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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems > Post-renaissance syncretist / eclectic systems > Theosophy & Anthroposophy
"Many who enter esoteric training are very disappointed and say
that they had imagined the exercises to be much more energetic and
the effects of the exercises to be far more drastic. Those who tell
this to themselves should quickly consider the possibility that
they are caught in a great error, and that they should make the
greatest efforts to correct this error as soon as possible. It is
not the exercises that lack enough energy, but rather the
individual. It is not the exercises that are ineffective, but
rather the person who is not making them effective. By living an
esoteric life, the student should become an entirely different
person. One must add something new to the old." -Rudolf Steiner In
this second of three volumes from Rudolf Steiner's early Esoteric
School, we find a further deepening of spiritual practice and
training. Rudolf Steiner explains the requirements one must meet to
become a serious student of esotericism. In addition, he gives
directions-always emphasizing the increasing need for
earnestness-for the transformation of the inner life, for the
development of new spriritual forces and capacities, and for
recognizing and overcoming the dangers that arise on a spiritual
path. Moreover, he shows how one should approach specific
meditations. These lessons mark Rudolf Steiner's continued movement
away from the Eastern path of the Theosophical Society at the time
and his increasing focus on the Christian-Rosicrucian path,
recognizing Christ as the leader of the path of his form of
spiritual training. This volume is the English translation of Aus
den Inhalten der esoterischen Stunden, Ged chtnisaufzeichnungen von
Teilnehmern. Band.2, 1910-1912 (GA 266/2).
How awake are we to our inner being, our true nature? How much
self-knowledge do we really have? In relation to our intrinsic
self, we can easily feel like a novice. In truth, we face a long
journey before we can fully understand ourselves - and we are
equally unpractised in relating to our 'shadow' and inner wounds.
The path described in this book is an inward one, concerned with
strengthening our individuality. Based on life-long research,
Karsten Massei has created a valuable workbook for knowing and
healing ourselves. In a series of short chapters, he explains the
interplay and tensions between the human individual and the nature
of our 'inner and cosmic child'. Both are complex entities but are
directly related; both are deeply connected with our destiny. Our
experiences with our inner child are often still in the earliest
stages - but cultivating a relationship with her, noticing her,
holding conversations with her, is vital, and offers us ever
deepening experiences. As our insights expand, our frailties,
deficiencies and inner wounds become apparent. The being of the
inner child wants to educate us to become inwardly truthful and
authentic. Only honest engagement with the traumas and
vulnerabilities of our soul will enable a true picture of ourselves
to arise. Child of the Cosmos contains surprising perspectives
arising from the author's personal experiences, opening up a clear
path of personal development. The text is complemented with seven
special meditations to assist us in engaging with the challenges
ahead.
In 1919 Rudolf Steiner spoke about the future physical incarnation
of the being of Ahriman. This would take place before 'a part' of
the third millennium had passed, and was inevitable - but it was
also necessary that people were aware of this event and recognized
it, for earthly culture would be destroyed if the world were to
fall completely to Ahriman. The situation we find ourselves in
today shows Ahriman's unmistakable signature: the rapid destruction
of nature, zoonotic diseases and pandemics, huge social
inequalities, and the overall dominance of high finance. In this
short book Peter Selg presents a timely overview of the challenges
we face, beginning with a pithy and concise survey of Steiner's
commentary on Ahriman's incarnation and the conditions that would
characterize it. This is followed by a study of Ahriman's depiction
in the mystery drama The Souls' Awakening. Steiner's remarkable
personification of Ahriman on stage - portraying his strategies and
activities - provides vital instruction for humanity. Selg
concludes with an evaluation of 'the Battle for Human Intelligence'
taking place in contemporary culture through materialistic ideas
such as transhumanism. In their recent book Covid-19: The Great
Reset, for example, Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret propose
wholesale economic, geopolitical, environmental and technological
revisions to society - ideas that need to be understood and
confronted in human thought and consciousness. The Future of
Ahriman is a crucial aid to comprehending our times.
