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The Ego & His Own
Have you ever seen a spirit? "No,
not I, but my grandmother." Now, you see, it's just so with
me too; I myself haven't seen any, but my grandmother had them
running between her feet all sorts of ways, and out of confidence
in our grandmothers' honesty we believe in the existence of spirits.
But had we no grandfathers then,
and did they not shrug their shoulders every time our grandmothers
told about their ghosts? Yes, those were unbelieving men who have
harmed our good religion much, those rationalists! We shall feel
that! What else lies at the bottom of this warm faith in ghosts,
if not the faith in "the existence of spiritual beings in
general," and is not this latter itself disastrously unsettled
if
saucy men of the understanding may disturb the former? The Romanticists
were quite conscious what a blow the very belief in God suffered
by the laying aside of the belief in spirits or ghosts, and they
tried to help us out of the baleful consequences not only by their
reawakened fairy world, but at last, and especially, by the "intrusion
of a higher world," by their somnambulists of Prevorst, etc.
The good believers and fathers of the church did not suspect that
with the belief in ghosts the foundation of religion was withdrawn,
and that since then it had been floating in the air. He who no
longer believes in any ghost needs only to travel on consistently
in his unbelief to see that there is no separate being at all
concealed behind things, no ghost or -- what is naively reckoned
as synonymous even in our use of words -- no "spirit."
"Spirits exist!" Look
about in the world, and say for yourself whether a spirit does
not gaze upon you out of everything. Out of the lovely little
flower there speaks to you the spirit of the Creator, who has
shaped it so wonderfully; the stars proclaim the spirit that established
their order; from the mountain-tops a spirit of sublimity breathes
down; out of the waters a spirit of yearning murmurs up; and --
out of men millions of spirits speak. The mountains may sink,
the flowers fade, the world of stars fall in ruins, the men die
-- what matters the wreck of these visible bodies? The spirit,
the "invisible spirit," abides eternally!
Yes, the whole world is haunted!
Only is haunted? Nay, it itself "walks," it is uncanny
through and through, it is the wandering seeming-
body of a spirit, it is a spook. What else should a ghost be,
then, than an apparent body, but real spirit? Well, the world
is "empty," is "naught," is only glamorous
"semblance"; its truth is the spirit alone; it is the
seeming-body of a spirit.
Look out near or far, a ghostly
world surrounds you everywhere; you are always having "apparitions"
or visions. Everything that appears to you is only the phantasm
of an indwelling spirit, is a ghostly "apparition";
the world is to you only a "world of appearances," behind
which the spirit walks. You "see spirits."
Are you perchance thinking of comparing
yourself with the ancients, who saw gods everywhere? Gods, my
dear modern, are not spirits; gods do not degrade the world to
a semblance, and do not spiritualize it.
But to you the whole world is spiritualized,
and has become an enigmatical ghost; therefore do not wonder if
you likewise find in yourself nothing but a spook. Is not your
body haunted by your spirit, and is not the latter alone the true
and real, the former only the "transitory, naught" or
a "semblance"? Are we not all ghosts, uncanny beings
that wait for "deliverance" -- to wit, "spirits"?
Since the spirit appeared in the
world, since "the Word became flesh," since then the
world has been spiritualized, enchanted, a spook.
You have spirit, for you have thoughts.
What are your thoughts? "Spiritual entities." Not things,
then? "No, but the spirit of things, the main point in all
things, the inmost in them, their -- idea." Consequently
what you think is not only your thought?
"On the contrary, it is that in the world which is most real,
that which is properly to be called true; it is the truth itself;
if I only think truly, I think the truth. I may, to be sure, err
with regard to the truth, and fail to recognize it; but,
if I recognize truly, the object of my cognition is the
truth." So, I suppose, you strive at all times to recognize
the truth? "To me the truth is sacred. It may well happen
that I find a truth incomplete and replace it with a better, but
the truth I cannot abrogate. I believe in the
truth, therefore I search in it; nothing transcends it, it is
eternal."
Sacred, eternal is the truth; it
is the Sacred, the Eternal. But you, who let yourself be filled
and led by this sacred thing, are yourself hallowed. Further,
the sacred is not for your senses -- and you never as a sensual
man discover its trace -- but for your faith, or, more definitely
still, for your spirit; for it itself, you know, is a
spiritual thing, a spirit -- is spirit for the spirit.
The sacred is by no means so easily
to be set aside as many at present affirm, who no longer take
this "unsuitable" word into their mouths. If even in
a single respect I am still upbraided as an "egoist,"
there is left the thought of something else which I should serve
more than myself, and which must be to me more important than
everything; in short, somewhat in which I should have to seek
my true welfare,1 something -- "sacred."2 However human
this sacred thing may look, though it be the Human itself, that
does not take away its sacredness, but at most changes it from
an unearthly to an earthly sacred thing, from a divine one to
a human.
Sacred things exist only for the
egoist who does not acknowledge himself, the involuntary egoist,
for him who is always looking after his own and yet does not count
himself as the highest being, who serves only himself and at the
same time always thinks he is serving a higher being, who knows
nothing higher than himself and yet is infatuated about something
higher; in short, for the egoist who would like not to be an egoist,
and abases himself (i.e. combats his egoism), but at
the same time abases himself only for the sake of "being
exalted," and therefore of gratifying his egoism. Because
he would like to cease to be an egoist, he looks about in heaven
and earth for higher beings to serve and sacrifice himself to;
but, however much he shakes and disciplines himself, in the end
he does all for his own sake, and the disreputable egoism will
not come off him. On this account I call him the involuntary egoist.
His toil and care to get away from
himself is nothing but the misunderstood impulse to self-dissolution.
If you are bound to your past hour, if you must babble today because
you babbled yesterday,3 if you cannot transform yourself each
instant, you feel yourself
fettered in slavery and benumbed. Therefore over each minute of
your existence a fresh minute of the future beckons to you, and,
developing yourself, you get away "from yourself," i.
e., from the self that was at that moment. As you are at
each instant, you are your own creature, and in this very "creature"
you do not wish to lose yourself, the creator. You are yourself
a higher being than you are, and surpass yourself. But that you
are the one who is higher than you, i. e., that you are
not only creature, but likewise your creator -- just this, as
an involuntary egoist, you fail to recognize; and therefore the
"higher essence" is to you -- an alien4 essence. Every
higher essence, e. g. truth, mankind, etc., is an essence
over us.
Alienness is a criterion of the
"sacred." In everything sacred there lies something
"uncanny," i.e. strange,5 e. g. we
are not quite familiar and at home in. What is sacred to me is
not my own; and if, e. g.,, the property of
others was not sacred to me, I should look on it as mine,
which I should take to myself when occasion offered. Or, on the
other side, if I regard the face of the Chinese emperor as sacred,
it remains strange to my eye, which I close at its appearance.
Why is an incontrovertible mathematical
truth, which might even be called eternal according to the common
understanding of words, not -- sacred? Because it is not revealed,
or not the revelation of, a higher being. If by revealed we understand
only the
so-called religious truths, we go far astray, and entirely fail
to recognize the breadth of the concept "higher being."
