiritual nature of memory.

How do memory and the power of recall actually confront us? Events long past enter our soul as images. Although the events themselves may lie far in the past, our soul is actively involved in conjuring them up from the depths of our inner life. And what emerges from these depths can be compared with the original experience, though in contrast to the images provided by our sensory perceptions memories are pale. However, they are closely connected with the integrity of our soul life. And without memory, we would not find our way in the world. But memory is built upon the power to recall, through which the soul can conjure up what is hidden in its memories.

This is where spiritual science comes in. Please note that it is not memory as such, but the power of summoning up a mental content from the soul's depths, which can be infinitely strengthened. Then this power can be used not only for conjuring up past experiences but for quite other purposes as well. Methods of spiritual research are not founded upon any external procedures applicable in laboratories or upon anything perceptible to external senses, but rather upon intensive soul processes which anyone can undergo. What makes these processes valuable is the boundless heightening of our attentiveness or, in other words, the concentration of our thought life.

What is this concentration of thought life?

This evening I have only a short hour to speak, so I'll just be able to touch on the principles of the topic under discussion. You can find the details in my books, Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment, Occult Science—an Outline, and The Threshold of the Spiritual World. Let me outline the basic soul activities which represent a boundless heightening of the attentiveness necessary for human life. Only this heightening makes spiritual research possible.

What activity does a person usually engage in when he confronts his surroundings? He perceives things; he applies his brain-bound thinking to them and forms mental images about them. As a rule he does nothing further with these images. But methods of spiritual science, based upon the concentration of thinking, begin just where our everyday mental activity leaves off. Anyone wanting to become a spiritual researcher must carry on from this point.

We must choose mental images which we ourselves can form for ourselves in detail and bring them into our field of consciousness. These should preferably be symbolic images that do not need to correspond with the external world. We must place these images, taken from the practice of spiritual science or suggested to us by the spiritual researcher, at the center of our full consciousness, so that for a longer period we turn our attention away from everything external, concentrating on a single image. Whereas we usually move on from one mental image to another, in this case we marshal all our soul forces, concentrate them on one chosen image, and devote ourselves totally to this image. A person observed in this activity seems to be engaged in something resembling sleep (although it is in fact radically different). For if such concentration is to be fruitful, that person must indeed become in some respects like a sleeper.

Just before we fall asleep, we feel how the will forces in our limbs quiet down, how a kind of twilight settles around us, how the activity of the senses ebbs away. Then we lose consciousness. In concentration, as in sleep, our senses must be wholly shut off from all impressions of the outer world; the eye should see as little, the ear hear as little as in sleep, and so on. Then the whole soul life is focused on a single mental image. This is what makes concentration radically different from sleep. In fact, it could be called fully conscious sleeping. Whereas in sleep the darkness of unconsciousness floods the soul, the aspiring spiritual researcher lives in a heightened state of soul activity. He mobilizes all the strengths of his soul and focuses them on the chosen image. The point here is not that we observe the mental image; it rather gives us the opportunity to pull our soul forces together and channel them. That's the important thing, because in this way we gradually succeed in wresting our soul-spiritual being free from our bodily nature. Again I refer you to my books for the details.

What I've just explained cannot be achieved all at once. Most people, even those who are not distracted by the demands of daily life, have to work for years on such concentration exercises; it is impossible to keep at them for more than a few minutes at a time, or for more than a fraction of an hour at most. We must repeat them again and again until we really succeed in strengthening the powers that otherwise slumber in everyday life (but are nevertheless there) so that they become effective in us to the point of freeing our soul-spiritual being from our bodily nature.

Let me share facts with you rather than talk abstractions, and say at once that if the spiritual researcher succeeds, by persevering energetically and devotedly in his exercises, in reaping the fruits of his efforts, then he arrives at an experience of what could be called purely inner consciousness. From then on, he can make sense of a statement that previously meant nothing to him: “I know that I am outside my body; in grasping and experiencing my inner being, I am outside my body.”

I'd like to describe this experience to you in detail. We notice first of all that the power of thinking, which is usually active only in the affairs of daily life, frees itself from the body. To begin with, this experience is faint, but it makes its appearance in such a way that, having had it, we know it for what it is. Only when we return to our body and have submerged ourselves in the life of the brain, manifested in physical substance, do we realize what resistance the brain offers. We are aware that we use the brain as an instrument for ordinary thinking; but now we know that we have been outside it. We gradually learn to make sense of the statement, “You are experiencing yourself in the soul-spiritual element.” We experience our head as though clothed in its thoughts. We know what it means to have separated our soul-spiritual element from our external bodily nature. First we get to know the resistance that bodily life puts up, and then to know life independent of the body. It is just as if hydrogen were to become aware of itself outside of the watery element. That is the case with a person who does exercises of this kind. And if he continues to do them faithfully, the great and significant moment comes when real spiritual research begins—a profoundly shattering moment that has far-reaching consequences for our entire existence. This moment can occur in thousands of different ways, but I will characterize it in the way it most typically comes about.

If we have carried on these exercises for a certain period of time, training our souls in conformity with the natural scientific approach, then that moment finally comes, either during waking life or in a sleep from which we awaken to realize that we are not dreaming but experiencing a brand new reality. The experience can be such, for example, that we say, “What is going on around me? It is as though my surroundings were receding from me, as though the natural elements were striking like lightning and destroying my body, and I nevertheless maintained myself, unlike this body.” We come to know what seers throughout the ages have always pictured as “reaching the gates of death.” This image brings home to us the true soul-spiritual state of man when he is living purely in the soul-spiritual element, instead of perceiving himself and the world through the instrument of his body (and this we experience only through the image; the reality is met only in death).

The shattering thing is to know that we have released ourselves from our body with our thinking capacity. And other forces can be similarly released so that we become ever richer and more inward as regards our soul life.

But the one exercise that I have characterized as concentration or as an unbounded heightening of attentiveness is not enough. We achieve the following result with this exercise: When we have arrived at the point where the soul experiences itself, images that we can call real imaginations make their appearance. Images rise up, but they are vastly different from those of our ordinary memory. Whereas ordinary memory contains only images of external experiences, these images arising now from the grey depths of our soul have nothing in common with anything that can be experienced in the outer world of the senses. Objections that we might easily be deceiving ourselves, that what thus arises from these grey depths of soul may merely be reminiscences produced by memory, don't hold up. For the spiritual researcher learns to distinguish exactly between what memory can summon up and something radically different from the content of memory.

We must keep one thing in mind, however, when talking about this moment of entering the spiritual world: namely, that people who suffer from visions, hallucinations, or other such pathological conditions are not well suited to spiritual research. The less a person tends in that direction, which is a mere reflection of ordinary experience, the more safely and certainly he advances in the field of spiritual research. A large part of the preparation for spiritual research consists in learning to distinguish exactly between something that arises in an unconscious and pathological manner from within, and the new element which can make its appearance as spiritual reality following a spiritual scientific schooling of our soul.

I'd like to mention a radical difference between visionary or hallucinatory experiences and what the spiritual researcher perceives. Why is it that so many people believe themselves to be already in the spiritual world, when they are only having hallucinations and visions? How unwilling people are to learn anything really new! They cling to the old and familiar. These sick soul-figments appear to us in hallucinations and visions in basically the same way as external sensory reality. They are simply there, confronting us; we do nothing to make them appear. The spiritual researcher is not in the same situation with regard to his new spiritual surroundings. I've told you how he has to concentrate and refine all the forces of his soul that are usually asleep. This requires him to exert a strength and energy of soul not present in external life. He must constantly hold on to this strength when he enters the spiritual world. It is characteristic of hallucinations and visions that a person remains passive; he doesn't need to exert himself. However, as soon as we become passive toward the spiritual world for even a moment, everything disappears. We have to stay with it and to be continuously active. That is why we cannot be mistaken, since nothing of the spiritual world can appear to us in the way a vision or hallucination does. We must be fully active in confronting every least detail of what appears to us out of the spiritual world, so that we grasp what we are facing. This uninterrupted activity is vital for true spiritual research. But only then do we enter a world radically different from the world of the senses, a world where spiritual actualities and beings surround us.

But another thing is still needed: Wresting the soul free of the body happens as described. This further need, however, can again be explained with a scientific comparison. When we extract hydrogen, it remains separate at first, but then it combines with other substances, becoming something quite different. The same thing must happen to our soul-spiritual being after its separation from the body. This being must link itself up with beings not of the sensory world. It must unite with them and thus perceive them.

The first stage of spiritual research is separation of the soul-spiritual from the bodily nature. The second is entering into relationship with beings that work behind the scenes of the sensory world. To say this is held against one nowadays, even more so than any vague talk of “spirit” in general. Many people today feel the urge to acknowledge the existence of something spiritual; they speak of a spirit behind the world order and are perfectly satisfied to be pantheists. But as the spiritual researcher sees it, pantheism is just like taking someone out into nature and remarking, “Look, all this around you is nature,” instead of saying, “Those are trees, clouds; that's a lily, that's a rose.” Leading a person from one experience of nature to another, from one being to the next, and saying, “All this is nature,” is to tell him nothing. The facts must be presented concretely and in detail. It is acceptable today to speak of an all-pervading spirit, but the spiritual researcher cannot rest content with that. After all, he is entering a realm of spirit beings and spiritual realities which are differentiated, just as the external world is concretely differentiated into clouds, mountains, valleys, trees, flowers, and so on. But although we differentiate natural phenomena into plant, animal and human kingdoms, it is not acceptable today to speak of concrete details and facts encountered upon entering the spiritual world. The spiritual researcher cannot help but point out that entering the spiritual world means entering a world of real, concrete spiritual beings and events.

Another exercise we need to do is to intensify our feeling of devotion—devotion felt in everyday life and in life's special moments as religious reverence. This devotion must be boundlessly heightened and developed, so that a person can reach the stage of giving himself devoutly over to the stream of cosmic events, as he does in sleep. In contemplation or meditation, he must forget about any bodily movement, again as he does in sleep.

This is the second exercise, and it must alternate with the first. The person doing the exercise forgets his body so completely that he not only stops thinking about it but can even shut out all stirrings of feeling and will, just as in sleep he shuts out all awareness of bodily stirrings. But this condition must be brought about consciously. Adding this exercise in devotion to the first, he will succeed in making himself at home in the spiritual world with the help of his awakening spiritual senses, just as he finds his way into his physical surroundings with the help of his external senses.

A new world now dawns before him, a world that is always inhabited by his soul-spiritual being. A reality becomes apparent to his inner observation—a reality still rejected by current prejudices, although it is just as much a fact of strictly scientific research as our modern evolutionary theory. I am referring to the fact that he comes to know the soul-spiritual core of his being in such a way the he realizes: “Before I was conceived and born into this life which clothed me in a body, I existed as a soul-spiritual being in a spiritual realm. When I pass through the gates of death, my body will fall away. But what I have come to know as the soul-spiritual core of my being, which can live outside my body, will pass through the gates of death. From then on, it lives in a spiritual world.”

In other words, we come to recognize the immortality of the soul already in this life between birth and death. We become familiar with something we know to be independent of the body and with the world that the human soul enters after death. We come to know this soul-spiritual core in such a way that we can describe it with scientific clarity.

Observing a plant, we see how the seed germinates, how leaves and blossoms develop, and how the fruit forms, producing new seed. We realize how its life culminates in this seed. Leaves and blossoms drop off, but the seed remains, bearing the promise of a new plant. We become aware that the seed, the essential part of a new plant, is already living in the plant we are observing. As we look at life between birth and death, we thus come to recognize that something develops in the soul-spiritual element that passes through the gates of death and is, moreover, the germ and essential core of a new life. The soul-spiritual core of our being, which is hidden in everyday life but reveals itself to spiritual science, carries the potential for a new human life just as certainly as a plant seed has the potential to become a new plant. Looking at things in this way, we arrive at the realization of repeated earth-lives in full harmony with the natural scientific approach. We know that the sum total of man's life consists not only of the life between birth and death but also of the life running its course between death and rebirth, from which man then embarks upon a new incarnation.

The only possible objection to what I've just said is that the germinating seed could perish if conditions didn't foster the development of a new plant. Spiritual science meets this objection by pointing out that, though the plant seed in its dependence on outer conditions may perish, there is nothing in the spiritual world to hinder the gradual ripening of the core of the human soul as it prepares for a new life on earth. In other words, the core of the human soul which matures during one earth-life will appear again in a further life on earth. I can only indicate briefly how the spiritual researcher, faithful to natural scientific methods of investigation, comes to this view of repeated earth-lives.

People have accused spiritual science of being Buddhistic because it speaks of reincarnation. Spiritual science certainly does not draw what it has to say from Buddhism; it is firmly founded on the premises and principles of modern natural science. But spiritual science widens modern natural science to cover the life of the spirit without even taking Buddhism into account. Spiritual science can't help acknowledging the truth of reincarnation. It can't change the fact that in ancient times Buddhism spoke out of old traditions about repeated earth-lives.

I'd like to mention in this connection that Lessing's mature thinking, deepened by experience, led him to speak about reincarnation. At the end of a long working life, Lessing wrote his treatise on the education of the human race, in which he advanced the idea of repeated earth-lives. He said somewhat as follows: “Is this teaching to be rejected just because it appears at the dawn of human culture, before any scholarly prejudice could cloud it?” Lessing refused to be swayed by the fact that this teaching was a product of ancient times, a teaching that was later pushed into the background by scholarly prejudice. Spiritual science also doesn't need to shy away from it simply because it appears in Buddhistic doctrine. That is certainly no reason to accuse spiritual science of Buddhistic leanings.

Spiritual science recognizes the truth of repeated earth-lives out of its own sources, and it points us to our connection with the totality of human life through the ages. For the souls living in us have been here many times before, and will return again and again. Let us look back on early cultural epochs—for instance, to the time when people lifted their eyes to the pyramids. We know that our souls were already living at that time and that they will appear again in the future; they take part in every epoch.

It is still perfectly understandable today that people have a bias against such teachings. There are also people who take everything the way they want to see it. They know that Lessing was a great man, but it makes them uncomfortable to know that he acknowledged the truth of reincarnation at the height of his career. So they say, “Oh, well, Lessing was getting senile in his old age.” That makes people more comfortable than to think that we have each been part of every civilization that ever existed on the earth.

Now, how does spiritual science want to introduce the facts I've just explained into contemporary culture? Why, no differently than natural science presents its findings, although this means that spiritual science is subject to the same prejudices as the initial findings based on the modern natural scientific approach. Just think of Copernicus, Galileo, or Giordano Bruno. What happened when Copernicus claimed that the earth didn't stand still, but revolved around the sun, and that the sun actually stood still in relation to the earth? How did people react? They thought that religion was at stake, that people's religious piety was jeopardized by this advance in knowledge.

It took the Church until the nineteenth century to remove the teachings of Copernicus from the Index and to integrate them into its doctrine. In every age advances in thought have had to fight against old prejudices. This young spiritual knowledge wants to make itself felt in human culture today in the same way as the new natural scientific knowledge did in its day. Spiritual science wants to emphasize the fact that mankind is ready to acquire knowledge of the spirit, just as in the achievements of Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno the need for a new science of nature was made evident at a time when mankind was ready for it.

In his day, even Nicholas Copernicus, a canon of the Church, was accused of not being a Christian. And now it is easy in certain respects to accuse spiritual science of being unchristian. When this happens, I always think of a priest who, on becoming rector of his university, delivered a lecture about Galileo. He spoke somewhat as follows: “In those days people had religious prejudices against Copernicus. But a truly religious person knows that God's glory and light are not dimmed when we consciously penetrate the secrets of the universe. He knows that the grandeur of our view of God has in fact only increased as a result of extending our knowledge beyond the realm of the senses to calculate the course of the stars and the particular characteristics of the heavenly bodies.”

A truly religious person can grasp that religion is only enriched and deepened by scientific knowledge. Spiritual science doesn't want to have anything to do with founding a new religion or to give rise to prophets or founders of sects. Mankind has matured; the time for prophets and founding religions is over. And in future people who feel the urge to be prophets will suffer a different fate from the prophets of old, who, in accordance with the ways of their times, were rightly revered as outstanding individuals. People of today who try to be prophets in the old sense will simply be laughed at. Spiritual science doesn't need any prophets because by its very nature it bases what it has to say upon the depths of the human soul, depths which our souls cannot always illuminate. And the spiritual scientist simply wants to investigate his subject as an unassuming researcher, drawing attention to vital matters. He says, “I've discovered it; you can discover it for yourself, too, if you try.” It won't take long until the spiritual investigator is recognized as a researcher just like any chemist or biologist. The difference is that the spiritual researcher does his research in a field of concern to every human soul.

Tonight I could only sketch the activity of the research done in this field. But if you study the matter in more detail, you will find that it addresses the most vital questions of the human soul, questions concerning the nature of man and his destiny. Both are questions which can stir human beings to their depths every hour of every day; they give us strength for our work. And because the concerns of spiritual science deal with the depths of the human soul, it is only natural that it should grip us and unite with our inmost self, thereby deepening and enhancing our religious feeling to an unusual degree.

