Güney27 wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 11:04 pm Yes, Ashvin, I understand and agree with you. It is certainly true that Steiner never wanted his impulse to become a rigid intellectual system. But this is ultimately what happened, with the exception of a few souls. I don’t think Valentin Tomberg ever doubted that it was unimportant to engage with the ideas of the Anthroposophical Society. It seems to me that for him, it was more about the fact that this was only meant for certain souls who feel a karmic attraction to it.
It appears to me that VT tried to bring occult knowledge into the public through the Catholic Church, rather than through the formation of a new organization. After all, Christ himself founded the Church—why shouldn’t we be able to receive his impulse through it? The Church as such can and has evolved over time. For example, Valentin Tomberg writes that during the time of the Reformation, which, as is well known, placed the will and reason in the foreground, there was a danger of robbing humanity of its heart, leaving humans as mere head and limbs. At that time, a saint received the revelation of the Sacred Heart devotion, which was meant to counteract these impulses.
The difference between VT and RS is not, in the end, that one speaks about reincarnation, karma, etc., while the other denies these and portrays them as demonically inspired, as fundamentalists might. Rather, VT’s focus (at least I think so, though I’m not sure if these thoughts are correct) seems to lie in creating a synthesis between the revealed and the occult, bringing the occult principles into the light of the revealed tradition. VT seems to believe that it can be dangerous to share certain occult knowledge with the public today, whereas for Steiner, this was a primary task.
Perhaps the two simply differ in their missions. Perhaps Steiner wanted to reach people who felt drawn to the occult, while VT wanted to bring the occult into the religious world in a moderated form. OMA and BD also don’t delve as deeply into occult mysteries as Steiner does but instead provide practical exercises and methods for soul purification, etc.
I think that during his conversion, VT recognized the rich and salutary tradition and theology, as well as its spiritual path with Christ as the ideal, as a bearer of the Christ impulse. This is not meant to diminish Steiner—as you said, it’s not about placing one above the other. What do you think VT must have recognized, or perhaps misunderstood, to radically break with the Anthroposophical Society and change his course? Do you think he misunderstood Steiner’s philosophical impulse, which you emphasize, and thus missed something essential?
Guney,
Rodriel mentioned before that these questions should often be addressed at a level deeper than the content we explore at the discursive intellectual level, and I think that's a helpful approach. One way to help orient to this deeper level is to ask what has been or is being done, rather than just what has been said. That is especially helpful to ask in our real-time thinking process, but it can also be asked of others.
A common theme on this forum has been that the World content - whether it is framed in philosophical, religious, scientific, esoteric, etc. terms, whether it is alchemy, astrology, tarot, MoT, Steiner's letures, etc. - will inevitably become more of a hindrance to the inner development of the modern intellectual (or consciousness) soul if it is not accompanied by the thinking perpsective finding its proper stance within the experiential flow. It inevitably leads in the direction of petrification (excessive Ahrimanic influence) within the imaginative life, as mental puzzles are constructed and lead the soul into further and further levels of indirection from the intuitive foundations. Thus, the real-time thinking perspective should first begin to understand how it is placed within the World process and its condensed content, beginning with our imaginative content, which necessarily overlaps with the content of modern cultural institutions (for ex., the dogmas of the Church, modern scientific theories, etc.).
Once we reorient our perspective within the experiential flow, bringing thinking out of the blind spot, we would be very unwise to imagine we can go it alone, floating into 'pure spiritual worlds', and ignoring the vast reservoirs of Wisdom embedded in the imploded natural and cultural patterns of the World state. In fact, we realize it is necessary to positively immerse ourselves in such patterns to stimulate living and evolving intuitions of supersensible realities. I think VT could develop such a profound appreciation for the RCC and its role in the evolutionary process precisely because he first went through the phenomenological foundations of the cognitive path, exactly as Steiner intended souls to do. It is through that path that he was able to see what was missing from the post-Steiner Anthroposophical society when it engaged with other traditions and systems, and launch such a forceful critique.
It then seems clear that VT wanted to emphasize these treasure troves of Wisdom, particularly as a counterbalance to the post-Steiner Anthroposophical movement that tended to be hypercritical of all other living traditions, philosophies, and so on, often characterizing and ostracizing them as Ahrimanic or Luciferic. Perhaps many Anthroposophists were drawing on Steiner's critical remarks of various personalities, for example, Kant, Eliphas Levi, Bergson, Jung (a little bit), and so on (many of whom VT puts in a more positive light in MoT). I think such Anthroposophers failed to realize Steiner was only using them as reference points for certain wider soul tendencies in the evolutionary process that he was trying to illustrate, not attempting to reject their work completely as 'evil' or inferior. VT wanted to draw out the valid intuitions and insights of these personalities as a counterbalance to such a dogmatic stance, it seems.
A similar thing may apply to the RCC, but that also goes beyond any particular philosophical, scientific, religious, etc. personality. It speaks to a deeper scale of imploded patterns, in a sense. Yet I see no reason why the same foundational principle can't apply here. By reorienting our thinking perspective as discussed, we can retrace the petrified aspects of the RCC to the light-filled Wisdom (Sophia) from which it was born and maintained itself as a living body of Christ for many centuries. Again, I think that is what VT sought to do from within the Church and could only do so because of his Anthroposophical cognitive foundations. From what I can gather, especially from my own experience, it is because of the latter that he was in a position to orient properly toward the traditions and dogmas of the Church and sense their underlying Inspiration, and the path of their potential transformation from the inside-out. If we pay more attention to what VT did, in that sense, then I think we get a better feeling for what he intended with his life path and the content of his later works.
So far from misunderstanding Steiner's philosophical-epistemic impulse, I think VT's entire life path is a testimony to that impulse and its fruits. Now, there is still the question of whether and how the RCC fits in the broader evolutionary impulse, i.e., whether it can be a 'host' for the etheric incarnation of Christ that is increasingly bringing intimations of life beyond the threshold (pre-born and post-death) into the intellectual scale of consciousness. I don't think we can say that reincarnation will eventually end, so therefore souls don't necessarily need to become familiar with the elastic threads lawfully connecting various aspects of their incarnate lives. As Federica pointed out, we are at an evolutionary stage where that is exactly what is needed for most modern souls who have contracted into the intellectual ego. Or as Cleric stated on the other thread, "If we understand that, we should really shudder – what we thought was ‘neutral’ or quite optional knowledge, turns out to concern trees that we are already bumping into." Without at least some orientation to those lawful threads, the frames of existence will start to feel more and more confusing, oppressive, threatening, and so on. But VT is also correct that it needs to be grasped from out of intimate cognitive insight, not as mere theoretical occultism (although it will inevitably begin that way). One need only look at the Facebook Anthroposophy page to see many examples of the latter, which can only lead to more harm and confusion than light and healing.