Atheists keep up their scoffing at the higher being, which was
also honored under the name of the "highest" or Être
suprême, and trample in the dust one "proof of
his existence" after another, without noticing that they
themselves, out of need for a higher being, only annihilate the
old to make room for a new. Is "Man" perchance not a
higher essence than an individual man, and must not the truths,
rights, and ideas which result from the concept of him be honored
and --counted sacred, as revelations of this very concept? For,
even though we should abrogate again many a truth that seemed
to be made manifest by this concept, yet this would only evince
a misunderstanding on our part, without in the least degree harming
the sacred concept itself or taking their sacredness from those
truths that must "rightly" be looked upon as its revelations.
Man reaches beyond every individual man, and yet -- though
he be "his essence" -- is not in fact his essence
(which rather would be as single6 as he the individual himself),
but a general and "higher," yes, for atheists "the
highest essence."7 And, as the divine revelations were not
written down by God with his own hand, but made public through
"the Lord's instruments," so also the new highest essence
does not write out its revelations itself, but lets them come
to our knowledge through "true men." Only the new essence
betrays, in fact, a more spiritual style of conception than the
old God,
because the latter was still represented in a sort of embodiedness
or form, while the undimmed spirituality of the new is retained,
and no special material body is fancied for it. And withal it
does not lack corporeity, which even takes on a yet more seductive
appearance because it looks more natural and mundane and consists
in nothing less than in every bodily man -- yes, or outright in
"humanity" or "all men." Thereby the spectralness
of the spirit in a seeming body has once again become really solid
and popular.
Sacred, then, is the highest essence
and everything in which this highest essence reveals or will reveal
itself; but hallowed are they who recognize this highest essence
together with its own, i.e. together with its revelations.
The sacred hallows in turn its reverer, who by his worship becomes
himself a saint, as Likewise what he does is saintly, a saintly
walk, saintly thoughts and actions, imaginations and aspirations.
It is easily understood that the
conflict over what is revered as the highest essence can be significant
only so long as even the most embittered opponents concede to
each other the main point -- that there is a highest essence to
which worship or service is due. If one should smile compassionately
at the whole struggle over a highest essence, as a Christian might
at the war of words between a Shiite and a Sunnite or between
a Brahman and a Buddhist, then the hypothesis of a highest essence
would be null in his eyes, and the conflict on this basis an idle
play. Whether then the one God or the three in one. whether the
Lutheran God or the Être suprême or not God
at all, but "Man," may
represent the highest essence, that makes no difference at all
for him who denies the highest essence itself, for in his eyes
those servants of a highest essence are one and all-pious people,
the most raging atheist not less than the most faith-filled Christian.
In the foremost place of the sacred,8
then, stands the highest essence and the faith in this essence,
our "holy9 faith."
With ghosts we arrive in the spirit-realm,
in the realm of essences.
What haunts the universe, and has
its occult, "incomprehensible" being there, is precisely
the mysterious spook that we call highest essence. And to get
to the bottom of this spook, to comprehend it, to discover
reality in it (to prove "the existence of God")
-- this task men set to themselves for thousands of years; with
the horrible impossibility, the endless Danaid-labor, of transforming
the spook into a non-spook, the unreal into something real, the
spirit into an entire and corporeal person --
with this they tormented themselves to death. Behind the existing
world they sought the "thing in itself," the essence;
behind the thing they sought the un-thing.
When one looks to the bottom
of anything, i.e. searches out its essence,
one often discovers something quite other than what it seems
to be; honeyed speech and a lying heart, pompous words and beggarly
thoughts, etc. By bringing the essence into prominence one degrades the hitherto misapprehended appearance to a
bare semblance, a deception. The essence of the world,
so attractive and splendid, is for him who looks to the bottom
of it -- emptiness; emptiness is = world's essence (world's doings).
Now, he who is religious does not occupy himself with the deceitful
semblance, with the empty appearances, but looks upon the essence,
and in the essence has -- the truth.
The essences which are deduced from
some appearances are the evil essences, and conversely from others
the good. The essence of human feeling, e. g., is love;
the essence of human will is the good; that of one's thinking,
the true, etc.
What at first passed for existence,
e. g. the world and its like, appears now as bare semblance,
and the truly existent is much rather the essence, whose
realm is filled with gods, spirits, demons, with good or bad essences.
Only this inverted world, the world of essences, truly exists
now. The human heart may be loveless, but its essence exists,
God, "who is love"; human thought may wander in error,
but its essence, truth, exists; "God is truth," and
the like.
To know and acknowledge essences
alone and nothing but essences, that is religion; its realm is
a realm of essences, spooks, and ghosts.
The longing to make the spook comprehensible,
or to realize non-sense, has brought about a corporeal
ghost, a ghost or spirit with a real body, an embodied ghost.
How the strongest and most talented Christians have tortured themselves
to get a conception of this ghostly apparition! But there always
remained
the contradiction of two natures, the divine and human, i.
e., the ghostly and sensual; there remained the most wondrous
spook, a thing that was not a thing. Never yet was a ghost more
soul torturing, and no shaman, who pricks himself to raving fury
and nerve-lacerating cramps to conjure a ghost, can endure such
soul-torment as Christians suffered from that most incomprehensible
ghost.
But through Christ the truth of
the matter had at the same time come to light, that the veritable
spirit or ghost is -- man. The corporeal or embodied
spirit is just man; he himself is the ghostly being and at the
same time the being's appearance and existence. Henceforth man
no longer, in typical cases, shudders at ghosts outside
him, but at himself; he is terrified at himself. In the depth
of his breast dwells the spirit of sin; even the faintest
thought (and this is itself a spirit, you know) may be a devil,
etc. -- The ghost has put on a body, God has become man, but now
man is himself the gruesome spook which he seeks to get back of,
to exorcise, to fathom, to bring to reality and to speech; man
is -- spirit. What matter if the body wither, if only
the spirit is saved? Everything rests on the spirit, and the spirit's
or "soul's" welfare becomes the exclusive goal. Man
has become to himself a ghost, an uncanny spook, to which there
is even assigned a distinct seat in the body (dispute over the
seat of the soul, whether in the head, etc.).
You are not to me, and I am not
to you, a higher essence. Nevertheless a higher essence may be
hidden in each of us, and call forth a mutual reverence. To take
at once the most general, Man lives in you and
me. If I did not see Man in you, what occasion should I have to
respect you? To be sure, you are not Man and his true and adequate
form, but only a mortal veil of his, from which he can withdraw
without himself ceasing; but yet for the present this general
and higher essence is housed in you, and you present before me
(because an imperishable spirit has in you assumed a perishable
body, so that really your form is only an "assumed"
one) a spirit that appears, appears in you, without being bound
to your body and to this particular mode of appearance -- therefore
a spook. Hence I do not regard you as a higher essence but only
respect that higher essence which '"walks" in you; I
"respect Man in you." The ancients did not observe anything
of this sort in their slaves, and the higher essence "Man"
found as yet little response. To make up for this, they saw in
each other ghosts of another sort. The People is a higher essence
than an individual, and, like Man or the Spirit of Man, a spirit
haunting the individual -- the Spirit of the People. For this
reason they revered this spirit, and only so far as he served
this or else a spirit related to it (e. g. the Spirit
of the Family) could the individual appear significant; only for
the sake of the higher essence, the People, was consideration
allowed to the "member of the people." As you are hallowed
to us by "Man" who haunts you, so at every time men
have been hallowed by some higher essence or other, like People,
Family, and such. Only for the sake of a higher essence has any
one been honored from of old, only as a ghost has he been regarded
in the light of a hallowed, i.e., protected and
recognized person. If I cherish you because I hold you dear, because
in you my heart finds nourishment, my need satisfaction, then
it is not done for the sake of a higher essence, whose hallowed
body you are, not on account of my beholding in you a ghost, i.e.
an appearing spirit, but from egoistic pleasure; you yourself
with your essence are valuable to me, for your essence
is not a higher one, is not higher and more general than you,
is unique10 like you yourself, because it is you.
