The Circular Flow of Man's Life within the World Of Sense, Soul And Spirit

GA 68b — 16 January 1906, Stuttgart

38. The Ideals of Humanity and the Ideals of the Initiates

Those who have a certain inclination towards spiritual life, “who must choose their heroes for themselves, the path to Olympus,” will encounter many things over time that they have absorbed from art and science, which seemed to them to be ideals. Then there is the world of practical people, who associate the concept of ideal and idealism with dreaminess and unworldliness.

One of those who grasped the concept of the ideal most beautifully is Johann Gottlieb Fichte. He once said to a group of young people: “We others also know that ideals cannot be applied directly in real life, if not better than that. But those others who don't have this feeling should wait for the time being. Ideals cannot be applied like food and drink every day; but for the idealist, ideals are the great effective forces of human life, those forces that he draws down from the invisible realms to introduce into the visible world. The small, unimportant phenomena of external life can indeed be experienced without significant ideals, but the great advances of humanity have only been achieved by those who are able to rise from the realm of reality into the realm of ideals. Not those who think practically are the real progressives, but those whom the everyday person looks down on as idealists.

They say that idealists are unworldly people. But in truth, the future is always unworldly in the present. The idealist is, of course, quite different from the practitioner. The idealist's soul is tuned quite differently. He has quite different experiences of the soul. We have to develop a very specific way of feeling and we cannot do a child a greater service than to develop in him this state of mind, which does not constitute dreamy but practical ideality.

This is the devotional mood of the soul. One must not grasp certain ideals with the mind, but the one who develops a reverential, devotional mood in himself develops it to comprehend the ideals.

In our youth we had uncritical veneration, and we can do nothing better for ourselves than, for example, to make ourselves capable of venerating a person in such a way that when we are told about him and have not yet seen him, he appears to us as beautiful and worthy of veneration. Those who have had many such moods in their youth, who have learned to venerate, have truly developed something of such a mood of the soul that generates real power in life. The real is generated by the real. We gradually struggle to generate real strength by learning to venerate.

This is a real life teaching, and it aims to develop the devotional view of life. We can give young people nothing better than this power to worship, this devotion, this reverence. We owe an infinite debt to that which we are able to revere uncritically. This is an inner experience that one must have to appreciate its significance. Through this, one comes to what is called the impersonal.

Disinterested deployment of strength in the affairs that we have recognized as the right ones, without our having any personal interest in them, enables us to develop powerful ideals.

The great geniuses of the world have become great by making their own the affairs in which they had no personal interest. Furthermore, we achieve this devotional mood when we do what we have recognized as being right without looking for personal success. This does not contradict in terms of external effect; but we should decide in the most important matters of our external life in such a way that we are able to say: I almost certainly foresee that my first or second or third attempt will fail, but nevertheless I undertake it. – So not looking at the success. This is, of course, put radically, and in life many things will be different; but it is the attitude that matters.

Ideas continue to have an effect in life. This can be observed in Herder's “Ideas for a Philosophy of the History of Mankind”, the most beautiful primer of theosophy, whose ideas Goethe, Schiller, Novalis and Schlegel absorbed. Of this work, Goethe could say: This is the most beautiful way in which ideas continue to have an effect in life, although one so easily forgets their origin. And with the great ideals of the spiritual leaders of humanity, forms are also formed. The geniuses of humanity transform human beings in their most everyday activities. To rise to the ideals, we must absorb the spiritual creation within us; we must revere that which rises above the everyday. It is indiscreet to see the everyday in the lives of great geniuses, instead of seeing that which rises above the everyday.

Hegel says: You believe that some ideal is an abstraction? For me, an ideal is not an abstraction, but something very concrete. — Idealism is not only the knowledge of ideals, but it is a mood, a feeling that must come to life in us, that must become a life force. The ideals of humanity are therefore the deepest forces at work in humanity. The great geniuses of humanity, the poets, composers, painters, sculptors, all these guides of humanity are recorded in history, which some understand better and others less well. They stand at the top as the guides of humanity; but those from whom they draw their strength stand behind them. Those who are hardly more than a name to humanity – namely, the “great initiates” – stand overlooking and dominating the times.

The greatest of these, the founders of the great religions, have become known to humanity; but what they were like themselves, in their inner being, humanity does not know. This is to become popular again through the theosophical world view.

The one who imbued the whole of Egyptian culture with the great wisdom of Egyptianism, who spiritually dominated all of this, is actually the great Hermes, the Egyptian initiate!

The one to whom the culture of India goes back, Krishna, is actually quite unknown in terms of his soul life.

