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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 91 through 100 of 5974

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8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Wisdom of the Mysteries and the Myth
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
For this purpose he had to enter the labyrinth into which the Minotaur’s booty was usually thrown, and kill the monster. He undertook the task, OVercame the formidable foe, and succeeded in regaining the open air with the aid of a ball of thread which Ariadne had given him.
He sacrificed the ram to the gods and gave its fleece to the King, who had it hung up in a grove and guarded by a terrible dragon. The Greek hero Jason undertook to fetch the fleece from Colchis in company with other heroes, Heracles, Theseus, and Orpheus.
We might go still deeper into the description of the spiritual events underlying the images, but it is only intended here to indicate the principle according to which myths originate.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Mystery Wisdom of Egypt
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
The mystic view of the mystery of number underlies this. Osiris as a cosmic being is One, yet he exists, nevertheless, undivided in each human soul.
It is not Necessary to study these procedures in detail if we understand their meaning. This meaning is contained in the confession possible to everyone who went through initiation.
In this sense initiation was a miracle. One who really wished to understand it must have awakened within himself powers to enable him to stand on a higher plane of existence.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Gospels
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
But if they are experiences which can only be fathomed in a higher state of existence, namely the spiritual, it is obvious that they cannot be understood by means of the laws of physical nature. [ 3 ] It is thus first of all necessary to read the Gospels correctly; then we shall know in what way they are speaking of the Founder of Christianity.
[ 4 ] We can understand how this came about if we admit that the wisdom of the Mysteries was imbedded in the folk-religion of the Israelites.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Lazarus Miracle
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
Yet there is undoubtedly an accurate perception underlying this last assertion of Renan. But with the means at his disposal he is not able to interpret or justify his opinion.
Might it not be that we have to do here with something of which we could arrive at a true understanding merely by reading the text in the right way? In that case, we should perhaps no longer speak of “fiction”.
Life and meaning at once permeate the words of Jesus if we understand them as the expression of a spiritual occurrence, and then, in a certain sense, even literally as they stand in the text.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Apocalypse of St. John
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
The path to the divine is an endless one, and it must be understood that when the first step has been gained it can only be the preparation for ascending higher and higher.
The candidate for initiation must pass through the experiences which otherwise man only undergoes in death. His guide must lead him beyond the region in which birth and death have any meaning.
John is that the Mysteries are no longer to be kept under lock and key. “And he saith unto me, Seal not the sayings of the prophecy of this book, for the time is at hand.”
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): Jesus and His Historical Background
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
The aspirant for admission was subjected to a severe test in order to ascertain whether he were ripe enough to prepare himself for a higher life. If he was admitted he had to undergo a period of probation, and to take a solemn oath that he would not betray to strangers the secrets of the Essenian discipline.
[ 2 ] The existence of such sects makes it possible to understand how far the time was ripe for the comprehension of the Mystery of Christ. In the Mysteries a man was artificially prepared for the dawning in his consciousness, at the appropriate time, of an awareness of the spiritual world.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Nature of Christianity
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
If they wished to become Christians they were obliged to come to an understanding with the old order. This must have brought about most difficult conflicts within their souls.
[ 2 ] The conflict between the method of the Mysteries and that of the Christian religion acquired a special stamp through the various Gnostic sects and writersWe may class as Gnostics all the writers of the first Christian centuries who sought for a deep, spiritual meaning in Christian teachings.2 We understand the Gnostics when we look upon them as saturated with the ancient wisdom of the Mysteries and as striving t0 understand Christianity from that point of view.
[ 4 ] One thing was clear to all Gnosis, that it must come to an understanding about the personality of Jesus. Christ and Jesus must be brought into relationship with one another.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): Christianity and the Pagan Wisdom
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
Like Plato, Philo sees in the destiny of the human soul the consummation of the great cosmic drama, the awakening of the divinity that is under a spell. He thus describes the inner actions of the soul: the wisdom in man’s inner being “emulates the ways of the Father, and shapes the forms by beholding the archetypes.”
The God who poured Himself forth into the world consummates His resurrection in the soul when that soul understands His creative word and echoes it. Then man has spiritually given birth within himself to Divinity, to the Divine Spirit which became man, to the Logos, Christ.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): St. Augustine and the Church
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
I asked the winds, and the whole atmosphere and its inhabitants said, ‘The philosophers who sought for the essence of things in us were under am illusion, we are not God.” I asked the sun, moon, and stars, which said, ‘We are not God whom thou seekest.'”
“Men may be doubtful whether vital force is situate in air or in fire, but who can doubt that he himself lives, remembers, understands, wills, thinks, knows, and judges? If he doubts, it is a proof that he is alive, he remembers why he doubts; he understands that he doubts; he will assure himself, he thinks, he knows that he knows nothing; he judges that he must not accept anything hastily.”
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): Preface to the Second Edition
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
It is true that mysticism is at present widely understood in the former sense, and hence it is declared by many to be a sphere of the human soul life with which true science can have nothing to do.
Edouard Schuré, author of Les Grands Initiés,1 is so far in accord with the attitude of this book that he undertook to translate it into French, under the title, Les Mystéres Antiques et les Mystéres Chrétiennes.
This book is to be had in an English translation, by F. Rothwell, under the title: The Great Initiates, A Sketch of the Secret History of Religions, by Edouard Schuré.

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