But it is not only man that "haunts";
so does everything. The higher essence, the spirit, that walks
in everything, is at the same time bound to nothing, and only
-- "appears" in it. Ghosts in every corner!
Here would be the place to pass
the haunting spirits in review, if they were not to come before
us again further on in order to vanish before egoism. Hence let
only a few of them be particularized by way of example, in order
to bring us at once to our attitude toward them.
Sacred above all, e. g.,
is the "holy Spirit," sacred the truth, sacred are right,
law, a good cause, majesty, marriage, the common good, order,
the fatherland, etc.
Man, your head is haunted; you have
wheels in your head! You imagine great things, and depict to yourself
a whole world of gods that has an existence for you, a spirit-realm
to which you suppose yourself
to be called, an ideal that beckons to you. You have a fixed idea!
Do not think that I am jesting or
speaking figuratively when I regard those persons who cling to
the Higher, and (because the vast majority belongs under this
head) almost the whole world of men, as veritable fools, fools
in a madhouse. What is it, then, that is called a "fixed
idea"? An idea that has subjected the man to itself. When
you recognize, with regard to such a fixed idea, that it is a
folly, you shut its slave up in an asylum. And is the truth of
the faith, say, which we are not to doubt; the majesty of (e.
g.) the people, which we are not to strike at (he who does
is guilty of -- lese-majesty); virtue, against which the censor
is not to let a word pass, that morality may be kept pure; --
are these not "fixed ideas"? Is not all the stupid chatter
of (e. g.) most of our newspapers the babble of fools
who suffer from the fixed idea of morality, legality, Christianity,
etc., and only seem to go about free because the madhouse in which
they walk takes in so broad a space? Touch the fixed idea of such
a fool, and you will at once have to guard your back against the
lunatic's stealthy malice. For these great lunatics are like the
little so-called lunatics in this point too -- that they assail
by stealth him who touches their fixed idea. They first steal
his weapon, steal free speech from him, and then they fall upon
him with their nails. Every day now lays bare the cowardice and
vindictiveness of these maniacs, and the stupid populace hurrahs
for their crazy measures. One must read the journals of this period,
and must hear the Philistines talk, to get the horrible conviction
that one is shut up in a house with fools. "Thou shalt not
call thy brother a fool; if thou dost -- etc." But I do not
fear the curse, and I say, my brothers are arch-fools. Whether
a poor fool of the insane asylum is possessed by the fancy that
he is God the Father, Emperor of Japan, the Holy Spirit, etc.,
or whether a citizen in comfortable circumstances conceives that
it is his mission to be a good Christian, a faithful Protestant,
a loyal citizen, a virtuous man -- both these are one and the
same "fixed idea." He who has never tried and dared
not to be a good Christian, a faithful Protestant, a virtuous
man, etc., is possessed and prepossessed11 by faith, virtuousness,
etc. Just as the schoolmen philosophized only inside
the belief of the church; as Pope Benedict XIV wrote fat books
inside the papist superstition, without ever throwing
a doubt upon this belief; as authors fill whole folios on the
State without calling in question the fixed idea of the State
itself; as our newspapers are crammed with politics because they
are conjured into the fancy that man was created to be a zoon
politicon -- so also subjects vegetate in subjection, virtuous
people in virtue, liberals in humanity, without ever putting to
these fixed ideas of theirs the searching knife of criticism.
Undislodgeable, like a madman's delusion, those thoughts stand
on a firm footing, and he who doubts them -- lays hands on the
sacred! Yes, the "fixed idea," that is the
truly sacred!
Is it perchance only people possessed
by the devil
that meet us, or do we as often come upon people possessed
in the contrary way -- possessed by "the good," by virtue,
morality, the law, or some "principle" or other? Possessions
of the devil are not the only ones. God works on us, and the devil
does; the former "workings of grace," the latter "workings
of the devil." Possessed12 people are set13 in their opinions.
If the word "possession"
displeases you, then call it prepossession; yes, since the spirit
possesses you, and all "inspirations" come from it,
call it -- inspiration and enthusiasm. I add that complete enthusiasm
-- for we cannot stop with the sluggish, half- way kind -- is
called fanaticism.
It is precisely among cultured people
that fanaticism is at home; for man is cultured so far
as he takes an interest in spiritual things, and interest in spiritual
things, when it is alive, is and must be fanaticism;
it is a fanatical interest in the sacred (fanum). Observe
our liberals, look into the Sächsischen Vaterlandsblätter,
hear what Schlosser says:14 "Holbach's company constituted
a regular plot against the traditional doctrine and the existing
system, and its members were as fanatical on behalf of their unbelief
as monks and priests, Jesuits and Pietists, Methodists, missionary
and Bible societies, commonly are for mechanical worship and orthodoxy."
Take notice how a "moral man"
behaves, who today often thinks he is through with God and throws
off Christianity as a bygone thing. If you ask him
whether he has ever doubted that the copulation of brother and
sister is incest, that monogamy is the truth of marriage, that
filial piety is a sacred duty, then a moral shudder will come
over him at the conception of one's being allowed to touch his
sister as wife also, etc. And whence this shudder? Because he
believes in those moral commandments. This moral faith
is deeply rooted in his breast. Much as he rages against the pious
Christians, he himself has nevertheless as thoroughly remained
a Christian -- to wit, a moral Christian. In the form
of morality Christianity holds him a prisoner, and a prisoner
under faith. Monogamy is to be something sacred, and
he who may live in bigamy is punished as a criminal;
he who commits incest suffers as a criminal. Those who
are always crying that religion is not to be regarded in the State,
and the Jew is to be a citizen equally with the Christian, show
themselves in accord with this. Is not this of incest and monogamy
a dogma of faith? Touch it, and you will learn by experience
how this moral man is a hero of faith too, not less than
Krummacher, not less than Philip II. These fight for the faith
of the Church, he for the faith of the State, or the moral laws
of the State; for articles of faith, both condemn him who acts
otherwise than their faith will allow. The brand of "crime"
is stamped upon him, and he may languish in reformatories, in
jails. Moral faith is as fanatical as religious faith! They call
that "liberty of faith" then, when brother and sister,
on account of a relation that they should have settled with their
"conscience," are thrown into prison. "But they
set a pernicious example." Yes, indeed: others might have taken the notion that
the State had no business to meddle with their relation, and thereupon
"purity of morals" would go to ruin. So then the religious
heroes of faith are zealous for the "sacred God," the
moral ones for the "sacred good."