Spiritual science does not want to usurp the place of Christianity; on the contrary it would like to be instrumental in making Christianity understood. Thus it becomes clear to us through spiritual science that the being whom we call Christ is to be recognized as the center of life on earth, that the Christian religion is the ultimate religion for the earth's whole future. Spiritual science shows us particularly that the pre-Christian religions outgrow their one-sidedness and come together in the Christian faith. It is not the desire of spiritual science to set something else in the place of Christianity; rather it wants to contribute to a deeper, more heartfelt understanding of Christianity.

Can it be said that when Copernicus was arriving at his concept of the solar system in the peace and quiet of his study, he wanted to reshape the order of nature? It would be mad to say anything of the sort. Nature stayed as it was, but people learned to think about nature in a way that accorded with the new view of the world. I've taken the liberty of calling a book on Christianity that I wrote many years ago Christianity as Mystical Fact. No one used to mulling over what he presents to the world would choose such a title without weighing it carefully. Why, then, did I choose it? Only in order to show that Christianity is not a mere doctrine to be interpreted this way or that; it has entered the world as a fact that can only be understood spiritually. Nature didn't change because of Copernicus, nor does the truth of Christianity change when spiritual science is used as a tool for understanding it more completely than was possible in times gone by.

I've taken more time than was intended, but perhaps you will let me draw your attention to one concrete aspect of Christian spiritual research. Studying ancient pre-Christian cultures from the viewpoint of the spiritual researcher, we find that they all had mystery places which were simultaneously centers of religion, art, and science. Although the exoteric cultures of earlier times did not allow people to delve into the spiritual world by means of the spiritual scientific methods I have described, it was possible for certain individuals to be admitted into the mysteries as pupils or candidates for initiation. The art of the mysteries helped them to achieve what I have just been describing—namely, withdrawing from the physical body and developing a body-free soul life. And what came of it? The achieving of this body-free soul life enabled them to experience the spiritual world and the pivotal event in man's evolutionary history, the Christ Event.

Exoteric scholarship pays far too little attention to the role played by these pupils of the mysteries, although this is not for lack of available material on the subject.

Let me mention a symptomatic instance. St. Augustine said that there have been Christians not only since Christ's appearance on earth, but even before His coming. Anyone saying that today would be accused of heresy. A Church Father could say it, however, and that was indeed St. Augustine's opinion. Why did this Christian teacher state such a thing? We get a sense of why he said it when we see in reading Plato, for instance, how he prized the mysteries and how he speaks of their significance for the whole life and being of mankind. Some words of Plato that seem harsh have come down to us. He said that human souls live in muddy swamps after death if they have not been initiated into the holy mysteries. Plato spoke out of his conviction that the human soul is essentially of a spiritual nature, and that he who withdraws his soul from the physical body as a result of initiation can behold the spiritual world. A person who has not worked his way into the mysteries seems to Plato to be cut off from his true being. The crucial point is that in ancient times the mysteries were the only way to leave the world of the senses and gain entry into the world of the spirit. So it was that those who were recognized as schooled in the mysteries, men like Heraclitus and Plato, were called “Christians” by the Church Fathers because the mysteries had taught them to see the spiritual world.

That, however, is no longer the case. The relationship of the human soul to the spiritual world is tremendously different today than it was in pre-Christian times. What I have been describing tonight about what every soul can undertake for itself to succeed in entering the spiritual world has been possible only since the founding of Christianity. Since then, every soul who applies the methods set forth in the books mentioned above can ascend to the spiritual world through a process of self-education. In pre-Christian times the mysteries and the authoritative guidance of teachers were essential; there was no such thing as self-initiation then. And when spiritual science is asked what brought about this change, the reply based on its research must be that it was brought about by the Mystery of Golgotha. The founding of Christianity has introduced to mankind a reality that can only be researched spiritually. Christ Himself could be found previously in the realm of the spirit only by a person who had learned in the mysteries to withdraw from his body. He can be found since the Christ Event by every human soul willing to make the effort. What the mysteries once introduced to human souls dwells since the Mystery of Golgotha in every human soul, shared by all alike.

How is this to be understood?

Those who were recognized as schooled in the mysteries, men like Heraclitus and Plato, were called “Christians” by the Church Fathers because the mysteries had taught them to see into the spiritual world. Spiritual science shows that while Jesus was living in the way the Gospels tell of it, there came a moment in His life—the baptism in the Jordan—when Jesus was transformed. A Being not there before entered into Him and lived within Him for the next three years. The Being that thus entered Him went through the Mystery of Golgotha. This is not the time to go into detail concerning the Mystery of Golgotha, but spiritual science, from its fully scientific point of view, confirms what the Gospels relate. Through the Event on Golgotha the Being Who could previously be experienced only in spiritual heights united with earthly humanity. Since the time He passed through death on Golgotha, Christ lives in all human souls alike. He is the source of strength whereby every soul can find its way into the spiritual world. Human souls on earth have been transformed by the Mystery of Golgotha. The Christ came, as He said, “from above,” but He has taken up His earthly abode in our human world.

Spiritual science is reproached for saying that Jesus was not always the Christ, but that Christ's life on earth began only when Jesus was thirty years old. Prejudiced humanity confronts spiritual science with one superficiality after another. The mere stating of the fact instantly invites prejudice. And the same holds true of almost everything that our opponents say regarding the position spiritual science takes on Christianity.

Don't we all agree that a child only begins to remember around his third year? Does this mean that what lives in him now was not already present before then? When we speak of Christ's entering into Jesus, are we thereby denying that Christ had been related to Jesus from birth on? We would not deny this any more than we would deny that the child has a soul before the soul becomes aware of itself during the third year of life. If we understood rightly what spiritual science had to say, we would not oppose it.

Anthroposophy is further reproached for making Christ a cosmic being; however, it only widens our earthly way of looking at things beyond merely terrestrial concerns into the far reaches of the universe. Thus our knowledge can embrace the universe spiritually, just as Copernicus, with his knowledge, embraced the external world. The need spiritual science feels to encompass what is most holy to it is simply due to a feeling that is religious and deeply scientific at the same time. Before Copernicus, people determined the movements of the stars on the basis of what they saw. Since Copernicus, they have learned to draw conclusions independent of their sensory perception. Is spiritual science to be blamed for doing the same with respect to the spiritual concerns of mankind? Up until now, people regarded Christianity and the life of Christ Jesus in the only way open to them. Spiritual science would like to widen their view to include cosmic spiritual reality as well. It adds what it has researched to what was known before about the Christ. It recognizes in Christ an eternal Being Who, unlike other human beings, entered once only into a physical body and is henceforth united with all human souls.

Those persons who make Christianity the basis for battling against spiritual science commit a peculiar error. Just inquire of spiritual science whether it opposes what it finds in Christianity! It affirms everything Christianity stands for and then adds something more to it. But to suppress what spiritual science has to add is not to insist on Christianity but rather to insist on a narrow view of it. In other words, it means to behave just like those who condemned Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno. It is easy to see the logical error at the root of this argument. People come along and say, “You talk of a cosmic Christ living in the far reaches of the universe; this makes you a Gnostic.” This is the same kind of error that we fall into if a person says to us, “I've just been given money by someone who owed me thirty crowns. But he gave me forty, because he was lending me ten in addition.” If we now insist that the man hasn't paid his debt because he returned forty crowns instead of thirty, we're talking nonsense, aren't we? If people reproach the spokesmen of spiritual science with the remark, “You are not only saying what we say about the Christ, but you add to it,” they don't notice what a monstrous mistake they've made; they are not speaking truly objectively, but out of strong emotion. Let people argue whether or not the findings of spiritual science about Christianity mean anything to them. That depends on what people think they need. Of course it would be possible for us to reject Copernicus, Galileo, or Giordano Bruno. But we cannot claim that spiritual science has less to offer on the subject of Christianity or that it is hostile to it.

And there's something else that must be added here when the relationship of spiritual science to Christianity is discussed. Mankind changes as each individual goes from life to life in succeeding epochs. Our souls incarnated in times before Christ united with the earth, and they will continue to be reborn into further earth-lives in which the Christ is joined with the earth. From now on, Christ lives in each human soul. If our souls acquire ever greater depth as they live through successive earth-lives, they become increasingly independent and inwardly ever more free. Therefore they need fresh means of understanding ancient wisdom and need to continue making progress out of this inner freedom. It must be stated that spiritual science confidently proclaims these ancient Christian truths in a new form because it has understood the depth, truth and significance of Christianity. Let those who insist on clinging to their prejudices believe that spiritual science undermines Christianity. Anyone familiar with modern culture will find that it is precisely those people who cannot be old-fashioned Christians who have been convinced of the truth of Christianity by spiritual science. For what it has to say about Christianity can be said by spiritual science to every human soul, since the Christ of Whom it speaks can be found by every human soul within itself. But spiritual science can also say that it sees Christ as the Being that once really entered into human souls and into the earth-world through the fact of the Mystery of Golgotha. Faith has nothing to fear from knowledge, for the elements of faith, raised to the level of the spirit, need not shun the light of knowledge. Thus spiritual science will win those souls for Christianity who could not be won by speaking to them like a prophet or as a founder of a sect, but instead they need to be addressed by an unassuming scientist who draws their attention to what can be found in the field of spiritual science and who sets the strings in every human soul vibrating in harmony.

Anyone can become a researcher in the field of the spirit; you can find the ways described in the books mentioned earlier. But it is also true that a person who is not a researcher in this field can be permeated by the truth if he lets it work upon him without bias. Otherwise, he won't be able to free himself from prejudices. All truth resides in the human soul. Not everybody may be able to achieve the seer's view of spiritual truth, but the more our thinking is freed from sensory realms, the more fully it can follow the spiritual scientist as he draws our attention to his findings along spiritual paths. He only wants to make us aware that there are truths that can spring to life in every soul because they are already dormant in it.

Before closing I'd like to point out how spiritual science fits into our cultural life today. Spiritual science is in full agreement with the natural scientific way of seeing and thinking about things. It wants to present itself to culture in the same way that the loyal canon Copernicus and Galileo and Giordano Bruno presented themselves in their times.

Let's think for a moment of Giordano Bruno—what did he really do? Before he appeared on the scene and spoke words so significant for human evolution, people gazed into the skies and talked of the heavenly spheres in the way they thought they saw them. They spoke of the blue vault of the heavens as the boundary of the universe. Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno had the courage to break through sensory appearances and to establish a new way of thinking. What was Giordano Bruno actually saying to his listeners? He said, “Look at the firmament, the blue vault of the heavens. The limitations of your knowledge have created it. That is as far as your eyes see; it is your eyes that create this boundary.” Giordano Bruno extended their view beyond these limits. He felt it permissible to point out that everlasting starry worlds were embedded in the vastnesses of space.

What is the task of the spiritual researcher? Let me try to express it in terms of recent spiritual evolution. The researcher must point to a sort of “firmament of time,” to birth and death as the boundaries of human life. He maintains that the exoteric viewpoint sees birth and death as a “firmament of time” because of the limitations of human understanding and perceptive capacity. Like Giordano Bruno, the spiritual researcher must point out that this “time firmament” doesn't really exist, but that people think it does simply because of their limited way of seeing. Giordano Bruno pointed beyond the supposed limits of space to endless worlds embedded in its vast expanses. The spiritual scientist must similarly explain that behind the supposed boundaries of birth and death there stretches never-ending time, in which the eternity of the human soul, the eternal being of man as it passes from life to life, is embedded. Spiritual science is in complete harmony with the impulses that brought about these changes in natural science.

May I be allowed to draw attention once again to the fact that spiritual science has no desire to found a religion of any kind; rather does it want to set a more religious mood of soul-life and to lead us to the Christ as the Being at the center of religious life. It brings about a deepened religious awareness. Anyone who fears that spiritual science could destroy his religious awareness resembles a person—if I may use this analogy—who might have approached Columbus before he set sail for America and asked, “What do you want to discover America for? The sun comes up so beautifully here in our good old Europe. How do we know if the sun also rises in America, warming people and shining on the earth?” Anyone familiar with the laws of physical reality would have known that the sun shines on all continents. But anyone fearing for Christianity is like the person described as fearing the discovery of a new continent because he thinks the sun might not shine there. He who truly bears the Christ-Sun in his soul knows that the Christ-Sun shines on every continent. And regardless of what may still be discovered, either in realms of nature or in realms of spirit, the “America of the spirit” will never be discovered unless truly religious life turns with a sense of belonging toward the Christ-Sun as the center of our existence on the earth, unless that Sun shines—warming, illumining, and enkindling our human souls. Only a person whose religious feeling is weak would fear that it could die or waste away because of some new discovery. But a person strong in his genuine feeling for the Christ will not be afraid that knowledge might undermine his faith.

Spiritual science lives in this conviction. It speaks out of this conviction to contemporary culture. It knows that truly religious thinking and feeling cannot be endangered by research of any kind, but that only weak religious sentiment has anything to fear. Spiritual science knows that we can trust our sense for truth. Through the shattering events in his soul life which he has experienced objectively, the spiritual researcher knows what lives in the depths of the human soul. Through his investigations he has come to have confidence in the human soul and has seen that it is most intimately related to the truth. As a result, he believes—signs of the times to the contrary—in the ultimate victory of spiritual science. And he counts on the truth-loving and genuinely religious life of the human soul to bring about this victory.

Anthroposophie und Christentum

Vor allen Dingen bitte ich Sie um Entschuldigung, daß ich nicht in der Lage bin, in der Sprache des Landes am heutigen Abend zu Ihnen zu sprechen. Allein die Freunde, die Mitglieder unserer Anthroposophischen Gesellschaft sind, in deren Mitte ich in diesen Tagen, in dieser Woche Vorlesungen über Geisteswissenschaft halten darf, waren der Meinung, daß ich auch öffentlich in deutscher Sprache in dieser Stadt über einen Gegenstand der Geisteswissenschaft sprechen könne. Auch das Thema, welches der Betrachtung dieses Abends zugrunde liegen soll, ist dem Wunsche unserer werten Mitglieder in dieser Stadt entsprungen. Ich soll sprechen über die Beziehung der Geisteswissenschaft oder, wie man die hier gemeinte Geisteswissenschaft auch nennen kann, über die Beziehung der Anthroposophie zum Christentum. Dabei wird es allerdings notwendig sein, daß ich einiges vorausschicke über das Wesen und über die Bedeutung dessen, was hier mit Geisteswissenschaft gemeint ist, über den Gesichtspunkt, von dem aus gesprochen werden soll.

Geisteswissenschaft, wie sie hier gemeint ist, strebt nicht an die Begründung irgend einer neuen Religion oder irgend einer neuen religiösen Sekte oder dergleichen. Geisteswissenschaft will sein oder glaubt sein zu dürfen dasjenige, was unserer gegenwärtigen Kultur auferlegt ist in geistiger Beziehung.

Wenn wir gegenwärtig auf einem Gebiete, auf dem es notwendig ist, Fortschritte machen sollen in der Kulturentwickelung der Menschheit, welche in ähnlicher Weise auf einem anderen Gebiete gemacht worden sind vor drei, vier, fünf Jahrhunderten, als die neuere Naturwissenschaft in ihrer Morgenröte eingezogen ist in das menschliche Kulturleben, so müssen wir sagen: Was für die Erkenntnis der äußeren Natur, was für das Leben durch die Erkenntnis der äußeren Naturgesetze diese Naturwissenschaft der Menschheit geworden ist, das möchte Geisteswissenschaft werden durch die Erkenntnis der Gesetze unseres Seelen- und Geisteslebens und durch die Anwendung dieser Gesetze des Seelen- und Geisteslebens im ethischen, im sozialen, im allerweitesten Kulturleben; das möchte sie werden für unsere Gegenwart und für die nächste Zukunft. Und so viel man auch diese Geisteswissenschaft notwendigerweise noch verkennen muß, ganz begreiflicherweise verkennen muß, so entnimmt sie das Vertrauen in ihre Wahrheit, auch das Vertrauen in ihre Wirksamkeit in der Menschheitskultur, der Betrachtung des Schicksals der Naturwissenschaft beim Aufgange des neueren Geisteslebens. Auch der Naturwissenschafter stand ja gegenüber jahrhunderte-, ja jahrtausendealten Vorurteilen; aber die Wahrheit hat Kräfte, die ihr in der Art, wie es angemessen ist im Menschenleben, immer zum Siege verhilft gegen alle widerstrebenden Kräfte.

Und so sei denn, nachdem von diesem Vertrauen des Geisteswissenschafters in die Wahrheit und Wirksamkeit seiner Arbeit einige Worte gesprochen worden sind, sogleich eingegangen auf das Wesen, auf die Art der Forschung, welche der hier gemeinten Geisteswissenschaft zugrunde liegt.

