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Karma of Untruthfulness II
GA 173b

25 December 1916, Dornach

Lecture X

Yesterday we began by considering the Baldur myth which, as we saw, goes back to ancient customs, and it is precisely such considerations that make clear for us how Christianity had to, and indeed should, link on to what mankind had previously understood. The three great festivals of the year, as they are still celebrated today, are very much linked with things which have slowly and gradually come about during the course of human evolution. We can only completely understand what still wants to express itself in the Christmas, Easter and Whitsun Mysteries if we do not shy away from linking these things with the thinking and feeling and experience of mankind gradually developing during the course of evolution. We saw how the Christ idea goes back to early, early times.

To understand this more exactly you only need to call before your soul what is contained in the book The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity. There you will learn how the foundation of the Christ idea can be traced back to the mysteries of the spiritual worlds. In the book is shown the path followed in the spiritual worlds by the Being Who underlies the Christ idea before He revealed Himself in physical human incarnation at a certain point in earthly evolution. In coming to grips with these concepts concerning the spiritual guidance of mankind it is possible to sense what connection, or even lack of connection, there exists between anthroposophical spiritual science and ancient Gnosis. To describe the path of Christ through the spiritual worlds in the way it is done in The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity would not yet have been possible for ancient Gnosis. But this ancient Gnosis also had its own image of Christ, its Christ idea. It was capable of drawing sufficient understanding out of its atavistic or clairvoyant knowledge to comprehend the Christ in a spiritual way, saying: In the spiritual world there is an evolution; the hierarchies—or, as Gnosis put it, the aeons—follow one another; and one such aeon is the Christ. Gnosis showed how, as aeon after aeon evolved, Christ gradually descended and revealed Himself in a human being. This can be shown even more clearly today, and you may read about it in the book The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity.

It is good, in our spiritual scientific Movement, to feel many aspects of the deeper connections in order to free oneself of purely personal affairs. For in this fifth post-Atlantean period mankind has reached a stage in evolution at which it is very difficult for the individual to escape from his personal affairs. The individual is in danger of mixing up his personal instincts and passions with what is common to mankind as a whole.

Even the various festivals have deteriorated into purely personal affairs because mankind has lost the earnestness and dignity which alone make it possible to approach the spiritual world in the right way. It is perfectly natural in our fifth post-Atlantean period, in which man is supposed to comprehend himself to a certain extent and become independent, that there should exist such a danger of man to some extent losing his connections with the spiritual world. In earlier times man was aware of his connections with the spiritual world, yet unaware of certain other things, such as I pointed out yesterday. Today man is, above all, unaware of those things I have mentioned in these lectures by saying: People are no longer inclined to pay attention to them; they allow them to pass by without being concerned about them.

It is a good thing on occasions such as the Christmas festival to say to oneself: Spiritual impulses, both good and evil, play into the evolution of our world. We have seen how these impulses can be used in an evil way by individuals who know about them either for some personal, egoistic purpose, or in the interests of the egoism of a group. We must learn to adjust our feelings to more comprehensive affairs and more comprehensive conditions. Even though we cannot always advertise such feelings, we must nevertheless cultivate them.

I am now going to give you the opportunity—in connection with a certain matter—to, as it were, tear your soul away from any sort of personal interpretation of Anthroposophy and turn instead towards something general which is connected with our Anthroposophical Movement. If you understood properly what I said yesterday, you will say to yourself: That twentieth day of May in 1347, that May Whitsuntide when Cola di Rienzi accomplished his important manifesto in Rome, was repeated in a certain way at Whitsuntide in the year 1915. Those who have been following the events will soon notice, or would soon notice, that this May Whitsuntide was selected entirely purposely and entirely consciously by those who brought this about. It was known to these people that these old impulses would once again revive, and that the hearts and souls who succumb to the blindness of Hödr can be caught when Loki approaches them. But people can only be caught so long as they do not have the will to accustom themselves to look at, and be impressed by, connections that are perfectly obvious and comprehensible. One is only at the mercy of connections that remain in the unconscious so long as one is so tied up in personal matters that one cannot see proper connections—connections in the good sense—so long as one has no interest for those things which involve mankind as a whole, which are things that inevitably lead into the spiritual realm.

I explained to you that in Gnosis there was still an understanding of the Christ idea; that when Gnosis was rooted out the Christ idea degenerated into dogma and that, in the South, therefore, the genuine Christ idea more or less disappeared. Now spiritual science has the task, in accordance with spiritual evolution, of once again comprehending this Christ idea, of forming a Christ idea that is not an empty phrase but filled with content, with real content.

In the North the very thing that could take root there has disappeared, namely, the feeling for Jesus. As I said the day before yesterday, the feeling for Jesus was really formed in the North and lingered on into the eighth, ninth, tenth centuries after the Mystery of Golgotha. In ancient times the Christ-child was welcomed wherever a birth took place, wherever a worthy new member could be taken into the tribe, especially among the Ingaevones, while those born at the wrong time were out of place—of course I am not being pedantic. We then saw how, as external Christianity spread, all things connected with the ancient feeling for Jesus, even the myths and processions—in other words, any remnants of religious customs—were pushed aside. We also saw how, since the Middle Ages, strenuous efforts have been going on to obliterate all that spread from Jutland across Europe, especially Central Europe.

Situated in the region of Denmark was the chief Mystery centre which laid down and watched over the conditions which then appeared in the regulation of conception and birth. There it was that a general consciousness of the social connections of human beings grew up, connections that were also sacramental, a true social sacrament. The year as such was arranged as a sacrament and human beings knew they were contained within this sacrament of the year. For people in those days the sun did not for nothing go in different ways across the dome of heaven at different seasons, for what took place on earth was a mirror image of heavenly events. Where human beings as yet have, or can have, no influence, where elemental and nature beings still regulate what is now regulated by human beings in social life—there the sacrament can exist. Today, though people are not as yet aware of it, quite strong ahrimanic impulses live in individual human beings. I mean it when I say that people are not yet aware of this. These ahrimanic impulses are directed towards seizing from certain elemental nature spirits their sacramental influence on earthly evolution.

When modern technology has made it possible to warm large areas with artificial heat—I am not finding fault but merely telling you of something that will of necessity come about in the future—then plant growth, above all that of grain, will be taken away from the nature and elemental spirits. There will be heating installations, not only for winter gardens and smaller spaces for plants to grow, but for whole cornfields. Deprived of cosmic laws, grain will grow in every season, instead of only when it grows of its own accord—that is, when it grows through the working of the nature and elemental spirits. For the seeds this will be similar to what happened when the ancient consciousness of sacramental laws about conception and birth faded so that these events came to be spread over the whole year. The task of Mystery centres such as that in Denmark, which I described as regulating, as a sacrament, the social life of the people, was to search for ways in which spiritual beings could work in the social and sacramental field, just as they work on the sprouting and growing of plants in the spring and their fading in autumn. From this centre in Denmark there spread what we were able to find in the third millennium before the Mystery of Golgotha, but which then faded gradually to make way for something new, without which human beings would have been unable to ascend to the use of their intellect. These things are necessary and we ought to recognize them as such, instead of trying to meddle with the handiwork of the gods by saying: Why have the gods done it like this, why did they not arrange things like that?—which always means: Why have they not made things more comfortable for human beings!

So in Jutland, in Denmark, originated the receptivity for the feeling for Jesus. You see, it is important to think about what is happening, not only in connection with events which are more or less important, but also to consider the connections. But this thinking must be straight and true, not full of fantastic aberrations. Many people like to brood on the weird and wonderful, but proper thinking means to consider how actual events are linked and then to wait and see what arises in the way of understanding.

After all I have said in the last few days it might occur to you to ask the following question, and those of you who have already asked yourselves this question have definitely sensed in your soul something that is right. If you have not yet asked it, you could strive in future to ask yourselves this kind of question. For such questions are to be found everywhere when there is determination that there shall be truth, not only in what is said, but also in what is done. The World Logos, Whose birth we celebrate in the Christmas Mystery, can only be understood rightly if we think of It as being as general and universal as possible, if we think of this World Logos actually vibrating and pulsating in all things that happen, in every event. And when we have the humility and devotion to feel ourselves interwoven with this universal process, then we recognize the connections and links which hold sway.

What is the question our soul might place before us? In recent days you soul might have thought: We have now seen that in Gnosis there was an important Christ idea; it disappeared in the South and, in a certain way, was unable to make its way to the North. To meet it came the Jesus idea, which is linked as a feeling to the Mysteries of Jutland. This is what we have seen.

Having recognized this and having seen the links between these two, would it not be natural to have the desire to bring together what has been unable to come together? In the world evolution of the West the Christ idea has been unable to come together with the Jesus idea. Out of this must surely come the desire to unite them.

In all modesty, modern Anthroposophy is to take on this task. It is the affair of Anthroposophy to endeavour to do what is right in this matter and bring these things together to some extent in the constellation of the universe. So in attempting to describe how modern Anthroposophy, as a Gnosis brought forward into the present day, can once again understand the Christ, the wish might arise to unite this Christ idea with something that can live again in a certain place where once it lived as the feeling for Jesus in such an intense way. To do this, one would endeavour to speak about the Christ idea and how it fits in with the spiritual guidance of man exactly at that spot, or as near to that spot as possible, whence the feeling for Jesus originally emanated.

This is why, years ago, in response to an invitation from Copenhagen I spoke particularly there about the path of Christ through the spiritual evolutions. Why did the need arise just at that time, to develop at that particular place the theme of the Christ idea as it is woven into The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity? It is a statement, expressed not in spoken words but in the constellation! It is up to people to understand such things. There is no need to speak about it publicly everywhere, but one must understand that not only what is said but also what is done will bring things to expression, and that in these things the Universal Logos lives in a certain way.

It seems to be the case nowadays that people obviously bring more feeling to bear on what is not right, on what is evil, seen universally, than they do when, by expressing a real fact, one endeavours to incorporate something that is essentially good in the sense of human evolution. But the feeling one really wants to inspire, especially now in connection with the Christmas Mystery, is that of participation in the Anthrosophical Movement, the feeling of living within something that is above mere external maya. Also one hopes that people will take seriously the knowledge that what happens on the physical plane, the way things happen on the physical plane, is maya, and not reality in the higher sense.

Not until we feel that what takes place on the earth also, in a way, takes place in ‘heaven’—to use a Christian expression—not until we feel that the full truth only comes about when we bring the two together in the human spirit—that is, in this fifth post-Atlantean period, the human intellect—are we seeing the full reality. The full reality lies in the bringing-together of what happens on earth and in heaven. Without this, we remain held fast in maya. We have, today, this great desire to remain held fast in maya because, in the fifth post-Atlantean period, we are far too exposed to the danger of taking the word for the fact. To a great extent words have lost their meaning, by which I mean the living soul-connection of the word with the reality that underlies the word. Words have become mere abbreviations, and the intoxication in which many people live with regard to words is no longer genuine ecstasy, because only a deepening as regards the spiritual world can make genuine the words we speak. Words will only regain real content when human beings fill themselves with knowledge of the spiritual world. Ancient knowledge is lost, and for the most part we speak in the way we do just because the ancient knowledge is lost and we are surrounded by maya, which gives us nothing but mere words. Now we must once again seek a spiritual life which gives the words their content. We live, in a way, in a mechanism of words, just as externally we shall gradually completely lose our individuality in a mechanism of technology until we are at the mercy of external mechanisms.

It is our task to bring together what lives in the spiritual world with what lives in the physical world. To do this we have to tackle very seriously the grasping of reality. In this materialistic age people are too much accustomed to living within narrow horizons and to seeing things confined within these horizons. They have even arranged their religion so comfortably that it gives them a narrow horizon. People today avoid wide horizons and do not want to call a spade a spade. That is why it is so difficult for them to understand how a karma could come about that is as terrible as that besetting Europe today. Everybody regards this karma—today, at least—from a narrow national standpoint, as it is called, although there is much that is untrue in this too. But at the foundation there lies the karma of mankind as a whole, something that is everybody's concern, which can be expressed in a single sentence with regard to one particular point—though there are many other points as well. People are inclined to pass by the very thing that matters. This thing that matters is the flight from truth into which souls have fallen today! Souls run away from the truth; they have a terrible abhorrence of grasping the truth in all its strength and intensity.

Consider the following: We have gradually built up a picture for ourselves of the evolution of mankind and we now know how to assess the fact that, during a certain period in this evolution, wars came upon the scene, that wars were what fired mankind. But it was a time when mankind believed in war. What do I mean when I say that it was a time when mankind believed in wars? What does it mean: to believe in wars? Well, a belief in wars is very similar to a belief in the duel, in the fight between two. But when does a duel have a real meaning? It has a meaning only when the two concerned are inwardly fully convinced that, not chance, but the gods will decide the outcome. If the two who take up their positions in order to fight a duel fully believe that the one who is killed or wounded will receive his death or wound because a god has sided against him, then there is truth in the duel. There is no truth in the duel if this conviction is lacking; then, obviously, the duel is a genuine lie. It is the same in the case of war. If the individuals who constitute the warring peoples are convinced that the outcome of the war is divine, that the gods govern what is to happen, then there is truth in the actions of war. But then the participants must understand the meaning of the words: A divine judgement will come about.

Ask yourselves whether there is any truth in such words today! You need only ask: Do people believe that actions of war express divine judgements? Do people believe this? Ask yourselves how many people believe that the outcome is divine! How many people truly believe this, how many honestly believe this? For among the many lies buzzing about in the world today are the prayers to the gods, or to God, offered up—naturally—by all sides. Obviously, in this materialistic age there cannot be a real belief that a divine judgement is going to take place. So it is necessary to look seriously and soberly at this matter, and admit that one is doing something without believing in its inner reality. One does not believe in this inner reality, and one believes all the less in this inner reality the further westwards one goes in Europe—quite rightly, because the further westwards one goes, the more does one enter western Europe, which has the task for the fifth post-Atlantean period of bringing about materialism.

Things are different going eastwards, however. I am not in the habit of constructing theories about such things or of saying such things lightheartedly. When I say something of this kind it is based on actual facts. It is nowadays already possible to make a remarkable discovery. Coming from the West to Central Europe you discover that here there exists a sporadic belief in divine judgement. In the West this is impossible unless it has been imported from Central Europe. But in Central Europe there are isolated individuals who have a kind of belief in destiny and who use the word ‘divine judgement’. And if you go right to the East where the future is being prepared, you will, of course, find numerous people who regard the approaching outcome as a divine judgement. For Russian people are not averse—as are the people of the West—to seeing a divine judgement in what takes place.

These things must be faced with full objectivity. Only then can we speak truly; only then do our words have meaning. Mankind has the task of learning to give meaning back to words.

Some time ago I drew your attention to what almost amounts to a religious cultivation of something that is entirely without thought or feeling, namely, the lack of desire to know that modern religions, when they speak of ‘God’, actually only mean an angel being, an angelos. When human beings today speak of ‘God’ they mean only their angel, the angel who guides them through life. But they persuade themselves that they are speaking of a being higher than an angel. It is maya that modern monotheism speaks of a single god for, in reality, seen from a spiritual point of view, mankind has the tendency to speak of as many gods as there are human beings on the earth, since each individual means only his own angel. Under the mask of monotheism is hidden the most absolute polytheism. That is why modern religions are in danger of being atomized, since each individual represents only his own idea of God, his own standpoint. Why is this? It is because, today, in the fifth post-Atlantean period, we are isolated from the spiritual world. Our consciousness remains solely in the human sphere.

In the fourth post-Atlantean period human consciousness reached some way into the spiritual sphere, namely, as far as the region of the angeloi. In the third post-Atlantean period it penetrated as far as the archangeloi. Only in this third period could such a thing as the Mysteries of Jutland, of Denmark come into being. What kind of a being was it who announced to each individual mother the coming birth of her child? It was the being about whom the Luke gospel speaks: an archangel, a being from the region of the archangeloi. One who can see only as far as the angeloi and calls an angel-being his god—regardless of whether he believes this is really God, for it is reality and not belief that matters—such a one is incapable of finding any connection that goes beyond the time between birth and death to those regions which are today hidden by external maya. In the third post-Atlantean period, however, he was still able to look into the region of the archangels, for there was still a living connection with that region. In the second post-Atlantean period, the ancient Persian period, what was open to human consciousness was still connected with the archai. Then man did not feel himself to be in what we today call nature. He felt himself to be in a spiritual world. Light and darkness were not yet external, material processes, but spiritual processes. In the original Zarathustra religion, in the second post-Atlantean period, this was so.

So mankind gradually came down to the earth. In the second post-Atlantean period his consciousness reached up into the region of the archai, so that he was then still able to say: As a human being I am not solely an articulated doll consisting of muscles and flesh—which is what modern anatomists, physiologists and biologists maintain—but a being who can only be understood in connection with the spiritual world, immersed in the living weaving of light and darkness, for I belong to the weaving of light and darkness.

Then came the third post-Atlantean period. Nature began to take hold of man in so far as it worked on him. For the processes of birth and death link the soul life of man with nature. For external maya these are natural processes. Birth, conception, death are natural processes for external maya. They are only spiritual processes for one who can see where spiritual reality intervenes in these natural processes, and that is in the region of the archangeloi. This connection was seen during the third post-Atlantean period.