In this third, enlarged edition of Lehrs' classic study, the reader
is led, step by step, to a spiritual-scientific method of
investigation. The author demonstrates how one can transcend the
boundaries of the physical-material world, to the metaphysical
origins of nature and the human being. This is a pioneering new
method of training both the mind and eye, as well as other human
senses, leading to a transformation from our modern 'onlooking'
consciousness to a new kind of 'participative' consciousness. The
beginnings of this method were formulated by Goethe (1749-1832)
more than 200 years ago, but his contemporaries offered little in
the way of fertile ground for his ideas. It was Rudolf Steiner
(1861-1925) who recognized the significance of 'Goetheanism' for
the future development not only of science, but of human culture in
general, and who developed Goethe's work in modern times. Man or
Matter contains the systematic results of the author's work using
the methods of Goethe and Steiner (the latter whom he knew
personally). With this unique study, he addresses himself to anyone
- with or without a specialized scientific training - who is
concerned with developing the human power of cognition in the
present time. This revised edition was edited by Nick Thomas and
Peter Bortoft.
Topics include: The Three States of Night Consciousness ? The
Changing Experience of Breathing in the Course of History ? The
Inquiry and Formulation of the Cosmic Word in Breathing In and Out
? The teaching of the Risen One ? The Threefold Sun and the Risen
Christ ? and more.
In March 2020, Are Thoresen contracted Covid-19. Whilst
convalescing from the disease and suffering great exhaustion, he
experienced a breakthrough in his daily meditation. Although he has
always been able to 'see' into the spiritual world, now deeper,
unknown realms appeared to his inner vision. In the soapstone
surround of the fireplace in his Norwegian home, he perceived the
elemental beings and forces that make up the mineral at an atomic
level. A few days later, an even deeper dimension revealed itself,
in the form of a void or vacuum. Here, astonishingly, was an open
portal to the entire cosmos... In Travels on the Northern Path of
Initiation, Thoresen shares the results of his latest spiritual
investigations, including a moving, life-changing encounter with
'the Light of the World'. He details the teachings he receives from
the beings Vidar and Balder - who stand as guardians to the
threshold of the outer etheric world - and characterizes the
Northern way of initiation, which is based on merging, or 'fading',
into nature. Thoresen documents Rudolf Steiner's descriptions of
this path and shows how it is reflected in the Old Norse Poetic
Edda, the Kalevala and von Eschenbach's Parzival. Based on
painstaking research, he describes the individual qualities of the
three elemental realms, and how the adversarial forces - seeking to
corrupt human senses - hinder spiritual observation of them.
Thoresen's book is a powerful personal testimony to the human
potential for spiritual knowledge and experience in our time.
That there is a living stream of Johannine Christianity can no
longer be doubted. There is now an abundant literature from
Rosicrucian and esoteric traditions - from the deepest prayer and
meditation - that addresses the exalted nature of John the
Evangelist as expressed through his Gospel, Letters and the Book of
Revelation. Yet it fell to Hermann Beckh to elucidate clearly how
the individual known as 'John' became the source of such undying
love and wisdom in Christ. According to Rudolf Steiner, John was
the ailing Lazarus, called from death to a new life as 'the
disciple Jesus loved'. Beckh demonstrates how John's invaluable
writings were based on personal spiritual knowledge and experience,
expressing the divine work of the Cosmic Christ on human nature and
on the Earth, leading far into the future. Whilst Beckh's
authorship originated within the context of the emerging Christian
Community founded in 1922, his profoundly original books could not
be confined to its framework. Not only could Beckh tackle original
texts in Tibetan, Sanskrit and Avestan, but - through his
independent vision - he was able to establish new links with
philosophical Alchemy, Jakob Boehme, Goethe, Nietzsche and Novalis.