Wahrhaftig ganz im Geiste der naturwissenschaftlichen Vorstellungsart ist die Vorstellungsart der Geisteswissenschaft gehalten. Aber da sich diese Geisteswissenschaft auf ein ganz anderes Gebiet erstreckt als die Naturwissenschaft, nämlich nicht auf das Gebier dessen, was sinnenfällig wahrgenommen werden kann, auf das Gebiet der äußeren Natur, sondern auf das Gebiet des Geistes, so muß es ja einleuchtend sein, daß gerade eine naturwissenschaftliche Denkweise da, wo es sich darum handelt, das Gebiet des Geistigen zu erforschen, sich wesentlich modifizieren muß, zu etwas anderem werden muß als auf dem Gebiete der Naturwissenschaft. Und obgleich die Methode, die Forschungsweise der Geisteswissenschaft ganz so gehalten ist in dem Geiste der Naturwissenschaft, daß jeder naturwissenschaftlich Gebildete, der heute Naturwissenschaft ohne Vorurteile nimmt, sich auf den Boden dieser Geisteswissenschaft stellen kann, so muß doch gesagt werden, daß allerdings, solange man die naturwissenschaftlichen Methoden in ihrer Einseitigkeit nimmt, wie es vielfach heute geschieht, Vorurteil über Vorurteil gegen die Anwendung naturwissenschaftlicher Vorstellungsart auf das geistige Leben erwachsen kann. Muß doch naturwissenschaftliches Denken, man möchte sagen, naturwissenschaftliche Logik angewendet werden auf das, was dem Menschen wohl am nächsten liegt, was aber auch am schwersten zu erforschen ist, muß doch diese Denkungsweise angewendet werden auf das Wesen des Menschen selbst. Muß doch der Mensch in der Geisteswissenschaft sich selber untersuchen, und muß er doch auch zu dem einzigen Werkzeug greifen, welches ihm zu seiner Untersuchung zur Verfügung steht, nämlich zu sich selbst. Davon geht die Geisteswissenschaft aus, daß der Mensch in sich selbst, indem er zum Instrument wird, um die Geisteswelt zu untersuchen, eine Verwandlung erfahren muß, daß er etwas mit sich vornehmen muß, das ihn in die Lage versetzt, in die geistige Welt hineinzusehen, was er ja nicht tut im alltäglichen Leben.

Von einem Vergleich lassen Sie mich ausgehen, von einem naturwissenschaftlichen Vergleich, der nichts beweisen soll, der nur verdeutlichen soll, wie die geisteswissenschaftliche Vorstellungsart ganz auf dem Boden naturwissenschaftlicher Denkungsweise steht. In der Natur tritt uns zum Beispiel das Wasser entgegen. Wenn wir das Wasser ansehen, wie es uns draußen entgegentritt, so stellt es sich zunächst in seinen Eigenschaften dar. Aber der Chemiker kommt mit seinen Methoden und wendet diese auf das Wasser an; er zerlegt uns das Wasser in Wasserstoff und Sauerstoff. Ja, was macht da der Naturwissenschafter aus dem Wasser? Das Wasser brennt bekanntlich nicht. Der Chemiker zieht den Wasserstoff aus dem Wasser heraus, und das ist ein Gas, das brennt. Niemand, der äußerlich das Wasser ansieht, kann diesem Wasser ansehen, daß da Wasserstoff drinnen ist und Sauerstoff drinnen ist, die ganz andere Eigenschaften haben als das Wasser.

Ebensowenig, das zeigt eben die Geisteswissenschaft, kann der Mensch, wenn er dem Menschen gegenübersteht im Leben, erkennen, was dieser Mensch ist in seinem Inneren. Und so wie der Chemiker, der Naturwissenschafter, kommt und uns das Wasser zerlegt in Wasserstoff und Sauerstoff, so muß, allerdings jetzt in einem innerlichen Seelenprozeß, der sich in den tiefsten Tiefen der Seele vorbereiten muß, der Geisteswissenschafter kommen und muß dasjenige, was sich im äußeren Leben darbietet, zerlegen. Und zerlegen kann der Geistesforscher durch die geistesforscherischen Methoden den Menschen in das Äußerlich-Leibliche und in das Geistig-Seelische. Zunächst interessiert es, vom Gesichtspunkte der Geisteswissenschaft aus das Geistig-Seelische abgesondert vom Leiblichen zu untersuchen. Niemand kann die wahre Wirklichkeit des Geistig-Seelischen aus dem Außerlich-Leiblichen erkennen, ebensowenig wie die Natur des Wasserstoffs erkannt werden kann, wenn er nicht aus dem Wasser herausgezogen wird.

Es ist heute sehr oft der Fall, daß in dem Augenblick, wo man beginnt, in dieser Art zu sprechen, einem gesagt wird: Das verstößt doch wider den Monismus, an dem man unbedingt festhalten muß. Nun, der Monismus darf ja auch den Chemiker nicht hindern, daß er das Wasser zerlegt in eine Zweiheit. Der Monismus wird gar nicht dadurch angefochten, daß dasjenige, was in Wirklichkeit geschehen kann, geschieht: daß durch die Geistesforschung, durch die geistesforscherischen Methoden abgetrennt wird von dem Leiblich-Körperhaften das Geistig-Seelische. Nun aber sind diese Methoden allerdings nicht solche, die man im Laboratorium, im physikalischen Kabinett, in der Klinik vollziehen kann, sondern es sind Vorgänge, die in der Seele selber vollzogen werden müssen. Es sind aber keine Vorgänge der Seele, die Wunder darstellen, sondern es sind nur Steigerungen desjenigen, was der Mensch im gewöhnlichen Leben beobachten kann. Es sind nicht wunderbare Eigenschaften, sondern solche Eigenschaften, die der Mensch im alltäglichen Leben in einem gewissen Maße hat, die er nur ins Unbegrenzte steigern muß, wenn er zum Geistesforscher werden soll. Und da ich nicht in allgemeinen Redensarten herumreden will, so will ich gleich in die Betrachtung der Sache selbst eintreten.

Jeder kennt dasjenige, was man im menschlichen Seelenleben nennt das Erinnerungsvermögen, das Gedächtnis. Jeder weiß ja, wieviel von dem Gedächtnis im Grunde genommen abhängt. Man stelle sich einmal vor, wir würden eines Morgens aufwachen und keine Ahnung haben, was früher um uns und in uns war. Wir würden dadurch die ganze menschliche Wesenheit verlieren. Unser Gedächtnis, das in sich zusammenhängt von einem gewissen frühen Zeitpunkt in der Kindheit an, das gehört notwendig zu unserem menschlichen Leben. Nun werden schon die Philosophen der Gegenwart gegenüber der Untersuchung der Gedächtniskraft stutzig. Sie haben jetzt schon Persönlichkeiten in ihrer Mitte, die gerade, indem sie das Gedächtnis betrachten, von einer materialistisch-monistischen Weltanschauung abkommen, indem sie durch genaue Untersuchung finden, daß, wenn man auch die Sinnesempfindungen, soviel man das nur sagen kann von Seelentätigkeit, in äußerlicher Weise gebunden findet an den Leib, man das Gedächtnis nie als an den Leib gebunden wird anerkennen können. Darauf brauche ich ja nur aufmerksam zu machen. Denn ein Mann, der wahrhaftig keine Neigung hat, in die Geisteswissenschaft einzudringen, der französische Philosoph Bergson, hat auf diese geistige Art des Gedächtnisses hingedeutert.

Wie aber tritt uns im Leben das Gedächtnis, die Erinnerungskraft entgegen? Längst vergangene Ereignisse kommen in Bildern in unsere Seele herein. Die Ereignisse sind längst vergangen, aber die Seele hat es mit sich selbst zu tun. Sie hat es damit zu tun, daß sie heraufzaubert das vergangene Erlebnis aus den Tiefen des inneren Lebens. Und man kann das, was da heraufkommt aus den Seelentiefen, mit dem ursprünglichen Erlebnis vergleichen. Blaß sind die Erinnerungen gegenüber den Bildern, die uns die Wahrnehmung der Sinne bietet. Aber mit der Integrität des Seelenlebens hängen sie zusammen. Und wir könnten uns in der Welt nicht zurechtfinden, wenn wir nicht das Gedächtnis hätten. Diesem Gedächtnis aber liegt die Kraft des Gedächtnisses zugrunde. Die Seele kann dasjenige, was in ihren Erinnerungen verborgen ist, durch die Kraft des Gedächtnisses heraufholen. Aber da gerade setzt nun Geisteswissenschaft ein. Nicht das Gedächtnis als solches — ich bitte ins Auge zu fassen, was ich sagen will —, nicht das Gedächtnis als solches, wohl aber die Kraft, welche dem Heraufholen eines geistigen Inhaltes aus den Tiefen der Seele zugrunde liegt, diese Kraft kann verstärkt werden, ins Unbegrenzte verstärkt werden, so daß sie im Leben der Seele nicht bloß verwendet wird, um durchgemachte Erlebnisse aus der Seele heraufzuholen, sondern daß sie zu etwas ganz anderem verwendet werden kann. Nicht äußere Methoden, die im Laboratorium verfolgt werden können, nicht das, was man durch die äußeren Sinne wahrnehmen kann, liegt zugrunde den geistesforscherischen Methoden, sondern intensive Seelenvorgänge, die jeder durchmachen kann. Das, was den Wert dieser intensiven Seelenvorgänge ausmacht, ist die unbegrenzte Steigerung der Aufmerksamkeit im Menschenleben, oder wie man es nennt: die Konzentration des Gedankenlebens.

Was ist diese Konzentration des Gedankenlebens?

Ich kann heute nur in einer kurzen einstündigen Betrachtung die Prinzipien dessen anführen, um was es sich handelt. Das Nähere können Sie nachlesen in meinen Büchern «Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten ?» und in meiner «Geheimwissenschaft» im zweiten Teil; diese Bücher sind ja auch übersetzt. Ferner in dem Buche «Die Schwelle der geistigen Welt». Aber den Prinzipien nach will ich die ersten Vornahmen der Seele auseinandersetzen, die eine unbegrenzte Steigerung dessen sind, was für das menschliche Leben notwendig ist, eine Steigerung der Aufmerksamkeit. Die Aufmerksamkeit muß in unbegrenzter Weise gesteigert werden, damit Geistesforschung in die Seele eintreten könne.

Was macht denn der Mensch in der Regel, wenn er der Außenwelt gegenübertritt? Er nimmt die Dinge wahr; er verarbeitet die Dinge durch den Verstand, der an das Gehirn gebunden ist. Dann macht er sich Vorstellungen über das Wahrgenommene. Und in der Regel ist er zufrieden, wenn er die äußeren Vorstellungen in der Seele bewahrt. Da, wo das Alltagsleben aufhört, da beginnen die Methoden der Geisteswissenschaft, da beginnt dasjenige, was man Konzentration des Denkens nennen kann. Derjenige, der ein Geistesforscher werden will, der muß den Faden des Seelenlebens da aufnehmen, wo er gewöhnlich im äußeren Leben verlassen wird. Vorstellungen, die wir uns selbst bilden, die wir genau überschauen können, am besten sinnbildliche Vorstellungen, bei denen wir nicht nötig haben, die Übereinstimmung mit der Außenwelt zu prüfen, sie stellen wir in den Horizont unseres Bewußtseins; Vorstellungen, die wir entweder finden, aus der Praxis der Geisteswissenschaft hervorgegangen, oder zu denen uns der Geistesforscher raten kann, sie stellen wir in den Mittelpunkt des ganzen Bewußtseins, so daß wir durch längere Zeit die Aufmerksamkeit der Seele von allem Äußeren ablenken und uns nur konzentrieren auf eine Vorstellung. Während man sonst nicht bei einer Vorstellung stehenbleibt, zieht man jetzt alle Kräfte seiner Seele zusammen, konzentriert sie auf eine Vorstellung und bleibt ganz in seinem Inneren hingegeben an diese Vorstellung. Wenn man den Menschen betrachtet bei einer solchen Vornahme, so vollzieht er im Grunde genommen etwas, was dem Schlafe gewissermaßen ähnlich ist, und was doch auch wiederum radikal verschieden ist. Denn, soll solche Konzentration fruchtbar werden, so muß der Mensch in der Tat wie ein Schlafender werden.

Wenn wir einschlafen, da fühlen wir zuerst, wie die Willenskräfte in unseren Gliedern ruhig werden, wie eine gewisse Dämmerung um uns auftritt, wie die Sinne in ihrer Tätigkeit abebben. Dann gehen wir über in Bewußtlosigkeit. Alles Außere muß so werden in der Konzentration wie beim Schlafe. Die Sinne müssen vollständig frei werden von allen Eindrücken der Außenwelt. Das Auge darf so wenig sehen wie im Schlafe; das Ohr so wenig hören wie im Schlafe und so weiter. Dann wird das ganze Seelenleben zusammengenommen und auf eine Vorstellung konzentriert; das ist der radikale Unterschied vom Schlafe. Man könnte den Zustand nennen ein bewußtes Schlafen, ein vollbewußstes Schlafen. Während im Schlafe die Finsternis der Unbewußtheit sich ausdehnt im Seelenleben, lebt in einem erhöhten Seelenleben derjenige, der ein Geistesforscher werden will. Er strengt alle Kräfte des Seelenlebens an und wendet sie auf eine Vorstellung. Nicht darauf kommt es an, daß wir diese Vorstellung betrachten; sie gibt uns nur eine Gelegenheit, unsere Seelenkräfte zusammenzuraffen, zusammenzudrängen. Auf dieses Zusammendrängen der Seelenkräfte kommt es an. Denn dadurch gelangen wir allmählich dazu — ich muß da wiederum auf das Nähere in meinen Büchern verweisen —, wirklich das Geistig-Seelische, das in uns ist, wie der Wasserstoff im Wasser ist, herauszureißen aus dem Physisch-Leiblichen, es frei zu machen vom Physisch-Leiblichen. Nicht sozusagen in einem Ansturm ist das zu erreichen, was ich jetzt charakterisiert habe. Es brauchen die meisten Menschen ein jahrelanges Arbeiten in solchen Konzentrationen, wenn auch das Tagesleben von solchen Konzentrationen nicht abgelenkt wird; denn man kann sie nur durch wenige Minuten, höchstens durch Teile einer Stunde festhalten, aber man muß sie immer und immer wiederum wiederholen, bis es wirklich gelingt, die Kräfte, die sonst nur schlummern in der menschlichen Natur — die im Alltagsleben ja auch da sind, die aber schlummern —, so zu verstärken, daß sie wirksam werden in unserer Seele und herausreißen das Geistig-Seelische aus dem Physisch-Leiblichen.

Da ich, wie gesagt, nicht herumreden möchte in abstrakter Art, sondern Ihnen Tatsachen mitteilen möchte, so sei es gleich gesagt, daß, wenn es dem Geistesforscher gelingt, durch Energie und Ausdauer, durch Hingabe an seine Übungen wirklich zur Frucht seiner Übungen zu kommen, er dann zu einem Erlebnis gelangt, das zunächst genannt werden könnte ein Erlebnis des rein inneren Bewußtseins. Man weiß mit einem Worte von einem bestimmten Zeitpunkte an einen Sinn zu verbinden mit dem Worte, das vorher sinnlos war: Ich weiß mich außerhalb meines Leibes; ich bin, mein Inneres erfassend, mein Inneres erlebend, außerhalb meines Leibes.

Ich will Ihnen von diesem Erlebnis im einzelnen erzählen. Zunächst verspürt man, daß wirklich die Denkkraft, die sonst nur in den Verrichtungen des Alltags sich regt, sich loslöst vom Leibe. Dumpf ist zunächst das Erlebnis, aber es tritt doch so auf, daß man seine Natur erkennt, wenn man es gehabt hat. Man weiß zuerst dann, wenn man wiederum zurückkehrt in seinen Leib — das möchte ich zunächst charakterisieren —, wie es ist, wenn man nun in das Gehirnleben, das die physische Materie darbietet, untertaucht, wie es Widerstand bietet, dieses Gehirn. Man weiß: Mit dem Alltagsdenken denkt man so, daß das Gehirn das Instrument ist; jetzt war man aber draußen. Dann kommt man allmählich dazu, einen Sinn zu verbinden mit dem Worte: Du erlebst dich im Seelisch-Geistigen. Man erlebt, wie das eigene Haupt umkleidet ist gewissermaßen mit seinen Gedanken. Man weiß, was es heißt, das Seelisch-Geistige abgetrennt zu haben vom äußeren, physisch-leiblichen Leben. Zuerst lernt man den Widerstand kennen, den das leibliche Leben bietet. Dann lernt man erkennen das selbständige Leben außerhalb des Leibes. Es ist wahrhaftig so, wie wenn der Wasserstoff einmal sich selbst außerhalb des Wassers wahrnehmen sollte. So ist es mit dem Menschen, wenn er solche Übungen durchmacht. Und dann, wenn er solche Übungen getreulich fortsetzt, dann tritt der große, der bedeutungsvolle Augenblick ein, an dem man sozusagen den Ausgangspunkt der eigentlichen Geistesforschung hat. Ein Augenblick, der tief erschütternd ist, der ungeheuer bedeutungsvoll ins ganze Leben eingreift. Dieser Augenblick kann in der verschiedensten Art sich einstellen. Er kann tausendfach verschieden sein. Ich will ihn aber typisch charakterisieren, wie er doch seiner Charakteristik nach meistens sein wird.