Gradually, nature itself became reality for man. This was from the fourth post-Atlantean period onwards. Before that nature was not spoken of in the way we speak of it today. But man needed to step out of the spiritual world and dwell alone with nature, isolated to a certain extent from the spiritual world. But then he needed an event which would enable him once again to forge links with the spiritual world. In the second post-Atlantean period the divine element appeared to him in the region of the archai; in the third, in the region of the archangeloi; and, in the fourth, in the region of the angeloi. In the fifth post-Atlantean period he had to recognize the divine as man. This was prepared in the middle of the fourth period when the divine appeared as Man—in the Christ. What this means is that Christ must come to be understood ever better and better; He must come to be understood in His connection with the human being. For Christ appeared as Man so that man might find the connection of mankind with the Christ. Such things we must make especially clear to ourselves in connection with the Christmas Mystery. Mankind's connection with the spiritual world must be found in the way that has become possible since man stepped down from this spiritual world in order to dwell within nature. This was prepared, as a fact, during the fourth post-Atlantean period. Now, in the fifth post-Atlantean period, it must be understood—really understood!

Human beings must find their way to an understanding of the fact of Christ, to an understanding of this in its connection with the whole of the spiritual world. There is so much today which is not understood about Christ, and so much which is not understood about Jesus. Yet these are the two constituent parts necessary for the understanding of Christ Jesus! Looking at the historical context we can see that the understanding for Christ disappeared when Gnosis was rooted out. Looking at the mysteries expressed in the Baldur myth we can understand how the feeling for Jesus was rooted out.

If we remain truthful we can see now, in the present, how external life corroborates what we find in history. For how many representatives of religion today believe in their hearts—not merely with their lips but in their hearts—how many believe in the true Resurrection, in the Mystery of Easter? They can only believe if they can comprehend it. How many priests do? Modern priests and pastors think themselves particularly enlightened when they succeed in disavowing the Easter Mystery, the Resurrection Mystery, if they manage somehow to discuss it to bits, to make it disappear through sophistry. They are delighted every time they discover a new reason for not having to believe in it.

First of all, the Christ idea, which is inseparable from the Resurrection Mystery, was made into dogma. Then gradually it became a subject for discussion, and the tendency now is to drop the Resurrection Mystery altogether. But the Mystery of the Birth is also not understood. People no longer want to have dealings with it because they do not want to accept its validity in all its profound depths as a mystery. They want to see only the natural side; they do not want to be aware that something spiritual came down. In the third post-Atlantean period human beings still saw this spiritual element descending, but then their consciousness was at a different level. What is today called modern religion, modern Christianity, really has no desire to comprehend either the birth or the death of Christ Jesus. Some still want to maintain a dogmatic connection. But a comprehension of these things that goes beyond mere words is today only possible through spiritual science. For this to be possible, the horizon of comprehension must be widened. But people today flee from the truth; they literally flee from what could lead them to an understanding of these things.

Only anthroposophical spiritual science is in a position to create out of itself—not by warming up ancient history—certain concepts which will now exist for conscious rather than atavistic understanding. Long ago these concepts existed atavistically; today, people no longer have any real feeling for them. Let me remind you of something I mentioned yesterday. The kingship of the ancient European tribes was connected with all those social institutions I mentioned as emanating from the Mysteries of Jutland. The first child born in the holy night in the third year was destined to be king. He was prepared for this in the way I explained and he grew up to be the man who could be king for three years. He had reached the stage I described when I said that he grew beyond his national limits—he stepped out of the context of his tribe. An individual of the fifth degree-called ‘Persian’ by the Persians—bore in every tribe the name of that tribe; he still stood within the group. The one who was to be king for three years had to be filled with the mystery of the ‘sun hero’. This was the sixth degree, and for this he had to have grown beyond his tribe or group and stand in the context of mankind as a whole. But he could only do this if his connections were not only earthly but also cosmic, if he was a ‘sun hero’, which meant that he lived in a realm governed not only by earthly laws but also by those laws with which the sun is interwoven. If man is to act on the earth he has to have contact with the earthly realm, and contact with this realm brings about a certain process. This process must be recognized. For by recognizing this process we gain an understanding for certain transitions, for certain things into which we need insight if we are to gain insight into reality.

In ancient times a man belonging to the tribe of the Ingaevones was called an ‘Ingaevoni’. But the one who ruled the tribe for three years as a ‘sun hero’ could not be called an Ingaevoni, because he had grown beyond his tribe. It would not have been truthful to call the ‘sun hero’ an Ingaevoni, because he had become something else. You see what an exact concept was attached to an earthly reality because the spiritual world was felt to be streaming in.

Nowadays, when we merely play with words instead of adhering strictly to concepts, who would take it into his head to say that it is untrue to call the Pope a Christian, since this is a paradox, just as it would have been paradoxical to call the king of the Ingaevones an Ingaevoni? If the Pope really wanted to be a ‘pope’, that is, if he really wanted to stand within the actual spiritual process, it would not be possible to take him for a Christian. We can only be Christians if the Pope is not a Christian. To say this would be to speak the truth.

Who would take it into his head today to want to think the truth about such important matters? And who would take it into his head to see in earthly things, which he recognizes as maya, the playing in of divine, of supernatural forces? This would be quite uncharacteristic of the present day. Only if we are forced do we recognize these things; only if forced do we bow to the laws of the cosmos. We are forced to recognize that the blade of wheat sprouts from the earth at a given season, develops ears which in turn produce new seeds; that there is a definite rotation so that what has come into being has to fade again in due season in accordance with the laws of nature. Even this we would not recognize if we were not forced to do so.

In ancient times it was recognized that the ‘sun hero’ called to be the leader of the Ingaevones would cease to be so after three years. These laws were felt, just as were those of the growing plants. It is important to endeavour to think of all these things resounding in unison, in harmony. Only by doing so can one come to the truth and widen one's horizons. For the truth is not a child's game to be arranged according to personal interests. To adhere to the truth is a grave and holy act of worship. This must be felt and sensed. Yet the whole tendency today is none other than to make maya absolute and declare it to be the truth.

What is the historical criticism cultivated today in historical seminars? It is a neat paring down to the bare sense-perceptible facts, and this can only lead to error. For by striving to pare things down to the sense-perceptible facts we drift over into maya. But maya is illusion. So any science of history which endeavours to exclude every spiritual element and, instead, bring maya to the fore, must of necessity lead directly to maya. Just try, by using modern seminar methods applied in historical departments today, to pare things down to the truth by eliminating anything spiritual and accepting only what takes place on the physical plane, that is, only sense-perceptible facts, and you will find that you fall a victim to maya and never reach an understanding of history. Take a modern history book for which anything super-sensible is an absurdity and in which great care is taken to attach validity only to physical events, and you have in your hand the striving to bring maya to the fore. But maya is illusion. So you have to fall a victim to illusion; and this is exactly what you do. The moment you believe history as it is written today you become a victim of maya, of illusion.

But history has not always been written in this way. The way it was done in former times is scorned today. It is a terrible aspect of human karma that even in man's view of history the spiritual element is excluded. Let us look back to the time when the attitude of the fourth post-Atlantean period was dominant. History was told quite differently then. It was told in a way which makes today's professors turn up their noses and say: These fellows were totally uncritical; they let themselves be lumbered with all sorts of myths and sagas; they had no feeling for tidy criticism which would have shown them the facts as they really were. This is what historians say today, and of course also those who copy them. The people in those days were childish, they say. Of course they were childish when compared with today's notions! Let us listen to the old way of telling history, of telling what countless people with the attitude of mind of the fourth post-Atlantean period saw as history. Let us listen to this today and look at it as an example which we can use as a basis for what is to be said tomorrow:

Once upon a time there lived in Saxon lands an Emperor whom people called ‘Red Emperor’, the Emperor with the red beard: Otto of the Red Beard. This Emperor had a wife who came from England and whose heart's desire it was to endow a church. So Otto the Red decided to endow the archbishopric of Magdeburg. The archbishopric of Magdeburg was to have a special mission in Central Europe. It was to link the West with the East in such a way that this very archbishopric would be the one to bring Christianity to the neighbouring Slavs. The archbishopric of Magdeburg made good progress, carrying out charitable works over a wide area, and Otto of the Red Beard saw what good effects his endowment was having in the district. He was very pleased at this. He said to himself: My deeds are sufficient as a blessing in the physical world. He always longed for God to reward him for his benevolent deeds towards the people. That was his aim: that God might reward him because, after all, everything he did was done from piety.

Once he knelt in church in prayer which rose up to become a meditation, beseeching the gods to reward him, when he died, for his endowment, in the same way as he had found his reward on the physical plane, in all the good that had come about in the environment of the archbishopric of Magdeburg. Then a spiritual being appeared to him and said: It is true, you have endowed much that is good, you have acted with much benevolence towards many people. But you have done all this with a view to receiving the blessing of the divine world after your death, just as you are now enjoying the blessing of the earthly world. This is bad and it spoils your endowment.

Now Otto of the Red Beard was very unhappy about this and he spoke with this being who was—was he not?—a being from the ranks of the angeloi. We may feel this in the attitude of mind of the fourth post-Atlantean period. He spoke with this being and this being said to him: Go to Cologne where Gerhard the Good lives. Ask where you can find Gerhard the Good. If you can make yourself more virtuous through what Gerhard the Good will say to you, then perhaps you can avoid what I have just said will happen to you. This, more or less, was the conversation of Otto of the Red Beard with the spiritual being.

With a speed which those around him could not understand, the Emperor Otto made ready to journey to Cologne. In Cologne he called a gathering of the Burgomaster and all ‘wise and benign councillors’. One of those who came he recognized by his appearance as an unusual man, the one whom he had really come to see. He asked the Archbishop of Cologne, who had accompanied him, whether this was Gerhard the Good. And indeed it was. Then the Emperor said to the councillors: I wished to consult with you, but now I shall first speak apart with this man and then discuss with you what I have gleaned from him when I have spoken with him.

Perhaps this put the councillors' noses out of joint somewhat, but we shall not go into this. So the Emperor took aside the councillor known in Cologne as Gerhard the Good and asked: Why do people call you Gerhard the Good? He had to ask this question, for the angel had pointed out that it all depended on whether he could recognize why this man was called Gerhard the Good. For he was to be healed through him. Gerhard the Good answered: People call me Gerhard the Good because they are thoughtless. I have not done anything special. But what I have done, which is something quite insignificant and about which I shall not tell you, has become known to some extent and, because people always want to invent phrases, they call me Gerhard the Good. The Emperor said: Surely it cannot be as simple as all that, and it is extremely important for me and my whole reign that I discover why people call you Gerhard the Good. Gerhard the Good did not want to disclose anything, but the Emperor pressed him ever harder till Gerhard the Good said: Very well, I will tell you why they call me Gerhard the Good, but you must not tell anyone else, for truly I see nothing special in it:

I am a simple merchant, I have always been a simple merchant, and one day I prepared to set out on a journey. First I journeyed on land for a while, and then at sea. I travelled as far as the Orient where I purchased very many valuable materials and valuable objects for very little money. I planned to sell these things elsewhere for double, treble, or even four or five times the price, for this is the custom among merchants; this was my business, my trade. Then I continued my journey by ship. But we were blown off course by an unfavourable wind. We had no idea where we were. So I found myself off course in the wind on the open sea with a few companions and all my costly objects and materials. We came ashore and from this shore a cliff rose up. We sent out a scout to climb the cliff to see what was beyond it, for we had been stranded on the shore. The scout saw a great city beyond the cliff; it was obviously a great trading city. Caravans were approaching along roads from all sides and a river flowed past it. The scout returned and showed us the way to approach the city from a spot where we could make fast our ship.

Here we were, in a city totally strange to us. Soon it became obvious that we Christians were surrounded by heathens. We saw a busy market. I thought to myself that I would be able to sell all sorts of things in the market, for the bargaining was lively. But I did not know the customs of the country. Then I saw coming towards me along the street a man who looked trustworthy. To him I said: Could you help me to sell my wares here? The man evidently felt that I too looked trustworthy and said: Where have you come from? I told him I was a Christian from Cologne. He said: Despite that, you seem quite respectable. Hitherto I have entertained the worst suspicions about Christians, but you do not seem to be a monster. I shall assist you and will find you lodgings. After that you may like to show me your wares.

When the merchant, Gerhard the Good, had settled in his lodgings, the heathen man he had met came one day, inspected his wares and found them exceptionally costly. He said: Though there are quite a few rich people in the town, none of them is rich enough to buy all this. I am the only one to possess anything equivalent to these wares. If you want to sell them to me, I can give you what they are worth, but I am the only one who could do this. The merchant from Cologne wanted to see for himself, so the heathen offered to show him that he did indeed possess wares of an equivalent value to those extremely costly pieces gathered from all over the world.

So Gerhard went to the home of the heathen, where he saw immediately that he was dealing with a most important citizen of the town. First the heathen led him to a chamber in which twelve youths lay chained. They were prisoners, starving and wretched. He said: See, these are twelve Christians whom we took prisoner on the high seas where they were drifting aimlessly. Now come and see the rest of the wares. He took him to another room and showed him the same number of miserable old men. Gerhard's heart bled more for the old men than it had for the youths. Then he showed him a number of women—fifteen, I believe—who had also been taken prisoner. And he said: If you give me the wares I will give you these prisoners. They are exceedingly valuable and you can have them.

Then Gerhard, the merchant from Cologne, discovered that one of the women was exceedingly valuable because she was a daughter of the King of Norway who had been shipwrecked with her women—only some of the fifteen, the others were from elsewhere—and taken prisoner by the heathen. The other women were from England, as were the youths and old men. They had set sail with William, the son of the King of England, to fetch his Norwegian bride. When he had collected his Norwegian bride from Norway they had met with misfortune and been washed out to sea. William, the King's son, had been separated from the others. They did not know what had befallen him. As far as they were concerned he was lost. But the others, the women and the King's daughter from Norway, the twelve noble youths, the twelve noble old men, and the English women who had accompanied William to collect his bride, had all been shipwrecked and fallen into the hands of this heathen prince. He now wanted to sell them to Gerhard in exchange for his oriental wares. Gerhard wept bitter tears, not on account of the wares but, on the contrary, because he was to receive such valuable commodities in exchange for them. With his whole heart he agreed to the deal. The heathen prince was much moved and thought to himself: These Christians are not at all the monsters I thought them to be. He even equipped a fully provisioned ship so that Gerhard might take the youths and the old men, the King's daughter and the maidens across the sea with him. In parting from them all he was much moved and said: On account of you I shall henceforth be very just to all Christians who come into my care.

Now the merchant Gerhard from Cologne set off across the sea, and when they came to the point where the configuration of the land showed that the passages to London and to Utrecht must separate, he said to his travelling companions: Those who belong to England may sail that way. Those who belong to Norway, the King's daughter with her few women, may come with me to Cologne and I shall see whether the one whose bride she was to be has perhaps been found so that he may come and collect her.

In Cologne Gerhard kept the King's daughter in accordance with her standing. She was most lovingly cared for by his family. Only at first—Gerhard the Good permitted himself to remark—was his wife's nose put slightly out of joint when he arrived with the King's daughter. But soon she loved her like her own daughter. These things are quite understandable. She grew up like a daughter of the house and was cared for lovingly. Her only great sadness was that she never stopped weeping for her beloved William, for she naturally presumed that if he had been saved he would scour the world to find her. But he did not come. The family of Gerhard the Good loved her, and Gerhard had a son, so he thought to himself that this beautiful maiden might become a wife for his son. Of course, in accordance with opinions at that time, this could only happen if the son could be raised up to an equal standing. The archbishop of Cologne declared himself prepared to make the son a knight. Everything was done in a suitable way. Gerhard was very rich and everything went well. Tournaments were held and after waiting still another year in case William should turn up—the King's daughter had begged for this—preparations were made for the wedding.

During the wedding a pilgrim appeared, a man with a beard so long that it was plain to see that much time had passed since it had last seen a blade. And he was very sad. Gerhard the Good was filled with pity at the sight of the pilgrim and asked him what was the matter. It is impossible to say, said the pilgrim, for from now on he must carry his sorrow through the wide world; from today he knew that his sorrow would never cease. For the pilgrim was William who had lost all his companions, had found land at last, had wandered about and arrived at the very moment when his bride was almost married to Gerhard's son in Cologne. Then Gerhard said: Of course you shall have your rightful bride; I shall speak with my son. Since the bride loved her lost bridegroom, William, more than Gerhard's son, everything was arranged and, after her marriage to William had been celebrated in Cologne, Gerhard accompanied William, the heir to the throne of England, with his bride to England. There he left them. Since he was known in London as a merchant he walked about the town and heard that a great meeting was in progress. Everything was in turbulence and it was plain to see that a revolution might break out. He heard that this was because there was no heir to the throne. The heir had disappeared years ago. He had quite a number of supporters in the land, but all the others were in disagreement and the meeting was now to decide on a new heir.

