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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 91 through 100 of 498

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90a. The Festivals and Their Meaning I: Christmas: On the Three Magi 30 Dec 1904, Berlin
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
You will remember that I have spoken of the meaning of the Christmas Festival in its connection with the evolution of races, or, better said, the epochs of civilisation, and indeed the significance of the Festival lies in this very connection both in respect of the past and of the future. I want to speak to-day about a Festival to which in modern times less importance is attached than to the Christmas Festival itself, namely, the Festival of the Three Kings, of the Magi who came from the East to greet the newly born Jesus.
90a. The Festivals and Their Meaning I: Christmas: The Christmas Festival: A Token of the Victory of the Sun 24 Dec 1905, Berlin
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
They were celebrating the time when winter draws to its close and spring begins. It is quite true that Christmas falls while it is still winter, but Nature is already heralding a victory which can be a token of hope in anticipation of the victory that will come in spring—a token of confidence, of hope, of faith—to use words which are connected in nearly every language with the Festival of Christmas.
This brings us to the true meaning of Christmas as a Festival of the very highest order in cosmic and human life. In the days when genuine occult teaching was not disowned as it is today by materialistic thought but was the very wellspring of the life of the peoples, the Christmas Festival was a kind of memorial, a token of remembrance of a great happening on the Earth.
The birth festival of all that man can feel, perceive and will—such is Christmas when it is truly understood. The aim of Spiritual Science is to stimulate a true and deep understanding of the Christmas Festival.
127. The Festivals and Their Meaning I: Christmas: The Birth of the Sun Spirit as the Spirit of the Earth. The Thirteen Holy Nights 26 Dec 1911, Hanover
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
When the candles are lit on the Christmas Tree, the human soul feels as though the symbol of an eternal reality were standing there, and that this must always have been the symbol of the Christmas Festival, even in a far distant past.
It is only one or at most two centuries ago that the Christmas Tree became a symbol of the thoughts and feelings which arise in man at the Christmas season. The Christmas Tree is a recent symbol but each year anew it reveals to man a great, eternal truth.
The human being can feel this to be the unfailing source of those forces of peace in his soul which spring from good-will. And thus, according to the Christmas Legend, did the proclamation also resound when the shepherds visited the birthplace of the Child whose festival we celebrate on Christmas Day.
156. The Festivals and Their Meaning I: Christmas: The Birth of Christ Within Us 27 Dec 1914, Basel
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
There are two aspects of this beautiful saying of the great Mystic Angelus Silesius. The one is the declaration that the true Christmas must be celebrated in man's inmost heart, that any outward celebration of Christmas must quicken the impulse whereby in the Holy Night of winter, the very deepest forces of the soul are drawn forth from the darkness prevailing within as the darkness of winter prevails without.
And we have tried to intensify this knowledge by drawing upon a source which enables us to celebrate the Holy Night of Christmas, the Festival of the Birth of Jesus, in a deeper and more worthy way. What this implies will become clear from the lecture to-day.
And so a new Christmas is celebrated when in the dark night of materialism, voices ring out that are not the voices of the Gnostics of olden times but are quickened and enriched by dedication to the Living Being of the Cosmic Christ.
203. The Festivals and Their Meaning I: Christmas: The Proclamations to the Magi and the Shepherds 01 Jan 1921, Stuttgart
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
The Christmas Tree was not adopted as a symbol of the Festival until the nineteenth century. What is the Christmas Tree, in reality?
This comes to expression in the fact that the real symbol of Christmas—the Crib—so beautifully presented in the Christmas Plays of earlier centuries, is gradually being superseded by the Christmas Tree which is, in reality, the Tree of Paradise.
For true Christianity must verily be born anew. We need a World-Christmas-Festival, and spiritual science would fain be a preparation for this World-Christmas-Festival among men.
209. The Festivals and Their Meaning I: Christmas: The Revelation of the Cosmic Christ 26 Dec 1921, Dornach
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
A cherished and intimate experience was bound up with the Christmas Festival. And if we think of the way in which this Christmas Festival was celebrated through the centuries, we find evidence everywhere that at the time of the approach of Christmas, the souls of men within Christianity were filled with loving devotion for the Jesus Child.
And it was out of this same Christian instinct—an instinct which caused man to associate the Christmas Festival with his earthly origin—that the day before Christmas, the 24th of December, was dedicated to Adam and Eve.
It is not enough to give each other presents at Christmas in accordance with ancient custom and habit. The warm feelings which for centuries inspired Christian men at the Christmas Festival have been lost.
90a. Signs and Symbols of the Christmas Festival: Birth of the Light 19 Dec 1904, Berlin
Tr. Lisa D. Monges, Gilbert Church

Rudolf Steiner
When we see the Christmas trees in the streets today, we might think that the custom of decorating a tree at Christmas is an ancient one.
In Christianity the Christmas festival has been taken as a symbol for the birth of the Christian Redeemer only since the fourth century A.D.
What the three subsequent ages must strive for resounds from the Christmas chimes because, if we truly understand what the Christmas festival expresses, the harmonies of the heavens speak to us.
54. Signs and Symbols of the Christmas Festival: The Christmas Festival as a Symbol of the Sun Victory 14 Dec 1905, Berlin
Tr. Lisa D. Monges, Gilbert Church

Rudolf Steiner
The preparations being made for Christmas that are published in our newspapers convince us of this. There is hardly anything more hopeless and alien to a true understanding of Christmas than the material being published today.
Let us use the knowledge acquired in the course of our spiritual-scientific lectures to understand what the ancient sages expressed in the Christmas festival. The festival held at Christmas time is not only a Christian event. It has existed wherever religious feeling was expressed.
The Christmas festival, rightly understood, is the festival of the birth of mankind's highest feelings and will impulses.
157a. Festivals of the Seasons: The Golden Legend and a German Christmas Play 19 Dec 1915, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
That He may strengthen us, That He may invigorate us, That He may teach us all over the earth really to experience in the truest sense of the words the utterance of the Christmas Eve saying, which transcends all that separates men from one another. This it is which he who really feels himself united with Christ Jesus solemnly vows anew at Christmas time.
Very little now remains of the grand thought which united the beginning of the Old Testament at this Christmas Eve festival with the secret history of the Mystery of Golgotha. Only this one thing remains, that in our calendar, before the actual Christmas Day comes the day of Adam and Eve.
The very manner in which these Christmas plays became part of the fife of the central European villages in which they arose and gradually evolved, shows us how powerfully the Christmas thought worked there.
165. The Golden Legend and a German Christmas Play 19 Dec 1915, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
That He may strengthen us, That He may invigorate us, That He may teach us all over the earth really to experience in the truest sense of the words the utterance of the Christmas Eve saying, which transcends all that separates men from one another. This it is which he who really feels himself united with Christ Jesus solemnly vows anew at Christmas time.
Very little now remains of the grand thought which united the beginning of the Old Testament at this Christmas Eve festival with the secret history of the Mystery of Golgotha. Only this one thing remains, that in our calendar, before the actual Christmas Day comes the day of Adam and Eve.
The very manner in which these Christmas plays became part of the life of the central European villages in which they arose and gradually evolved, shows us how powerfully the Christmas thought worked there.

Results 91 through 100 of 498

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