The History of the Esoteric School 1904–1914, Volume Two

GA 265

Wisdom, Beauty, and Strength

From a lecture in Berlin, January 2, 1906

If you want to understand and delve into today's culture, you will find that it falls into three areas: the area of wisdom, the area of beauty and the area of strength. These three words contain the full scope of spiritual culture. Hence they are also called the three columns of human culture. They are the same as the three Kings in Goethe's “Fairytale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily”: the Golden, the Silver and the Bronze King. This is why Freemasonry is called the “Royal Art”. Today these cultural areas are separated from each other. Wisdom is essentially contained in what we call science; beauty is essentially incarnate in what we call art; and what, in Masonic terms, is called strength is contained in the structured, organized social coexistence of people in the state. The Mason unites all of this as the relationship of the will to these three elements: wisdom, beauty, strength.

(...) When those who really understand something about it talk about these ideals, they are talking about something very specific; something so specific that it relates to the course of events in the coming centuries in the same way that the idea of a master builder who is building a factory relates to that factory when it is built.

From a lecture in Bremen, April 9, 1906

Freemasonry is everything that is done with the help of wisdom, beauty and strength. This refers to the proper construction of the temple of the earth, not just the inner man. We build on the inside and on the outside. Above all, the mason endeavors to bring himself to the point where he is a worthy co-worker in the construction of man (and the earth). The meaning of life on earth is that we transform our planet, rework it. More and more, human labor is intervening in our earth.

What will the earth become? A structure that man will complete. And it is the duty of every human being to contribute to this structure. Three forces must be built into the temple, otherwise chaos will result. The columns on which this temple rests are wisdom, beauty and strength.

Wisdom, when he ennobles his spirit; beauty, when he ennobles his mind; strength, when he ennobles his will.

Therefore, these three columns are considered the foundation of all work.

From a teaching in Hanover, Christmas 1911

Wisdom, Beauty, Strength are actually present only in the spiritual world; down here, only their reflection is to be found. Whoever utters the words Wisdom, Beauty, Strength should be mindful that he is thereby uttering a creed. “I believe in an astral world,” he says when he utters the word ‘wisdom’; ‘I believe in a lower Devachan’ when he utters the word ‘beauty’; ‘I believe in an upper Devachan’ when he utters the word ‘strength’. The reflection of wisdom down here is truth, that of beauty down here is piety, and that of strength down here is virtue.

Instruction lesson in Hanover, Christmas 1911, notes in a different hand.

In all mystery centers, the disciple spoke these words as his creed: wisdom, beauty, strength.

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