Gerhard donned his best robe and went to the meeting. He was allowed in on account of his best robe—which was exceedingly splendid because he was such a rich merchant. There he found four-and-twenty men discussing who should replace the beloved heir, William. Gerhard saw that the four-and-twenty were the selfsame men he had rescued from the heathen prince and had sent to London at the point where the ways to London and Utrecht parted. They did not recognize him immediately. They told him that William had been lost—William, whom they loved above all others. But then they recognized each other. Now Gerhard explained that he would bring William to them. So the matter was settled. I need not describe to you the joy which now broke out all over England. At first, in the meeting, before they knew who Gerhard was about to bring to them, but having recognized him as the one who had saved them, they even wanted to declare Gerhard himself king. Now William became King of England. Then William wanted to confer on Gerhard the Duchy of Kent, but he did not accept this. Even from the new Queen, who had for so long been his foster daughter, he refused the gold treasures she wished to bestow on him, accepting only a ring and a few other trinkets to bring to his wife as keepsakes from their foster daughter. So he departed for home.

All this has now unfortunately become known here—said Gerhard the Good to Otto the Red—and that is why people call me Gerhard the Good. But it is not for people, or even myself, to judge whether what I did was good or not. Therefore it is nonsense for people to call me Gerhard the Good, for the words can have no meaning.

Otto the Red, the Emperor, listened attentively and realized that other attitudes than the one he had developed were possible and existed, even in the heart of a merchant of Cologne. This made a deep impression on him. He returned to the council meeting and said to the councillors: Gentlemen, you may go home, for I have learned all I needed to know from Gerhard the Good. This put the noses of the wise and benign councillors thoroughly out of joint, but the attitude of soul of Otto the Red was entirely transformed.

This is how a story—history—was told in those days. What is told here is criticized, obviously, by the historians of today, whose aim is to pare history down to the facts of the physical plane, facts which have their feet on the ground. Not only this event but many others also were told, when the feeling for history was still that of the fourth post-Atlantean period, with the inclusion of not only the physical facts but also with the meaning they had in relation to the spiritual world. There was an interweaving between what happened on the physical plane and what flowed through it, giving it meaning.

There is very deep meaning in the story of Otto the Red and Gerhard the Good.

I wanted to tell you this story, which was once seen as history, so that tomorrow we can use it, among other things, as a foundation for further discussions which will widen our horizons still further.

Zehnter Vortrag

Wir haben gestern begonnen mit der Betrachtung des Baldur-Mythus, der, wie wir gesehen haben, zurückgeht auf alte Einrichtungen, und gerade an solcher Betrachtung kann uns klar werden, wie das Christentum anknüpfen mußte und anknüpfen sollte an dasjenige, was von der Menschheit vorher begriffen worden ist. Wenn wir die drei großen Feste des Jahres nehmen, so wie sie heute noch immer gefeiert werden, so stehen diese drei großen Feste des Jahres eben durchaus im Zusammenhange mit Dingen, die sich langsam und allmählich durch die Menschheitsentwickelung hindurch ergeben haben. Und vollständig verstehen kann man dasjenige, was sich noch ausdrücken will im Weiihnachts-, Oster-, Pfingstmysterium nur dann, wenn man nicht scheut, die Dinge anzuknüpfen an das Denken und Fühlen und Empfinden der sich im Laufe der Zeiten entwickelnden Menschheit. Wir haben gesehen, wie die Christus-Idee zurückgeht in frühe, frühe Zeiten.

Sie brauchen nur, um das genauer ins Auge zu fassen, sich vor die Seele zu führen, was in der Schrift «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit» enthalten ist. Da werden Sie sehen, wie man dasjenige, was der Christus-Idee zugrunde liegt, zurückführen kann auf Geheimnisse der geistigen Welten, wie man zeigen kann, welchen Weg das der Christus-Idee zugrunde liegende Wesen in den geistigen Welten durchgemacht hat, um dann gewissermaßen in einem Punkt der Erdenentwickelung in physischer Menschwerdung sich zu offenbaren. Gerade an den Auseinandersetzungen dieser Begriffe über die geistige Führung der Menschheit ist es möglich, zu empfinden, welcher Zusammenhang oder auch Nichtzusammenhang besteht zwischen der anthroposophisch orientierten Geisteswissenschaft und der alten Gnosis. Den Weg des Christus durch die geistigen Welten so darzustellen, wie es versucht worden ist in der Schrift «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit», das wäre in der alten Gnosis noch nicht möglich gewesen. Aber diese alte Gnosis hat doch eine Christus-Vorstellung, eine Christus-Idee gehabt. Sie konnte aus dem atavistisch-hellseherischen Wissen so viel herausholen, um den Christus auf geistige Art zu erfassen, um zu sagen: In der geistigen Welt ist eine Evolution, die Hierarchien, oder, wie dort gesagt wird, die Aonen folgen aufeinander, und einer der Äonen ist der Christus. Und gezeigt wird in der Gnosis, wie der Christus, während sich Äon nach Äon evolviert hat, heruntersteigt und sich in einem Menschen offenbart. Das kann heute noch deutlicher gezeigt werden, und Sie können es nachlesen in der Schrift «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit».

Nun ist es gut, wenn man in unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung mancherlei von tieferen Zusammenhängen empfindet, um dadurch loszukommen von den rein persönlichen Angelegenheiten. Denn es ist doch so, daß die Menschheit in ihrer Entwickelung in diesem fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum an einem Punkt angelangt ist, in dem der einzelne es sehr schwer hat, von seinen persönlichen Angelegenheiten loszukommen. Der einzelne steht in Gefahr, seine persönlichen Angelegenheiten, seine persönlichen Instinkte und Leidenschaften zu vermischen mit demjenigen, was der ganzen Menschheit gemeinschaftlich ist.

Auch die verschiedenen Festlichkeiten sind eigentlich zu rein persönlichen Angelegenheiten heruntergesunken, weil der Menschheit der Ernst und die Würde entschwunden sind, die allein möglich machen, der geistigen Welt in rechter Art sich zu nahen. Es ist sehr natürlich, daß in unserer fünften nachatlantischen Periode, wo der Mensch gewissermaßen sich selbst erfassen soll, sich auf sich selber stellen soll, solch eine Gefahr naheliegt, wie ich sie eben charakterisiert habe: daß der Mensch gewissermaßen den Zusammenhang verliert mit der geistigen Welt. Früher war der Menschheit der Zusammenhang mit der geistigen Welt bewußt, dafür aber anderes unbewußt, worauf ich ja gestern wieder hingedeutet habe. In der Gegenwart sind vor allem diejenigen Dinge unbewußt, auf die ich in diesen Betrachtungen in der Weise hingewiesen habe, daß ich sagte: Die Menschen haben heute nicht die Geneigtheit, ihre Aufmerksamkeit auf sie zu richten. Sie lassen sie vorübergehen, ohne sich um sie zu bekümmern.

Es ist gut, wenn man gerade bei solchen Anlässen, wie das Weihnachtsfest einer ist, sich sagt: In unsere Weltentwickelung spielen geistige Impulse herein, in gutem wie auch in bösem Sinne. Und wir haben gesehen, wie die Impulse, die da walten, von den Menschen, die gewissermaßen in diese Dinge eingeweiht sind, auch im bösen Sinne, in irgendeinem persönlichen, egoistischen Sinne oder im Interesse eines Gruppenegoismus verwendet werden können. Wir müssen lernen, unsere Empfindung einzustellen auf umfassendere Angelegenheiten, auf umfassendere Verhältnisse. Wenn wir auch nicht immer solche Empfindungen an die große Glocke hängen können, wie man sagt, so müssen wir sie doch hegen können.

Nun möchte ich Ihnen Gelegenheit geben, an einer Sache jetzt gleich die Seele gewissermaßen loszureißen aus irgendeiner rein persönlichen Interpretation der Anthroposophie, und sie hinzulenken auf etwas Allgemeines, das verknüpft ist mit unserer anthroposophischen Bewegung. Wenn Sie das gestern Gesagte ordentlich auffassen, so werden Sie sich sagen: Jener 20. Mai 1347, jener Pfingstmai, an dem Cola di Rienzi seine bedeutsame Manifestation in Rom vollbracht hat, der wiederholte sich in einer gewissen Weise zur Pfingstzeit des Jahres 1915. Wer die Ereignisse verfolgt hat, der wird bald sehen können, oder würde bald sehen können, daß mit voller Absichtlichkeit, mit vollem Bewußtsein von jener Seite, von der es gemacht worden ist, dieser Pfingstmai gewählt worden ist. Man hat eben gewußt, daß da die alten Impulse wieder aufleben, daß da die Herzen und die Seelen, die sich HödurBlindheit ergeben, zu erfassen sind, wenn Loki an sie herantritt. Aber man ist ja nur so lange zu erfassen, als man nicht den Willen hat, sich daran zu gewöhnen, auf begreifbare, auf der Hand liegende Zusammenhänge hinzuschauen und sich von ihnen beeindrucken zu lassen. Man ist nur so lange den unbewußt bleibenden Zusammenhängen ausgeliefert, als man sich so im Persönlichen verstrickt, daß man nicht, ich möchte sagen auf «ordentliche» Zusammenhänge, auf Zusammenhänge im guten Sinne hinschaut, solange man kein Interesse hat für Allgemeinmenschliches, das immer in das Geistige hineinführt.

Ich habe Ihnen ausgeführt, daß die Gnosis noch ein Verständnis hatte für die Christus-Vorstellung, daß mit der Ausrottung der Gnosis die Christus-Vorstellung verdogmatisiert worden ist, im Süden daher die eigentliche Christus-Vorstellung gewissermaßen verschwunden ist. Die Geisteswissenschaft hat die Aufgabe, im Zusammenhang mit der geistigen Evolution diese Christus-Vorstellung wiederum zu begreifen, eine Christus-Vorstellung zu bilden, die nicht Phrase ist, sondern die inhaltsvoll ist, einen wirklichen Inhalt hat.

Im Norden ist gerade dasjenige, was dort vorhanden sein konnte, verschwunden: die Jesus-Empfindung. Die Jesus-Empfindung ist im Norden wirklich ausgebildet worden, wie ich vorgestern sagte, bis in das 8., 9., 10. Jahrhundet nach dem Mysterium von Golgatha. In alten Zeiten begrüßte man in jedem Hause, wo eine Geburt stattfand, das Christkind, das allein, insbesondere beim Stamm der Ingävonen, als ein würdiges Stammesmitglied aufgenommen werden konnte, während deplaziert war derjenige, der — selbstverständlich ohne Pedanterie — zu anderen Zeiten geboren wurde. Aber wir haben gezeigt, wie dasjenige, was dann als äußeres Christentum sich verbreitet hat, alles zurückdrängte, was selbst noch in Mythen und Umzügen, also in Kultgebräuchen, zusammenhing mit jener alten Jesus-Empfindung. Und wir haben gesehen, wie seit der Mitte des Mittelalters gewissermaßen angestrengt gearbeitet worden ist, um zu verwischen dasjenige, was sich von Jütland her über Europa, namentlich Mitteleuropa, ausgebreitet hatte.

In den dänischen Gebieten war das Zentralmysterium, welches jene Verhältnisse gewissermaßen anordnete und überwachte, die dann in der Regelung der Empfängnisse und Geburten zum Vorschein kamen. Da war es, wo ein allgemeines Bewußtsein entwickelt worden ist über einen Zusammenhang sozialer Natur in der Menschheit, über einen Zusammenhang, der zugleich sakramental war, der ein wirkliches soziales Sakramentum war. Das Jahr selber wurde angeordnet als ein Sakramentum, und der Mensch wußte sich hineingestellt in das Jahressakramentum. Für die damaligen Menschen ging die Sonne nicht umsonst in verschiedener Weise über das Himmelsgewölbe in den verschiedenen Jahreszeiten, sondern was auf der Erde geschah, war ein Abbild der himmlischen Ereignisse. Da, wo der Mensch noch keinen Einfluß haben kann oder hat, wo noch elementarische und Naturgeister dasjenige verrichten, was mit Bezug auf das soziale Leben heute der Mensch verrichtet, da besteht noch das Sakramentum. Es leben heute, allerdings ohne daß die Menschen es schon wissen, recht starke ahrimanische Impulse in einzelnen Menschen. Ich sage ausdrücklich: ohne daß die Menschen es schon wissen. Diese ahrimanischen Impulse sind darauf gerichtet, auch gewissen elementaren Naturgeistern ihren Sakramentaleinfluß auf die Erdenevolution zu entreißen.

Wenn die moderne Technik so weit ausgebildet sein wird, daß man über gewisse Flächen hin künstliche Wärme erzeugen kann, dann wird man — und das wird schon geschehen, das tadele ich nicht, sondern stelle es Ihnen nur als eine Notwendigkeit hin, als etwas, was in der Zukunft geschehen wird -, dann wird man den Natur- und Elementargeistern das Pflanzenwachstum, vor allem das Getreidewachstum entreißen, man wird nicht nur Wintergärten, nicht nur geheizte Räume für kleinere Pflanzenwachstumsanlagen einrichten, sondern für ganze Getreidefelder, in denen man, den vom Kosmos hereinwirkenden Gesetzen entrissen, das Getreide zu andern Jahreszeiten ziehen wird, als es gewissermaßen von selbst, das heißt, durch die Natur- und Elementargeister wächst. Das aber wird für die Saaten dasselbe sein, wie das, was geschah, als das alte Bewußtsein von dem Sakramentalen der Empfängnis und der Geburten sich verallgemeinert hat über das ganze Jahr. Erforschen, erkunden, wie die geistigen Wesenheiten ebenso wirken können auf den sozial-sakramentalen Zusammenhang, wie sie wirken auf das Aufsprießen und Sprossen der Pflanzen im Frühling und das Zurückgehen im Herbste, das war die Aufgabe solcher Mysterienstätten wie derjenigen, von der ich sagte, daß sie sich in Dänemark befunden und das soziale Leben sakramental geregelt habe. Von da aus hat sich also dasjenige ausgebreitet, was wir noch im 3. Jahrtausend vor dem Mysterium von Golgatha suchen dürfen, dann aber allmählich schwinden und einem andern Platz machen sehen, das kommen mußte; sonst hätte der Mensch sich nicht zum Gebrauch seines Intellekts aufschwingen können. Die Dinge sind notwendig, aber eben ihre Notwendigkeit muß man einsehen, und nicht den Göttern ins Handwerk pfuschen wollen, indem man sagt: Warum haben die Götter nicht dies oder jenes, warum haben es die Götter nicht anders — wobei man immer meint, für den Menschen bequemer — eingerichtet?

Da also ist von Jütland aus, von Dänemark aus, die Empfänglichkeit für die Jesus-Empfindung ausgegangen. Sehen Sie, es handelt sich darum, nicht nur bei mehr oder weniger wichtigen Anlässen nachzudenken, was geschieht, sondern an die Zusammenhänge zu denken, nur nicht, ich möchte sagen, um die Ecke herum zu denken und zu spintisieren, sondern geradeaus und in Wahrheit zu denken. Spintisieren tun gar viele sehr gern; aber das richtige Denken besteht in dem Zusammendenken der tatsächlichen Ereignisse, und dann zu warten, was daraus kommt, was für einen daraus hervorgeht.

Man könnte sich nun in diesen Tagen, nachdem ich das alles auseinandergesetzt habe, folgende Frage vorlegen, und diejenigen unter Ihnen werden in der Seele etwas Richtiges empfunden haben, welche sich diese Frage vorgelegt haben. Und wenn Sie heute sie sich noch nicht vorgelegt haben, so können Sie danach streben, sich gerade solche Fragen für die Zukunft vorzulegen; denn sie sitzen überall, wenn die Voraussetzung gemacht wird, daß nicht nur in dem, was gesagt wird, die Wahrheit liegt, sondern auch in dem, was getan wird. Das Weltenwort, dessen Geburt wir im Weihnachtsmysterium feiern, verstehen wir nur dann recht, wenn wir dieses Weltenwort so allgemein als möglich denken, wenn wir denken, daß dieses Weltenwort wirklich vibriert und wellt in alledem auch, was geschieht, was sich ereignet. Und wenn man die Demut und Hingebung hat, sich selber eingewoben zu fühlen in dem Weltenprozeß, so erkennt man die Zusammenhänge, die da walten.

Welche Frage konnte sich die Seele vorlegen? So könnte Ihre Seele denken in diesen Tagen: Wir haben nun erfahren, daß in der Gnosis eine bedeutsame Christus-Vorstellung enthalten war; sie ist im Süden verschwunden, sie konnte sich gewissermaßen nicht bis zum Norden bewegen. Ihr ist entgegengekommen die Jesus-Vorstellung, die aber als Empfindung anknüpft an die jütischen Mysterien. Das haben wir nun gesehen.

Wenn man dieses erkennt und sich diesen Zusammenhang vor Augen stellt, wäre es da nicht natürlich, daß das Bedürfnis entsteht, dasjenige, was sich nicht hat zusammenfinden können, zusammenzubringen? In der Weltenevolution des Abendlandes hat sich die Christus-Idee mit der Jesus-Idee nicht zusammenfinden können. Daraus muß das Bedürfnis entstehen, die beiden zusammenzuknüpfen.