Hat man so eine gewisse Zeit hindurch geübt, hat man gewissermaßen aus der naturwissenschaftlichen Denkweise heraus die eigene Seele so behandelt, dann kommt der Moment, der eintreten kann entweder im alltäglichen Leben, oder auch mitten im Schlafe, so daß man aus dem Schlafe aufwacht und weiß: man träumt nicht, man erlebt eine neue Wirklichkeit. Man kann das zum Beispiel so erleben, daß man sich sagt: Was ist doch um mich? Es ist, wie wenn ich mich in einer Umgebung befände, die sich von mir loslöst, wie wenn die Elemente blitzartig einschlügen und wie wenn mein Leib zerstört würde durch die Elemente und ich mich aufrecht erhalte gegenüber diesem Leibe. Man lernt erkennen, was alle Geistesforscher durch alle Zeiten hindurch mit einem bildlichen Ausdruck genannt haben: an die Pforte des Todes gelangen. Denn das erlebt man, daß man jetzt weiß durch das Bild — also nicht durch die Wirklichkeit, diese erlebt man nur im Tode —, man erlebt durch das Bild, daß man jetzt weiß, wie der Mensch geistig-seelisch ist, wenn er nicht durch das Instrument seines Leibes sich und die Welt wahrnimmt, sondern wenn er nur im Geistig-Seelischen lebt.

Das ist zunächst das Erschütternde; man weiß: Du hast dich mit deiner Denkkraft losgelöst von deinem Leibe. Und ebenso können andere Kräfte losgelöst werden von dem Leibe, so daß der Mensch immer reicher, immer innerlicher mit Bezug auf sein Seelenleben wird.

Aber es genügt die eine Übung nicht, welche ich mit dem Ausdruck Konzentration oder unbegrenzte Steigerung der Aufmerksamkeit bezeichnet habe. Durch diese Übung erlangt man das Folgende: Wenn man an dem Punkte angelangt ist, wo die Seele sich selbst erlebt, dann steigen auch auf die Bilder, die man reale Imaginationen nennen kann. Bilder steigen auf, aber Bilder, die sich gewaltig unterscheiden von den Bildern des gewöhnlichen Gedächtnisses. Während das gewöhnliche Gedächtnis nur dasjenige in Bildern hat, was äußerlich erlebt worden ist, steigen jetzt Bilder auf aus den grauen Seelentiefen, die nichts gemein haben mit dem, was man in der äußeren Sinneswelt erleben kann. Alle Einwände, daß man sich leicht täuschen könne, daß das, was da aus den grauen Seelentiefen heraufsteigt, nur Reminiszenzen des Gedächtnisses sein könnten, alle diese Einwände sind hinfällig. Denn der Geistesforscher lernt eben wirklich unterscheiden zwischen dem, was das Gedächtnis heraufrufen kann, und dem, was radikal verschieden ist von allem, was im Gedächtnis stehen kann. Allerdings, eines muß bedacht werden, wenn von diesem Punkte des Eintretens in die geistige Welt gesprochen wird. Es ist dasjenige, daß zur Geistesforschung wenig sich solche Personen eignen, welche an Halluzinationen, an Visionen oder ähnlichen krankhaften Seelengebilden und Seelenzuständen leiden. Je weniger der Mensch dazu neigt, was ja doch nur eine Reminiszenz des Tageslebens ist, desto sicherer kommt er vorwärts auf dem Gebiete der Geistesforschung. Und darin besteht ein großer Teil der Vorbereitung zur Geistesforschung, daß man alles dasjenige, was nur irgendwie unbewußt aus der Menschenseele sich aufdrängen könnte in solch krankhafter Art, genau unterscheiden lernt von dem, was als ein neues Element, als eine geistige Wirklichkeit durch die geisteswissenschaftliche Ausbildung der Seele eintreten kann.

Ich möchte gerade einen radikalen Unterschied angeben zwischen dem Visionären, dem Halluzinatorischen und dem, was der Geistesforscher erschaut. Warum ist es denn so, daß so viele Menschen glauben, schon in der geistigen Welt drinnen zu stehen, wenn sie nur Halluzinationen und Visionen haben? Ja, die Menschen lernen so ungern etwas wirklich Neues kennen! Sie halten so gerne an dem Alten, in dem sie schon drinnen stehen, fest. Im Grunde genommen treten uns in Halluzinationen und Visionen die krankhaften Seelengebilde so entgegen, wie uns die äußere sinnliche Wirklichkeit entgegentritt. Sie sind da; sie stellen sich vor uns hin. Wir tun gewissermaßen nichts dazu, wenn sie sich vor uns hinstellen. In dieser Lage ist der Geistesforscher gegenüber seinem neuen geistigen Element nicht. Ich habe davon gesprochen, daß der Geistesforscher alle Kräfte seiner Seele, die im gewöhnlichen Leben schlummern, konzentrieren, heraufarbeiten muß. Das erfordert aber, daß er eine seelische Energie, eine seelische Stärke anwendet, die im äußeren Leben nicht da ist. Aber diese Stärke muß er immer festhalten, wenn er eintritt in die geistige Welt. Der Mensch bleibt passiv, er braucht sich nicht anzustrengen: das ist das Charakteristische der Halluzinationen, der Visionen. In dem Augenblick, wo wir der geistigen Welt gegenüber auch nur einen Moment passiv werden, verschwindet sogleich alles. Wir müssen unausgesetzt tätig, aktiv dabeisein. Daher können wir uns auch nicht täuschen, denn nichts kann aus der geistigen Welt vor unsere Augen treten so, wie eine Vision oder Halluzination vor unsere Augen tritt. Wir müssen überall mit unserer Tätigkeit dabeisein, bei jedem Atom desjenigen, was uns aus der geistigen Welt entgegentritt. Wir müssen wissen, wie es sich damit verhält. Diese Aktivität, dieses fortlaufende Tätigsein, das ist notwendig für die wirkliche Geistesforschung. Dann aber tritt man ein in eine Welt, die sich radikal unterscheidet von der physisch-sinnlichen Welt. Man tritt ein in eine Welt, wo geistige Wesen, geistige Tatsachen um uns sind.

Aber ein Zweites ist dazu notwendig. Daß man losreißt die Seele vom Leibe, das geschieht in der geschilderten Weise. Das zweite aber, es kann wiederum durch einen naturwissenschaftlichen Vergleich klar gemacht werden. Wenn wir den Wasserstoff abtrennen, so ist er zunächst für sich allein; aber er geht Verbindungen ein mit anderen Stoffen, er wird zu etwas ganz anderem. Dasselbe muß sich vollziehen mit unserem Geistig-Seelischen nach der Abtrennung vom Leibe. Dieses Geistig-Seelische muß sich verbinden mit Wesenheiten, die nicht in der Sinneswelt sind. Es muß mit ihnen eins werden; dadurch nimmt es sie wahr.

Die erste Stufe der Geistesforschung ist das Abtrennen des SeelischGeistigen vom Physisch-Leiblichen. Die zweite Stufe ist das Eingehen von Verbindungen mit Wesen, die hinter der Sinneswelt sind. Das letztere ist etwas, was einem in der Gegenwart nicht verziehen wird, weit weniger verziehen wird als das Reden von einem «Geiste im allgemeinen». Es gibt ja heute schon viele Menschen, die wissen, daß es sie drängt, ein Geistiges anzunehmen. Sie sprechen aber von einem Geiste, der hinter der Welt ist und sind froh beseelt, wenn sie Pantheisten sein können. Aber für den Geistesforscher ist der Pantheismus gerade dasselbe, wie wenn man jemand in die Natur führt und sagt zu ihm: Schau nur, das alles, was dich hier umgibt, es ist Natur! wenn man ihm nicht sagt: Das sind Bäume, das sind Wolken, das ist eine Lilie, das ist eine Rose, sondern: das ist alles Natur! Wenn man den Menschen also von einem Vorgang zum anderen Vorgang, von einem Wesen zum anderen Wesen führt und ihm sagt: Es ist das alles Natur ! — damit ist ja nichts gesagt. Im einzelnen, im Konkreten muß auf die Tatsachen eingegangen werden. Es wird einem heute verziehen, wenn man von einem Geiste spricht, der in allem darinnen ist. Der Geistesforscher kann sich aber damit nicht zufrieden geben. Er tritt ja ein in eine Welt, die besteht aus einer Welt von geistigen Wesenheiten, geistigen Tatsachen, die differenziert sind so, wie die äußere Welt konkret differenziert ist, indem sie besteht aus Wolken, Bergen, Tälern, aus Bäumen, Blumen und so weiter. Daß man aber davon spricht, daß nicht nur die natürlichen Vorgänge differenziert sind in Pflanzen-, Tier- und Menschenreich, sondern daß man, wenn der Mensch in eine geistige Welt eintritt, auch dort von konkreten Einzelheiten und Tatsachen spricht, das wird einem heute nicht verziehen. Aber der Geistesforscher kann nicht anders als darauf aufmerksam machen, daß, wenn er so in die geistige Welt eintritt, er eintritt in eine Welt wirklicher, konkreter geistiger Wesenheiten und geistiger Vorgänge.

Das zweite, das dann notwendig ist, das ist eine Steigerung der Hingabe, jener Hingabe, die der Mensch im gewöhnlichen Leben oder im gesteigerten gewöhnlichen Leben in der religiösen Frömmigkeit empfindet. Aber wiederum ins Unendliche gesteigert muß das entwickelt werden, daß der Mensch wirklich dazu kommt, daß er gleichsam im Strome des Weltgeschehens hingebungsvoll ruht wie im Schlafe. Im Schlafe vergißt er jede Regung des eigenen Leibes, so muß der Mensch jede Regung des eigenen Leibes vergessen in der Kontemplation oder Meditation. Es ist dies die zweite Übung, die abwechseln muß mit der ersten Übung. Der Übende vergißt seinen Leib vollständig, nicht nur in denkerischer Beziehung, sondern so, daß er auch alle Gemütsregungen und Willensregungen abzusondern vermag, so wie er sich im Schlafe abzusondern vermag von jeder Regsamkeit des Leibes. Aber bewußt muß dieser Zustand herbeigeführt werden. Indem der Mensch diese Hingabe hinzufügt zu der ersten Übung, gelangt er dazu, wirklich sich durch die erwachenden geistigen Sinne so in eine geistige Welt hineinzustellen, wie er sich hineinlebt durch die äußeren Sinne in die Welt der Sinnlichkeit, die uns umgibt. Eine neue Welt tritt dann vor dem Menschen auf, die Welt, in der der Mensch mit seinem Geistig-Seelischen immer ist. Dann aber wird für den Menschen etwas zur Tatsache. Zur Tatsache wird es, so sagte ich, für die Innenbeobachtung, was heute noch durchaus zurückgewiesen wird von den Vorurteilen unserer Zeit, was aber ebenso ein Ergebnis einer streng wissenschaftlichen Forschung ist, wie die Evolutionslehre der neueren Zeit es ist: der Mensch lernt seinen seelisch-geistigen Wesenskern kennen, und zwar so lernt er ihn kennen, daß er weiß: Bevor ich vor der Empfängnis und vor der Geburt in dieses Leben eingetreten bin, das mich mit dem Leibe bekleidete, war ich geistig-seelisch in einem geistigen Reiche. Indem ich durch die Pforte des Todes schreiten werde, wird mein Leib abfallen, aber dasjenige, was ich jetzt kennen gelernt habe als geistig-seelischen Wesenskern, dasjenige, was außer dem Leibe leben kann, das wird durch die Pforte des Todes schreiten. Das gehört, nachdem es durch die Pforte des Todes geschritten ist, zu einer geistigen Welt, das geht in eine geistige Welt ein. - Man lernt, mit anderen Worten, die unsterbliche Seele kennen schon in diesem Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod. Man lernt kennen dasjenige, wovon man weiß, daß es auf den Leib nicht angewiesen ist. Die Welt lernt man kennen, in welche die Menschenseele nach dem Tode eintritt. Aber man lernt diesen geistig-seelischen Wesenskern des Menschen in einer solchen Weise erkennen, wie es sich wiederum wissenschaftlich-anschaulich beschreiben läßt.

Wenn wir die Pflanze betrachten, wie der Keim sich entwickelt, wie die Blätter und Blüten entstehen, wie die Frucht sich bildet, aus der dann wiederum ein Keim hervorgeht, dann werden wir gewahr, daß das Leben dieser Pflanze sich zuspitzt in diesem Keim. Man sieht das Abfallen der Blüten und Blätter, man sieht, daß der Keim bleibt, der in sich trägt eine neue Pflanze. So wird man gewahr: In dieser Pflanze, die man vor sich hat, da lebt der Keim, der Kern zu einer neuen Pflanze. So lernt man erkennen, indem man das Leben zwischen Geburt und 'Tod betrachtet, daß sich im Geistig-Seelischen dasjenige entwickelt, was durch die Pforte des Todes geht, was aber der Keim, der Kern eines neuen Lebens ist. So gewiß wie der Pflanzenkeim die Anlage hat, eine neue Pflanze zu werden, so gewiß hat dasjenige, was sich in dem Alltagsleben als Seelisch-Geistiges verbirgt, was sich aber der Geisteswissenschaft zeigt, die Anlage zu einem neuen Menschen. Und durch eine solche Betrachtung gelangt man in voller Übereinstimmung mit der naturwissenschaftlichen Vorstellungsart zu den wiederholten Erdenleben. Man weiß, daß das gesamte Menschenleben besteht aus dem Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod und aus dem Leben, das verläuft zwischen dem Tode und einer neuen Geburt, aus dem dann der Mensch wiederum in ein neues Erdenleben eintritt. Das einzige, was eingewendet werden könnte gegen das eben Gesagte, ist, daß ja der Pflanzenkeim auch zugrunde gehen könnte, wenn die Bedingungen nicht da sind, die ihn zu einer neuen Pflanze aufrufen. Dieser Einwand erledigt sich für die Geisteswissenschaft dadurch, daß allerdings der Pflanzenkeim, weil er angewiesen ist auf die äußere Welt, auch zugrunde gehen kann. In der geistigen Welt aber, in der der menschliche Seelenwesenskern heranreift zu einem neuen Erdenleben, da gibt es kein Hindernis dafür, daß dasjenige, was als Seelenkern im Erdenleben reift, in einem anderen Erdenleben wiederum zum Vorschein kommt. Ich kann nur flüchtig in kurzen Worten andeuten, wie der Geistesforscher, festhaltend an der naturwissenschaftlichen Forschungsart, zu der Anschauung der wiederholten Erdenleben kommt.

Man hat die Geisteswissenschaft angeklagt des Buddhismus, weil sie von den wiederholten Erdenleben spricht. Nun, die Geisteswissenschaft holt das, was sie zu sagen hat, wahrhaftig nicht aus dem Buddhismus, sondern sie steht voll und ganz auf dem Boden der neueren Naturwissenschaft. Aber, sie dehnt diese neuere Naturwissenschaft auf das geistige Leben aus. Und sie kann nichts dafür, daß sie, ohne irgendwie auf den Buddhismus Rücksicht zu nehmen, zu der Anschauung von den wiederholten Erdenleben kommt. Sie kann nichts dafür, daß der Buddhismus in uralten Zeiten aus alten Traditionen heraus gesprochen hat von den wiederholten Erdenleben.

In diesem Zusammenhange möchte ich darauf aufmerksam machen, daß Lessing aus seinem reifen und erfahrungsreichen Denken heraus dazu gekommen ist, von den wiederholten Erdenleben zu sprechen. Nach einem arbeitsreichen Leben hat Lessing seine Abhandlung «Über die Erziehung des Menschengeschlechts» geschrieben, und da vertritt er diese Lehre von den wiederholten Erdenleben. Er sagt ungefähr das Folgende: Sollte denn diese Lehre deshalb zu verwerfen sein, weil sie in den ersten Morgenstunden der Menschheit aufgetreten ist, als noch keine Vorurteile der Schulen sie getrübt haben ? So wenig Lessing sich beirren ließ dadurch, daß diese Lehre von den wiederholten Erdenleben in der Morgenröte der Menschheit aufgetreten ist und dann später durch die Vorurteile der Schulen in den Hintergrund gedrängt worden ist, so wenig braucht die Geisteswissenschaft vor dieser Lehre zurückzuschrecken, weil diese Lehre auch im Buddhismus vorkommt. Es ist durchaus unbegründet, die Geisteswissenschaft deshalb des Buddhismus zu zeihen. Geisteswissenschaft bekennt sich zu der Lehre von den wiederholten Erdenleben aus ihren eigenen Quellen heraus, und der Mensch wird hingewiesen durch diese Geisteswissenschaft darauf, daß er mit dem gesamten Menschheitsleben auf Erden in Zusammenhang steht. Denn diese Seelen, die in uns leben, sie waren schon oftmals da, sie werden noch oftmals da sein. Wir blicken zurück auf uralte Kulturepochen, auf Zeiten zum Beispiel, wo die Augen der Menschen hinaufgeblickt haben zu den Pyramiden. Wir wissen: Unsere Seelen haben schon dazumal gelebt, und wiederum werden sie erscheinen in der Zukunft; sie nehmen teil an allen Menschheitsepochen. Es ist heute noch durchaus zu verstehen, wenn die Vorurteile der Menschen sich gegen eine solche Lehre wenden. Es gibt ja auch Menschen, die sich alles so zurechtlegen, wie sie es gerne mögen. Daß Lessing ein großer Mensch war, ist bekannt. Daß er sich auf der Höhe seines Lebens zu der Lehre von den wiederholten Erdenleben bekannt hat, das ist manchen Menschen unbequem und sie sagen deshalb: Nun ja, Lessing ist eben auch schwach geworden im Alter! Das ist den Menschen bequemer zu denken, als zu denken: der Mensch steht in Verbindung mit der gesamten Erdenkultur.