To see into the soul of Buddha is granted to only a few, and what took place in the soul of Zoroaster can be seen by only a very few; the same applies to Pythagoras, Plato; then the incarnation of the second Logos, Christ; and then the great initiate, the unknown from the highlands, whom history does not even know: Master Jesus. Behind the greatest we always find the very greatest. Just as people allow themselves to be inspired by their leaders, so the leaders allow themselves to be inspired by those who are even greater.

What then is an initiate? It is the one who knows something of the hidden forces in the world, of its deepest, most mysterious ones. It is usually a great secret that he has, and it is his mission to make this secret effective in the world.

The true initiates will not deny that they are initiates, but they will say that it is impossible to reveal the deepest laws of existence, the hidden forces, at first. An initiate may even tell his secret in words, but the world will not notice it. There are many people who are what is called ordinary in their outward occupation; they could be shoemakers like Jacob Boehme, but they are not recognizable as initiates by those around them. What he knows is a spiritual power, or a sum of powers, which in the present time must be put into humanity by some means, and these powers work through the centuries, even if they do not work immediately.

He is an initiate who knows what is to happen in the future, and he guides the course of human development in a great, definite direction.

Just as the chemist combines and controls certain substances, so the initiate controls spiritual forces.

Those who want to achieve higher development must overcome the illusion of personal self. While we may have the appearance of being personal, we are only a link in the organism. The hand that withers when it is sawn off is also only a link in the organism, nothing in itself. Just as man is ruled by the soul, so those who recognize the laws of nature [of] the earth speak of the earth spirit. That is the soul of the earth, and we all together with it are the body of the earth soul. Not only must we intellectually recognize that selfhood is illusion; our innermost feelings must also recognize that we are parts of a whole.

“My soul would be nothing without the others,” says Angelus Silesius. When this illusion fades and a person can let go of their personality and surrender in this way, they are ready to receive a certain teaching, which is a deeply inner experience of their soul. Initially, it is the greatest experience that a person can have here on our earthly journey.

Although we are part of a whole, we are still a very special being; we are a building block in the universe, but it would have to collapse if we were taken out.

The initiate learns to recognize which letter he is in the universe, in the book of the world; he gets to know his deepest, innermost being, which exists only once. He must recognize his letter, but each person has a different letter that he must recognize himself. All learning from the initiates consists in our being led, in our being shown the way, but what we are, that we must tell ourselves. No one can understand this, no one else understands this deep secret; only each person understands it for himself. To have come so far that we have the “inner word” — the letter — that enables us to develop spiritual powers.

And what is the value of all this? Even if it must be admitted that people quarrel over many, many things and are at war over them, there is still a certain area of truth where only the inner experience is decisive. People quarrel because of their passions, their desires, cravings and instincts – but wherever pure thought, dispassionate thought, prevails, there is no quarrel. But one must see the thought in the pure etheric height.

And only very few can do that! This unified realm, the purified thought floating in etheric height, harmonizes people.

That is Manas! The ideals of men are thoughts, but still interspersed with desires, longings and passions. People can still argue about their ideals because the passions, ideas and prejudices of one person are the same as the passions, ideas and prejudices of another.

But let us ascend to the ideals of the initiated! Through the innermost education of the human being, he has purified his passions, desires and wishes, just as the thinking person has also purified his thoughts. Christ therefore says: Sanctify your thoughts! If a number of people could be together who have purified their passions, desires and wishes in this way, they would be in harmony with each other, as are the thoughts of these people. When a person has undergone this purification, they find themselves in something similar that encompasses everyone, they are in harmony. That which develops in this way is the Budhi, which lies in all people in a germinal form.

Only manasic natures are united in their thoughts. But those who have developed Budhi are united in their feelings.

Thus we see at the bottom of human nature something spiritual, divine. The ideals of the initiates have become enthusiasm; that is: “in God”!

For when they have developed the Budhi, they can receive that which is their deepest self, their note, their word; then man can let his living ideals flow into humanity. A thought becomes powerful when it is inspired by desires. If it is imbued with divine power, then it can be placed in the germ of human development, then it can carry development through the centuries.

Thus the great initiates have brought the soul forces out of the hidden and invisible and placed them in humanity, creating in the invisible the phenomena that then unfold in history as events.

This is what Schiller calls “the gestalt”. Man then becomes aware of the essential, the hidden, the supersensible.

Schiller's beautiful words apply to him:

Only the body is subject to those powers
That weave the dark fate;
But free from every temporal power,
The companion of blessed natures
Walks above in the corridors of light
Divinely among gods the figure.

The great initiates do not contradict themselves; they express themselves differently because they speak for different ages of the human race, just as the same truth would be presented to an eight-year-old boy and a twenty-year-old youth in the same way.

The initiates know that they are initiates. Their goal is to plant the appropriate forces in humanity so that it continues to develop upwards.

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