Die moderne Anthroposophie hat in aller Bescheidenheit diese Aufgabe aufzunehmen. Es ist ihre Angelegenheit, zu versuchen, da das Richtige zu tun und diese Dinge in der Weltkonstellation ein wenig zusammenzuführen. Wenn man also versucht zu schildern, wie die neuere Anthroposophie gewissermaßen als eine in die Neuzeit heraufgehobene Gnosis den Christus wieder versteht, so könnte man diese Christus-Idee zusammenfügen wollen mit dem, was leben kann an einer bestimmten Stelle, wo es als Jesus-Empfindung in so intensiver Weise einstmals gelebt hat, wie ich es Ihnen dargestellt habe. Dann würde man über die Christus-Idee, wie sie sich einfügt in die geistige Führung der Menschheit, zu sprechen versuchen gerade an der Stätte, oder, entsprechend unseren Möglichkeiten, in der Nähe der Stätte, von wo die Jesus-Empfindung ausgestrahlt ist.

Das ist die Antwort, die Sie sich geben können, wenn Sie sich fragen, warum ich vor Jahren auf eine von dort kommende Einladung hin gerade in Kopenhagen den Christus-Wandel durch die geistigen Evolutionen vorgetragen habe. Warum entstand gerade dazumal das Bedürfnis, die Christus-Idee, so wie sie in das Thema «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit» einverwoben werden konnte, an dieser Stätte zu entwickeln? Da ist etwas gesagt, nicht durch die Worte, die gesprochen sind, sondern durch die Konstellation! Auf die Menschen kommt es dann an, solche Dinge zu verstehen. Man braucht sie nicht an die große Glocke zu hängen, sagte ich; aber man kann verstehen, daß nicht nur durch das, was gesagt wird, sondern durch das, was geschieht, Dinge ausgedrückt werden, und daß in diesen Dingen das Weltenwort in einer gewissen Weise lebt.

Nun scheint es ja heute, daß die Menschheit dem Unrichtigen, dem Bösen, wenn man es in die Weltenkonstellationen hineinstellt, ganz offenbar mehr Gefühl und Empfindung entgegenbringt, als wenn man versucht, das, was im wirklich guten Sinne der Menschheitsentwickelung einverleibt werden soll, auch durch die reale Tatsache zum Ausdrucke zu bringen. Aber man möchte, gerade in der Anknüpfung an so etwas wie das Weihnachtsmysterium, ein Gefühl davon hervorrufen, daß man sich fühlen soll, teilnehmend an der anthroposophischen Bewegung, als in etwas darinnen lebend, was erhaben ist über die bloße äußere Maja, und man möchte, daß ernst genommen würde die Einsicht, daß dasjenige, was auf dem physischen Plan vorgeht, so wie es auf dem physischen Plane vorgeht, eben die Maja und nicht die Wirklichkeit im höheren Sinne ist.

Wenn man also fühlt, daß dasjenige, was hier auf der Erdegeschieht, gewissermaßen, wenn ich mich des christlichen Ausdruckes bedienen darf, auch im «Himmel» geschieht, und daß erst in der Zusammenfügung im menschlichen Geiste, also jetzt für unsere fünfte nachatlantische Zeit im menschlichen Intellekte, die volle Wahrheit liegt, dann betrachtet man erst die volle Wirklichkeit. Sie liegt in der Zusammenfügung dessen, was auf der Erde und im Himmel geschieht. Sonst aber bleibt man in der Maja stecken. Man hat heute so sehr das Bedürfnis, in der Maja steckenzubleiben, weil man im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum der Gefahr allzu stark ausgesetzt ist, die Worte für die Sache zu nehmen. Die Worte haben ja vielfach ihre Bedeutung verloren, und unter Bedeutung verstehe ich hier den lebendigen Seelenzusammenhang des Wortes mit der Wirklichkeit, die dem Worte zugrunde liegt. Die Worte sind nur Abbreviaturen geworden, und der Rausch, in dem heute noch viele leben in bezug auf die Worte, ist kein echter mehr, weil nur die Vertiefung in die geistige Welt das, was wir sprechen, echt machen kann. Die Worte werden erst wiederum einen wirklichen Inhalt bekommen, wenn die Menschen sich erfüllen mit einem Wissen von der geistigen Welt. Das alte Wissen ist verlorengegangen, und wir reden heute vielfach so, weil das alte Wissen verlorengegangen ist, wir in der Maja drinnen sind und nur Worte haben. Aber wir müssen wiederum ein geistiges Leben suchen, das den Worten einen Inhalt gibt. Wir leben gewissermaßen in einem Mechanismus der Worte, wie wir äußerlich in einem Mechanismus der Technik nach und nach vollständig die Individualität verlieren und ausgeliefert werden an den äußeren Mechanismus.

Unsere Aufgabe ist es, dasjenige, was in der geistigen Welt lebt, zusammenzufügen mit dem, was in der physischen Welt lebt. Dazu müssen wir aber mit großem Ernst an die Erfassung der Wirklichkeit gehen. Der Mensch ist in unserer materialistischen Zeit zu sehr gewöhnt worden, nur immer kleine Horizonte zu überschauen und alles im Umfang kleiner Horizonte nur anzuschauen. Er hat sich sogar seine Religion so bequem eingerichtet, daß sie ihm einen kleinen Horizont gibt. Große Horizonte will der Mensch in unserer Zeit gerne vermeiden, will nicht die Dinge beim rechten Namen nennen. Dadurch verstehen die Menschen so schwer, daß ein solches Karma hat zustande kommen können wie dasjenige, das jetzt über Europa hereingebrochen ist. Mindestens will heute jeder solch ein Karma hauptsächlich von einem engen nationalen Standpunkte — wie man das nennt, obwohl darinnen auch viel Unwahrheit steckt — betrachten. Es ist aber ein allgemeines Menschheitskarma zugrunde liegend, das schon jeden einzelnen angeht, das man mit einem einfachen Worte, wenigstens in bezug auf einen Punkt - es gibt allerdings viele Punkte — aussprechen kann. Aber man hat ein Bestreben, vorbeizugehen gerade an dem, worauf es ankommt: es kommt an auf die Flucht vor der Wahrheit, in welche die Seelen heute verfallen sind! Die Seelen fliehen die Wahrheit förmlich, sie haben einen furchtbaren Abscheu, die Wahrheit in aller Stärke und aller Intensität aufzufassen.

Nehmen Sie das Folgende: Wir haben uns allmählich im Laufe der Zeit eine Art Überblick verschafft über die Entwickelung der Menschheit, wir wissen zu beurteilen, daß in einem gewissen Zeitabschnitte der Entwickelung der Menschheit Kriege aufgekommen sind, Kriege dasjenige waren, wovon die Menschheit gewissermaßen ergriffen worden ist. Aber es war die Zeit, in welcher die Menschen an Kriege geglaubt haben. Was heißt denn das: Es war die Zeit, in welcher die Menschen an Kriege geglaubt haben? — Was heißt: Glauben an Kriege? Nun, das Glauben an Kriege ist sehr ähnlich dem Glauben an das Duell, an den Zweikampf. Wann aber hat das Duell, der Zweikampf einen wahren Sinn? Nur dann, wenn diejenigen, die zum Duell sich stellen, der vollen inneren Überzeugung sind, daß nicht ein Zufall, sondern die Götter entscheiden. Sind diejenigen, die zum Duell antreten, des vollen Glaubens, daß derjenige, der getötet oder verwundet wird, diesen Tod oder diese Verwundung erhalten hat deshalb, weil ein Gott gegen ihn entschieden hat, dann ist Wahrheit im Duell. Keine Wahrheit ist im Duell, wenn man diese Überzeugung nicht hat; dann ist das Duell eine reale Lüge, selbstverständlich. So aber ist es auch mit dem Krieg. Wenn die Menschen, die zu den Völkern gehören, überzeugt sein können davon, den Glauben haben, daß die Entscheidung, die durch den Krieg herbeigeführt wird, eine göttliche ist, daß Göttliches waltet in dem, was geschieht, dann herrscht eine Wahrheit in dem, was als Kriegshandlung geschieht. Dann müssen aber diejenigen, die daran beteiligt sind, einen Sinn verbinden können mit dem Worte: ein Gottesurteil wird sich vollziehen.

Nun, fragen Sie sich selber, ob in einem solchen Worte heute Wahrheit liegt! Sie brauchen nur die Frage zu stellen: Glauben die Menschen daran, daß in den Kriegshandlungen heute sich Gottesurteile aussprechen? Glauben die Menschen daran? Fragen Sie sich, wie viele daran glauben, das Göttliche entscheide! — aber ich meine, ehrlich daran glauben; denn unter den verschiedenen Lügen, welche die Welt heute durchschwirren, ist ja auch diese, die in dem Anrufen der Götter oder des Gottes liegt, von allen Seiten, selbstverständlich. Aber ein wirklicher Glaube in dem Sinne, daß ein Gottesurteil sich vollzieht, kann selbstverständlich in diesem materialistischen Zeitalter nicht vorhanden sein. Man muß also ernst und würdig die Sache ansehen und sich sagen: Man vollzieht eigentlich etwas, an dessen innere Realität man nicht glaubt. Man glaubt nicht an die innere Realität, und man glaubt um so weniger an diese innere Realität, je weiter man nach dem europäischen Westen kommt — mit Recht, denn je weiter man nach dem europäischen Westen kommt, desto mehr hat dieser europäische Westen die Aufgabe, gerade für die fünfte nachatlantische Periode den Materialismus zu liefern.

Aber anders schon werden die Dinge, wenn man weiter gegen den Osten geht. Ich bin nicht gewohnt, in solchen Dingen theoretisch zu konstruieren oder leichten Herzens irgend etwas auszusprechen, sondern wenn ich etwas ausspreche, so liegen dem gute Tatsachen zugrunde. Sie können schon heute die Entdeckung machen, die eine merkwürdige Entdeckung ist: Kommen Sie aus dem Westen nach Mitteleuropa, so tritt nachweisbar sporadisch schon in Mitteleuropa der Glaube auf, daß ein Gottesurteil sich vollziehen kann. Das können Sie bemerken: Im Westen kann es das nicht geben, wenn sie es nicht von Mitteleuropa importiert haben, aber in Mitteleuropa tritt bei einzelnen Menschen gewissermaßen eine Art Schicksalsglaube auf, und das Wort «Gottesurteil» fällt. Und kommen wir ganz nach dem Osten, wo sich die Zukunft vorbereitet, da werden Sie natürlich zahlreiche Menschen finden, welche in den kommenden Entscheidungen Gottesurteile sehen. Denn der russische Mensch wird nicht wie der Mensch des Westens heute fern davon sein, ein Gottesurteil zu sehen in dem, was sich vollzieht.

Diesen Dingen muß man mit aller Objektivität ins Auge schauen. Dann nur ist man wahr, dann nur verbindet man mit den Worten heute einen Sinn. Das aber ist die Aufgabe der Menschheit, daß sie wiederum lerne, mit den Worten einen Sinn zu verbinden.

Ich habe Sie vor einiger Zeit darauf aufmerksam gemacht, wie heute geradezu, ich möchte sagen, religiös gezüchtet wird die Gedanken- und Empfindungslosigkeit, indem man nicht wissen will, daß die modernen Religionen, indem sie von «Gott» sprechen, eigentlich nur von einem Engelwesen, von einem Angelos sprechen. Wenn der moderne Mensch «Gott» sagt, meint er nur seinen Engel, denjenigen Engel, der ihn durchs Leben weist. Und er redet sich bloß ein, daß er von einem höheren Wesen als einem Engelwesen spricht. Die Maja ist, daß der heutige Monotheismus von einem einzigen Gotte spricht, die Wirklichkeit, vom geistigen Gesichtspunkte angesehen, ist, daß im Grunde genommen die Menschheit die Tendenz hat, von so viel Göttern zu sprechen, als es Menschen auf der Erde gibt, weil jeder nur von seinem Engel spricht. Also die absoluteste Vielgötterei ist diejenige, die sich unter der Maske des Monotheismus verbirgt, daher auch die modernsten Religionen vor der Gefahr stehen, sich zu atomisieren, indem jeder nur seine Gottesidee vertritt, seinen Standpunkt. Woher kommt das? Das kommt daher, daß wir heute, im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum, isoliert stehen von der geistigen Welt. Das Bewußtsein ist nur in der Menschheitssphäre. |

Im vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum reichte das Bewußtsein der Menschen noch etwas hinauf in die geistige Sphäre, nämlich bis in die Region der Angeloi, und im dritten nachatlantischen Zeitraum in die Region der Archangeloi. Nur in diesem dritten Zeitraum aber konnte dasjenige entstehen, was ich Ihnen erzählt habe von den jütischen, von den dänischen Mysterien. Was war das für ein Wesen, das jeder einzelnen Mutter das kommende Kind ankündigte? Dasselbe Wesen, von dem auch im Lukas-Evangelium erzählt wird — ein Erzengel, ein Wesen aus der Region der Archangeloi. Derjenige, der nur aufblickt bis zu den Angeloi und einen aus der Sphäre der Angeloi seinen Gott nennt gleichgültig, ob er glaubt, daß das der Allgott ist, auf die Wirklichkeit kommt es an und nicht auf den Glauben -, der kann nicht mehr einen Zusammenhang finden, der über die Zeit zwischen der Geburt und dem Tode des Menschen hinausgeht in diejenige Region, die heute verdeckt ist von der äußeren Maja. Im dritten nachatlantischen Zeitraum konnte er jedoch noch in die Region der Erzengel hinaufblicken, da war ein lebendiger Zusammenhang noch da. Im zweiten nachatlantischen, urpersischen Zeitraum stand dasjenige, was dem Bewußtsein der Menschen offen war, auch noch mit den Archai in Zusammenhang, da fühlte sich der Mensch gar nicht in dem drinnen, was man heute Natur nennt, sondern in einer geistigen Welt. Licht und Finsternis waren da noch nicht die äußeren materiellen Vorgänge, sondern geistige Vorgänge, und in der ursprünglichen Zarathustra-Religion im zweiten nachatlantischen Zeitraum war es so.

Sie sehen, der Mensch ist allmählich herabgestiegen. Im zweiten nachatlantischen Zeitraum ragte sein Bewußtsein noch empor bis in die Region der Archai, da konnte er sich noch sagen: Ich als Mensch bin nicht nur die aus Muskeln und Fleisch bestehende Gliederpuppe, wie es die heutigen Anatomen und Physiologen und Biologen behaupten, sondern ich bin ein Wesen, das man gar nicht verstehen kann, wenn man es nicht im Geistzusammenhange betrachtet, wenn man es nicht betrachtet im lebendigen Weben von Licht und Finsternis drinnen; denn dem Weben von Licht und Finsternis gehöre ich an.

Dann kam der dritte nachatlantische Zeitraum. Das Natürliche ergriff schon den Menschen, wie es an ihm selber ist; denn die Vorgänge von Geburt und Tod verknüpfen das Seelenleben des Menschen mit dem Natürlichen. Es sind Naturvorgänge für die äußerliche Maja. Geburt, Empfängnis, Tod, sind Naturvorgänge für die äußerliche Maja. Sie sind erst geistige Vorgänge, wenn man hinaufblickt dorthin, wo eben in diese Naturvorgänge die geistige Wirklichkeit eingreift, das ist in der Region der Archangeloi. Diesen Zusammenhang erblickte man aber in der dritten nachatlantischen Zeit.

Dann allmählich wurde für den Menschen die Natur selber gewissermaßen eine Wirklichkeit -— von der vierten nachatlantischen Zeit an. Vorher hat man von einer Natur in dem Sinne, wie wir heute von Natur sprechen, gar nicht gesprochen. Der Mensch mußte heraustreten aus der geistigen Welt und gewissermaßen abgesondert von der geistigen Welt mit der Natur allein sein. Es mußte ihm aber durch ein Ereignis die Möglichkeit gegeben werden, sich wieder anzuknüpfen an die geistige Welt. Das Göttliche ist ihm einstmals in der zweiten nachatlantischen Periode in der Region der Archai erschienen, in der dritten in der Region der Archangeloi, in der vierten in der Region der Angeloi. In der fünften muß er es als Mensch erkennen, nachdem es sich vorbereitet hat, da es als Mensch erschienen ist mitten in der vierten nachatlantischen Periode - in dem Christus. Das heißt, der Christus muß immer besser und besser verstanden werden, verstanden werden in seinem Zusammenhange mit dem Menschen. Denn der Christus ist deshalb als Mensch erschienen, damit der Mensch seinen Menschheitszusammenhang mit dem Christus finden kann. Solches muß man sich besonders klarmachen im Zusammenhange mit dem Weihnachtsmysterium: Der Menschheitszusammenhang mit der geistigen Welt muß gefunden werden, so wie er einem entgegentreten kann, nachdem die Menschheit aus der geistigen Welt herausgetreten ist, um in der Natur zu leben. Als Tatsache hat sich das vorbereitet im vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum. Verstanden muß es aber erstwerden im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum, wirklich verstanden muß es da werden!