Those who are zealous for something
sacred often look very little like each other. How the strictly
orthodox or old-style believers differ from the fighters for "truth,
light, and justice," from the Philalethes, the Friends of
Light, the Rationalists, and others. And yet, how utterly unessential
is this difference! If one buffets single traditional truths (i.e.
miracles, unlimited power of princes), then the Rationalists buffet
them too, and only the old-style believers wail. But, if one buffets
truth itself, he immediately has both, as believers,
for opponents. So with moralities; the strict believers are relentless,
the clearer heads are more tolerant. But he who attacks morality
itself gets both to deal with. "Truth, morality, justice,
light, etc.," are to be and remain "sacred." What
any one finds to censure in Christianity is simply supposed to
be "unchristian" according to the view of these rationalists,
but Christianity must remain a "fixture," to buffet
it is outrageous, "an outrage." To be sure, the heretic
against pure faith no longer exposes himself to the earlier fury
of persecution, but so much the more does it now fall upon the
heretic against pure morals.
Piety has for a century received
so many blows, and had to hear its superhuman essence reviled
as an "inhuman" one so often, that one cannot feel tempted to draw
the sword against it again. And yet it has almost always been
only moral opponents that have appeared in the arena, to assail
the supreme essence in favor of -- another supreme essence. So
Proudhon, unabashed, says:15 "Man is destined to live without
religion, but the moral law is eternal and absolute. Who would
dare today to attack morality?" Moral people skimmed off
the best fat from religion, ate it themselves, and are now having
a tough job to get rid of the resulting scrofula. If, therefore,
we point out that religion has not by any means been hurt in its
inmost part so long as people reproach it only with its superhuman
essence, and that it takes its final appeal to the "spirit"
alone (for God is spirit), then we have sufficiently indicated
its final accord with morality, and can leave its stubborn conflict
with the latter lying behind us. It is a question of a supreme
essence with both, and whether this is a superhuman or a human
one can make (since it is in any case an essence over me, a super-mine
one, so to speak) but little difference to me. In the end the
relation to the human essence, or to "Man," as soon
as ever it has shed the snake-skin of the old religion, will yet
wear a religious snake-skin again.
So Feuerbach instructs us that,
"if one only inverts speculative philosophy, i.e.
always makes the predicate the subject, and so makes the subject
the object and principle, one has the undraped truth, pure and
clean."16 Herewith, to be sure, we lose the narrow
religious standpoint, lost the God, who from this standpoint
is subject; but we take in exchange for it the other side of the
religious standpoint, the moral standpoint. Thus we no
longer say "God is love," but "Love is divine."
If we further put in place of the predicate "divine"
the equivalent "sacred," then, as far as concerns the
sense, all the old comes back-again. According to this, love is
to be the good in man, his divineness, that which does
him honor, his true humanity (it "makes him Man
for the first time," makes for the first time a man out of
him). So then it would be more accurately worded thus: Love is
what is human in man, and what is inhuman is the loveless
egoist. But precisely all that which Christianity and with it
speculative philosophy (i.e., theology) offers as the
good, the absolute, is to self-ownership simply not the good (or,
what means the same, it is only the good). Consequently,
by the transformation of the predicate into the subject, the Christian
essence (and it is the predicate that contains the essence,
you know) would only be fixed yet more oppressively. God and the
divine would entwine themselves all the more inextricably with
me. To expel God from his heaven and to rob him of his "transcendence"
cannot yet support a claim of complete victory, if therein he
is only chased into the human breast and gifted with indelible
immanence. Now they say, "The divine is the truly
human!"
The same people who oppose Christianity
as the basis of the State, i.e. oppose the so-called
Christian State, do not tire of repeating that morality is "the
fundamental pillar of social life and of the State."
As if the dominion of morality were not a complete dominion of
the sacred, a "hierarchy."
So we may here mention by the way
that rationalist movement which, after theologians had long insisted
that only faith was capable of grasping religious truths, that
only to believers did God reveal himself, and that therefore only
the heart, the feelings, the believing fancy was religious, broke
out with the assertion that the "natural understanding,"
human reason, was also capable of discerning God. What does that
mean but that the reason laid claim to be the same visionary as
the fancy?17 In this sense Reimarus wrote his Most Notable
Truths of Natural Religion. It had to come to this -- that
the whole man with all his faculties was found to be
religious; heart and affections, understanding and reason,
feeling, knowledge, and will -- in short, everything in man --
appeared religious. Hegel has shown that even philosophy is religious.
And what is not called religion today? The "religion of love,"
the "religion of freedom," "political religion"
-- in short, every enthusiasm. So it is, too, in fact.
To this day we use the Romance word
"religion," which expresses the concept of a condition
of being bound. To be sure, we remain bound,
so far as religion takes possession of our inward parts; but is
the mind also bound? On the contrary, that is free, is sole lord,
is not our mind, but absolute. Therefore the correct affirmative
translation of the word religion would be "freedom of
mind"! In whomsoever the
mind is free, he is religious in just the same way as he in whom
the senses have free course is called a sensual man. The mind
binds the former, the desires the latter. Religion, therefore,
is boundness or religion with reference to me -- I am
bound; it is freedom with reference to the mind -- the mind is
free, or has freedom of mind. Many know from experience how hard
it is on us when the desires run away with us, free and
unbridled; but that the free mind, splendid intellectuality, enthusiasm
for intellectual interests, or however this jewel may in the most
various phrase be named, brings us into yet more grievous
straits than even the wildest impropriety, people will not perceive;
nor can they perceive it without being consciously egoists.
Reimarus, and all who have shown
that our reason, our heart, etc., also lead to God, have therewithal
shown that we are possessed through and through. To be sure, they
vexed the theologians, from whom they took away the prerogative
of religious exaltation; but for religion, for freedom of mind,
they thereby conquered yet more ground. For, when the mind is
no longer limited to feeling or faith, but also, as understanding,
reason, and thought in general, belongs to itself the mind --
when therefore, it may take part in the spiritual18 and heavenly
truths in the form of understanding, as well as in its other forms
-- then the whole mind is occupied only with spiritual things,
i. e., with itself, and is therefore free. Now we are
so through-and-through religious that "jurors," i.e.
"sworn men," condemn us to death, and every
policeman, as a good Christian, takes us to the lock-up by virtue
of an "oath of office."
Morality could not come into opposition
with piety till after the time when in general the boisterous
hate of everything that looked like an "order" (decrees,
commandments, etc.) spoke out in revolt, and the personal "absolute
lord" was scoffed at and persecuted; consequently it could
arrive at independence only through liberalism, whose first form
acquired significance in the world's history as "citizenship,"
and weakened the specifically religious powers (see "Liberalism"
below). For, when morality not merely goes alongside of piety,
but stands on feet of its own, then its principle lies no longer
in the divine commandments, but in the law of reason, from which
the commandments, so far as they are still to remain valid, must
first await justification for their validity. In the law of reason
man determines himself out of himself, for "Man" is
rational, and out of the "essence of Man" those laws
follow of necessity. Piety and morality part company in this --
that the former makes God the law-giver, the latter Man.