Nun, in welchem Sinne will die Geisteswissenschaft dasjenige, was soeben auseinandergesetzt worden ist, vor die ganze Menschheitskultur hintragen? In keinem anderen Sinne, als die neuere Naturwissenschaft ihre Erkenntnisse vor die Menschheit bringt. Aber indem diese Geisteswissenschaft in dieser Art gegenwärtig vor die Menschheitskultur hinrtritt, ist sie denselben Vorurteilen ausgesetzt, denen dasjenige ausgesetzt war, was die neuere naturwissenschaftliche Denkungsweise gebracht hat. Erinnern wir uns nur an Kopernikus, an Galilei, an Giordano Bruno. Wie war es denn dazumal, als Kopernikus auftrat mit der Ansicht, daß die Erde nicht stille steht, sondern daß sie sich dreht um die Sonne, daß die Sonne in Wahrheit gegenüber der Erde stille steht? Was hatte man geglaubt? Man hatte geglaubt, daß jetzt die Religion auf dem Spiel stehe, daß durch solche Fortschritte des Wissens die religiöse Frömmigkeit der Menschen gefährdet sei. Gewisse kirchliche Bekenntnisse haben bis zum neunzehnten Jahrhundert gebraucht, um die Lehre des Kopernikus vom Index abzusetzen und im Schoße ihrer Weltanschauung anzuerkennen. Geistiger Fortschritt hat zu jeder Zeit gegen alte Vorurteile zu kämpfen gehabt. Nicht anders, als das neue naturwissenschaftliche Wissen dazumal in die Menschheitskultur eingetreten ist, will das neue Geisteswissen in die Menschheitskultur eintreten. Daß man etwas wissen kann über den Geist, und daß die Menschheit dazu reif ist, dieses Wissen sich anzueignen, das will Geisteswissenschaft so betonen, wie betont worden ist durch Kopernikus, Galilei, Giordano Bruno, daß ein neues Wissen notwendig geworden war, für das die Menschheit reif war, in bezug auf die Natur. Und wie man dazumal selbst den christlichen Domherrn Nikolaus Kopernikus angeklagt hat, kein Christ zu sein, so hat man es ja auch in gewissen Punkten leicht, die neuere Geisteswissenschaft nun wiederum anzuklagen, daß sie unchristlich sei. Ich muß bei einer solchen Anklage immer wiederum eines Priesters gedenken, der, als er einmal sein Universitätsrektorat angetreten hat, einen Vortrag hielt über Galilei, und der dazumal sagte: Es waren eben religiöse Vorurteile dazumal unter den Menschen, als sie Kopernikus entgegengetreten sind. Derjenige aber, der wahrhaft Religiosität in sich hat, der weiß, daß die Herrlichkeit und das Licht der Gottheit nicht vermindert wird dadurch, daß man in die Geheimnisse des Weltalls wissend eindringt; er weiß, daß die Größe der Gottesanschauung der Menschen nur zugenommen hat dadurch, daß der Mensch sein Wissen ausdehnte über den Sinnenschein hinaus zu einem Berechnen der Sternenbahnen und der Gestirne Eigentümlichkeiten. — Daß Religion nur gewinnen kann, wenn sie sich wissenschaftlich vertieft, das kann das wahrhaft religiöse Gemüt einsehen. Und Geisteswissenschaft will nicht etwas sein, was zu tun hat mit einer neuen Religionsstiftung. Sie will keine neue Sekte stiften. Sie will keine Propheten und keine Religionsstifter hervorbringen. Die Zeit der Religionsstiftungen, die Zeit der Propheten ist vorüber. Die Menschheit ist reif geworden. Und Menschen, die mit Prophetennatur in der Zukunft vor die Menschheit hintreten wollten, sie werden ein anderes Schicksal haben als die alten Propheten. Die alten Propheten, sie sind mit Recht nach den Eigenarten ihrer Zeit als hervorragende Menschen verehrt worden. Propheten der Gegenwart, die es in dem alten Sinne sein wollten, werden ihr Schicksal erfahren: sie werden ausgelacht werden ! Geisteswissenschaft braucht keine Propheten, denn Geisteswissenschaft steht ihrer ganzen Natur nach auf dem Boden, daß dasjenige, was sie zu sagen hat, Eigentum ist der Tiefen der Menschenseele, derjenigen Tiefen, in welche die Menschenseele nur nicht immer hinunterleuchten kann. Und dasjenige, was der Geistesforscher sagt, will er als schlichter Forscher erforschen. Er will aufmerksam machen auf dasjenige, was notwendig ist. Der Geistesforscher sagt: Ich habe es gefunden; wenn du suchst, findest du es selbst! Und immer mehr und mehr werden sich die Zeiten nähern, wo der Geistesforscher anerkannt werden wird als schlichter Forscher, so wie der Chemiker, der Biologe als Forscher anerkannt werden auf ihrem Gebiete; nur daß der Geistesforscher auf dem Gebiete forscht, das jeder Menschenseele nahegeht.

Ich konnte ja heute nur skizzieren, was bei der Forschung auf diesem Gebiete herauskommt. Aber wenn Sie darauf eingehen, so werden Sie sehen, daß das die Erforschung der für die Menschenseele wichtigsten Fragen ist: der Menschheits- und Schicksalsfragen, der beiden Fragen, die die Menschen tief bewegen können, stündlich, täglich - derjenigen Fragen, die die Menschenseele stark machen zur Arbeit. Und weil die Gegenstände der Geistesforschung mit den Tiefen der Menschenseele zu tun haben, daher ist es ihr eigen, daß sie die Menschen ergreift, daß sie sich verbindet mit dem tiefsten Innern des Menschen, und daß sie dadurch sein religiöses Empfinden vertieft, daß sie den Menschen religiöser macht in seinem Empfinden, als er sonst gewesen wäre.

Geisteswissenschaft will nicht das Christentum ersetzen, aber ein Instrument zum Ergreifen des Christentums will sie sein. Und gerade dadurch wird uns durch die Geisteswissenschaft klar, daß dasjenige Wesen, das wir den Christus nennen, in den Mittelpunkt alles Erdendaseins zu stellen ist, daß dasjenige, was wir das christliche Bekenntnis nennen, die letzte der Religionen ist, die für die Erdenzukunft ewige Religion ist. Gerade das zeigt uns die Geisteswissenschaft, daß die vorchristlichen Religionen aus ihrer Einseitigkeit herausgewachsen sind, zusammengewachsen sind in die Religion des Christentums. Geisteswissenschaft will nicht etwas anderes an die Stelle des Christentums setzen, sondern sie will nur dazu helfen, das Christentum tiefer, inniger zu verstehen.

Kann man sagen, daß Kopernikus, als er in seinem stillen Kämmerlein ein neues astronomisches Weltensystem aufstellte, die Natur umschaffen wollte? Wahnsinn wäre es, solches zu sagen. Die Natur ist geblieben, was sie war; aber die Menschen haben verstehen gelernt in einer Weise, wie es der neuen Kultur geziemte, über die Natur zu denken. Ich habe mir erlaubt, mein Buch, das ich vor vielen Jahren geschrieben habe über das Christentum, zu nennen: «Das Christentum als mystische Tatsache». Derjenige, der gewohnt ist, über die Dinge auch nachzudenken, die er der Welt überliefert, wählt einen solchen Titel nicht ohne Bedenken. Warum habe ich diesen Titel gewählt? Nun, um zu zeigen, daß das Christentum nicht eine bloße Lehre ist, die man so oder so verstehen kann, sondern daß es als eine Tatsache, die nur geistig zu verstehen ist, in die Welt eingetreten ist. So wahr die Natur keine andere geworden ist durch Kopernikus, so wahr wird die Tatsache des Christentums keine andere, wenn Geisteswissenschaft zum Instrument wird, diese Tatsache des Christentums in einem vollen Sinne zu verstehen, besser zu verstehen, als das in abgelebten Zeiten möglich gewesen ist.

Nur ein Punkt aus der geisteswissenschaftlichen Erforschung des Christentums sei mir gestattet hervorzuheben. Ich habe zwar die Zeit schon überschritten, die mir gesetzt war, aber ich bitte Sie, noch auf diesen einen konkreten Punkt der christlichen Geistesforschung hinweisen zu dürfen.

Wenn man die alten Kulturen, die vorchristlichen Kulturen mit dem Blicke des Geistesforschers verfolgt, dann findet man, daß diese vorchristlichen Kulturen überall das hatten, was man die Mysterien nennt, Stätten, von denen man sagen kann, daß sie religiöse Stätten, Kunststätten und Wissenschaftsstätten zugleich waren. Während die äußere Kultur so beschaffen war, daß in den alten Zeiten der Mensch niemals dazu gekommen ist, so, wie ich es geschildert habe, durch die geisteswissenschaftlichen Methoden in die geistige Welt einzudringen, während die äußere Kultur nie eindringen ließ in die geistige Welt, konnten die einzelnen Menschen aufgenommen werden in die Mysterien. Da waren die Schüler, die man auch nannte die Einzuweihenden. Sie wurden dazu gebracht, das zu erlangen, was heute geschildert worden ist, nämlich aus ihrem physischen Leibe herauszugehen. Sie wurden sozusagen durch die Kunst der Mysterien dazu gebracht, ein leibfreies Seelenleben zu entwickeln. Und was erlangten sie durch dieses leibfreie Seelenleben ? Sie erlangten die Möglichkeit, die geistige Welt zu erleben und diesen Mittelpunkt der Erdenmenschheitsgeschichte, das Christus-Ereignis, zu erleben. Man berücksichtigt in der äußeren Wissenschaft viel zu wenig, was aus den Schülern der Mysterien geworden ist, aber man könnte vieles anführen, um dieses darzustellen. Nur das Eine lassen Sie mich erwähnen wie ein Symptom, ein Wort des Kirchenvaters Augustinus. Er sagte: Christen gibt es nicht nur, seitdem der Christus auf Erden erschienen ist, Christen gab es auch schon vorher! Wenn man das heute sagt, wird man als Ketzer angeklagt; aber ein christlicher Kirchenvater durfte es sagen, daß es vor dem Christus, vor dem Erscheinen des Christus auf Erden Christen gab; und es ist das auch die Anschauung des Augustinus selber. Warum sagte dieser christliche Lehrer solche Worte? Man erlangt ein gewisses Bewußtsein davon, warum er das sagte, wenn man zum Beispiel bei Plato liest, wie er die Mysterien schätzt, wie er spricht über die Bedeutung der Mysterien für das ganze Wesen und Leben der Menschheit. Ein Wort, das uns hart erscheinen kann, ist uns überliefert von Plato: Die Menschenseelen leben wie im Schlamm, leben wie im Sumpfe, solange sie nicht in die heiligen Mysterien eingeweiht sind. Er sagte das, weil er überzeugt war, daß die Menschenseele eigentlich ihrem Wesen nach geistig-seelisch ist, daß aber nur derjenige, der herausnimmt seine Seele aus dem physischen Leibe, durch die Mysterien ansichtig wird der geistigen Welt. Als jemand, der seinem wahren Wesen entzogen ist, erscheint dem Plato der Mensch, der nicht in die Mysterien eingedrungen ist. Und das ist das Wesentliche: Der einzige Weg, aus dem Physisch-Sinnlichen in das Geistige hereinzugelangen, war in alten Zeiten der Weg durch die Mysterien.

Das ist aber heute nicht mehr so. Ein gewaltiger Unterschied ist vorhanden in bezug auf das Verhältnis der Menschenseele zu der geistigen Welt gegenüber den vorchristlichen Zeiten. Dasjenige, was ich Ihnen heute erzählt habe, und was jede Seele vornehmen kann mit sich, um ihren Einzug in die geistige Welt zu halten, das ist erst möglich in der Welt seit der Begründung des Christentums. Seither erst kann jede Seele, die dasjenige anwendet, was ich heute und in den genannten Büchern dargestellt habe, durch Selbsterziehung hinaufgelangen in die geistige Welt. Vor der Begründung des Christentums brauchte man die Mysterien, brauchte man die autoritativen Anweisungen der Lehrer. Selbsteinweihung hat es in alten Zeiten nicht gegeben. Und wenn die Geisteswissenschaft gefragt wird: Worauf beruht dieser Umschwung? - dann hat sie aus ihren Forschungen heraus zu antworten: Dieser Umschwung ist möglich geworden durch das Mysterium von Golgatha. Durch die Begründung des Christentums ist eine Tatsache, die nur im Geiste erforscht werden kann, in die Menschheit eingetreten. Etwas, was vorher nur im Geistigen zu finden war, wenn der Mensch den Leib verlassen hatte durch die Mysterien, der Christus selbst, er ist nach der Begründung des Christentums von jeder Menschenseele durch eigene Anstrengung zu finden. Dasjenige, was gleichsam die Mysterien in die Menschenseelen hineinbrachten, das liegt seit dem Mysterium von Golgatha in jeder Menschenseele, das ist allen Menschenseelen zuteil geworden. Woher ist das gekommen? Diejenigen, von denen man wußte, daß sie durch die Mysterien gegangen sind, Heraklit, Plato, sie nennt der Kirchenlehrer «Christen», weil sie durch die Mysterien die geistige Welt gesehen haben.

Die Geisteswissenschaft zeigt uns, daß, indem Jesus gelebt hat in der Art, wie Sie es in den Evangelienbüchern finden können, für Jesus ein Moment eintritt in seinem Leben — es ist die Taufe im Jordan —, wo dieser Jesus sich umgewandelt hat, wo etwas eingetreten ist in ihm, das früher nicht da war, das dann in ihm lebte während dreier Jahre. Und dasjenige, was da in ihn eingezogen ist, es geht durch das Mysterium von Golgatha hindurch. Es ist jetzt nicht die Zeit hier, die Einzelheiten des Mysteriums von Golgatha zu schildern. Aber die Geisteswissenschaft bestätigt dasjenige, was in den Evangelien geschrieben ist, von ihrem Gesichtspunkte aus, von ihrem vollständig wissenschaftlichen Gesichtspunkte aus. Durch dasjenige, was auf Golgatha geschieht, verbindet sich etwas, das vorher nur in den geistigen Höhen zu erreichen war, mit der Erdenmenschheit selbst. Es lebt seit der Zeit, da der Christus durch den Tod gegangen ist auf Golgatha, in allen menschlichen Seelen drinnen. Es ist die Kraft, durch welche jede Seele den Weg in die geistige Welt hinein finden kann. Das Menschengeschlecht auf Erden ist in bezug auf seine Seele ein anderes geworden durch das Mysterium von Golgatha. Der Christus ist, wie er selber sagt, «von oben», aber er ist eingezogen in die MenschenErdenwelt.

Man wirft der Geisteswissenschaft vor, daß sie sagt, der Jesus sei nicht immer der Christus gewesen, sondern erst im dreißigsten Jahre des Jesus hätte das Christus-Leben auf Erden begonnen. Oberflächlichkeit über Oberflächlichkeit, aus dem Vorurteil der Menschheit herausgeboren, tritt der Geisteswissenschaft entgegen; wenn man die Tatsache zugibt, tritt einem gleich ein Vorurteil entgegen. Und so ist es fast mit allem, was gesagt wird von der Gegnerschaft in bezug auf die Stellung der Geisteswissenschaft zum Christentum.

Müssen wir nicht sagen: Erst im dritten Lebensjahr ungefähr kann der Mensch beginnen, sich zu erinnern. Sagt man aber deshalb, daß dasjenige, was später im Menschen lebt, nicht früher schon in ihm war? Wenn man spricht von dem Einzuge des Christus in den Jesus, leugnet man deshalb, daß der Christus mit dem Jesus von der Geburt an verbunden war? Ebensowenig leugnet man dieses, wie man leugnet, daß die Seele im Kinde ist, bevor die Seele sozusagen aufersteht in diesem Kinde im Laufe des dritten Jahres. Man muß nur verstehen, was die Geisteswissenschaft sagt, dann wird man nicht mehr ihr Gegner sein.

Ferner wird der Geisteswissenschaft vorgeworfen, daß sie aus dem Christus ein kosmisches Wesen macht. Sie tut nichts anderes, als den Blick des Erdenmenschen erweitern über die bloßen irdisch-physischen Angelegenheiten hinaus in die Weiten des Weltenalls, daß er auch geistig das Weltenall umfasse mit seinem Wissen, so wie Kopernikus die äußere Welt umfaßt hat mit seinem Wissen. Daß die Geisteswissenschaft das Bedürfnis hat, einzubeziehen, was ihr das Heiligste ist, in dieses ihr Wissen, das entspricht nur einem religiösen Gefühl und zugleich einem tief wissenschaftlichen Gefühl. Geurteilt haben die Menschen über die Bewegungen im Weltenall nach dem, was sie sahen, vor Kopernikus; unabhängig von der Sinneswelt haben sie gelernt zu urteilen. Ist es strafbar, wenn Geisteswissenschaft dasselbe tut in bezug auf die geistigen Angelegenheiten der Menschheit? Geurteilt haben die Menschen in einer gewissen Weise über das Christentum, über das Leben des Christus Jesus, wie sie bisher urteilen konnten. Geisteswissenschaft will erweitern den Blick in die kosmisch-geistigen Weiten. Sie fügt zu dem bisher Gewußten hinzu, was sie aus der Geisteswissenschaft heraus über den Christus zu sagen hat. Geisteswissenschaft erkennt in dem Christus ein Wesen, das ewig ist; ein Wesen, das nur einmal eingezogen ist in einen menschlichen Leib, das sich dadurch unterscheidet von den übrigen Menschen, daß es nicht wiederholte Erdenleben durchmacht. Der Christus ist nur einmal eingezogen in einen Menschenleib und ist nun vereinigt mit den Seelen der Menschen.