Und die Menschen müssen sich dazu hinfinden, die Christus-Tatsache zu verstehen, sie zu verstehen im Zusammenhange mit der ganzen geistigen Welt. Was versteht man alles nicht an dem Christus heute, und was versteht man alles nicht an dem Jesus, aus welchen zwei Bestandteilen sich das Verständnis des Christus Jesus eben zusammensetzt! Wer den historischen Zusammenhang betrachtet, kann einsehen, daß mit dem Ausrotten der Gnosis verschwunden ist das ChristusVerständnis. Wer den Mysterienzusammenhang, wie er sich dann im Baldur-Mythus ausspricht, ins Auge faßt, kann verstehen, wie ausgerottet worden ist die Jesus-Empfindung.

Aber man kann auch, wenn man wahr bleibt, an den Zusammenhängen der Gegenwart erkennen, daß sich im äußeren Leben das bestätigt, was so aus der Historie herausgeholt wird. Denn man muß immer wieder darauf hinweisen: Wie viele Vertreter der heutigen Religion glauben in ihrem Herzen, nicht bloß mit ihren Lippen, sondern in ihrem Herzen an die wirkliche Auferstehung - sie können ja nur glauben, wenn sie sie begreifen —, an das Ostergeheimnis? Wie viele Priester? Die modernen Priester und Pfarrer sehen schon ihre ganze Aufgeklärtheit darin, daß sie das Ostergeheimnis, das Auferstehungsgeheimnis wegleugnen, es irgendwie wegdiskutieren, wegsophistizieren; und wenn sie irgendeinen Grund finden, nicht daran glauben zu müssen, so sind sie ungeheuer froh.

Zunächst ist die Christus-Idee, die untrennbar ist von dem Auferstehungsgeheimnis, verdogmatisiert worden; dann aber ist sie allmählich in die Diskussion verfallen, und die Tendenz besteht, das Auferstehungsmysterium vollständig fallen zu lassen. Aber auch das Geburtsmysterium will man nicht verstehen. Man will sich nicht einlassen darauf, weil man es in seiner ganzen Tiefe, eben in seinem Mysteriencharakter, nicht mehr gelten lassen will. Man will es nur in seinem animalen Charakter gelten lassen; man will sich nicht bewußt sein, daß etwas Geistiges herabsteigt. Im dritten nachatlantischen Zeitraum haben die Menschen noch dieses Geistige herabsteigen sehen, aber mit einer andern Bewußtseinslage. Weder Geburt noch Tod des Christus Jesus will eigentlich dasjenige, was man moderne Religion, modernes Christentum nennt, noch verstehen. Einige wollen noch dogmatisch daran glauben, daran festhalten; aber ein Verständnis dieser Dinge, das über den bloßen Wortschall hinausgeht, ist heute nur durch Geisteswissenschaft möglich. Dazu ist es aber notwendig, den Horizont des Begreifens zu erweitern. Aber es besteht ein Fliehen der Wahrheit, man flieht förmlich dasjenige, was zum Verstehen der Dinge führen kann.

Nur die anthroposophisch orientierte Geisteswissenschaft ist imstande, aus sich selbst heraus, nicht durch ein historisches Aufwärmen, gewisse Begriffe wiederum zu schaffen, die jetzt voll bewußt und nicht mehr atavistisch da sein werden, die einmal aber atavistisch da waren, Begriffe, für die der heutige Mensch eigentlich gar keine so rechte Empfindung mehr hat. Und da erinnern Sie sich an etwas, wovon ich gestern gesprochen habe. Ich sagte Ihnen, mit der ganzen sozialen Einrichtung, von der ich im Zusammenhange mit den jütischen Mysterien gesprochen habe, hängt das Königtum der alten europäischen Stämme zusammen. DasjenigeKind wurde als determiniert für dieKönigswürde angesehen, das im dritten Jahr zuerst nach der Heiligen Nacht geboren worden ist. Das wurde in dieser Weise, wie ich es gestern angedeutet habe, zur Königswürde vorbereitet, und aus ihm wurde der Mensch, der dann drei Jahre König sein konnte. Da war er in dem Stadium, von dem ich Ihnen sagte: Er wuchs heraus aus dem Nationalen, das heißt aus dem Zusammenhang mit seinem Stamme. — Der fünfte Grad, der bei den Persern «Perser» hieß, bei jedem Stamm den Namen des betreffenden Stammes hatte, der stand noch drinnen in der Gruppe; der «Sonnenheld», der sechste Grad - und mit dem Mysterium des «Sonnenhelden» mußte derjenige durchdrungen sein, der drei Jahre König sein durfte in jener Zeit —, der mußte herausgewachsen sein aus dem Stammes-, aus dem Gruppenzusammenhang, mußte im Menschheitszusammenhang drinnenstehen. Aber er konnte das nur dadurch, daß er nicht in einem bloß irdischen Zusammenhang stand, sondern in einem kosmischen Zusammenhange drinnenstand, eben «Sonnenheld» war, das heißt, in dem lebte, das nicht bloß von irdischen Gesetzen beherrscht war, sondern von denjenigen Gesetzen, in die auch die Sonne eingesponnen ist. Unter der Berührung aber mit dem Irdischen, die unbedingt eintritt, wenn der Mensch Irdisches verrichten soll, vollzieht sich ein gewisser Prozeß. Diesen Prozeß soll man anerkennen. Denn durch die Anerkennung dieses Prozesses bekommt man das Verständnis für gewisse Übergänge, für gewisse Dinge, die man einsehen muß, wenn man die Wirklichkeit einsehen will.

Nehmen wir an, man hätte einen Menschen, der in diesen alten Zeiten zum Stamm der Ingävonen gehört hat, einen Ingävonen genannt; den «Sonnenhelden», der drei Jahre regierte, konnte man keinen Ingävonen nennen, denn er war aus seinem Stamm herausgewachsen. Man wäre nicht wahr gewesen, wenn man den «Sonnenhelden» einen Ingävonen genannt hätte; er ist etwas anderes geworden. Sehen Sie, was für ein feiner Begriff dadurch mit einer irdischen Realität verbunden war dadurch, daß man das Hereinstrahlen des Geistigen fühlte.

Wem wird denn in der heutigen Zeit, die mit Worten nur spielt, statt sich an Begriffe zu halten, wem wird denn in unserer heutigen Zeit zum Beispiel einfallen, daß der Papst nur mit Unrecht ein Christ genannt wird, weil es paradox ist, den Papst einen Christen zu nennen, geradeso wie es paradox wäre, den König der Ingävonen einen Ingävonen zu nennen? Wenn der Papst wirklich ein «Papst» sein will, das heißt, drinnenstehen soll im wirklichen geistigen Prozesse, so müßte er gar nicht als Christ aufgenommen werden. Wir können nur dadurch Christen sein, daß der Papst kein Christ ist: das wäre die Wahrheit.

Wem fällt es denn heute ein, über so gewichtige Dinge die Wahrheit denken zu wollen? Und wem fällt es ein, in irdischen Dingen dadurch, daß man sie als Maja erkennt, das Hereinspielen der göttlichen, der überirdischen Dinge anzuerkennen? Das liegt gar nicht im Charakter der heutigen Zeit. Nur wo man dazu gezwungen ist, erkennt man es an; man fügt sich nur, wo man gezwungen ist, den Gesetzen des Kosmos. Würde man nicht gezwungen sein, anzuerkennen, daß der Weizenhalm zu einer gewissen Jahreszeit heraussproßt aus der Erde, heranwächst, die Ähren entwickelt und dann wiederum aus dem Samen neu herauskommen muß, daß da ein Kreislauf sich vollzieht, daß dasjenige, was entsteht, auch in das Vergehen übergehen muß, und zwar gesetzmäßig in das Vergehen übergehen muß, so würde man ja auch das nicht anerkennen!

In jenen alten Zeiten hat man anerkannt, daß der «Sonnenheld», der dazu berufen ist, der Führer des Stammes der Ingävonen zu sein, nach drei Jahren wieder aufhören muß, es zu sein. Man fühlte die Gesetzmäßigkeit wie im Heranwachsen der Pflanzen. Das ist wichtig, daß man versucht, alles miteinander in Harmonie und im Einklange zu denken. Denn nur dadurch kommt man zu der Wahrheit, nur dadurch erweitert man die Horizonte. Denn die Wahrheit ist kein Kinderspiel, das man nach seinen persönlichen Interessen einrichten kann, sondern das Anhangen an der Wahrheit ist ein ernster, heiliger Dienst. Und das muß man fühlen, das muß man empfinden. Und die heutige Zeit ist ihrer ganzen Anlage nach zu nichts anderem geneigt, als die Maja zu verabsolutieren, sie unbedingt zur Wahrheit zu erklären.

Gehen Sie heute auf die historischen Seminarien: Was nennt man da historische Kritik? Das reinliche Herausschälen der bloß sinnenfälligen Tatsachen — wobei man immer irren muß. Denn bestrebt man sich überhaupt, die bloße sinnenfällige Tatsache herauszuschälen, dann gleitet man in die Maja hinein. Die Maja ist aber die Täuschung. Daher muß diejenige Geschichtswissenschaft, die sich bestrebt, alles auszuschalten, was geistig ist, die Maja herausarbeiten, gerade recht zur Maja führen. Versuchen Sie einmal mit der heutigen Seminarmethode, mit der heutigen Historischen-Institutsmethode die Wahrheit herauszuschälen, indem Sie alles Geistige ablehnen und nur das, was auf dem physischen Plan vorgeht - die sinnenfällige Tatsache — herauszustellen, so verfallen Sie gerade der Maja, dann können Sie niemals Geschichte auffassen. Nehmen Sie ein heutiges Geschichtsbuch zur Hand, für das jeder übersinnliche Zusammenhang ein Unding ist, wo sorgfältig danach gestrebt wird, nur die physischen Zusammenhänge gelten zu lassen, so finden Sie das Bestreben, die Maja herauszustellen. Die Maja ist aber die Täuschung. Sie müssen also gerade der Täuschung verfallen, und das tun Sie auch. Sobald Sie diese Geschichte, die heute geschrieben wird, glauben, verfallen Sie der Maja, der Täuschung.

So hat man aber nicht immer Geschichte geschrieben. Die Art, wie man früher Geschichte geschrieben hat, verachtet man heute. Und das ist ein furchtbares Menschheitskarma, daß gewissermaßen schon in der Geschichtsbetrachtung das Geistige ausgeschaltet werden soll. Gehen wir zurück, sagen wir, unmittelbar in die Zeit, wo noch im wesentlichen die Gesinnung der vierten nachatlantischen Periode herrscht. Da wird ganz anders Geschichte erzählt, es wird Geschichte so erzählt, daß der heutige professoral infizierte Mensch die Nase rümpft und sagt: Die Kerle haben keine Kritik gehabt, die Kerle, die haben ja alles mögliche Mythen- und Sagenhafte sich aufbinden lassen; eine reinliche Kritik, wodurch die Tatsachen in ihrer Wahrheit hätten hingestellt werden können, dafür haben diese Leute keinen Sinn. — So sagt der heutige Historiker, und selbstverständlich derjenige erst recht, der ihm nachbetet. Kindisch waren die Menschen dazumal - so sagen die Leute. Für heutige Begriffe waren sie auch kindisch! Hören wir zum Beispiel einmal an, wie eine alte Historie erzählt worden ist, etwas, was zahllose Menschen aus der Gesinnung noch des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums als Historie, als Geschichte angesehen haben. Wollen wir uns heute einmal ein Beispiel vor Augen führen, damit wir es als Grundlage haben für weitergehende Betrachtungen, die wir morgen anstellen wollen:

Es lebte einmal im Sachsenlande, so erzählt man, ein Kaiser, den man nannte den «Roten Kaiser», den Kaiser mit dem roten Bart: Otto mit dem roten Bart. Dieser Kaiser hatte eine Gemahlin, die aus England stammte, und die, um ihren Herzensbedürfnissen so recht entsprechen zu können, wünschte, eine besondere kirchliche Stiftung zu haben. Da entschloß sich der Rote Otto, die Stiftung des Erzbistums Magdeburg vorzunehmen. Das Erzbistum Magdeburg sollte eine besondere Mission in Mitteleuropa haben, insbesondere den Westen mit dem Osten so verbinden, daß gerade vom Erzbistum Magdeburg unter den ja gleich angrenzend wohnenden Slawen das Christentum verbreitet werden sollte. Das Erzbistum Magdeburg machte gute Fortschritte, es übte in einer weiten Umgebung höchst wohltätige Wirkungen aus, und Otto mit dem roten Bart sah, was seine Stiftung für wohltätige Wirkungen in der Umgebung ausübte. Nun war er darüber sehr froh. Zum Segen in der physischen Welt gereichen meine Taten, sagte er sich, und er hatte immer den Wunsch, daß ihm Gott lohnen möge, was er an Wohltaten an den Menschen vollbrachte. Das war sein Bestreben: daß göttlicher Lohn ihm werden möge, weil er ja aus der Frömmigkeit heraus tat, was er unternahm.

Einmal kniete er in der Kirche, und während er so, man möchte sagen, in einem Gebete, das bis zur Meditation gesteigert war, flehte: Wenn er einmal sterben sollte, mögen ihm die Götter das, was er gestiftet habe, so vergelten, wie es ihm auf dem physischen Plan vergolten worden war durch das viele Gute, das in der Umgebung des Erzbistums Magdeburg entstanden war -, da erschien ihm ein Geistwesen, und dieses Geistwesen sprach zu ihm: Wahr ist es, du hast viel Gutes gestiftet, du hast vielen Menschen große Wohltaten erwiesen. Aber du hast es im Hinblick darauf getan, daß dir nach dem Tode von der göttlichen Welt der Segen kommt, wie dir jetzt der irdische Segen gekommen ist. Das ist schlecht, und damit verdirbst du deine Stiftung.

Nun war Otto mit dem roten Bart sehr unglücklich und er unterhielt sich mit dem Geistwesen, von dem wir jetzt wissen, nicht wahr, daß es ein Wesen aus der Reihe der Angeloi war. Es ist dies aus der Gesinnung des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums heraus empfunden. Er unterhielt sich mit jenem Wesen und das Wesen machte ihm begreiflich: Gehe nach Köln, da wohnt der Gute Gerhard; erkundige dich nach dem Guten Gerhard, und wenn du besser werden kannst durch das, was dir der Gute Gerhard sagt, dann vielleicht kannst du verhindern, daß sich vollzieht an dir, was eben ausgesprochen worden ist. — So ungefähr war die Unterredung Ottos mit dem roten Bart mit dem Geistwesen.

In einer für seine Umgebung etwas unbegreiflichen Weise arrangierte der Kaiser Otto schnell eine Reise nach Köln. In Köln ließ er versammeln nicht nur den Bürgermeister, sondern auch alle «wohlweisen und großgünstigen Ratsherren». An einem, der hereinkam, erkannte er schon an dem Aussehen, daß dies ein besonderer Mann sei, und um dessentwillen war er ja eigentlich nur gekommen. Und er fragte den Erzbischof von Köln, der ihn hingeführt hatte, ob das der sogenannte «Gute Gerhard» sei. Und wirklich, er war es. Da sagte der Kaiser zu den Ratsherren: Ich wollte mich mit Euch beraten, aber ich will zuerst mit diesem Einzelnen abgesondert sprechen und dann dasjenige, was ich, nachdem ich mit ihm gesprochen habe, erkundet habe, mit Euch besprechen.

Vielleicht hatten die Ratsherren, aus deren Mitte einer herausgenommen wurde, etwas lange Nasen, aber das wollen wir nicht besonders untersuchen, jedenfalls nahm der Kaiser den Ratsherrn, den man in Köln den Guten Gerhard nannte, zu sich in ein besonderes Zimmer und fragte: Warum nennt man dich den Guten Gerhard? Er mußte diese Frage stellen, denn der Engel hatte ihn darauf verwiesen, daß etwas davon abhänge, daß er erkenne, warum man diesen Mann den «Guten Gerhard» nenne; denn durch den sollte er ja geheilt werden. Da sagte der Gute Gerhard so ungefähr: Man nennt mich den Guten Gerhard, weil die Leute gedankenlos sind. Ich habe nichts Besonderes getan. Aber das, was ich getan habe und was wirklich unbedeutend ist, was ich dir auch nicht erzählen will und nicht erzählen werde, das ist ein bißchen bekanntgeworden, und weil die Leute eben das Bedürfnis haben, überall Worte zu erfinden, so nennen sie mich den Guten Gerhard. — Nein, nein, sagte der Kaiser, so einfach kann das nicht sein, und es ist für mich und meine ganze Regierung außerordentlich wichtig, daß ich weiß, warum du der Gute Gerhard genannt wirst. - Der Gute Gerhard wollte das nicht verraten, aber der Kaiser wurde immer eindringlicher, und so sagte der Gute Gerhard: So will ich dir erzählen, warum sie mich den Guten Gerhard nennen; aber du darfst es nicht wiedersagen, denn ich sehe darin wirklich nichts Besonderes:

Ich bin ein einfacher Kaufmann, bin immer ein einfacher Kaufmann gewesen, und eines Tages rüstete ich eine Reise aus. Ich durchwanderte also zunächst zu Land einige Gegenden, dann zu Schiff, kam bis in den Orient und kaufte viele, viele wertvolle Stoffe und wertvolle Gegenstände, alles mögliche um billiges Geld. Ich dachte, ich würde das da oder dort wiederum verkaufen um das Doppelte, das Drei-, Vier-, Fünffache, denn das ist so Kaufmannsbrauch; das war eben so mein Geschäft, mein Beruf. Dann setzte ich die Reise, weil das notwendig war, zu Schiff fort. Aber wir wurden durch einen ungünstigen Wind verschlagen im Meere. Wir wußten gar nicht, wo wir sind, und so war ich im Winde auf offenem Meer mit wenigen Gefährten verschlagen mit meinen kostbaren Geräten und Stoffen. Wir kamen an einen Strand, an dem Strand erhob sich ein Gebirge. Wir schickten einen Kundschafter aus, der auf das Gebirge hinaufsteigen sollte, um zu sehen, was jenseits ist, denn wir wurden einfach an den Strand geschlagen. Der Kundschafter sah von dem Gebirge aus jenseits eine mächtige Stadt, offenbar eine große Handelsstadt. Karawanen zogen von allen Seiten durch eine Reihe von Straßen heran, ein Fluß floß vorbei. Er kam wieder zurück, der Kundschafter, und wir konnten nun den Weg finden, um mit unserem Schiff an der Stadt anzulegen.