From a certain standpoint of morality
people reason about as follows: Either man is led by his sensuality,
and is, following it, immoral, or he is led by the good,
which, taken up into the will, is called moral sentiment (sentiment
and prepossession in favor of the good); then he shows himself
moral. From this point of view how, e. g., can
Sand's act against Kotzebue be called immoral? What is commonly
understood by unselfish it certainly was, in the same measure
as (among other things) St. Crispin's thieveries in favor of the poor. "He should not have murdered,
for it stands written, Thou shalt not murder!" Then to serve
the good, the welfare of the people, as Sand at least intended,
or the welfare of the poor, like Crispin -- is moral; but murder
and theft are immoral; the purpose moral, the means immoral. Why?
"Because murder, assassination, is something absolutely bad."
When the Guerrillas enticed the enemies of the country into ravines
and shot them down unseen from the bushes, do you suppose that
was assassination? According to the principle of morality, which
commands us to serve the good, you could really ask only whether
murder could never in any case be a realization of the good, and
would have to endorse that murder which realized the good. You
cannot condemn Sand's deed at all; it was moral, because in the
service of the good, because unselfish; it was an act of punishment,
which the individual inflicted, an -- execution inflicted
at the risk of the executioner's life. What else had his scheme
been, after all, but that he wanted to suppress writings by brute
force? Are you not acquainted with the same procedure as a "legal"
and sanctioned one? And what can be objected against it from your
principle of morality? -- "But it was an illegal execution."
So the immoral thing in it was the illegality, the disobedience
to law? Then you admit that the good is nothing else than -- law,
morality nothing else than loyalty. And to this externality
of "loyalty" your morality must sink, to this righteousness
of works in the fulfillment of the law, only that the latter is
at once more tyrannical and more revolting than
the old-time righteousness of works. For in the latter only the
act is needed, but you require the disposition
too; one must carry in himself the law, the statute;
and he who is most legally disposed is the most moral. Even the
last vestige of cheerfulness in Catholic life must perish in this
Protestant legality. Here at last the domination of the law is
for the first time complete. "Not I live, but the law lives
in me." Thus I have really come so far to be only the "vessel
of its glory." "Every Prussian carries his gendarme
in his breast," says a high Prussian officer.
Why do certain opposition parties
fail to flourish? Solely for the reason that they refuse to forsake
the path of morality or legality. Hence the measureless hypocrisy
of devotion, love, etc., from whose repulsiveness one may daily
get the most thorough nausea at this rotten and hypocritical relation
of a "lawful opposition." -- In the moral relation
of love and fidelity a divided or opposed will cannot have place;
the beautiful relation is disturbed if the one wills this and
the other the reverse. But now, according to the practice hitherto
and the old prejudice of the opposition, the moral relation is
to be preserved above all. What is then left to the opposition?
Perhaps the will to have a liberty, if the beloved one sees fit
to deny it? Not a bit! It may not will to have the freedom,
it can only wish for it, "petition" for it,
lisp a "Please, please!" What would come of it, if the
opposition really willed, willed with the full energy
of the will? No, it must renounce will in order to live to love,
renounce liberty -- for love of morality. It may never "claim
as a right" what it is permitted only to "beg
as a favor." Love, devotion. etc., demand with undeviating
definiteness that there be only one will to which the others devote
themselves, which they serve, follow, love. Whether this will
is regarded as reasonable or as unreasonable, in both cases one
acts morally when one follows it, and immorally when one breaks
away from it. The will that commands the censorship seems to many
unreasonable; but he who in a land of censorship evades the censoring
of his book acts immorally, and he who submits it to the censorship
acts morally. If some one let his moral judgment go, and set up
e. g. a secret press, one would have to call him immoral,
and imprudent in the bargain if he let himself be caught; but
will such a man lay claim to a value in the eyes of the "moral"?
Perhaps! -- That is, if he fancied he was serving a "higher
morality."
The web of the hypocrisy of today
hangs on the frontiers of two domains, between which our time
swings back and forth, attaching its fine threads of deception
and self-deception. No longer vigorous enough to serve morality
without doubt or weakening, not yet reckless enough to live wholly
to egoism, it trembles now toward the one and now toward the other
in the spider-web of hypocrisy, and, crippled by the curse of
halfness, catches only miserable, stupid flies. If one
has once dared to make a "free" motion, immediately
one waters it again with assurances of love, and -- shams
resignation; if, on the other side, they have had the face
to reject the free motion with moral appeals to confidence,
immediately the moral courage also sinks, and they assure one
how they hear the free words with special pleasure, etc.;
they -- sham approval. In short, people would like to
have the one, but not go without the other; they would like to
have a free will, but not for their lives lack the moral
will. Just come in contact with a servile loyalist, you Liberals.
You will sweeten every word of freedom with a look of the most
loyal confidence, and he will clothe his servilism in the most
flattering phrases of freedom. Then you go apart, and he, like
you, thinks "I know you, fox!" He scents the devil in
you as much as you do the dark old Lord God in him.
A Nero is a "bad" man
only in the eyes of the "good"; in mine he is nothing
but a possessed man, as are the good too. The good see
in him an arch-villain, and relegate him to hell. Why did nothing
hinder him in his arbitrary course? Why did people put up with
so much? Do you suppose the tame Romans, who let all their will
be bound by such a tyrant, were a hair the better? In old Rome
they would have put him to death instantly, would never have been
his slaves. But the contemporary "good" among the Romans
opposed to him only moral demands, not their will; they
sighed that their emperor did not do homage to morality, like
them; they themselves remained "moral subjects," till
at last one found courage to give up "moral, obedient subjection."
And then the same "good Romans" who, as "obedient
subjects," had borne all the ignominy of having no will,
hurrahed over the nefarious, immoral act of the rebel. Where then
in the "good" was the courage for the revolution,
that courage which they now praised, after another had mustered
it up? The
good could not have this courage, for a revolution, and an insurrection
into the bargain, is always something "immoral," which
one can resolve upon only when one ceases to be "good"
and becomes either "bad" or -- neither of the two. Nero
was no viler than his time, in which one could only be one of
the two, good or bad. The judgment of his time on him had to be
that he was bad, and this in the highest degree: not a milksop,
but an arch-scoundrel. All moral people can pronounce only this
judgment on him. Rascals e. g. he was are still living
here and there today (see e. g. the Memoirs
of Ritter von Lang) in the midst of the moral. It is not convenient
to live among them certainly, as one is not sure of his life for
a moment; but can you say that it is more convenient to live among
the moral? One is just as little sure of his life there, only
that one is hanged "in the way of justice," but least
of all is one sure of his honor, and the national cockade is gone
before you can say Jack Robinson. The hard fist of morality treats
the noble nature of egoism altogether without compassion.
"But surely one cannot put
a rascal and an honest man on the same level!" Now, no human
being does that oftener than you judges of morals; yes, still
more than that, you imprison as a criminal an honest man who speaks
openly against the existing constitution, against the hallowed
institutions, and you entrust portfolios and still more important
things to a crafty rascal. So in praxi you have nothing
to reproach me with. "But in theory!" Now there I do
put both on the same level, as two opposite poles -- to
wit, both on the level of the moral law. Both have meaning only
in the "moral world, just as in the pre-Christian time a
Jew who kept the law and one who broke it had meaning and significance
only in respect to the Jewish law; before Jesus Christ, on the
contrary, the Pharisee was no more than the "sinner and publican."