Einen merkwürdigen Fehler machen diejenigen, die die Geisteswissenschaft vom Standpunkte des Christentums aus bekämpfen. Man frage einmal bei der Geisteswissenschaft an, ob sie dasjenige, was sie innerhalb des Christentums finden kann, bekämpft! Sie sagt zu allem Ja, wozu das Christentum Ja sagt. Aber sie sagt noch etwas anderes dazu. Dieses andere verbieten, das heißt nicht, auf seinem Christentum bestehen, sondern das heißt bestehen auf der Beschränktheit des Christentums; das heißt so operieren, wie diejenigen operiert haben, die über Kopernikus, Galilei, Giordano Bruno so gesprochen haben, wie ich es angeführt habe. Welcher logische Fehler da zugrunde liegt, das kann man leicht einsehen. Diejenigen, die da kommen und sagen: Ihr redet ja von einem kosmischen Christus, der auch in den Weltenweiten lebt, daher seid Ihr Gnostiker — begehen ungefähr denselben Fehler, den einer begeht, der sagt: Ja, der Mann, der mir jetzt Geld gab, er ist mir 30 Kronen schuldig, er hat mir aber 40 Kronen gegeben, weil er mir 10 dazu leiht. Wenn ich jetzt komme und sage: Der Mann hat mir die Schuld nicht bezahlt, er hat mir ja die 30 Kronen nicht gegeben, sondern 40 Kronen, begehe ich da nicht einen törichten Fehler?! Wenn aber die Leute kommen und sagen zu den Vertretern der Geisteswissenschaft: Ihr sagt uns nicht nur das, was wir über den Christus sagen, sondern ihr sagt noch etwas dazu — dann merken es die Leute nicht, welch ungeheuren Fehler sie machen, weil sie aus ihrer Leidenschaft heraus sprechen und nicht wirklich objektiv. Meinetwegen mag man polemisieren dagegen, daß das, was Geisteswissenschaft über das Christentum gibt, etwas sein kann oder nicht sein kann für die Menschen. Das hängt davon ab, was die Menschen brauchen. Man könnte ja auch Kopernikus, Galilei, Giordano Bruno zurückweisen. Aber man darf nicht sagen, Geisteswissenschaft gebe weniger über das Christentum oder Geisteswissenschaft trete gegen das Christentum auf.

Und noch eines ist es, was ausgesprochen werden muß, wenn über das Verhältnis von Geisteswissenschaft zum Christentum die Rede ist: Die Menschheit ändert sich, indem sie in den einzelnen Menschenleben von Epoche zu Epoche geht. Unsere Menschenseelen haben durchgemacht Erdenleben in Zeiten, wo der Christus noch nicht mit der Erde vereinigt war, und sie werden durchmachen noch fernere Erdenleben, in denen der Christus mit der Erde vereint ist. Der Christus lebt nunmehr in den Menschenseelen selbst. Dann aber, wenn die Menschenseele sich immer mehr und mehr vertieft, wenn die Menschenseele immer wieder und wiederum durch wiederholte Erdenleben geht, dann wird sie immer selbständiger und selbständiger, immer innerlich freier und freier. Daher ist es so, daß sie immer neue Instrumente braucht, um die alten Wahrheiten zu verstehen, daß sie aus dieser inneren Freiheit heraus immer weiter und weiter vorzudringen hat. So muß gesagt werden: Das Christentum wird gerade durch die Geisteswissenschaft in einer solchen Tiefe erkannt, in einer solchen Wahrheit, in einer solchen Wichtigkeit erkannt, daß die Geisteswissenschaft Vertrauen haben darf, wenn sie in einer neuen Form diese alten christlichen Wahrheiten verkündigt. Mögen diejenigen, die nur bei ihren Vorurteilen stehenbleiben wollen, glauben, daß Geisteswissenschaft dem Christentum Abbruch tue. Wer in die Kultur der Gegenwart eindringt, der wird finden, daß gerade diejenigen Menschen, die nicht mehr in der alten Weise Christen sein können, durch Geisteswissenschaft wiederum von der Wahrheit des Christentums überzeugt werden. Denn dasjenige, was die Geisteswissenschaft über das Christentum zu sagen hat, das darf sie sagen zu jeder Seele, weil den Christus, von dem sie spricht, jede Seele in sich selbst finden kann. Aber sie darf auch sagen, daß sie den Christus findet als das Wesen, das einmal wirklich durch die Tatsache des Mysteriums von Golgatha eingetreten ist in die Menschenseelen, in die Erdenwelt. Der Glaube hat nichts zu fürchten von dem Wissen, denn die Gegenstände des Glaubens, wenn sie zum Geiste aufsteigen, haben das Licht des Wissens nicht zu scheuen. Und so wird Geisteswissenschaft dem Christentum diejenigen Seelen erobern, die ihm nicht anders werden gewonnen werden können als dadurch, daß man zu ihnen nicht spricht wie ein prophetischer Religionsstifter, sondern wie ein schlichter Wissenschafter, der aufmerksam macht auf dasjenige, was auf geisteswissenschaftlichem Gebiete gefunden werden kann, und der die Saiten, die in jeder Seele sind, zum Mitschwingen bringt.

Geistesforscher kann zwar ein jeder Mensch werden; die Wege dazu können Sie in den genannten Büchern angegeben finden. Aber auch derjenige, der nicht Geistesforscher ist, kann, wenn er die Wahrheit in unbefangener Weise auf sich wirken läßt, von dieser Wahrheit durchdrungen werden. Und wenn er das nicht tut, dann kann er sich eben nicht frei machen von Vorurteilen. In der Seele des Menschen liegen alle Wahrheiten. Es hat vielleicht nicht jeder Mensch Gelegenheit, als Geistesforscher die Wahrheit des Geistigen zu überschauen; aber so wahr wir schon mit dem Denken aus dem Gebiet der Sinneswelt heraus sind, so wahr geht das Denken mit, wenn der Geisteswissenschafter auf das aufmerksam machen will, was er auf seinen geistigen Wegen erforscht. Und nur aufmerksam machen will er darauf, daß es Wahrheiten gibt, die in jeder Seele keimen können, weil sie in jeder Seele vorhanden sind.

Da ich zum Schlusse noch aufmerksam machen möchte, wie die Geisteswissenschaft sich hineinstellt in das Kulturleben, so möchte ich noch das Folgende sagen: Geisteswissenschaft stimmt wirklich überein mit der naturwissenschaftlichen Vorstellungsart und Denkungsart, und nicht anders will sie sich hinstellen vor die Kultur der Gegenwart, als sich der kirchliche Domherr Kopernikus, als sich Galilei, als sich Giordano Bruno hingestellt haben vor ihre Gegenwart. Vergegenwärtigen wir uns Giordano Bruno. Was hat er eigentlich getan ? Bevor er auftrat und seine für die Menschheitsentwickelung so bedeutungsvollen Worte sprach, blickten die Menschen ins Weltenall hinein. Sie sprachen von den Sternensphären so, wie sie glaubten, sie zu sehen. Sie sprachen von der blauen Himmelskugel, die das Weltall begrenzt. Kopernikus, Galilei, Giordano Bruno, sie hatten den Mut, den Sinnenschein zu durchbrechen und eine neue Denkungsweise zu begründen. Was war es denn im Grunde genommen, was Giordano Bruno vor seinen Zuhörern sagte? Er sagte: Seht euch die blaue Himmelskugel an; das Firmament, ihr macht es selbst durch die Begrenztheit eurer Erkenntnis. Eure Augen sehen nur bis dahin, und eure Augen sind es, die sich diese Grenze schaffen! Über diese Grenzen hinaus erweiterte Giordano Bruno den Blick der Menschen. Er glaubte darauf hinweisen zu dürfen, daß eingebettet sind in die Raumesweiten ewige Sternenwelten.

Was muß der Geistesforscher tun? Lassen Sie es mich bescheiden im Sinne der neueren Geistesentwickelung aussprechen. Hinweisen muß der Geistesforscher auf das Zeitenfirmament, hinweisen muß er auf die Grenzen von Geburt und Tod des Menschenlebens, sagen muß er: Die äußere Anschauung sieht Geburt und Tod als ein Zeitenfirmament durch die Begrenztheit des menschlichen Verstandes und Wahrnehmungsvermögens. Aber wie Giordano Bruno muß er darauf hinweisen, daß dieses Zeitenfirmament nicht da ist, sondern daß es nur herrührt von der Begrenztheit der menschlichen Anschauung. Wie Giordano Bruno hinausweist über die Begrenztheit des Raumes, wie er darauf hinweisen muß, wie unendliche Welten eingebettet sind in die Weiten des Raumes, so muß der Geistesforscher darauf hinweisen, daß hinter den nicht vorhandenen Grenzen von Geburt und Tod die Zeitenunendlichkeit liegt, und daß darin eingebettet ist der Menschenseele Ewigkeit, die ewige Wesenheit des Menschen, wie sie von Leben zu Leben geht. In vollem Einklang mit dem, was für die Naturwissenschaft geschehen ist, steht die Geisteswissenschaft da.

Und noch einmal sei es mir gestattet, auch in dieser Stadt darauf aufmerksam zu machen, wie die Geisteswissenschaft keine Religion stiften will, wie sie aber das Seelenleben religiöser stimmt, und wie sie gerade zu der Wesenheit im religiösen Mittelpunkte, zu dem Christus hinführt. Wiederholt sei es mir gestattet, darauf aufmerksam zu machen, wie Geisteswissenschaft, obzwar sie keine neue Religionsgemeinschaft stiften will, sie doch die Menschenseele tief religiös stimmt, wie sie aus der Wissenschaft des Geistes heraus nicht eine neue Religion, aber ein vertieftes religiöses Bewußtsein herbeiführt. Und derjenige, der sich fürchtet vor der Geisteswissenschaft so, als ob sie zerstören könnte das religiöse Bewußtsein, der gleicht einem Menschen, der etwa vor Kolumbus hingetreten wäre, als er nach Amerika gefahren ist — gestatten Sie, daß ich diesen Vergleich gebrauche — und gesagt hätte: Warum entdeckst du Amerika? Hier in unserem alten Europa geht so schön die Sonne auf; wissen wir denn, ob in Amerika auch die Sonne aufgehen wird und die Menschen wärmt und die Erde beleuchtet? Derjenige aber, der in den Sinn des physischen Erdendaseins eingetreten ist, der wird gewußt haben, daß in allen Ländern die Sonne leuchtet. Wer da aber für sein Christentum fürchtet, der gleicht einem solchen Menschen, der die Entdeckung eines neuen Landes fürchtet, weil er meint, es könne vielleicht dort die Sonne nicht scheinen. Wer wahrhaft Christus-Sonne in seiner Seele trägt, der weiß, daß die Christus-Sonne in jedem Lande leuchten wird. Und welche Gebiete auch noch entdeckt werden mögen, sei es auf Gebieten der Natur oder auf Gebieten des Geistes, das Amerika des Geistes wird niemals entdeckt werden, wenn nicht das wahrhaft religtöse Leben in Zugehörigkeit zum Mittelpunkt des Erdendaseins, zur Christus-Sonne sich hinneigen wird, und wenn nicht diese Christus-Sonne, die Seelen erleuchtend, die Seelen erwärmend, die Seelen befeuernd scheinen wird. Nur derjenige, der schwach ist in seinem religiösen Fühlen, kann fürchten, daß dieses religiöse Fühlen ersterben oder erlahmen könnte in einer neu entdeckten Lage. Wer aber stark ist in seinem echten Christus-Gefühl, der wird nicht Furcht haben vor dem Wissen, der wird nicht fürchten, daß in irgendeiner Weise gefährdet werden könnte der Glaube durch das Wissen.

In diesem Vertrauen lebt Geisteswissenschaft. In diesem Vertrauen spricht Geisteswissenschaft zur Kultur der Gegenwart. Denn sie weiß, daß das wahr ist, daß wahres religiöses Denken und Fühlen durch keine Forschung gefährdet werden kann, sondern nur eine schwache Religiosität etwas zu fürchten hat. Sie weiß, daß man Vertrauen haben darf zum Sinn der Wahrheit. Und weil der Geistesforscher durch die erschütternden Ereignisse seines Seelenlebens, durch das, was er objektiv durchgemacht hat, weiß, was in den Tiefen der Menschenseele lebt, und weil er durch seine Forschungen Vertrauen zur Menschenseele gewinnt, weil er sieht, daß die Menschenseele die innigste Verwandtschaft hat mit der Wahrheit, so glaubt er, wie auch die Zeichen in der Gegenwart gegen die Geisteswissenschaft sprechen mögen, doch an den endlichen Sieg der Geisteswissenschaft. Und er erhofft ihn von dem wahrheitsliebenden und auch von dem echten religiösen Leben der Menschenseele.

Anthroposophy and Christianity

First of all, I apologize for not being able to speak to you in the language of this country this evening. However, the friends who are members of our Anthroposophical Society, in whose midst I have been privileged to give lectures on spiritual science during the past week, were of the opinion that I should also speak publicly in German in this city on a subject of spiritual science. The topic that will be the subject of this evening's lecture also arose from the wishes of our esteemed members in this city. I am to speak about the relationship between spiritual science, or, as spiritual science can also be called here, between anthroposophy and Christianity. In doing so, however, it will be necessary for me to say a few words about the nature and significance of what is meant here by spiritual science, about the point of view from which I shall speak.

Spiritual science, as it is meant here, does not seek to establish any new religion or any new religious sect or anything of the kind. Spiritual science wants to be, or believes it may be, what is required of our present culture in a spiritual sense.

If we are currently in a field where it is necessary to make progress in the cultural development of humanity, similar to that made in other fields three, four, or five centuries ago when modern natural science entered human cultural life in its infancy, then we must say: What natural science has become for humanity in terms of knowledge of external nature and life through knowledge of the laws of external nature, spiritual science would like to become through knowledge of the laws of our soul and spirit life and through the application of these laws of soul and spirit life in ethical, social, and the broadest cultural life; this is what it would like to become for our present and for the near future. And however much this spiritual science must necessarily still be misunderstood, quite understandably misunderstood, it derives its confidence in its truth, and also its confidence in its effectiveness in human culture, from the observation of the fate of natural science at the dawn of the newer spiritual life. Natural scientists, too, faced centuries-old, even millennia-old prejudices; but truth has powers that, in a manner appropriate to human life, always help it to triumph over all opposing forces.

And so, after a few words have been said about the confidence of the spiritual scientist in the truth and effectiveness of his work, let us now turn to the nature and method of the research that forms the basis of the spiritual science referred to here.

The mode of conception of spiritual science is truly in keeping with the mode of conception of natural science. But since this spiritual science extends into a completely different realm than natural science, namely not into the realm of what can be perceived by the senses, into the realm of external nature, but into the realm of the spirit, it must be obvious that a scientific way of thinking must be modified considerably when it comes to exploring the realm of the spiritual, and must become something different from what it is in the realm of natural science. And although the method, the mode of research of spiritual science is entirely in keeping with the spirit of natural science, so that anyone educated in natural science who today accepts natural science without prejudice, can stand on the ground of this spiritual science, it must nevertheless be said that, as long as one takes the natural scientific methods in their one-sidedness, as is often the case today, prejudice upon prejudice can arise against the application of the natural scientific mode of thinking to spiritual life. If scientific thinking, one might say scientific logic, must be applied to what is closest to human beings, but also what is most difficult to investigate, then this way of thinking must also be applied to the essence of human beings themselves. In spiritual science, human beings must examine themselves, and they must also resort to the only tool available to them for this investigation, namely themselves. Spiritual science proceeds from the assumption that human beings, in becoming instruments for investigating the spiritual world, must undergo a transformation within themselves, that they must do something to enable them to see into the spiritual world, which they do not do in everyday life.

Let me start with a comparison, a scientific comparison that is not intended to prove anything, but only to illustrate how the spiritual scientific way of thinking is entirely based on the scientific way of thinking. In nature, for example, we encounter water. When we look at water as it appears to us outside, we first perceive its properties. But the chemist comes along with his methods and applies them to water; he breaks water down into hydrogen and oxygen. So what does the natural scientist make of water? As we know, water does not burn. The chemist extracts hydrogen from water, and hydrogen is a gas that burns. No one who looks at water externally can see that it contains hydrogen and oxygen, which have completely different properties from water.