Nun waren wir in einer ganz fremden Stadt. Bald zeigte sich, daß wir als Christen mitten unter Heiden waren. Wir sahen, daß ein lebhafter Markt ist. Ich dachte, ich werde auch auf dem Markte allerlei verkaufen können, denn die Handelstätigkeit war rege in jener Stadt; aber ich wußte nicht recht Bescheid. Da kam mir auf der Straße ein Mann entgegen, zu dem ich Vertrauen faßte, der mir vertrauenswürdig aussah. Zu dem Mann sagte ich: Kannst du mir nicht behilflich sein, um hier meine Waren zu verkaufen? — Der Mann hatte offenbar auch zu mir Vertrauen gefaßt und sagte: Woher kommst du? - Ich erzählte, ich sei ein Christ und aus Köln. Da sagte er: Mir scheinst du trotzdem ein ganz guter Mann zu sein. Ich habe bis jetzt über die Christen die allerschlimmsten Vorstellungen gehabt, aber du scheinst mir kein Unmensch zu sein; ich werde dir behilflich sein, und ich werde dir eine Herberge verschaffen können. Und dann laß mich einmal deine Waren alle anschauen.

Als der Kaufmann, der Gute Gerhard, in der Herberge war, da kam nach einigen Tagen der Heide, den er getroffen hatte, schaute sich die Waren an, fand sie außerordentlich kostbar und sagte: Es gibt in der Stadt, trotzdem es hinreichend reiche Leute gibt, keinen einzigen, der so viel Geld hat, daß er so viel kaufen könnte. Das ist ganz unmöglich. Ich bin der einzige hier, der etwas hat, was ein Äquivalent ist für diese Waren. Ich kann dir, wenn du mir alle deine Waren gibst, einen Gegenwert bieten, aber ich bin der einzige, der das hat. - Nun, der Mann aus Köln wollte sich die Sache doch ansehen — er erzählt das alles dem Kaiser. — Ja, dann komm zu mir, und ich werde dir zeigen, daß ich Gegenwaren habe, die wirklich austauschbar sind gegen deine außerordentlich wertvollen, aus aller Welt als Kostbarstes zusammengetragenen Waren.

Nun kam der Gerhard zu dem heidnischen Menschen, sah gleich, daß er es mit einem außerordentlich wichtigen Manne der Heidenstadt zu tun hatte. Zunächst führte ihn der Heide in ein Gemach, worinnen zwölf Jünglinge waren, gefesselt, als Gefangene, abgezehrt, in elendiger Lage. — Siehst du, sagte er, das sind zwölf Christen, die haben wir gefangengenommen auf offenem Meere, nachdem sie auf offenem Meere richtungslos schwammen. Jetzt werde ich dir den andern Teil der Ware zeigen. - Nun führte er ihn in ein anderes Gemach und zeigte ihm ebensoviele herabgekommene Greise. Dem Gerhard tat das Herz bei den Greisen noch mehr weh als bei den Jünglingen. Und dann zeigte der Heide ihm auch eine Anzahl Frauen - ich glaube fünfzehn -, die nun auch gefangengenommen waren. Und dann sagte er ihm: Gibst du mir deine Ware, so gebe ich dir diese Gefangenen; sie sind sehr kostbar, du kannst sie haben.

Nun erfuhr der Gerhard, der Kaufmann aus Köln, daß sich unter den Frauen eine befand, die einen ganz besonderen Wert dadurch hatte, daß sie eine norwegische Königstochter war, die mit ihren Frauen — wenigen, nur ein paar, die andern waren woanders her - Schiffbruch erlitten hatte und gefangengenommen war von den Heiden. Die anderen waren aus England. Die Frauen waren Engländerinnen, die Jünglinge und Greise waren Engländer, und zwar waren sie ausgezogen mit dem Königssohne von England, Wilhelm, der sich seine norwegische Braut holen sollte. Und als er die norwegische Braut von Norwegen abgeholt hatte, da hatten sie auf dem Meere Unglück, die ganze Gesellschaft wurde in das Meer hinausgetrieben. Der Königssohn Wilhelm wurde ganz getrennt von den andern. Von dem wußten die andern nicht, wo er hingekommen war, er war für sie verschollen. Die aber, die ich aufgezählt habe, die Frauen und die Königstochter von Norwegen, die zwölf edlen Jünglinge aus England, die zwölf edlen Greise, die andern Frauen, die mit abgeholt hatten die Königstochter mit Wilhelm, die hatten Schiffbruch erlitten und waren in die Gewalt dieses heidnischen Fürsten gekommen. Die wollte ihm also der Heidenhäuptling verkaufen gegen seine orientalischen Waren. Gerhard weinte viele Tränen, nicht um die Waren, sondern im Gegenteil, weil er solch kostbares Gut gegen die Waren eintauschen sollte, und ging seiner ganzen Gesinnung nach auf den Handel ein. Der Heidenhäuptling war sehr gerührt und dachte sich: So starke Unmenschen sind nun wirklich diese Christen nicht. — Er stattete ihm sogar ein Schiff mit allen Lebensmitteln aus, so daß er seine Jünglinge und Greise und die Königstochter und die Jungfrauen mit über das Meer führen konnte, und entließ ihn sehr gerührt, indem er ihm sagte: Um deinetwillen werde ich von jetzt ab sehr loyal gegen alle Christen sein, die in meinen Gewahrsam kommen.

Der Kaufmann Gerhard aus Köln fuhr nun über das Meer, und als man an die Stelle kam, an der man an der Konfiguration des Landes erkennen konnte, wo sich die Wege nach London und Utrecht trennen, da sagte er zu seiner Reisegesellschaft: Diejenigen, die nun nach England gehören, die mögen nach England gehen; die nach Norwegen gehören, die Königstochter mit ihren wenigen Frauen, die gehen mit mir nach Köln, und ich werde sehen, ob derjenige, für den diese Braut bestimmt war, nachdem er sich vielleicht gefunden hat, sie abholt.

Gerhard in Köln hielt nun die norwegische Königstochter ihrem Stande angemessen. Sie war außerordentlich liebevoll gepflegt in der Familie, selbstverständlich, nur die kleine Bemerkung machte er noch, der Gute Gerhard, daß, als er heimkam mit der Königstochter, seine Frau erst etwas die Nase rümpfte. Aber dann hatte sie sie wie eine Tochter wirklich lieb. Nun, diese Dinge, nicht wahr, sind ja begreiflich. Sie wuchs also wie die Tochter des Hauses heran, war sehr lieb gehalten, sie hatte nur den großen Schmerz, der sich daraus ergab, daß sie immer nach ihrem Geliebten, dem Wilhelm, weinte, denn sie hatte selbstverständlich vorausgesetzt, daß er, wenn er gerettet werde, überallin der Welt sie suchen würde und sie schon finden werde. Er kam nicht und kam nicht. Aber sie war der Familie des Guten Gerhard lieb geworden, und der Gerhard hatte einen Sohn, und so dachte der Gerhard selber, daß diese schöne Jungfrau seines Sohnes Gattin werde. Das konnte sie natürlich nur, nach der Auffassung der damaligen Zeit, wenn der Sohn zu ihrem Stand hinaufgehoben wurde. Der Erzbischof von Köln erklärte sich bereit, den Sohn zum Ritter zu schlagen. Alles wurde in entsprechender Weise gemacht. Gerhard war sehr reich, es ging alles sehr gut. Turniere wurden abgehalten, und nachdem man noch ein Jahr gewartet hatte, ob sich nun der Wilhelm einfinde — dieses Jahr hatte sich die Königstochter ausbedungen -, da hatte man die Hochzeit gerichtet.

Während der Hochzeit erscheint ein Pilger, der einen solchen Bart hatte, daß man sah, daß schon lange Zeit kein Schermesser über sein Gesicht gegangen war, und der sehr traurig war. Der Gute Gerhard war voller Erbarmen, als er den Pilger sah, und fragte ihn, was er denn habe. Es ist unmöglich, zu sagen, meinte der Pilger, was er habe, denn er müsse nun sein Leid weiter durch die Welt tragen; von heute ab wisse er, daß dieses Leid niemals gemildert werden könne. — Das war nämlich der Wilhelm, der alle seine Gefährten verloren hatte, an eine Küste verschlagen worden war, in der Welt als Pilger umhergeirrt war, in dem unrechten Augenblicke erst ankam, als seine ihm zugedachte Braut schon dem Sohne des Gerhard in Köln fast vermählt war. Der Gerhard sagte: Das ist ganz selbstverständlich, daß du deine rechtmäßige Braut erhältst, ich werde mit meinem Sohne sprechen. — Da die Braut auch gewissermaßen die größere Liebe hatte zu ihrem verlorengegangenen, ihr zugehörigen Bräutigam Wilhelm, so ließ sich die Sache ordnen, und der Gerhard brachte, nachdem nun die Hochzeit mit dem Wilhelm gefeiert war in Köln, den Wilhelm, den Thronerben Englands, mit seiner Gattin nach London. Da ließ er zunächst die andern zurück. Er war ja bekannt als ein Kaufmann, der oft in London war. Er ging in die Stadt hinein und hörte, daß eben eine große Versammlung sei. Alles war unruhig, hatte einen revolutionären Charakter schon im Äußeren; er hörte, es sei Unordnung im Lande ausgebrochen, weil kein Thronfolger da sei. Der Thronfolger sei verschwunden vor Jahren, sei nicht wiedergekommen, er hätte Anhänger im Lande, aber alles andere sei uneinig, und man wolle jetzt für einen Königsnachfolger sorgen.

Der Gerhard steckte sich in sein bestes Gewand und ging in die Versammlung. Da ließ man ihn auch hinein, da er eben in seinem besten Gewande war, was bei diesem reichen Kaufmann außerordentlich prunkvoll war. Und er fand vierundzwanzig Menschen versammelt, welche darüber berieten, wer der Ersatz sein sollte für den geliebten Thronfolger Wilhelm. Gerhard sah, diese vierundzwanzig Menschen waren dieselben, die er von dem Heidenhäuptling befreit hatte, die er dazumal, als die Wege nach London und Utrecht sich schieden, nach London geschickt hatte. Sie erkannten ihn nicht gleich. Sie erzählten ihm, daß Wilhelm verlorengegangen sei, ihr über alles geliebter Wilhelm. Dann aber erkannten sich Gerhard und die andern. Nun erklärte er ihnen, daß er ihnen ihren Wilhelm bringen werde. Auf diese Weise löste sich die Sache. Die Freude, die da herrschte in England, brauche ich Ihnen nicht zu erzählen. Zuerst hatte man sogar in der Versammlung, als man noch nicht gewußt hatte, wen der Gerhard bringen werde, aber ihn, der sie gerettet hatte, schon erkannt hatte, den Gerhard selber zum König ausrufen wollen. - Wilhelm wurde nun der König von England. Und nun wollte Wilhelm das Herzogtum Kent dem Gerhard geben, aber der nahm es nicht. Selbst von der neuen Königin, die so lange seine Pflegetochter war, nahm er nicht einmal die Goldschätze, die sie ihm zu geben wünschte, nur einen Ring und einiges andere noch, aber weniges, das er zum Andenken an die Pflegetochter seiner Frau mit nach Hause nehmen wollte. Und fuhr nach Hause.

Das ist dasjenige, was nun leider bekanntgeworden ist in meiner Umgebung, sagte der Gute Gerhard zum Roten Otto, und deshalb nennen mich die Leute den Guten Gerhard. Aber eine Entscheidung darüber, ob dasjenige, was ich getan habe, gut ist oder nicht gut ist, steht ja nicht den Menschen, auch mir selber nicht zu. Und deshalb ist es ganz unsinnig, daß die Leute mich den Guten Gerhard nennen, wenn die Worte einen Sinn haben sollen.

Der Rote Otto, der Kaiser, hörte das mit Aufmerksamkeit an und wußte nun allerdings, daß es eine andere Gesinnung gäbe als diejenige, die er entwickelt hatte, und daß diese andere Gesinnung sogar bei einem Kaufmann in Köln zu finden sei. Das machte einen tiefen Eindruck auf ihn. Er ging zurück in die Ratsversammlung, sagte den Herren: Ihr könnt nach Hause gehen, ich habe alles schon von dem Guten Gerhard erfahren. — Die Nasen der wohlweisen und großgünstigen Herren wurden noch länger, aber die Seelenrichtung des Roten Otto war eine vollständig andere geworden.

So erzählte man eine Geschichte.

Das, was da erzählt wird, kritisiert heute selbstverständlich der Historiker, der reinlich herausschälen will die Tatsachen, die auf dem physischen Plan sich abspielen, in Grund und Boden. Aber nicht nur dieses Ereignis, sondern auch andere Ereignisse hat man in jener geschichtlichen Gesinnung, die noch im vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum herrschend war, so erzählt, daß man nicht bloß die physische Tatsache erzählt hat, sondern gewissermaßen den mit der geistigen Welt zusammenhängenden Sinn. Ineinandergreifen ließ man dasjenige, was auf dem physischen Plan geschah, und dasjenige, was als Sinn das durchwebt, was auf dem physischen Plan geschieht.

Ein tiefer Sinn liegt schon in der Geschichte von dem Roten Otto und dem Guten Gerhard.

Ich wollte Ihnen diese Geschichte heute erzählen, die einmal als Geschichte genommen worden ist, damit wir sie unter andern Dingen auch morgen zugrunde legen können bei Betrachtungen, die uns noch weitere Horizonte eröffnen sollen.

Tenth lecture

Yesterday we began our consideration of the myth of Baldur, which, as we have seen, goes back to ancient institutions, and it is precisely this consideration that can make it clear to us how Christianity had to and should have connected with what had previously been understood by humanity. If we take the three great festivals of the year, as they are still celebrated today, these three great festivals of the year are indeed connected with things that have slowly and gradually emerged through human evolution. And we can only fully understand what still wants to express itself in the mysteries of Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost if we are not afraid to connect things with the thinking, feeling, and sensing of humanity as it has developed over time. We have seen how the idea of Christ goes back to early, early times.

To grasp this more clearly, you need only bring to mind what is contained in the book Spiritual Guidance of the Individual and Humanity. There you will see how the basis of the idea of Christ can be traced back to the mysteries of the spiritual worlds, how it can be shown what path the being underlying the idea of Christ took in the spiritual worlds in order to reveal itself, as it were, at a certain point in the Earth's development in physical human incarnation. It is precisely in the debate surrounding these concepts of spiritual guidance of humanity that it is possible to sense the connection or lack thereof between anthroposophically oriented spiritual science and ancient Gnosticism. To describe Christ's path through the spiritual worlds as attempted in the book “The Spiritual Guidance of Humanity,” would not have been possible in ancient Gnosticism. But this ancient Gnosis did have a concept of Christ, an idea of Christ. It was able to draw so much from atavistic clairvoyant knowledge that it could grasp Christ in a spiritual way and say: In the spiritual world there is an evolution, the hierarchies, or, as it is called there, the Aeons follow one another, and one of the Aeons is Christ. And Gnosis shows how Christ, while evolving from Aeon to Aeon, descends and reveals himself in a human being. This can be shown even more clearly today, and you can read about it in the book “The Spiritual Guidance of the Human Being and Humanity.”

Now it is good if we in our spiritual scientific movement sense something of the deeper connections, so that we can free ourselves from purely personal concerns. For it is indeed the case that humanity, in its development in this fifth post-Atlantean period, has reached a point where it is very difficult for the individual to free himself from his personal concerns. The individual is in danger of mixing his personal affairs, his personal instincts and passions with what is common to all humanity.

