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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 6541 through 6549 of 6549

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106. Egyptian Myths and Mysteries: Ninth Lecture 11 Sep 1908, Leipzig
Translated by Norman MacBeth

The Persian said to himself, “There is the beneficent fullness of light, the god Ahura Mazdao or Ormuzd, and there are the dark powers under the leadership of Angramainyush or Ahriman. From Ahura Mazdao comes salvation for men; from Ahriman comes the physical world.
But an understanding person can well imagine of a Greek temple, that even if it stood in a solitude with no people anywhere near, even if it were quite alone, it would be a whole.
But a Gothic cathedral is only half complete if there are no worshippers within. One who understands this cannot think of a Gothic cathedral, standing alone, without a congregation of the faithful, whose thoughts stream into it.
106. Egyptian Myths and Mysteries: Tenth Lecture 12 Sep 1908, Leipzig
Translated by Norman MacBeth

We cannot take such things deeply enough, and we only understand them when we know the facts of the spiritual world. Now let us bring into more concrete form what we touched upon abstractly yesterday.
These are things that we must grasp if we want to understand all the real connections. But one should not believe that the historical appearance of the Buddha immediately reveals all that lies within it.
We should try to present the real occult facts, and then try to understand the pictures that have arisen out of the occult facts and have passed over into the consciousness of man.
106. Egyptian Myths and Mysteries: Eleventh Lecture 13 Sep 1908, Leipzig
Translated by Norman MacBeth

The capacity for combining shows itself in green colors in the aura, especially in those who have keen mathematical understanding. The ancient Egyptian initiates saw the god who implanted the faculty of intelligence in men, and in portraying him they painted him green2 because they saw the green shimmering of his luminous astral and etheric form.
Many people in the country will recount that they have met the midday woman. She appears in many regions under many different names. She is a descendent of the ancient Sphinx, and as the ancient Sphinx put questions to the men who experienced her, so this midday woman also asks questions.
We have mentioned this so it may be seen how manifold evolution is. Now, to understand everything correctly, we must give some thought to the fact that in the course of time man has organized the fourth member, the ego, into what he brought with him at the beginning of earth evolution as his physical, etheric, and astral bodies.
106. Egyptian Myths and Mysteries: Twelfth Lecture 14 Sep 1908, Leipzig
Translated by Norman MacBeth

What a mass of spirit is thus diverted from life for the higher worlds. The spiritual scientist understands this and does not criticize in our time, because he knows that it was necessary to conquer the physical plane.
I was also able to show that if one understands Paracelsus correctly, his medical lore is a recrudescence of what was taught in the temples of ancient Egypt.
If thus we permeate everything with the spiritual, then this is properly understood Christianity. It is a slander of the science of the spirit when men say that it is a fantastic view of the world.
106. Egyptian Myths and Mysteries: First Lecture 02 Sep 1908, Leipzig
Translated by Norman MacBeth

Long did the Indian culture endure, long also the Persian, reaching a culmination in Zarathustra. Then arose, under the influence of colonists who were sent into the land of the Nile, the culture that is comprised under the four names, Chaldean-Egyptian-Assyrian-Babylonian.
We shall see that there is a remarkable law that enables us to understand the working of wonderful forces through the various epochs and the relationships of the epochs to each other.
Thus our souls will lift themselves to the significant connections of the world, and the fruit will be a deep understanding of what lives in us.
143. Love and Its Meaning in the World 17 Dec 1912, Zurich
Translated by Dorothy S. Osmond, E. F. Derry, S. Derry

In the light of this knowledge we shall be able to understand the deeds of a man who has reached a high stage of development, for he has still greater debts to pay to the past.
How, then, can the Gods of progress draw man to themselves again? To understand this we must think, not of the earth, but of Gods taking counsel together. It is for the Gods that Christ performs the Deed by which men are drawn back to the Gods.
Lucifer's deed belongs to a time when man was still aware of his own participation in the super-sensible world; Christ's Deed was performed in material existence itself—it is both a physical and a spiritual Deed. We can understand the deed of Lucifer through wisdom; understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha is beyond the reach of wisdom alone.
162. Artistic and Existential Questions in the Light of Spiritual Science: Fourth Lecture 30 May 1915, Dornach

They have no interest in following their slow deterioration, but they return very soon to repair what they have done, in order to truly live with the conditions they must live with, so that they may learn to understand their gradual destruction. Those who have never lived with earthly conditions do not understand their destruction, their dissolution.
It is an enormous setback in our time that, in the course of the 19th century, people began once again to place the greatest emphasis on the barriers to human development and even to see in the “national idea” something that could somehow still be a bearer of culture for our era. Humanity could wonderfully climb up to an understanding of what spiritual science should be, if one wanted to understand something like what is hidden in Faust.
Herman Grimm, of whom I have often spoken to you, pointed out that Goethe will only be fully understood in a thousand years. I must say that I believe this too. When people have delved even deeper than they have in our time, they will understand more and more of what lies in Goethe.
165. The Tree of Knowledge and the Christmas Tree 28 Dec 1915, Basel

The Christian would have answered him, perhaps not out of theoretical understanding, but out of emotional understanding: You may be right, that is what would have happened to the earth if the tree had been allowed to unfold its power, from which humans unlawfully enjoyed the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil through Lucifer's seduction.
But it is different with the Christmas idea, this other side of the Christian idea. In order to understand the Easter idea, one must already have acquired certain knowledge. I would say that even the smallest children understand the Christmas idea intuitively.
Therefore, it must be deeply rooted in the human heart. It can be understood at every age, even at the most childlike age. The poet Adalbert Stifter spoke the truth. One understands it in such a way that even as a very small child, one can read in the writing of the stars how the Holy Christ speaks.
179. Historical Necessity and Freewill: Lecture VII 17 Dec 1917, Dornach
Translator Unknown

Certainly, a necessity underlies man's nature; but this necessity ceases as disintegrating processes begin, as the sequence of causes comes to an end.
The whole mistake consists in the fact that people have been unwilling to understand not only the up-building forces in the organism, but also the disintegrating processes. However, in order to understand what really underlies man's nature it will be necessary to develop a greater capacity to do this than in our age.
Thou 'rt free to hasten, ere the day, From flame to flame, and seek her so: Who to the Mothers found his way, Has nothing more to undergo. Homunculus says:— Who to the Mothers found his way, Has nothing more to undergo.

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