Just as the spiritual science shows, when a person stands face to face with another person in life, they cannot recognize what that person is inside. And just as the chemist, the natural scientist, comes and breaks water down into hydrogen and oxygen, so must the spiritual scientist, albeit now in an inner soul process that must be prepared in the deepest depths of the soul, come and break down that which presents itself in outer life. And the spiritual researcher can use spiritual research methods to break down the human being into the outer physical and the spiritual-soul. From the point of view of spiritual science, it is first of all interesting to investigate the spiritual-soul separately from the physical. No one can recognize the true reality of the spiritual-soul element from the external-physical, any more than the nature of hydrogen can be recognized unless it is extracted from water.

Today, it is very often the case that as soon as one begins to speak in this way, one is told: But that violates monism, which must be adhered to unconditionally. Well, monism must not prevent the chemist from breaking water down into two elements. Monism is not challenged by the fact that what can happen in reality does happen: that through spiritual research, through spiritual-scientific methods, the spiritual-soul element is separated from the physical-corporeal element. Now, however, these methods are not such that they can be carried out in the laboratory, in the physics cabinet, or in the clinic, but are processes that must be carried out in the soul itself. However, these are not processes of the soul that constitute miracles, but are only intensifications of what human beings can observe in ordinary life. These are not miraculous qualities, but qualities that human beings possess to a certain extent in everyday life, which they only need to increase indefinitely if they are to become spiritual researchers. And since I do not want to beat about the bush with generalities, I will go straight to the heart of the matter.

Everyone knows what is called memory in human life. Everyone knows how much depends on memory. Imagine if we woke up one morning and had no idea what had happened around us or within us. We would lose our entire human essence. Our memory, which is interconnected from a certain early point in childhood, is an essential part of our human life. Now, even contemporary philosophers are puzzled by the investigation of the power of memory. They already have personalities in their midst who, precisely by looking at memory, are departing from a materialistic-monistic worldview, finding through careful investigation that even if one finds the sense perceptions, as far as one can say about soul activity, bound to the body in an external way, one can never recognize memory as bound to the body. I need only point this out. For a man who truly has no inclination to delve into spiritual science, the French philosopher Bergson, has pointed to this spiritual nature of memory.

But how does memory, the power of recollection, appear to us in life? Long-past events enter our soul in images. The events are long past, but the soul is concerned with itself. It is concerned with conjuring up the past experience from the depths of inner life. And what emerges from the depths of the soul can be compared with the original experience. Memories are pale in comparison with the images offered to us by our senses. But they are connected with the integrity of our soul life. And we would not be able to find our way in the world if we did not have memory. But this memory is based on the power of memory. The soul can bring up what is hidden in its memories through the power of memory. But this is precisely where spiritual science comes in. Not memory as such — please consider what I am saying — not memory as such, but the power that underlies the retrieval of spiritual content from the depths of the soul, this power can be strengthened, strengthened to infinity, so that in the life of the soul it is not merely used to retrieve experiences from the soul, but can be used for something completely different. It is not external methods that can be pursued in the laboratory, not what can be perceived through the external senses, that underlie the methods of spiritual research, but intensive soul processes that everyone can go through. What constitutes the value of these intensive soul processes is the unlimited increase in attention in human life, or what is called the concentration of the life of the mind.

What is this concentration of the life of the mind?

Today, I can only give a brief one-hour overview of the principles involved. You can read more about this in my books How to Know Higher Worlds and in the second part of my Secret Science; these books have also been translated. Furthermore, in the book “The Threshold of the Spiritual World.” But according to the principles, I want to examine the first steps of the soul, which are an unlimited increase in what is necessary for human life, an increase in attention. Attention must be increased in an unlimited way so that spiritual research can enter the soul.

What does a person usually do when confronted with the outside world? They perceive things; they process things through the mind, which is connected to the brain. Then they form ideas about what they have perceived. And as a rule, they are satisfied when they retain the external ideas in their soul. Where everyday life ends, the methods of spiritual science begin, and what can be called concentration of thought begins. Anyone who wants to become a spiritual researcher must pick up the thread of soul life where it is usually left in outer life. We place in the horizon of our consciousness those ideas that we form ourselves, that we can clearly see, preferably symbolic ideas that we do not need to check for correspondence with the external world. We place at the center of our consciousness those ideas that we either find arising from the practice of spiritual science or which the spiritual researcher can advise us to adopt, we place at the center of our entire consciousness, so that for a longer period of time we divert the attention of the soul from everything external and concentrate only on one idea. Whereas otherwise one does not dwell on an idea, one now gathers all the powers of one's soul, concentrates them on one idea, and remains completely absorbed in this idea within oneself. When one observes a person engaged in such an activity, one sees that he is essentially doing something that is similar to sleep in a certain sense, yet radically different. For such concentration to be fruitful, the person must indeed become like a sleeping person.

When we fall asleep, we first feel the forces of will in our limbs becoming calm, a certain twilight descending around us, our senses gradually fading. Then we pass into unconsciousness. Everything external must become like this in concentration, as in sleep. The senses must become completely free of all impressions from the outside world. The eye must see as little as in sleep; the ear must hear as little as in sleep, and so on. Then the whole soul life is gathered together and concentrated on one idea; this is the radical difference from sleep. One could call this state conscious sleep, fully conscious sleep. While in sleep the darkness of unconsciousness expands in the soul life, those who want to become spiritual researchers live in an elevated soul life. They strain all the powers of their soul life and apply them to an idea. It does not matter what this idea is; it only gives us an opportunity to gather and concentrate our soul forces. What matters is this gathering of the soul forces. For through this we gradually attain — I must refer again to my books for more details — the ability to truly extract the spiritual-soul element that is in us, like hydrogen in water, from the physical-corporeal element and free it from the physical-corporeal. What I have just described cannot be achieved in a rush, so to speak. Most people need years of work in such concentrations, even if their daily life is not distracted from such concentrations; for they can only be maintained for a few minutes, at most for parts of an hour, but they must be repeated over and over again until it really succeeds in strengthening the forces that otherwise lie dormant in human nature — forces that are also present in everyday life, but lie dormant — so that they become effective in our soul and tear out the forces that are otherwise only dormant in human nature. to strengthen the forces that otherwise lie dormant in human nature — which are also present in everyday life, but lie dormant — so that they become effective in our soul and tear the spiritual-soul out of the physical-bodily.

Since, as I have said, I do not wish to talk in abstract terms, but would like to give you facts, let me say right away that when the spiritual researcher succeeds, through energy and perseverance, through devotion to his exercises, in really reaping the fruits of his exercises, he then arrives at an experience that could initially be called an experience of pure inner consciousness. In a word, from a certain point in time, one knows how to connect a meaning with words that were previously meaningless: I know myself to be outside my body; I am, perceiving my inner being, experiencing my inner being, outside my body.

I will tell you about this experience in detail. At first, one feels that the power of thought, which otherwise only stirs in the activities of everyday life, is really detaching itself from the body. The experience is dull at first, but it occurs in such a way that one recognizes its nature once one has had it. When you return to your body, you first realize—and this is what I would like to characterize—what it is like to immerse yourself in the brain life presented by physical matter, how this brain offers resistance. You know that in everyday thinking, you think in such a way that the brain is the instrument; but now you were outside. Then you gradually come to associate a meaning with the words: you experience yourself in the soul-spiritual. You experience how your own head is, as it were, enveloped by your thoughts. You know what it means to have separated the soul-spiritual from external, physical-bodily life. First you learn to know the resistance offered by physical life. Then you learn to recognize the independent life outside the body. It is truly as if hydrogen were to perceive itself outside water. This is how it is with human beings when they go through such exercises. And then, if they faithfully continue such exercises, the great, meaningful moment arrives when they have, so to speak, reached the starting point of actual spiritual research. It is a moment that is deeply shocking and has an enormously significant impact on one's entire life. This moment can occur in many different ways. It can be a thousand different things. But I want to characterize it in a typical way, as it will usually be in terms of its characteristics.

If you have practiced for a certain period of time, if you have treated your own soul in a scientific manner, then the moment comes, either in everyday life or in the middle of sleep, when you wake up and know that you are not dreaming, but experiencing a new reality. You can experience this, for example, by saying to yourself: What is around me? It is as if I were in an environment that is detaching itself from me, as if the elements were striking me in flashes and as if my body were being destroyed by the elements and I were maintaining myself upright in relation to this body. One learns to recognize what all spiritual researchers throughout the ages have called, in a figurative expression, “reaching the gates of death.” For one experiences that one now knows through the image — not through reality, which one experiences only in death — one experiences through the image that one now knows how human beings are spiritually and soulfully when they do not perceive themselves and the world through the instrument of their bodies, but when they live only in the spiritual and soulful.

That is the first shock: you know that you have detached yourself from your body with your power of thought. And in the same way, other forces can be detached from the body, so that the human being becomes ever richer and more inwardly focused in relation to his soul life.

But the one exercise I have described as concentration or unlimited increase of attention is not enough. Through this exercise, one achieves the following: when one has reached the point where the soul experiences itself, images arise which can be called real imaginations. Images arise, but images that differ greatly from the images of ordinary memory. While ordinary memory has only images of what has been experienced externally, images now arise from the gray depths of the soul that have nothing in common with what can be experienced in the external sensory world. All objections that one can easily be deceived, that what rises up from the gray depths of the soul could only be reminiscences of memory, all these objections are invalid. For the spiritual researcher learns to distinguish between what memory can bring up and what is radically different from everything that can be stored in memory. However, one thing must be borne in mind when speaking of this point of entry into the spiritual world. That is, people who suffer from hallucinations, visions, or similar pathological mental constructs and states of mind are not well suited to spiritual research. The less a person is inclined to experience such things, which are only reminiscences of daily life, the more confidently they will progress in the field of spiritual research. And a large part of the preparation for spiritual research consists in learning to distinguish precisely between everything that could in some way impose itself unconsciously on the human soul in such a pathological manner and what can enter as a new element, as a spiritual reality, through the spiritual scientific training of the soul.

I would like to point out a radical difference between the visionary, the hallucinatory, and what the spiritual researcher sees. Why is it that so many people believe they are already in the spiritual world when they only have hallucinations and visions? Yes, people are so reluctant to learn something truly new! They are so fond of clinging to the old things they are already familiar with. Basically, hallucinations and visions are the manifestation of sick soul formations, just as external sensory reality is the manifestation of the external world. They are there; they present themselves to us. We do nothing, so to speak, when they appear before us. The spiritual researcher is not in this situation when confronted with his new spiritual element. I have spoken of the fact that the spiritual researcher must concentrate and bring to the surface all the powers of his soul that lie dormant in ordinary life. But this requires him to apply a spiritual energy, a spiritual strength that is not present in outer life. But he must always hold on to this strength when he enters the spiritual world. The person remains passive, he does not need to make any effort: this is characteristic of hallucinations and visions. The moment we become passive, even for a moment, in relation to the spiritual world, everything disappears immediately. We must be constantly active, constantly present. Therefore, we cannot be deceived, because nothing from the spiritual world can appear before our eyes in the same way that a vision or hallucination appears before our eyes. We must be present everywhere with our activity, with every atom of what comes toward us from the spiritual world. We must know how it is. This activity, this continuous activity, is necessary for real spiritual research. But then one enters a world that is radically different from the physical-sensory world. One enters a world where spiritual beings and spiritual facts surround us.

But a second thing is necessary. That one detaches the soul from the body happens in the manner described. The second thing, however, can again be made clear by a scientific comparison. When we separate hydrogen, it is initially on its own; but it forms compounds with other substances and becomes something completely different. The same must happen to our spiritual soul after it is separated from the body. This spiritual soul must connect with beings that are not in the sensory world. It must become one with them; in this way it perceives them.

The first stage of spiritual research is the separation of the soul-spiritual from the physical-corporeal. The second stage is the entering into connections with beings that are behind the sensory world. The latter is something that is not forgiven in the present, far less forgiven than talking about a “spirit in general.” There are already many people today who know that they feel compelled to accept something spiritual. But they speak of a spirit that is behind the world and are happy to be pantheists. But for the spiritual researcher, pantheism is just the same as taking someone into nature and saying to them: Look, everything that surrounds you here is nature! If you don't tell them: Those are trees, those are clouds, that is a lily, that is a rose, but instead say: That is all nature! So when you lead a person from one process to another, from one being to another, and say to him, “It's all nature!” — that doesn't really say anything. In detail, in concrete terms, you have to go into the facts. Today, people will forgive you if you talk about a spirit that is in everything. But the spiritual researcher cannot be satisfied with that. He enters a world that consists of spiritual beings, spiritual facts that are differentiated in the same way that the outer world is concretely differentiated, consisting of clouds, mountains, valleys, trees, flowers, and so on. But today, people are not forgiven for saying that not only are natural processes differentiated into the plant, animal, and human kingdoms, but that when humans enter a spiritual world, they also speak of concrete details and facts there. But the spiritual researcher cannot help pointing out that when he enters the spiritual world in this way, he enters a world of real, concrete spiritual beings and spiritual processes.

The second thing that is then necessary is an increase in devotion, that devotion which human beings feel in ordinary life or in heightened ordinary life in religious piety. But this must be developed to infinity, so that human beings really come to rest devotedly in the stream of world events, as if in sleep. In sleep, he forgets every movement of his own body; in the same way, man must forget every movement of his own body in contemplation or meditation. This is the second exercise, which must alternate with the first exercise. The practitioner forgets his body completely, not only in a mental sense, but in such a way that he is also able to separate himself from all emotions and volitions, just as he is able to separate himself from all bodily activity in sleep. But this state must be brought about consciously. By adding this devotion to the first exercise, the person really gets to put themselves into a spiritual world through their awakening spiritual senses, just like they live into the world of the senses that surrounds us through their outer senses. A new world then appears before the person, the world in which the person always is with their spiritual-soul life. But then something becomes a fact for the human being. It becomes a fact, as I said, for inner observation, something that is still completely rejected by the prejudices of our time, but which is just as much a result of rigorous scientific research as the modern theory of evolution: the human being gets to know his soul-spiritual core, and he gets to know it in such a way that he knows: Before I entered this life before conception and birth, which clothed me with a body, I was spiritually and soulfully in a spiritual realm. When I pass through the gate of death, my body will fall away, but what I have now come to know as my spiritual-soul core, that which can live outside the body, will pass through the gate of death. After passing through the gate of death, it belongs to a spiritual world; it enters a spiritual world. In other words, one learns to know the immortal soul already in this life between birth and death. One learns to know that which one knows is not dependent on the body. One gets to know the world into which the human soul enters after death. But one learns to recognize this spiritual-soul essence of the human being in such a way that it can be described scientifically and vividly.

When we look at a plant, how the seed develops, how the leaves and flowers emerge, how the fruit forms, from which in turn a seed emerges, then we become aware that the life of this plant culminates in this seed. We see the flowers and leaves fall off, we see that the seed remains, carrying within itself a new plant. Thus we become aware that in this plant before us lives the seed, the core of a new plant. By observing life between birth and death, we learn to recognize that what passes through the gate of death develops in the spiritual-soul realm, but that it is the seed, the core of a new life. Just as surely as the plant seed has the potential to become a new plant, so surely does that which is hidden in everyday life as the soul-spiritual, but which is revealed to spiritual science, have the potential to become a new human being. And through such observation, one arrives at the repeated lives on earth in full agreement with the scientific way of thinking. We know that the whole of human life consists of the life between birth and death and the life that passes between death and a new birth, from which the human being then enters a new earthly life. The only objection that could be raised against what has just been said is that the plant germ could also perish if the conditions necessary for it to develop into a new plant are not present. This objection is settled for spiritual science by the fact that the plant germ, because it is dependent on the external world, can indeed perish. In the spiritual world, however, where the core of the human soul matures for a new life on earth, there is no obstacle to what has matured as the core of the soul in one life on earth reappearing in another life on earth. I can only briefly hint at how spiritual researchers, adhering to the scientific method of research, arrive at the view of repeated earthly lives.

Spiritual science has been accused of Buddhism because it speaks of repeated earthly lives. Now, spiritual science does not truly derive what it has to say from Buddhism, but stands entirely on the ground of modern natural science. However, it extends this modern natural science to spiritual life. And it cannot help coming to the view of repeated earthly lives without taking Buddhism into consideration in any way. It cannot help that Buddhism spoke of repeated earthly lives in ancient times based on old traditions.

In this context, I would like to point out that Lessing came to speak of repeated earthly lives out of his mature and experienced thinking. After a busy life, Lessing wrote his treatise “On the Education of the Human Race,” in which he advocates this doctrine of repeated earthly lives. He says something like the following: Should this doctrine be rejected because it appeared in the early hours of humanity, when it was not yet clouded by the prejudices of the schools? Just as Lessing was not deterred by the fact that this doctrine of repeated earthly lives arose in the dawn of humanity and was later pushed into the background by the prejudices of the schools, so spiritual science need not shy away from this doctrine because it also occurs in Buddhism. It is completely unfounded to accuse spiritual science of borrowing from Buddhism for this reason. Spiritual science professes the doctrine of repeated earthly lives from its own sources, and through this spiritual science, human beings are made aware that they are connected to the entire life of humanity on earth. For these souls that live within us have been here many times before and will be here many times again. We look back on ancient cultural epochs, on times, for example, when people's eyes looked up at the pyramids. We know that our souls already lived then, and that they will appear again in the future; they participate in all epochs of humanity. It is still understandable today when people's prejudices turn against such a teaching. There are also people who arrange everything to suit themselves. It is well known that Lessing was a great man. The fact that he professed the teaching of repeated lives on earth at the height of his life is uncomfortable for some people, and they therefore say: Well, Lessing also became weak in his old age! It is more convenient for people to think this than to think that human beings are connected with the entire earthly culture.