The various festivities have also degenerated into purely personal affairs, because humanity has lost the seriousness and dignity that alone make it possible to approach the spiritual world in the right way. It is very natural that in our fifth post-Atlantean period, when human beings are supposed to grasp themselves, so to speak, and stand on their own two feet, there is a danger, as I have just characterized it, that human beings will lose their connection with the spiritual world. In the past, humanity was conscious of its connection with the spiritual world, but unconscious of other things, as I pointed out again yesterday. In the present, it is above all those things that are unconscious which I have referred to in these reflections in such a way that I said: People today are not inclined to focus their attention on them. They let them pass by without bothering about them.

It is good, especially on occasions such as Christmas, to say to oneself: Spiritual impulses play a part in the development of our world, both in a good and in an evil sense. And we have seen how the impulses that are at work can be used by people who are, so to speak, initiated into these things, also in a bad sense, in some personal, selfish sense, or in the interest of group egoism. We must learn to attune our feelings to broader issues, to broader circumstances. Even if we cannot always trumpet such feelings, as the saying goes, we must at least be able to cherish them.

Now I would like to give you the opportunity to free your soul, as it were, from any purely personal interpretation of anthroposophy and direct it toward something general that is connected with our anthroposophical movement. If you understand what was said yesterday correctly, you will say to yourselves: That May 20, 1347, that Pentecost Monday, when Cola di Rienzi made his significant manifestation in Rome, was repeated in a certain way at Pentecost in 1915. Anyone who has followed the events will soon be able to see, or would soon be able to see, that this Pentecost was chosen with full intention, with full consciousness on the part of those who did it. They knew that the old impulses would revive, that the hearts and souls that surrender to HödurBlindheit could be captured when Loki approached them. But one can only be captured as long as one does not have the will to get used to looking at comprehensible, obvious connections and allowing oneself to be impressed by them. One is only at the mercy of connections that remain unconscious as long as one is so entangled in the personal that one does not look at, I would say, “proper” connections, connections in the good sense, as long as one has no interest in what is common to all human beings, which always leads to the spiritual.

I have explained to you that Gnosticism still had an understanding of the concept of Christ, that with the eradication of Gnosticism, the concept of Christ became dogmatized, and that in the South, the actual concept of Christ has therefore, in a sense, disappeared. Spiritual science has the task, in connection with spiritual evolution, of understanding this concept of Christ again, of forming a concept of Christ that is not a phrase but is meaningful, has real content.

In the north, precisely that which could have existed there has disappeared: the feeling for Jesus. The feeling for Jesus was truly developed in the north, as I said the day before yesterday, until the 8th, 9th, and 10th centuries after the Mystery of Golgotha. In ancient times, in every house where a birth took place, the Christ Child was welcomed, who alone, especially among the Ingavones, could be accepted as a worthy member of the tribe, while those who were born at other times were considered out of place — without pedantry, of course. But we have shown how what then spread as external Christianity suppressed everything that was still connected with that ancient feeling for Jesus, even in myths and processions, that is, in cult customs. And we have seen how, since the middle of the Middle Ages, strenuous efforts have been made to obscure what had spread from Jutland across Europe, especially Central Europe.

In the Danish regions, the central mystery that, in a sense, ordered and supervised those conditions then came to the fore in the regulation of conceptions and births. It was there that a general consciousness developed about a social connection within humanity, about a connection that was at the same time sacramental, that was a real social sacrament. The year itself was arranged as a sacrament, and human beings knew that they were part of the annual sacrament. For the people of that time, the sun did not move across the sky in different ways during the different seasons for no reason, but what happened on earth was a reflection of heavenly events. Where human beings cannot yet have any influence, where elemental and nature spirits still do what human beings do today in relation to social life, there the sacrament still exists. Today, although human beings are not yet aware of it, quite strong Ahrimanic impulses are living in individual human beings. I say expressly: without people already knowing it. These Ahrimanic impulses are directed toward wresting the sacramental influence of certain elemental nature spirits from the evolution of the earth.

When modern technology has developed to such an extent that artificial heat can be generated over certain areas, then people will — and this will happen, I do not condemn it, but merely present it to you as a necessity, as something that will happen in the future — then people will take away plant growth, especially the growth of grain. Not only will winter gardens and heated rooms be set up for small plant growth facilities, but entire grain fields will be created in which, freed from the laws of the cosmos, grain will be grown at different times of the year than it would grow on its own, that is, through the natural and elemental spirits. But this will be the same for seeds as what happened when the old consciousness of the sacrament of conception and birth became generalized throughout the whole year. To investigate and explore how spiritual beings can influence social-sacramental relationships in the same way that they influence the sprouting and budding of plants in spring and their decline in autumn was the task of mystery centers such as those I mentioned that were located in Denmark and regulated social life in a sacramental manner. From there, then, spread out what we may still seek in the third millennium before the Mystery of Golgotha, but then gradually see it disappear and make way for something else that had to come; otherwise, human beings would not have been able to rise to the use of their intellect. Things are necessary, but we must understand their necessity and not meddle in the work of the gods by saying: Why did the gods not do this or that, why did the gods not arrange things differently — always meaning more conveniently for human beings?

So it was from Jutland, from Denmark, that the receptivity to the Jesus feeling originated. You see, it is not just a matter of thinking about what is happening on more or less important occasions, but of thinking about the connections, not, I would say, thinking around the corner and speculating, but thinking straight and truthfully. Many people are very fond of speculating, but right thinking consists in putting the actual events together and then waiting to see what comes of them, what emerges from them.

Now that I have explained all this, you might ask yourselves the following question, and those of you who have asked yourselves this question will have felt something right in your souls. And if you have not yet asked yourselves this question today, you can strive to ask yourselves such questions in the future; for they are everywhere, provided that the prerequisite is that truth lies not only in what is said, but also in what is done. We can only understand the Word of the world, whose birth we celebrate in the Christmas mystery, if we think of this Word of the world as universally as possible, if we think that this Word of the world really vibrates and waves in everything that happens, in everything that occurs. And if one has the humility and devotion to feel oneself woven into the world process, one recognizes the connections that prevail there.

What question could the soul ask itself? Your soul might think like this these days: We have now learned that Gnosticism contained a significant concept of Christ; it disappeared in the south and was unable, so to speak, to move northward. It was met by the concept of Jesus, which, however, is linked to the Jewish mysteries as a feeling. We have now seen this.

If one recognizes this and considers this connection, would it not be natural for the need to arise to bring together what has not been able to come together? In the world evolution of the West, the idea of Christ has not been able to come together with the idea of Jesus. From this must arise the need to connect the two.

Modern anthroposophy must take on this task in all modesty. It is its task to try to do the right thing and bring these things together a little in the world constellation. So when one tries to describe how the newer anthroposophy, as a kind of gnosis raised up into modern times, understands Christ again, one might want to bring this idea of Christ together with what can live in a certain place where it once lived as the feeling for Jesus in such an intense way, as I have described to you. Then one would try to speak about the idea of Christ as it fits into the spiritual guidance of humanity, precisely at the place, or, according to our possibilities, near the place, from where the Jesus feeling radiated.

That is the answer you can give yourself if you ask why, years ago, I accepted an invitation from there to speak in Copenhagen about the Christ's transformation through spiritual evolution. Why did the need arise at that particular time to develop the Christ idea, as it could be woven into the theme of “The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity,” at this particular place? Something was said, not through the words that were spoken, but through the constellation! It is then up to people to understand such things. There is no need to shout them from the rooftops, I said; but one can understand that things are expressed not only through what is said, but also through what happens, and that in these things the word of the world lives in a certain way.

Now it seems today that humanity has more feeling and sensitivity for what is wrong and evil, when it is placed in the world constellations, than when one tries to express through real facts what should be incorporated in the truly good sense of human evolution. But one would like, especially in connection with something like the Christmas mystery, to evoke a feeling that one should feel, as a participant in the anthroposophical movement, that one is living in something that is elevated above mere outer Maya, and one would like the insight to be taken seriously that what what happens on the physical plane, as it happens on the physical plane, is precisely Maya and not reality in the higher sense.

So when one feels that what happens here on earth also happens, in a sense, if I may use the Christian expression, in “heaven,” and that only in the combination in the human spirit, that is, now for our fifth post-Atlantean epoch in the human intellect, does the full truth lie, then one sees the full reality. It lies in the combination of what happens on earth and in heaven. Otherwise, one remains stuck in Maya. Today, we have such a strong need to remain stuck in Maya because, in the fifth post-Atlantean period, we are overly exposed to the danger of taking words for the thing itself. Words have lost much of their meaning, and by meaning I mean the living soul connection of the word with the reality that underlies it. Words have become mere abbreviations, and the intoxication in which many still live today with regard to words is no longer genuine, because only immersion in the spiritual world can make what we say genuine. Words will only regain their real content when people are filled with knowledge of the spiritual world. The old knowledge has been lost, and we often speak today in this way because the old knowledge has been lost, we are caught up in Maya and have only words. But we must seek a spiritual life that gives words their content. We live, as it were, in a mechanism of words, just as we gradually lose our individuality in a mechanism of technology and become at the mercy of the external mechanism.

Our task is to bring together what lives in the spiritual world with what lives in the physical world. To do this, however, we must approach the understanding of reality with great seriousness. In our materialistic age, human beings have become too accustomed to seeing only small horizons and looking at everything within the scope of small horizons. They have even made their religion so comfortable for themselves that it gives them a narrow horizon. People in our time want to avoid broad horizons and do not want to call things by their proper names. This makes it very difficult for people to understand how karma such as that which has now befallen Europe could have come about. At least today, everyone wants to view such karma mainly from a narrow national standpoint — as it is called, although there is also a great deal of untruth in this. But there is a general human karma underlying this, which concerns every individual and which can be expressed in a simple word, at least in relation to one point — although there are many points. But people strive to ignore precisely what is important: what is important is the flight from the truth into which souls have fallen today! Souls literally flee from the truth; they have a terrible aversion to grasping the truth in all its strength and intensity.

Take the following: Over time, we have gradually gained a kind of overview of the development of humanity; we are able to judge that in a certain period of human development, wars arose, wars that, in a sense, took hold of humanity. But that was the time when people believed in wars. What does that mean: it was a time when people believed in wars? What does it mean to believe in wars? Well, believing in war is very similar to believing in dueling, in single combat. But when does dueling, single combat, have any real meaning? Only when those who engage in it are fully convinced that it is not chance but the gods who decide. If those who engage in a duel are fully convinced that the one who is killed or wounded has received this death or wound because a god has decided against him, then there is truth in the duel. There is no truth in a duel if one does not have this conviction; then the duel is a real lie, of course. But it is the same with war. If the people who belong to the nations can be convinced, can have faith that the decision brought about by war is a divine one, that the divine reigns in what happens, then there is truth in what happens as an act of war. But then those who are involved must be able to attach meaning to the words: a judgment of God will be carried out.

Now ask yourselves whether there is any truth in such words today! You need only ask the question: Do people believe that God's judgments are being pronounced in the acts of war today? Do people believe this? Ask yourself how many believe that the divine decides! — but I mean truly believe; for among the various lies that swirl around the world today, this one, which lies in invoking the gods or God, is, of course, found on all sides. But a real belief in the sense that a judgment of God is being carried out cannot, of course, exist in this materialistic age. One must therefore look at the matter seriously and with dignity and say to oneself: one is actually doing something in which one does not believe. One does not believe in the inner reality, and the further one goes towards the European West, the less one believes in this inner reality — and rightly so, for the further one goes towards the European West, the more this European West has the task of providing materialism for the fifth post-Atlantean period.

But things are different when you go further east. I am not accustomed to constructing theories about such things or to expressing anything lightly, but when I do express something, it is based on solid facts. You can already make a strange discovery today: if you come from the West to Central Europe, you will find that there is already a sporadic belief in Central Europe that divine judgment can take place. You can see this: it cannot exist in the West unless it has been imported from Central Europe, but in Central Europe a kind of belief in fate arises in certain individuals, and the word “divine judgment” is used. And if we go all the way to the East, where the future is being prepared, we will naturally find numerous people who see divine judgments in the decisions that are to come. For the Russian people will not be as far removed as the people of the West today from seeing God's judgment in what is happening.

We must look at these things with complete objectivity. Only then will we be true, only then will we be able to connect words with meaning today. But it is the task of humanity to learn once again to connect words with meaning.

Some time ago, I drew your attention to how today, I would say, thoughtlessness and insensitivity are being cultivated in an almost religious manner by not wanting to know that modern religions, when they speak of “God,” are actually only speaking of an angelic being, of an angel. When modern man says “God,” he means only his angel, the angel who guides him through life. And he merely convinces himself that he is speaking of a higher being than an angelic being. The illusion is that today's monotheism speaks of a single God, but the reality, from a spiritual point of view, is that humanity basically has a tendency to speak of as many gods as there are people on earth, because everyone speaks only of his own angel. Thus, the most absolute polytheism is that which hides under the mask of monotheism, which is why even the most modern religions are in danger of becoming atomized, with each person representing only his own idea of God, his own point of view. Where does this come from? It comes from the fact that today, in the fifth post-Atlantean period, we are isolated from the spiritual world. Consciousness is only in the human sphere.

In the fourth post-Atlantean period, human consciousness still reached somewhat into the spiritual sphere, namely into the region of the Angeloi, and in the third post-Atlantean period into the region of the Archangeloi. But it was only in this third period that what I have told you about the Jutish and Danish mysteries could arise. What was this being that announced the coming child to each individual mother? It was the same being that is also mentioned in the Gospel of Luke—an archangel, a being from the region of the Archangeloi. Those who look only up to the Angeloi and call one of the Angeloi their God, regardless of whether they believe that this is the universal God — for it is reality that matters, not belief — cannot find a connection that extends beyond the time between human birth and death into the region that is now hidden by the outer Maya. In the third post-Atlantean period, however, he could still look up to the region of the archangels, for there was still a living connection. In the second post-Atlantean, primordial Persian period, what was open to human consciousness was still connected with the archai, and human beings did not feel themselves to be inside what we now call nature, but in a spiritual world. Light and darkness were not yet external material processes, but spiritual processes, and this was the case in the original Zarathustra religion in the second post-Atlantean period.

You see, human beings have gradually descended. In the second post-Atlantean period, their consciousness still rose up to the realm of the archai, where they could still say to themselves: I, as a human being, am not just a puppet made of muscles and flesh, as today's anatomists, physiologists, and biologists claim, but I am a being that cannot be understood at all unless it is viewed in its spiritual context, unless it is viewed in the living web of light and darkness within; for I belong to the web of light and darkness.

Then came the third post-Atlantean period. Nature already took hold of man as it is in itself, for the processes of birth and death connect the soul life of man with nature. These are natural processes for the outer Maya. Birth, conception, and death are natural processes for the outer Maya. They are only spiritual processes when one looks up to where spiritual reality intervenes in these natural processes, that is, in the realm of the archangels. However, this connection was seen in the third post-Atlantean epoch.

Then, gradually, nature itself became a reality for human beings, so to speak, from the fourth post-Atlantean epoch onwards. Before that, people did not speak of nature in the sense in which we speak of it today. Human beings had to step out of the spiritual world and be alone with nature, separated from the spiritual world, so to speak. However, an event had to give them the opportunity to reconnect with the spiritual world. The divine once appeared to them in the second post-Atlantean period in the region of the Archai, in the third in the region of the Archangeloi, and in the fourth in the region of the Angeloi. In the fifth, he must recognize it as a human being, after it has prepared itself, since it appeared as a human being in the middle of the fourth post-Atlantean period—in Christ. This means that Christ must be understood better and better, understood in his connection with human beings. For Christ appeared as a human being so that human beings could find their connection with Christ. This must be made particularly clear in connection with the mystery of Christmas: the connection between humanity and the spiritual world must be found, just as it can come to meet us after humanity has stepped out of the spiritual world in order to live in nature. This was prepared as a fact in the fourth post-Atlantean period. But it must first be understood in the fifth post-Atlantean period; it must be truly understood there!

And human beings must find their way to understanding the Christ fact, to understanding it in connection with the entire spiritual world. How much is there today that is not understood about Christ, and how much is there that is not understood about Jesus, about the two components that make up the understanding of Christ Jesus! Anyone who considers the historical context can see that with the eradication of Gnosticism, the understanding of Christ disappeared. Anyone who considers the mystery context as expressed in the Baldur myth can understand how the feeling for Jesus has been eradicated.

But if one remains true to the facts, one can also recognize in the present context that what has been gleaned from history is confirmed in outer life. For it must be pointed out again and again: How many representatives of today's religion believe in their hearts, not just with their lips, but in their hearts, in the real resurrection — for they can only believe if they understand it — in the mystery of Easter? How many priests? Modern priests and pastors see their entire enlightenment in denying the mystery of Easter, the mystery of the Resurrection, somehow arguing it away, sophistically dismissing it; and if they find any reason not to believe in it, they are immensely happy.

First, the idea of Christ, which is inseparable from the mystery of the Resurrection, has been dogmatized; but then it gradually fell into discussion, and the tendency is to drop the mystery of the Resurrection altogether. But people do not want to understand the mystery of the birth either. They do not want to get involved in it because they no longer want to accept it in all its depth, precisely in its mysterious character. They only want to accept it in its animal character; they do not want to be aware that something spiritual descends. In the third post-Atlantean period, people still saw this spiritual descent, but with a different state of consciousness. Neither the birth nor the death of Christ Jesus is really understood by what is called modern religion or modern Christianity. Some still want to believe in it dogmatically, to hold on to it; but an understanding of these things that goes beyond mere words is only possible today through spiritual science. To do this, however, it is necessary to broaden the horizon of understanding. But there is a flight from the truth; people literally flee from anything that might lead to understanding.