So before self-ownership the moral Pharisee amounts to as much
as the immoral sinner.
Nero became very inconvenient by
his possessedness. But a self-owning man would not sillily oppose
to him the "sacred," and whine if the tyrant does not
regard the sacred; he would oppose to him his will. How often
the sacredness of the inalienable rights of man has been held
up to their foes, and some liberty or other shown and demonstrated
to be a "sacred right of man!" Those who do that deserve
to be laughed out of court -- as they actually are -- were it
not that in truth they do, even though unconsciously, take the
road that leads to the goal. They have a presentiment that, if
only the majority is once won for that liberty, it will also will
the liberty, and will then take what it will have. The
sacredness of the liberty, and all possible proofs of this sacredness,
will never procure it; lamenting and petitioning only shows beggars.
The moral man is necessarily narrow
in that he knows no other enemy than the "immoral" man.
"He who is not moral is immoral!" and accordingly reprobate,
despicable, etc. Therefore the moral man can never comprehend
the egoist. Is not unwedded cohabitation an immorality? The moral
man may turn as he pleases, he will have to stand by this verdict;
Emilia Galotti gave up her life for this moral
truth. And it is true, it is an immorality. A virtuous girl may
become an old maid; a virtuous man may pass the time in fighting
his natural impulses till he has perhaps dulled them, he may castrate
himself for the sake of virtue as St. Origen did for the sake
of heaven: he thereby honors sacred wedlock, sacred chastity,
as inviolable; he is -- moral. Unchastity can never become a moral
act. However indulgently the moral man may judge and excuse him
who committed it, it remains a transgression, a sin against a
moral commandment; there clings to it an indelible stain. As chastity
once belonged to the monastic vow, so it does to moral conduct.
Chastity is a -- good. -- For the egoist, on the contrary, even
chastity is not a good without which he could not get along; he
cares nothing at all about it. What now follows from this for
the judgment of the moral man? This: that he throws the egoist
into the only class of men that he knows besides moral men, into
that of the -- immoral. He cannot do otherwise; he must find the
egoist immoral in everything in which the egoist disregards morality.
If he did not find him so, then he would already have become an
apostate from morality without confessing it to himself, he would
already no longer be a truly moral man. One should not let himself
be led astray by such phenomena, which at the present day are
certainly no longer to be classed as rare, but should reflect
that he who yields any point of morality can as little be counted
among the truly moral as Lessing was a pious Christian when, in
the well-known parable, he compared the Christian religion, as
well as the Mohammedan and Jewish, to a
"counterfeit ring." Often people are already further
than they venture to confess to themselves. For Socrates, because
in culture he stood on the level of morality, it would have been
an immorality if he had been willing to follow Crito's seductive
incitement and escape from the dungeon; to remain was the only
moral thing. But it was solely because Socrates was -- a moral
man. The "unprincipled, sacrilegious" men of the Revolution,
on the contrary, had sworn fidelity to Louis XVI, and decreed
his deposition, yes, his death; but the act was an immoral one,
at which moral persons will be horrified to all eternity.
Yet all this applies, more or less,
only to "civic morality," on which the freer look down
with contempt. For it (like civism, its native ground, in general)
is still too little removed and free from the religious heaven
not to transplant the latter's laws without criticism or further
consideration to its domain instead of producing independent doctrines
of its own. Morality cuts a quite different figure when it arrives
at the consciousness of its dignity, and raises its principle,
the essence of man, or "Man," to be the only regulative
power. Those who have worked their way through to such a decided
consciousness break entirely with religion, whose God no longer
finds any place alongside their "Man," and, as they
(see below) themselves scuttle the ship of State, so too they
crumble away that "morality" which flourishes only in
the State, and logically have no right to use even its name any
further. For what this "critical" party calls morality
is very positively distinguished from the
so-called "civic or political morality," and must appear
to the citizen like an "insensate and unbridled liberty."
But at bottom it has only the advantage of the "purity of
the principle," which, freed from its defilement with the
religious, has now reached universal power in its clarified definiteness
as "humanity."
Therefore one should not wonder
that the name "morality" is retained along with others,
like freedom, benevolence, self-consciousness, and is only garnished
now and then with the addition, a "free" morality --
just as, though the civic State is abused, yet the State is to
arise again as a "free State," or, if not even so, yet
as a "free society."
Because this morality completed
into humanity has fully settled its accounts with the religion
out of which it historically came forth, nothing hinders it from
becoming a religion on its own account. For a distinction prevails
between religion and morality only so long as our dealings with
the world of men are regulated and hallowed by our relation to
a superhuman being, or so long as our doing is a doing "for
God's sake." If, on the other hand, it comes to the point
that "man is to man the supreme being," then that distinction
vanishes, and morality, being removed from its subordinate position,
is completed into -- religion. For then the higher being who had
hitherto been subordinated to the highest, Man, has ascended to
absolute height, and we are related to him as one is related to
the highest being, i.e. religiously. Morality and piety
are now as synonymous as in the beginning of Christianity, and
it is only because the supreme being has come to be a different
one that a holy walk is no
longer called a "holy" one, but a "human"
one. If morality has conquered, then a complete -- change
of masters has taken place.
After the annihilation of faith
Feuerbach thinks to put in to the supposedly safe harbor of love.
"The first and highest law must be the love of man to man.
Homo homini Deus est -- this is the supreme practical
maxim, this is the turning point of the world's history."19
But, properly speaking, only the god is changed -- the deus;
love has remained: there love to the superhuman God, here love
to the human God, to homo as Deus. Therefore man is to
me -- sacred. And everything "truly human" is to me
-- sacred! "Marriage is sacred of itself. And so it is with
all moral relations. Friendship is and must be sacred
for you, and property, and marriage, and the good of every man,
but sacred in and of itself.20 " Haven't we the
priest again there? Who is his God? Man with a great M! What is
the divine? The human! Then the predicate has indeed only been
changed into the subject, and, instead of the sentence "God
is love," they say "love is divine"; instead of
"God has become man," "Man has become God,"
etc. It is nothing more or less than a new -- religion.
"All moral relations are ethical, are cultivated with a moral
mind, only where of themselves (without religious consecration
by the priest's blessing) they are counted religious.
" Feuerbach's proposition, "Theology is anthropology,"
means only "religion must be ethics, ethics alone is religion."
Altogether Feuerbach accomplishes
only a transposition of subject and predicate, a giving of preference
to the latter. But, since he himself says, "Love is not (and
has never been considered by men) sacred through being a predicate
of God, but it is a predicate of God because it is divine in and
of itself," he might judge that the fight against the predicates
themselves, against love and all sanctities, must be commenced.
How could he hope to turn men away from God when he left them
the divine? And if, as Feuerbach says, God himself has never been
the main thing to them, but only his predicates, then he might
have gone on leaving them the tinsel longer yet, since the doll,
the real kernel, was left at any rate. He recognizes, too, that
with him it is "only a matter of annihilating an illusion";21
he thinks, however, that the effect of the illusion on men is
"downright ruinous, since even love, in itself the truest,
most inward sentiment, becomes an obscure, illusory one through
religiousness, since religious love loves man22 only for God's
sake, therefore loves man only apparently, but in truth God only."