He thereby stands with these figures as a co-worker in a greater
community. Having prepared the way with his Mark's Gospel of 1928,
John's Gospel could be described as the capstone of Beckh's
writings - as a triumphant announcement that theology and the study
of John's Gospel have finally come of age. Appearing here in a
freshly revised translation by Alan Stott, the current volume is
enhanced by a series of valuable addenda that shed further light on
Beckh's significant achievements.
In this third volume in The Actor of the Future series, Dawn
Langman continues to explore the integration of Steiner's research
into speech, drama and eurythmy with Michael Chekhov's acting
methodology. Her advanced applications of all the basic processes
allow the art of the actor and speaker to evolve beyond the 'soul
and body' paradigm - still broadly accepted in contemporary culture
- to include dimensions of the spirit. The book contains a seminal
analysis of comedy and tragedy, showing how an understanding of
their esoteric roots - sprung from the Eleusis mysteries of ancient
Greece - deepen our appreciation and our ability to implement the
practical suggestions made by Steiner and Chekhov to differentiate
the fundamental styles. A comprehensive exploration of the vowels
in relation to planetary beings lays the foundation for many layers
of artistic deepening and application.
In a concise study, Rudolf Steiner presents an inspirational sketch
of the evolution of the Mysteries - from ancient Persia through
Egypt and Greece, to the Christian era and the present day. He
traces the line of initiates from Egyptian divinities Isis and
Osiris to Moses, King Arthur's Round Table and the Holy Grail in
the twelfth century. Steiner focuses on the process of initiation
as a historical topic: how initiation worked in ancient Egypt and
in the late Middle Ages. But his presentation is also
inspirational, leading to the question: How can we advance to
initiation now? He underscores the potential for achieving
enlightenment today without a teacher in the flesh, and explains
the four stages of the process towards initiation. He also
highlights the need for strenuous efforts to overcome the subtle
power of evil - in the form of Lucifer and Ahriman - through
selfless work. The four lectures collected here form an important
landmark in Rudolf Steiner's biography: the first being delivered
on 3 February 1913 - the very day that the Anthroposophical Society
was founded. First published in English under the title The
Mysteries of the East and of Christianity and unavailable for many
years, this edition has been re-edited by Professor Frederick
Amrine and features appendices, an index as well as an introduction
by Robert McDermott. Four lectures, Berlin, 3-7 Feb. 1913, GA 144
In an absorbing series of lectures, Rudolf Steiner discloses
factors in a person's life on Earth that will influence their
experiences in the spiritual world after their death - and
conversely, factors in the spiritual world that will affect their
next life on Earth. Steiner focuses on the period in the afterlife
when the individual has been through kamaloka - the purgatorial
place where the soul is purified. Once the soul has been cleansed
of its astral sheath, it becomes open to cosmic influences,
expanding into the planetary sphere. Now it can begin preparation
for reincarnation - for a new human life on Earth. Steiner
addresses the vital relationship of the living to the dead - in
particular, how those on Earth can influence the souls of the dead.
He also speaks on themes of 'Sleep and death', 'The seven-year life
cycles of man', and offers a 'Christmas gift' in the form of a
lecture on Christian Rosenkreutz and Gautama Buddha. He ends with a
mighty picture of the Mystery of Golgotha: Jesus Christ's death on
the cross was only seemingly a death; in reality it enabled the
momentous birth of the Earth-Soul. Long out-of-print, the
freshly-revised text of the ten lectures in this new edition is
complemented with an introduction, notes and appendices by
Professor Frederick Amrine, and also features an index. Ten
lectures, Berlin, Nov.-Apr. 1913, GA 141
Freedom for the spiritual-cultural life, equality and democracy for
human rights, initiative and solidarity for the economic sphere!
Revolutions happen when society does not change and evolve.
