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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems
Are Thoresen perceives demons and other spiritual beings as clearly
as we see each other. He sees the demons that cause disease as well
as the beings associated with medicinal plants and other substances
that can promote health. He has witnessed how demons of disease
leave the bodies of the sick and enter the healthy, thus causing
contagion. Through his therapeutic work, Thoresen has learned that
one cannot simply `fight' demons, as they will `translocate' to
other people or return later. The only effective way to counteract
these malign entities is to dissolve them through the boundless
love of the being of Christ. The author presents a lifetime's
knowledge - the fruit of more than half a century's practical and
clinical experience - in the pages of this book, offering a better
understanding of health and disease. He recounts numerous personal
experiences of demonic entities and explains how demons are
created. Thoresen advises on the prevention of the demonic effects
of natural and artificial radiation, and how we can defend and
ultimately free ourselves from demonic influence. A fascinating
Addendum describes the phenomenon of poltergeists and the spiritual
beings related to various drugs. Demons and Healing is a singular
work, written out of precise vision and knowledge of the spiritual
entities that surround us in everyday life.
With great empathy, delicacy, and directness, Peter Selg recounts,
in three lectures, the moving story of Ita Wegman and her
relationship with Rudolf Steiner in the context of the development
of anthroposophic medicine and the formation of the Medical Section
of the School for Spiritual Science. Steiner had suffered patiently
until the right person-Ita Wegman-arrived to guide spiritual
science's healing mission into the medical fi eld. In the fall of
1920, Ita Wegman founded a medical clinic in Arlesheim. From then
on, she and Rudolf Steiner worked together, both medically and
spiritually, gradually unveiling a karmic working relationship
unique in Steiner's life. Thus the stage is set. The second lecture
focuses on anthroposophic curative education: ..". the social
center, the heart even, of Ita Wegman's 'Medical Section.' To make
a commitment to children with severe obstacles in their
incarnation, out of spiritual insight into the human being and the
wider karmic context, and to make this commitment as a group of
people working out of a Christian-religious impulse-this was for
Ita Wegman the true anthroposophic medicine." Dr. Selg then
describes Dr. Wegman's heroic eff orts to create a true community
of physicians working anthroposophically out of Rudolf Steiner's
indications and in the spirit of Christ; how she looked after her
colleagues, always seeking to wake them up "to the destiny of their
own being." As well, she sought to resist all that was happening in
Nazi Germany, never forgetting Rudolf Steiner's warning: "In the
future the Anthroposophical Society will be faced with the crucial
decision of whether responsibilities will be met or not..." And
here exactly lies the heart of this wonderful book: the inner
struggle to make love responsible.
The healthy social life is found When in the mirror of each human
being The whole community finds its reflection And when in the
community The virtue of each one is living. From the beginning of
his public work, Rudolf Steiner saw his spiritual mission as
civilizational. He understood that individual spiritual development
means little unless, spreading through a community of
practitioners, it leads to larger societal and cultural
transformation. As always, his views were radical. He realized that
a healthy social life would depend, above all, on the
transformation of work from a commodity into a gift. As he said in
1905: Evolution is moving towards totally uncompensated work. No
one rejects the idea and no one can change it. Whereas Greek
workers performed their work in bondage to their master and modern
workers are compelled to work for pay, in the future all work will
be performed freely. Work and income will be completely separated.
That is the healthy state of social conditions in the future. That
same year, he formulated what he called "the fundamental social
law" The wellbeing of an entire group of individuals who work
together becomes greater the less individuals claim the income
resulting from their own accomplishments for themselves-that is,
the more they contribute this income to their fellow workers, and
the more their own needs are met not through their own efforts but
through the efforts of others. In this important book, Peter Selg
shows us a different Rudolf Steiner. Here, the emphasis of his
teaching is mostly on the need to cultivate selflessness and
readiness to sacrifice. Selg first describes the context in which
Steiner expressed these ideas, how much they meant to him, and how,
when they fell on barren ground, he selflessly laid them aside
while holding them in his heart in the hope of a more opportune
moment. He goes on to show how this moment came after World War I,
when Rudolf Steiner dedicated himself tirelessly to the Threefold
Social Organism, lecturing extensively on economics and social
policy. Finally, in a last, extraordinarily moving chapter, Selg
shows the essential Christ- and Gospel-inspired nature of these
ideas: As long as you feel pain That passes me by, The Christ works
unrecognized... Weak is the spirit That can feel suffering Only in
its own body. Anyone interested in a just, equitable, healthy, and
spirit-based social future should read this important book
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