Is this different with moral love? Does it love the man, this
man for this man's sake, or for morality's sake, and
so -- for homo homini Deus -- for God's sake?
The wheels in the head have a number
of other formal aspects, some of which it may be useful to indicate
here.
Thus self-renunciation is
common to the holy with
the unholy, to the pure and the impure. The impure man renounces
all "better feelings," all shame, even natural timidity,
and follows only the appetite that rules him. The pure man renounces
his natural relation to the world ("renounces the world")
and follows only the "desire" which rules him. Driven
by the thirst for money, the avaricious man renounces all admonitions
of conscience, all feeling of honor, all gentleness and all compassion;
he puts all considerations out of sight; the appetite drags him
along. The holy man behaves similarly. He makes himself the "laughing-stock
of the world," is hard-hearted and "strictly just";
for the desire drags him along. As the unholy man renounces himself
before Mammon, so the holy man renounces himself before
God and the divine laws. We are now living in a time when the
shamelessness of the holy is every day more and more
felt and uncovered, whereby it is at the same time compelled to
unveil itself, and lay itself bare, more and more every day. Have
not the shamelessness and stupidity of the reasons with which
men antagonize the "progress of the age" long surpassed
all measure and all expectation? But it must be so. The self-renouncers
must, as holy men, take the same course that they do so as unholy
men; as the latter little by little sink to the fullest measure
of self-renouncing vulgarity and lowness, so the former
must ascend to the most dishonorable exaltation. The
mammon of the earth and the God of heaven both demand
exactly the same degree of -- self-renunciation. The low man,
like the exalted one, reaches out for a "good" -- the
former for the material good, the latter for the ideal,
the so-called "supreme good"; and at last both complete
each other again too, as the "materially-minded" man
sacrifices everything to an ideal phantasm, his vanity,
and the "spiritually-minded" man to a material gratification,
the life of enjoyment.
Those who exhort men to "unselfishness"23
think they are saying an uncommon deal. What do they understand
by it? Probably something like what they understand by "self-renunciation."
But who is this self that is to be renounced and to have no benefit?
It seems that you yourself are supposed to be it. And for whose
benefit is unselfish self-renunciation recommended to you? Again
for your benefit and behoof, only that through unselfishness
you are procuring your "true benefit."
You are to benefit yourself,
and yet you are not to seek your benefit.
People regard as unselfish the benefactor
of men, a Francke who founded the orphan asylum, an O'Connell
who works tirelessly for his Irish people; but also the fanatic
who, like St. Boniface, hazards his life for the conversion of
the heathen, or, like Robespierre," sacrifices everything
to virtue -- like Körner, dies for God, king, and fatherland.
Hence, among others, O'Connell's opponents try to trump up against
him some selfishness or mercenariness, for which the O'Connell
fund seemed to give them a foundation; for, if they were successful
in casting suspicion on his "unselfishness," they would
easily separate him from his adherents.
Yet what could they show further
than that O'Connell was working for another end than
the ostensible one? But, whether he may aim at making money or
at liberating the people, it still remains certain, in one case
as in the other, that he is striving for an end, and that his
end; selfishness here as there, only that his national self-interest
would be beneficial to others too, and so would be for
the common interest.
Now, do you suppose unselfishness
is unreal and nowhere extant? On the contrary, nothing is more
ordinary! One may even call it an article of fashion in the civilized
world, which is considered so indispensable that, if it costs
too much in solid material, people at least adorn themselves with
its tinsel counterfeit and feign it. Where does unselfishness
begin? Right where an end ceases to be our end and our
property, which we, as owners, can dispose of at pleasure;
where it becomes a fixed end or a -- fixed idea; where it begins
to inspire, enthuse, fantasize us; in short, where it passes into
our stubbornness and becomes our -- master. One is not
unselfish so long as he retains the end in his power; one becomes
so only at that "Here I stand, I cannot do otherwise,"
the fundamental maxim of all the possessed; one becomes so in
the case of a sacred end, through the corresponding sacred
zeal.
I am not unselfish so long as the
end remains my own, and I, instead of giving myself up to be the
blind means of its fulfillment, leave it always an open question.
My zeal need not on that account be slacker than the most fanatical,
but at the same time I remain toward it frostily cold, unbelieving,
and its
most irreconcilable enemy; I remain its judge, because
I am its owner.
Unselfishness grows rank as far
as possessedness reaches, as much on possessions of the devil
as on those of a good spirit; there vice, folly, etc.; here humility,
devotion, etc.
Where could one look without meeting
victims of self-renunciation? There sits a girl opposite me, who
perhaps has been making bloody sacrifices to her soul for ten
years already. Over the buxom form droops a deathly-tired head,
and pale cheeks betray the slow bleeding away of her youth. Poor
child, how often the passions may have beaten at your heart, and
the rich powers of youth have demanded their right! When your
head rolled in the soft pillow, how awakening nature quivered
through your limbs, the blood swelled your veins, and fiery fancies
poured the gleam of voluptuousness into your eyes! Then appeared
the ghost of the soul and its eternal bliss. You were terrified,
your hands folded themselves, your tormented eyes turned their
look upward, you -- prayed. The storms of nature were hushed,
a calm glided over the ocean of your appetites. Slowly the weary
eyelids sank over the life extinguished under them, the tension
crept out unperceived from the rounded limbs, the boisterous waves
dried up in the heart, the folded hands themselves rested a powerless
weight on the unresisting bosom, one last faint "Oh dear!"
moaned itself away, and -- the soul was at rest. You
fell asleep, to awake in the morning to a new combat and a new
-- prayer. Now the habit of renunciation cools the heat of your
desire, and the roses of your youth are
growing pale in the -- chlorosis of your heavenliness. The soul
is saved, the body may perish! O Lais, O Ninon, how well you did
to scorn this pale virtue! One free grisette against
a thousand virgins grown gray in virtue!
The fixed idea may also be perceived
as "maxim," "principle," "standpoint,"
etc. Archimedes, to move the earth, asked for a standpoint outside
it. Men sought continually for this standpoint, and every one
seized upon it as well as he was able. This foreign standpoint
is the world of mind, of ideas, thoughts, concepts, essences;
it is heaven. Heaven is the "standpoint" from
which the earth is moved, earthly doings surveyed and -- despised.
To assure to themselves heaven, to occupy the heavenly standpoint
firmly and for ever -- how painfully and tirelessly humanity struggled
for this!