Stagnation and resistance create a situation in which a leap in
development is required. In nature, living organisms suffering from
inner blockages must heal or die. The same applies to the social
organism - society - which occasionally requires drastic change in
order to avoid complete collapse or violent revolution. With his
oft-repeated phrase 'We are the Revolution!', the artist and social
activist Joseph Beuys was intimating that true transformation
develops from within, in an artistic or creative way. People are
the source of metamorphosis in the social realm. But in modern
times a 'we' is also required - an agreement with others. The
individual connects with fellow human beings, in active
cooperation, as a solid foundation for healthy forms of
co-existence. In a series of clear and insightful essays, Ulrich
Roesch builds on the 'threefold' social thinking of Rudolf Steiner,
Joseph Beuys and others, presenting ideas for change in the context
of twenty-first century life. Our world has become one through
global division of labour and mutual dependence, and this calls for
new thinking and rejuvenated social forms. Roesch compares the
spirituality and social action of Mahatma Gandhi and Rudolf
Steiner, takes the living example of a biodynamic farm as a social
organism, and studies the tangible situation of the production and
worldwide sale of bananas as a symptom of inequitable commerce.
In this landmark series of lectures, Rudolf Steiner challenges the
notion that human consciousness has in essence remained the same
throughout history. On the contrary, we can only see the past in
its true light when we study the differences in human souls during
the various historical eras. Consciousness, he says, evolves
constantly and we can only comprehend the present by understanding
its origin in the past. Delivered in the evenings during the course
of the 'mystery act' of the Christmas Foundation Meeting - when
Rudolf Steiner not only re-founded the Anthroposophical Society but
for the first time took a formal role within it - these lectures
study world history in parallel with the ancient mysteries of
initiation, showing how they are intimately linked. Steiner
describes consciousness in the ancient East and follows the
initiation principle from Babylonia to Greece, up to its influences
in present-day spiritual life. He also discusses Gilgamesh and
Eabani, the mysteries of Ephesus and Hibernia, and the occult
relationship between the destruction by fire of the Temple of
Artemis and the burning of the first Goetheanum in Dornach,
Switzerland. Published for the first time with colour plates of
Steiner's blackboard drawings, the freshly-revised text is
complemented with an introduction, notes and appendices by
Professor Frederick Amrine and an index.
Relationships are built through dialogue - through exploring
heartfelt questions that lead to liberating personal insights. This
book shows how such dialogue can transform relationships and build
community. However, true meeting and healing conversations take
effort. Encounter involves light and dark. Relationships bring out
sympathy and antipathy. In an age of digital communications and
internet-based encounters - when alienation and loneliness are very
real issues - this new edition of Margarete van den Brink's classic
work is more vital than ever. The process of inner development -
leading ultimately to the unification of the human self with its
higher, spiritual being - involves a transformation in our everyday
selves. In this act of initiation, the art of conversation plays a
central role. The words which people speak to each other contain a
force that can work in an invigorating and life-enhancing way. This
force - which can be more precious than light itself - is the
highest creative principle, the Word referred to in the Gospel of
St John, which created everything that exists. Informed by the
insights of anthroposophy, More Precious than Light indicates the
path towards the spirit and the lost power of the Word,
transforming relationships and building community. True encounter
can only be fostered through building real connections with our
fellow human beings.
11 lectures, Munich, August 16-26, 1910 (CW 122) How was the world
created? From a direct spiritual perception of the facts, Rudolf
Steiner presents a new perspective that transcends the bipolar
arguments of both the creationists and the scientific
reductionists. He affirms that clairvoyant research accords with
the biblical descriptions, but he emphasizes that the text of
Genesis has to be interpreted in a special way. In this
extraordinary document, Steiner speaks of the six days of creation
as a reawakening of the previous phases of the Earth's development.
He describes the work of spiritual hierarchies in the creation of
Earth and clarifies the relationship of the Elohim and the biblical
Jehovah. In addition, Steiner discusses themes of light and
darkness, the meaning of Adam and Eve, the "day of rest" on the
seventh day, the stages of human development on Earth, and the
special character of the Hebrew language. Also featured in this new
edition is a previously unpublished introductory lecture on the
meaning of mystery drama. This book is a translation from German of
Die Geheimnisse der biblischen Schoepfungsgeschichte. Das
Sechtagwerk im 1. Buch Moses (GA 122).
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.
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