Now, in what sense does spiritual science want to bring what has just been discussed to the attention of the whole of human culture? In no other sense than the newer natural science brings its findings before humanity. But in stepping forward in this way before human culture, spiritual science is exposed to the same prejudices that were directed against the newer scientific way of thinking. Let us just remember Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno. What was it like back then when Copernicus came forward with the view that the Earth does not stand still, but that it revolves around the Sun, that the Sun in fact stands still in relation to the Earth? What had people believed? They had believed that religion was now at stake, that such advances in knowledge endangered the religious piety of mankind. It took certain ecclesiastical confessions until the nineteenth century to remove Copernicus's teachings from the Index and recognize them within their worldview. Spiritual progress has always had to struggle against old prejudices. Just as the new scientific knowledge entered human culture at that time, so the new spiritual knowledge wants to enter human culture. Spiritual science wants to emphasize that it is possible to know something about the spirit and that humanity is ready to acquire this knowledge, just as Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno emphasized that a new knowledge had become necessary for which humanity was ready in relation to nature. And just as Christian canons accused Nicolaus Copernicus of not being a Christian, it is easy to accuse the newer spiritual science of being unchristian in certain respects. When I hear such accusations, I am always reminded of a priest who, when he took up his position as university rector, gave a lecture on Galileo and said: “It was religious prejudice that led people to oppose Copernicus at that time. But anyone who is truly religious knows that the glory and light of the deity are not diminished by penetrating the mysteries of the universe with knowledge; he knows that the greatness of man's view of God has only increased as man has extended his knowledge beyond the senses to a calculation of the paths of the stars and the peculiarities of the heavenly bodies. The truly religious mind can understand that religion can only gain if it deepens itself scientifically. And spiritual science does not want to be something that has to do with founding a new religion. It does not want to create a new sect. It does not want to produce prophets or founders of religions. The time of founding religions, the time of prophets, is over. Humanity has become mature. And people who want to step forward before humanity in the future with a prophetic nature will have a different fate than the prophets of old. The prophets of old were rightly revered as outstanding human beings according to the characteristics of their time. Prophets of the present who want to be prophets in the old sense will meet their fate: they will be laughed at! Spiritual science does not need prophets, for spiritual science, by its very nature, stands on the ground that what it has to say is the property of the depths of the human soul, those depths into which the human soul cannot always shine. And what the spiritual researcher says, he wants to investigate as a simple researcher. He wants to draw attention to what is necessary. The spiritual researcher says: I have found it; if you search, you will find it yourself! And more and more the time will come when the spiritual researcher will be recognized as a simple researcher, just as the chemist and the biologist are recognized as researchers in their fields; only that the spiritual researcher investigates in the field that is close to every human soul.

Today I could only sketch what research in this field has revealed. But if you look into it, you will see that it is the investigation of the most important questions for the human soul: the questions of humanity and destiny, the two questions that can deeply move people every hour, every day—the questions that make the human soul strong for work. And because the subjects of spiritual research have to do with the depths of the human soul, it is inherent in them that they move people, that they connect with the deepest inner being of the human being, and that they thereby deepen his religious feeling, making him more religious in his feeling than he would otherwise have been.

Spiritual science does not want to replace Christianity, but it wants to be an instrument for grasping Christianity. And it is precisely through spiritual science that we realize that the being we call Christ must be placed at the center of all earthly existence, that what we call the Christian creed is the last of the religions, the eternal religion for the future of the earth. Spiritual science shows us precisely that the pre-Christian religions have outgrown their one-sidedness and have grown together into the religion of Christianity. Spiritual science does not want to replace Christianity with something else, but only to help us understand Christianity more deeply and more intimately.

Can we say that Copernicus, when he sat in his quiet little room and devised a new astronomical world system, wanted to transform nature? It would be madness to say so. Nature has remained what it was, but people have learned to think about nature in a way that befits the new culture. I took the liberty of calling my book on Christianity, which I wrote many years ago, “Christianity as Mystical Fact.” Anyone who is accustomed to thinking about the things they pass on to the world does not choose such a title without hesitation. Why did I choose this title? Well, to show that Christianity is not a mere doctrine that can be understood in one way or another, but that it entered the world as a fact that can only be understood spiritually. Just as nature did not become different because of Copernicus, so the fact of Christianity does not become different when spiritual science becomes an instrument for understanding this fact of Christianity in a full sense, better than was possible in times past.

Allow me to highlight just one point from the spiritual scientific investigation of Christianity. I have already exceeded the time allotted to me, but I would like to draw your attention to this one concrete point of Christian spiritual research.

If one studies ancient cultures, pre-Christian cultures, from the perspective of spiritual research, one finds that these pre-Christian cultures everywhere had what we call mysteries, places that can be described as religious sites, places of art, and places of science all at once. While the outer culture was such that in ancient times people never came to penetrate the spiritual world through spiritual scientific methods, as I have described, while the outer culture never allowed penetration into the spiritual world, individual people could be admitted into the mysteries. There were the disciples, who were also called the initiates. They were led to attain what has been described today, namely, to step out of their physical bodies. Through the art of the mysteries, they were led, so to speak, to develop a soul life free of the body. And what did they attain through this soul life free of the body? They gained the ability to experience the spiritual world and to experience the center point of human history on Earth, the Christ event. Outer science takes far too little account of what became of the students of the mysteries, but much could be cited to illustrate this. Let me mention just one thing as a symptom, a saying of the Church Father Augustine. He said: Christians have not only existed since Christ appeared on earth; Christians existed even before that! If one says that today, one is accused of heresy; but a Christian Church Father was allowed to say that there were Christians before Christ, before Christ appeared on earth; and that is also Augustine's own view. Why did this Christian teacher say such words? One gains a certain awareness of why he said this when one reads, for example, in Plato how he values the mysteries, how he speaks about the significance of the mysteries for the whole being and life of humanity. Plato has handed down to us a statement that may seem harsh: human souls live as if in mud, as if in a swamp, as long as they are not initiated into the sacred mysteries. He said this because he was convinced that the human soul is actually spiritual and soulful in its essence, but that only those who remove their soul from the physical body can see the spiritual world through the mysteries. To Plato, people who have not entered into the mysteries appear to be deprived of their true essence. And that is the essential point: in ancient times, the only way to enter the spiritual realm from the physical-sensory realm was through the mysteries.

But this is no longer the case today. There is a tremendous difference in the relationship between the human soul and the spiritual world compared to pre-Christian times. What I have told you today, and what every soul can do with itself in order to maintain its entry into the spiritual world, has only been possible in the world since the founding of Christianity. Only since then has every soul that applies what I have described today and in the books mentioned been able to ascend to the spiritual world through self-education. Before the establishment of Christianity, people needed the mysteries, they needed the authoritative instructions of teachers. Self-initiation did not exist in ancient times. And when spiritual science is asked: What is the basis for this change? — then it must answer from its research: This change has become possible through the mystery of Golgotha. Through the establishment of Christianity, a fact that can only be researched in the spirit has entered into humanity. Something that was previously only to be found in the spiritual realm, when human beings had left the body through the mysteries, Christ himself, can be found by every human soul through its own efforts since the establishment of Christianity. That which brought the mysteries into human souls, so to speak, has been in every human soul since the mystery of Golgotha; it has been given to all human souls. Where did this come from? Those who were known to have passed through the mysteries, Heraclitus, Plato, are called “Christians” by the Church Fathers because they saw the spiritual world through the mysteries.

Spiritual science shows us that, as Jesus lived in the way you can find in the Gospels, there came a moment in his life—it was his baptism in the Jordan—when this Jesus was transformed, when something entered into him that had not been there before, and which then lived in him for three years. And what entered into him passed through the mystery of Golgotha. This is not the time to describe the details of the mystery of Golgotha. But spiritual science confirms what is written in the Gospels from its own point of view, from its completely scientific point of view. Through what happens at Golgotha, something that was previously only accessible in the spiritual heights is connected with humanity itself. Since the time when Christ passed through death at Golgotha, it has been living within all human souls. It is the power through which every soul can find its way into the spiritual world. The human race on earth has become different in relation to its soul through the mystery of Golgotha. Christ is, as he himself says, “from above,” but he has entered into the human-earth world.

Spiritual science is accused of saying that Jesus was not always the Christ, but that the Christ life on earth only began in the thirtieth year of Jesus' life. Superficiality upon superficiality, born of the prejudice of humanity, confronts spiritual science; when one admits the fact, one is immediately confronted with prejudice. And so it is with almost everything that is said by opponents regarding the position of spiritual science in relation to Christianity.

Must we not say that it is only around the age of three that a human being can begin to remember? But does that mean that what lives in the human being later did not already exist in him earlier? When we speak of Christ entering into Jesus, do we therefore deny that Christ was connected with Jesus from birth? One does not deny this any more than one denies that the soul is in the child before the soul, so to speak, is resurrected in this child during the course of the third year. One only has to understand what spiritual science says, and then one will no longer be its opponent.

Furthermore, spiritual science is accused of making Christ a cosmic being. It does nothing other than expand the view of earthly human beings beyond mere earthly-physical matters into the vastness of the universe, so that they can also embrace the universe spiritually with their knowledge, just as Copernicus embraced the outer world with his knowledge. That spiritual science feels the need to include what is most sacred to it in its knowledge is simply a religious feeling and at the same time a deeply scientific feeling. Before Copernicus, people judged the movements in the universe according to what they saw; they learned to judge independently of the sensory world. Is it punishable if spiritual science does the same with regard to the spiritual affairs of humanity? People have judged Christianity and the life of Jesus Christ in a certain way, as they were able to judge until now. Spiritual science wants to broaden our view into the cosmic-spiritual expanses. It adds to what has been known up to now what it has to say about Christ from the perspective of spiritual science. Spiritual science recognizes in Christ a being that is eternal, a being that entered a human body only once and is therefore different from other human beings in that it does not go through repeated earthly lives. Christ entered a human body only once and is now united with the souls of human beings.

Those who oppose spiritual science from the standpoint of Christianity make a remarkable mistake. Ask spiritual science whether it opposes anything it finds within Christianity. It says yes to everything that Christianity says yes to. But it also says something else. To forbid this other thing does not mean to insist on one's Christianity, but to insist on the limitations of Christianity; it means to act as those acted who spoke about Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno in the way I have described. The logical error underlying this is easy to see. Those who come and say, “You are talking about a cosmic Christ who also lives in the worlds beyond, therefore you are Gnostics,” are making roughly the same mistake as someone who says, “Yes, the man who just gave me money owes me 30 crowns, but he gave me 40 crowns because he is lending me 10.” If I now come and say, 'The man has not paid me what he owes me; he did not give me 30 crowns, but 40 crowns,' am I not making a foolish mistake? But when people come and say to the representatives of spiritual science: You are not only telling us what we say about Christ, but you are adding something to it — then people do not realize what an enormous mistake they are making, because they are speaking out of passion and not really objectively. For all I care, people can argue that what spiritual science says about Christianity may or may not be something for human beings. That depends on what people need. One could also reject Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno. But one cannot say that spiritual science says less about Christianity or that spiritual science opposes Christianity.

And there is one more thing that must be said when discussing the relationship between spiritual science and Christianity: humanity changes as it passes from one epoch to another in the lives of individual human beings. Our human souls have gone through earthly lives in times when Christ was not yet united with the earth, and they will go through further earthly lives in which Christ is united with the earth. Christ now lives in human souls themselves. But then, as the human soul deepens more and more, as the human soul goes through repeated earthly lives, it becomes more and more independent, more and more free within itself. That is why it needs ever new instruments to understand the old truths, why it must press ever further and further out of this inner freedom. So it must be said: Christianity is recognized precisely through spiritual science in such depth, in such truth, in such importance, that spiritual science may have confidence when it proclaims these old Christian truths in a new form. Let those who wish to remain stuck in their prejudices believe that spiritual science undermines Christianity. Anyone who penetrates contemporary culture will find that it is precisely those people who can no longer be Christians in the old way who are convinced of the truth of Christianity through spiritual science. For what spiritual science has to say about Christianity, it can say to every soul, because every soul can find the Christ of whom it speaks within itself. But it can also say that it finds Christ as the being who once truly entered into human souls, into the earthly world, through the mystery of Golgotha. Faith has nothing to fear from knowledge, for the objects of faith, when they ascend to the spirit, have no reason to shy away from the light of knowledge. And so spiritual science will win over to Christianity those souls that cannot be won in any other way than by speaking to them not as a prophetic founder of a religion, but as a simple scientist who draws attention to what can be found in the field of spiritual science and who causes the strings that are in every soul to vibrate.

Every human being can become a spiritual researcher; you can find the ways to do so in the books mentioned above. But even those who are not spiritual researchers can be permeated by the truth if they allow it to affect them in an unbiased manner. And if they do not do so, then they cannot free themselves from prejudice. All truths lie in the human soul. Perhaps not every human being has the opportunity to survey the truth of the spiritual world as a spiritual researcher; but as surely as we have already left the realm of the sensory world with our thinking, so surely does our thinking follow when the spiritual scientist wants to draw our attention to what he has discovered on his spiritual paths. And he only wants to draw attention to the fact that there are truths that can germinate in every soul because they are present in every soul.

Since I would like to conclude by drawing attention to how spiritual science fits into cultural life, I would like to say the following: Spiritual science is truly in harmony with the scientific way of thinking and imagining, and it does not want to present itself to contemporary culture in any other way than the church canon Copernicus, Galileo, and Giordano Bruno presented themselves to their contemporaries. Let us recall Giordano Bruno. What did he actually do? Before he appeared and spoke his words so significant for the development of humanity, people looked into the universe. They spoke of the spheres of the stars as they believed they saw them. They spoke of the blue celestial sphere that limited the universe. Copernicus, Galileo, Giordano Bruno had the courage to break through the illusions of the senses and establish a new way of thinking. What was it, basically, that Giordano Bruno said to his listeners? He said: Look at the blue celestial sphere; the firmament, you yourselves create it through the limitations of your knowledge. Your eyes can only see as far as that, and it is your eyes that create this limitation! Giordano Bruno expanded people's view beyond these limitations. He believed he was entitled to point out that eternal star worlds are embedded in the vastness of space.

What must the spiritual researcher do? Let me express it modestly in the spirit of recent spiritual development. The spiritual researcher must point to the firmament of time, he must point to the limits of birth and death in human life, he must say: External perception sees birth and death as a firmament of time due to the limitations of the human intellect and faculty of perception. But like Giordano Bruno, he must point out that this firmament of time does not exist, but that it only arises from the limitations of human perception. Just as Giordano Bruno points beyond the limitations of space, just as he must point out how infinite worlds are embedded in the vastness of space, so the spiritual researcher must point out that behind the non-existent boundaries of birth and death lies the infinity of time, and that embedded in it is the eternity of the human soul, the eternal essence of the human being as it passes from life to life. Spiritual science stands in complete harmony with what has happened in natural science.

And once again, allow me to point out, even in this city, that spiritual science does not seek to found a religion, but that it makes the soul life more religious and leads precisely to the essence at the religious center, to Christ. Let me repeatedly draw attention to the fact that spiritual science, although it does not seek to found a new religious community, nevertheless makes the human soul deeply religious, that out of the science of the spirit it brings about not a new religion but a deepened religious consciousness. And those who fear spiritual science as if it could destroy religious consciousness are like a man who stood before Columbus when he set sail for America — allow me to use this comparison — and said: Why are you discovering America? Here in our old Europe, the sun rises so beautifully; do we know whether the sun will also rise in America and warm the people and illuminate the earth? But those who have entered into the meaning of physical existence on earth will have known that the sun shines in all countries. But anyone who fears for his Christianity is like such a person who fears the discovery of a new country because he thinks that the sun might not shine there. Anyone who truly carries the Christ-Sun in his soul knows that the Christ-Sun will shine in every country. And whatever territories may yet be discovered, whether in the realm of nature or in the realm of the spirit, the America of the spirit will never be discovered unless the truly religious life inclines itself toward the center of earthly existence, toward the Christ Sun, and unless this Christ Sun shines, illuminating souls, warming souls, and firing souls. Only those who are weak in their religious feeling can fear that this religious feeling might die or weaken in a newly discovered situation. But those who are strong in their genuine Christ feeling will not be afraid of knowledge; they will not fear that faith might in any way be endangered by knowledge.

Spiritual science lives in this trust. In this trust, spiritual science speaks to the culture of the present. For it knows that it is true that true religious thinking and feeling cannot be endangered by any research, but that only a weak religiosity has anything to fear. It knows that one may have confidence in the meaning of truth. And because the spiritual researcher knows, through the shattering events of his soul life, through what he has objectively gone through, what lives in the depths of the human soul, and because he gains confidence in the human soul through his research, because he sees that the human soul has the most intimate relationship with truth, he believes, no matter how much the signs in the present may speak against spiritual science, in the ultimate victory of spiritual science. And he hopes for this from the truth-loving and also from the genuine religious life of the human soul.