Christianity has aimed to deliver
us from a life determined by nature, from the appetites as actuating
us, and so has meant that man should not let himself be determined
by his appetites. This does not involve the idea that he
was not to have appetites, but that the appetites were not to
have him, that they were not to become fixed, uncontrollable,
indissoluble. Now, could not what Christianity (religion) contrived
against the appetites be applied by us to its own precept that
mind (thought, conceptions, ideas, faith) must determine
us; could we not ask that neither should mind, or the conception,
the idea, be allowed to determine us, to become fixed and inviolable
or "sacred"? Then it would end in the dissolution
of mind, the dissolution of all thoughts, of all conceptions. As we there had to say, "We are indeed to have appetites,
but the appetites are not to have us," so we should now say,
"We are indeed to have mind, but mind is not to
have us." If the latter seems lacking in sense, think e.
g. of the fact that with so many a man a thought becomes
a "maxim," whereby he himself is made prisoner to it,
so that it is not he that has the maxim, but rather it that has
him. And with the maxim he has a "permanent standpoint"
again. The doctrines of the catechism become our principles
before we find it out, and no longer brook rejection. Their thought,
or -- mind, has the sole power, and no protest of the "flesh"
is further listened to. Nevertheless it is only through the "flesh"
that I can break tyranny of mind; for it is only when a man hears
his flesh along with the rest of him that he hears himself wholly,
and it is only when he wholly hears himself that he is
a hearing or rational24 being. The Christian does not hear the
agony of his enthralled nature, but lives in "humility";
therefore he does not grumble at the wrong which befalls his person;
he thinks himself satisfied with the "freedom of the spirit."
But, if the flesh once takes the floor, and its tone is "passionate,"
"indecorous," "not well-disposed," "spiteful"
(as it cannot be otherwise), then he thinks he hears voices of
devils, voices against the spirit (for decorum, passionlessness,
kindly disposition, and the like, is -- spirit), and is justly
zealous against them. He could not be a Christian if he were willing
to endure them. He listens only to morality,
and slaps unmorality in the mouth; he listens only to legality,
and gags the lawless word. The spirit of morality and
legality holds him a prisoner; a rigid, unbending master.
They call that the "mastery of the spirit" -- it is
at the same time the standpoint of the spirit.
And now whom do the ordinary liberal
gentlemen mean to make free? Whose freedom is it that they cry
out and thirst for? The spirit's! That of the spirit
of morality, legality, piety, the fear of God. That is what the
anti-liberal gentlemen also want, and the whole contention between
the two turns on a matter of advantage -- whether the latter are
to be the only speakers, or the former are to receive a "share
in the enjoyment of the same advantage." The spirit
remains the absolute lord for both, and their only quarrel
is over who shall occupy the hierarchical throne that pertains
to the "Viceregent of the Lord." The best of it is that
one can calmly look upon the stir with the certainty that the
wild beasts of history will tear each other to pieces just like
those of nature; their putrefying corpses fertilize the ground
for -- our crops.
We shall come back later to many
another wheel in the head -- e. g., those of vocation,
truthfulness, love, etc.
When one's own is contrasted with
what is imparted to him, there is no use in objecting
that we cannot have anything isolated, but receive everything
as a part of the universal order, and therefore through the impression
of what is around us, and that consequently
we have it as something "imparted"; for there is a great
difference between the feelings and thoughts which are aroused
in me by other things and those which are given to me.
God, immortality, freedom, humanity, etc. are drilled into us
from childhood as thoughts and feelings which move our inner being
more or less strongly, either ruling us without our knowing it,
or sometimes in richer natures manifesting themselves in systems
and works of art; but are always not aroused, but imparted, feelings,
because we must believe in them and cling to them. That an Absolute
existed, and that it must be taken in, felt, and thought by us,
was settled as a faith in the minds of those who spent all the
strength of their mind on recognizing it and setting it forth.
The feeling for the Absolute exists there as an imparted
one, and thenceforth results only in the most manifold revelations
of its own self. So in Klopstock the religious feeling was an
imparted one, which in the Messiad simply found artistic
expression. If, on the other hand, the religion with which he
was confronted had been for him only an incitation to feeling
and thought, and if he had known how to take an attitude completely
his own toward it, then there would have resulted, instead
of religious inspiration, a dissolution and consumption of the
religion itself. Instead of that, he only continued in mature
years his childish feelings received in childhood, and squandered
the powers of his manhood in decking out his childish trifles.
The difference is, then, whether
feelings are imparted to me or only aroused. Those which are
aroused are my own, egoistic, because they are not as feelings
drilled into me, dictated to me, and pressed upon me; but those
which are imparted to me I receive, with open arms -- I cherish
them in me as a heritage, cultivate them, and am possessed
by them. Who is there that has never, more or less consciously,
noticed that our whole education is calculated to produce feelings
in us, i.e. impart them to us, instead of leaving their
production to ourselves however they may turn out? If we hear
the name of God, we are to feel veneration; if we hear that of
the prince's majesty, it is to be received with reverence, deference,
submission; if we hear that of morality, we are to think that
we hear something inviolable; if we hear of the Evil One or evil
ones, we are to shudder. The intention is directed to these feelings,
and he who e. g. should hear with pleasure the deeds
of the "bad" would have to be "taught what's what"
with the rod of discipline. Thus stuffed with imparted feelings,
we appear before the bar of majority and are "pronounced
of age." Our equipment consists of "elevating feelings,
lofty thoughts, inspiring maxims, eternal principles," etc.
The young are of age when they twitter like the old; they are
driven through school to learn the old song, and, when they have
this by heart, they are declared of age.
We must not feel at every
thing and every name that comes before us what we could and would
like to feel thereat; e. g. at the name of God we must
think of nothing laughable, feel nothing disrespectful, it being
prescribed and imparted to us what and how we are to feel and
think at mention of that name.
That is the meaning of the care
of souls -- that my soul or my mind be tuned as others think
right, not as I myself would like it. How much trouble does it
not cost one, finally to secure to oneself a feeling of one's
own at the mention of at least this or that name, and to laugh
in the face of many who expect from us a holy face and a composed
expression at their speeches. What is imparted is alien
to us, is not our own, and therefore is "sacred," and
it is hard work to lay aside the "sacred dread of it."
Today one again hears "seriousness"
praised, "seriousness in the presence of highly important
subjects and discussions," "German seriousness,"
etc. This sort of seriousness proclaims clearly how old and grave
lunacy and possession have already become. For there is nothing
more serious than a lunatic when he comes to the central point
of his lunacy; then his great earnestness incapacitates him for
taking a joke. (See madhouses.)
1 [Heil]
2 [heilig]
3 [How the priests tinkle! how important they
Would make it out, that men should come their way
And babble, just as yesterday, today!
Oh, blame them not! They know man's need, I say!
For he takes all his happiness this way,
To babble just tomorrow as today.
-- Translated from Goethe's "Venetian Epigrams."]
4 [fremd]
5 [fremd]
6 [einzig]
7 ["the supreme being."]
8 [heilig]
9 [heilig]
10 [einzig]
11 [gefangen und befangen, literally "imprisoned and prepossessed."]
12 [besessene]
13 [versessen]
14 "Achtzehntes Jahrhundert", II, 519.
15 "De la Création de l'Ordre" etc., p. 36.
16 "Anekdota,
II, 64.
17 [dieselbe Phantastin wie die Phantasie.]
18 [The same word as "intellectual", as "mind" and "spirit" are the same.]
19 "Essence of Christianity," second edition, p. 402.
20 P. 403.
21 P. 408.
22 [Literally "the man."]
23 [uneigennützigkeit, literally "un-self-benefitingness."]
24 [vernünftig, derived from vernehmen, to hear.]
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