Only anthroposophically oriented spiritual science is capable of creating, out of itself, not through historical rehashing, certain concepts that will now be fully conscious and no longer atavistic, but which were once atavistic, concepts for which modern man no longer has any real feeling. And here you will remember something I spoke about yesterday. I told you that the kingship of the ancient European tribes is connected with the whole social structure I spoke about in connection with the Jewish mysteries. The child who was born in the third year after the Holy Night was regarded as predestined for kingship. As I indicated yesterday, this child was prepared in this way for the royal dignity, and from him came the person who could then be king for three years. He was then at the stage I told you about: he grew out of the national, that is, out of the connection with his tribe. — The fifth degree, which among the Persians was called “Persian,” had the name of the tribe in question in each tribe, was still within the group; the “sun hero,” the sixth degree — and the mystery of the “sun hero” had to permeate the one who was allowed to be king for three years in those days — had to have grown out of the tribal, group connection and had to stand within the human connection. But he could only do this because he did not stand in a merely earthly context, but in a cosmic context, because he was a “sun hero,” that is, he lived in a world that was not ruled by earthly laws alone, but by those laws in which the sun is also woven. However, when a person comes into contact with the earthly, which inevitably occurs when a person has to perform earthly tasks, a certain process takes place. This process must be recognized. For it is through the recognition of this process that one gains an understanding of certain transitions, of certain things that must be understood if one wants to understand reality.

Let us suppose that there was a person who belonged to the tribe of the Ingävo in those ancient times, a person called an Ingävo; the “sun hero” who ruled for three years could not be called an Ingävo, because he had outgrown his tribe. It would not have been true to call the “sun hero” an Ingävo; he had become something else. See what a subtle concept was connected with earthly reality by the fact that one felt the radiance of the spiritual.

In our present age, which plays with words instead of adhering to concepts, who would think, for example, that the Pope is wrongly called a Christian, because it is paradoxical to call the Pope a Christian, just as it would be paradoxical to call the king of the Ingavones an Ingavone? If the Pope really wants to be a “Pope,” that is, if he wants to be part of the real spiritual process, then he should not be accepted as a Christian at all. We can only be Christians if the Pope is not a Christian: that would be the truth.

Who today would think of wanting to think the truth about such weighty matters? And who would think of recognizing the influence of divine, supernatural things in earthly things by recognizing them as Maya? That is not at all in the character of our time. Only where one is forced to do so does one recognize it; one conforms to the laws of the cosmos only where one is forced to do so. If we were not forced to acknowledge that the wheat stalk sprouts from the earth at a certain time of year, grows, develops ears of corn, and then must come out again from the seed, that a cycle takes place, that what comes into being must also pass away, and indeed must pass away according to law, then we would not acknowledge that either!

In those ancient times, it was recognized that the “sun hero,” who was called to be the leader of the Ingavones tribe, had to cease to be so after three years. People felt the lawfulness of this, as in the growth of plants. It is important to try to think of everything in harmony and accord with each other. For only in this way can one arrive at the truth, only in this way can one broaden one's horizons. For the truth is not child's play that can be arranged according to one's personal interests; rather, adherence to the truth is a serious, sacred service. And one must feel this, one must sense this. And the present age, in its entire disposition, is inclined to nothing else than to absolutize Maya, to declare it unconditionally to be the truth.

Go to the history seminars today: what do they call historical criticism? The neat extraction of mere facts that are apparent to the senses — whereby one must always err. For if one strives at all to extract the mere facts that are apparent to the senses, one slips into Maya. But Maya is deception. Therefore, historical science that strives to eliminate everything that is spiritual, to work out Maya, must lead straight to Maya. Try to extract the truth using today's seminar method, using today's historical institute method, by rejecting everything spiritual and emphasizing only what happens on the physical plane — the facts that are apparent to the senses — and you will fall into Maya, and then you will never be able to understand history. Pick up a modern history book, in which every supernatural connection is an absurdity, where every effort is made to accept only physical connections, and you will find the desire to highlight Maya. But Maya is deception. So you must fall prey to deception, and that is what you do. As soon as you believe this history that is being written today, you fall prey to Maya, to deception.

But history has not always been written in this way. The way history was written in the past is despised today. And it is a terrible karma of humanity that, in a sense, the spiritual is to be eliminated from the view of history. Let us go back, say, directly to the time when the mindset of the fourth post-Atlantean period still prevailed. History is told very differently then, in such a way that today's professorially infected people turn up their noses and say: Those guys had no sense of criticism, they let themselves be taken in by all kinds of myths and legends; these people have no sense of clean criticism, which would have allowed the facts to be presented in their truth. That is what today's historians say, and of course those who parrot them say the same. People were childish back then, they say. By today's standards, they were childish! Let us listen, for example, to how an old story was told, something that countless people from the mindset of the fourth post-Atlantean period regarded as history. Let us take an example today as a basis for further considerations that we want to make tomorrow:

Once upon a time, so the story goes, there lived in Saxony an emperor who was called the “Red Emperor,” the emperor with the red beard: Otto with the red beard. This emperor had a wife who came from England, and she, in order to satisfy the desires of her heart, wished to have a special ecclesiastical foundation. So Red Otto decided to establish the Archdiocese of Magdeburg. The Archdiocese of Magdeburg was to have a special mission in Central Europe, in particular to connect the West with the East in such a way that Christianity would be spread among the Slavs living in the neighboring regions from the Archdiocese of Magdeburg. The archbishopric of Magdeburg made good progress, exerting a highly beneficial influence over a wide area, and Otto with the red beard saw what charitable effects his foundation was having in the surrounding area. Now he was very happy about this. My deeds are a blessing in the physical world, he said to himself, and he always wished that God would reward him for the good he had done for mankind. That was his aspiration: that he might receive divine reward because he did what he did out of piety.

Once he knelt in church, and while he was, one might say, in a prayer that had risen to meditation, he pleaded: If he should die, may the gods reward him for what he had done, as he had been rewarded on the physical plane by the many good things that had come about in the vicinity of the archbishopric of Magdeburg. Then a spirit appeared to him and said to him: It is true, you have done much good, you have done great favors to many people. But you have done it with a view to receiving blessings from the divine world after death, just as you have now received earthly blessings. That is wrong, and in doing so you are spoiling your endowment.”

Now Otto with the red beard was very unhappy, and he conversed with the spirit being, whom we now know, do we not, to be a being from the order of the Angeloi. This is understood from the mindset of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. He conversed with that being, and the being made him understand: Go to Cologne, where the good Gerhard lives; inquire after the good Gerhard, and if you can become better through what the good Gerhard tells you, then perhaps you can prevent what has just been said from happening to you. — That was roughly the conversation between Otto with the red beard and the spirit being.

In a manner somewhat incomprehensible to those around him, Emperor Otto quickly arranged a trip to Cologne. In Cologne, he summoned not only the mayor, but also all the “wise and generous councilors.” As soon as one of them entered, he recognized by his appearance that this was a special man, and it was for his sake that he had come. He asked the Archbishop of Cologne, who had brought him there, if this was the so-called “Good Gerhard.” And indeed, it was. Then the emperor said to the councilors: “I wanted to consult with you, but first I want to speak with this individual in private and then discuss with you what I have learned after speaking with him.”

Perhaps the councilors, from whose midst one had been taken, were a little offended, but we will not examine that in detail. In any case, the emperor took the councilor, who was called Good Gerhard in Cologne, into a special room and asked him, “Why are you called Good Gerhard?” He had to ask this question because the angel had told him that something depended on his understanding why this man was called “Good Gerhard,” for it was through him that he was to be healed. Good Gerhard replied something like this: “I am called Good Gerhard because people are thoughtless. I haven't done anything special. But what I have done, which is really insignificant, which I don't want to tell you and won't tell you, has become a little known, and because people have a need to invent words for everything, they call me Good Gerhard. “No, no,” said the emperor, ”it can't be that simple, and it is extremely important for me and my entire government that I know why you are called Good Gerhard.” Good Gerhard did not want to reveal this, but the emperor became more and more insistent, and so Good Gerhard said: “I will tell you why they call me Good Gerhard, but you must not repeat it, for I really see nothing special in it:

“I am a simple merchant, I have always been a simple merchant, and one day I prepared for a journey. So I first traveled through some regions by land, then by ship, and came to the Orient, where I bought many, many valuable fabrics and valuable objects, all kinds of things for cheap money. I thought I would sell them here and there for double, triple, quadruple, or even five times the price, for that is the custom of merchants; that was my business, my profession. Then I continued my journey by ship, because it was necessary. But we were blown off course by an unfavorable wind. We had no idea where we were, and so I was stranded on the open sea with a few companions, with my precious equipment and fabrics. We came to a beach, and on that beach there was a mountain. We sent out a scout to climb the mountain to see what was beyond, because we had simply been washed up on the beach. From the mountain, the scout saw a mighty city beyond, apparently a large trading city. Caravans were approaching from all sides through a series of streets, and a river flowed by. The scout returned, and we were now able to find the way to land our ship at the city.

Now we were in a completely foreign city. It soon became apparent that we were Christians in the midst of pagans. We saw that there was a lively market. I thought I would be able to sell all kinds of things at the market, for trade was brisk in that city; but I did not know what to do. Then a man came toward me on the street who looked trustworthy, and I took a liking to him. I said to the man, “Can you help me sell my goods here?” The man had obviously taken a liking to me as well and said, “Where are you from?” I told him that I was a Christian from Cologne. He replied, “You seem to me to be a good man nonetheless. Until now, I have had the worst impressions of Christians, but you do not seem to be a monster to me; I will help you, and I will be able to find you lodging. And now let me take a look at all your goods.”

When the merchant, good Gerhard, was in the inn, the heathen man he had met came in after a few days, looked at the goods, found them extremely valuable, and said: “There is no one in the city, even though there are plenty of rich people, who has enough money to buy so much. That is quite impossible.” I am the only one here who has something equivalent to these goods. If you give me all your goods, I can offer you something of equal value, but I am the only one who has it.” Now, the man from Cologne wanted to see for himself — he told the emperor all about it. ”Yes, then come to me, and I will show you that I have goods that are truly exchangeable for your extremely valuable goods, which have been gathered from all over the world as the most precious things.”

Now Gerhard came to the pagan man and saw at once that he was dealing with an extremely important man of the pagan city. First, the pagan led him into a chamber where twelve young men were bound, captive, emaciated, and in a miserable condition. “See,” he said, ‘these are twelve Christians whom we captured on the open sea after they were swimming aimlessly. Now I will show you the other part of the goods.’ Then he led him into another room and showed him just as many decrepit old men. Gerhard's heart ached even more for the old men than for the young men. And then the heathen also showed him a number of women—I think fifteen—who had also been captured. And then he said to him, “If you give me your goods, I will give you these prisoners; they are very precious, you can have them.”

Now Gerhard, the merchant from Cologne, learned that among the women there was one who was of very special value because she was a Norwegian princess who, with her women—few in number, only a couple, the others were from elsewhere—had been shipwrecked and captured by the heathens. The others were from England. The women were English, the young men and old men were English, and they had set out with the son of the king of England, William, who was to fetch his Norwegian bride. And when he had fetched the Norwegian bride from Norway, they had misfortune at sea, and the whole company was driven out into the sea. The king's son William was completely separated from the others. The others did not know where he had gone; he was lost to them. But those I have mentioned, the women and the king's daughter of Norway, the twelve noble young men from England, the twelve noble old men, the other women who had accompanied the king's daughter and William, had been shipwrecked and had fallen into the hands of this pagan prince. The pagan chief wanted to sell them to him in exchange for his oriental goods. Gerhard wept many tears, not for the goods, but on the contrary, because he was to exchange such precious goods for them, and in accordance with his whole disposition, he agreed to the deal. The pagan chief was very moved and thought to himself: “These Christians are not really such strong inhuman beings after all. He even provided him with a ship and all the provisions he needed to take his young men and old men, the king's daughter, and the virgins across the sea, and dismissed him with great emotion, saying: “For your sake, I will henceforth be very loyal to all Christians who come into my custody.”

The merchant Gerhard from Cologne now sailed across the sea, and when they came to the place where the configuration of the land showed where the roads to London and Utrecht separated, he said to his traveling companions: Those who now belong to England may go to England; those who belong to Norway, the king's daughter with her few women, will go with me to Cologne, and I will see if the one for whom this bride was intended, after perhaps finding himself, will come and take her away.

Gerhard in Cologne treated the Norwegian king's daughter in a manner befitting her rank. She was cared for with extraordinary affection in the family, of course, but the good Gerhard made the small remark that when he came home with the king's daughter, his wife at first turned up her nose a little. But then she really loved her like a daughter. Well, these things are understandable, aren't they? So she grew up as the daughter of the house, was very well loved, and her only great sorrow was that she always cried for her beloved Wilhelm, for she had naturally assumed that when he was rescued, he would search for her all over the world and find her. He did not come, and did not come. But she had become dear to the family of Good Gerhard, and Gerhard had a son, and so Gerhard himself thought that this beautiful maiden would become his son's wife. Of course, according to the customs of the time, this could only happen if the son was raised to her rank. The Archbishop of Cologne agreed to knight his son. Everything was done in the proper manner. Gerhard was very rich, and everything went very well. Tournaments were held, and after waiting another year to see if Wilhelm would show up—the king's daughter had requested this year—the wedding was arranged.

During the wedding, a pilgrim appeared who had such a beard that it was clear that no razor had touched his face for a long time, and he was very sad. Good Gerhard was filled with compassion when he saw the pilgrim and asked him what was wrong. It was impossible to say what was wrong, replied the pilgrim, for he must now carry his sorrow through the world; from this day forward, he knew that his sorrow could never be alleviated. “That was Wilhelm, who had lost all his companions, been washed up on a coast, wandered around the world as a pilgrim, and arrived at the wrong moment, when his intended bride was already almost married to Gerhard's son in Cologne. Gerhard said, “It is only natural that you should have your rightful bride. I will speak to my son.” Since the bride also had, in a sense, a greater love for her lost fiancé Wilhelm, who belonged to her, the matter was settled, and after the wedding with Wilhelm had been celebrated in Cologne, Gerhard brought Wilhelm, the heir to the throne of England, with his wife to London. He left the others behind for the time being. He was well known as a merchant who was often in London. He went into the city and heard that a large gathering was taking place. Everything was restless and had a revolutionary character even on the outside; he heard that disorder had broken out in the country because there was no heir to the throne. The heir to the throne had disappeared years ago and had not returned. He had followers in the country, but everyone else was divided, and now they wanted to find a successor to the king.

Gerhard put on his best clothes and went to the meeting. They let him in because he was wearing his best clothes, which were extremely magnificent for a rich merchant. And he found twenty-four people gathered together, discussing who should replace the beloved heir to the throne, William. Gerhard saw that these twenty-four men were the same ones he had freed from the pagan chieftain, whom he had sent to London when the roads to London and Utrecht diverged. They did not recognize him at first. They told him that William had been lost, their beloved William. But then Gerhard and the others recognized each other. Now he explained to them that he would bring their William back to them. In this way, the matter was resolved. I need not tell you of the joy that reigned in England. At first, when they did not yet know whom Gerhard would bring, but had already recognized him as their savior, the assembly had even wanted to proclaim Gerhard himself king. William now became king of England. And now William wanted to give the duchy of Kent to Gerhard, but he did not accept it. He did not even take the gold treasures that the new queen, who had been his foster daughter for so long, wanted to give him, only a ring and a few other things, but very little, which he wanted to take home with him as a memento of his wife's foster daughter. And he went home.

That is what has now unfortunately become known in my neighborhood, said Good Gerhard to Red Otto, and that is why people call me Good Gerhard. But it is not for people, not even for me, to decide whether what I did was good or not. And that is why it is completely nonsensical for people to call me Good Gerhard, if the words are to have any meaning."

Red Otto, the emperor, listened attentively and now knew that there was a different way of thinking than the one he had developed, and that this different way of thinking could even be found in a merchant in Cologne. This made a deep impression on him. He returned to the council meeting and said to the gentlemen: “You may go home, I have already learned everything from Good Gerhard.” The noses of the wise and generous gentlemen grew even longer, but Red Otto's soul had been completely transformed.

So the story goes.

What is told here is, of course, criticized today by historians who want to thoroughly examine the facts that take place on the physical plane. But not only this event, but also other events were recounted in the historical spirit that still prevailed in the fourth post-Atlantean period in such a way that not only the physical facts were recounted, but also, in a sense, the meaning connected with the spiritual world. What happened on the physical plane was intertwined with the meaning that permeates what happens on the physical plane.

There is a deeper meaning in the story of Red Otto and Good Gerhard.

I wanted to tell you this story today, which was once taken as a story, so that we can use it tomorrow, among other things, as a basis for reflections that will open up even broader horizons for us.