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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 191 through 200 of 1160

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The Life, Nature, and Cultivation of Anthroposophy: Introduction

From the time of the Foundation Meeting of the General Anthroposophical Society (Dornach, Christmas to New Year, 1923–24) until his death shortly before Easter, 1925, Rudolf Steiner wrote a Letter week by week, addressed to the members of the Society.
An urgent need has been felt for the earlier Letters in which Rudolf Steiner describes the character of the Society arising out of the Foundation Meeting and gives advice as to its conduct and its relation to the world. To meet this need, the Rudolf Steiner-Nachlassverwaltung has issued these Letters in a separate volume entitled Das lebendige Wesen der Anthroposophie und seine Pflege: Briefe an die Mitglieder, and has given the Council of the Anthroposophical Society in Great Britain permission to publish the translation contained in the following pages (Vol.
259. The Fateful Year of 1923: Draft of a Letter to the Groups in Other Countries Dornach

Dear Friends, The gravity of the present moment for the Anthroposophical Society has awakened a sense of responsibility in the hearts and minds of members around the world. The tragic loss of the Goetheanum, and the message which Dr. Steiner has given to the Society during the recent meetings at Dornach and Stuttgart and through his lectures at Dornach during the last few months, have made it clear to us that the Society must rise to a new awareness of its task as the bearer of a spiritual impulse necessary for our time. In the desire to take a real step forward in unity and in the consciousness of our task, a General Assembly of the Anthroposophical Society in Great Britain took place at the London headquarters on Wednesday, May 23. From the numerous and varied votes in the discussion, a true unity of desire and intention emerged, and before breaking up, the assembly authorized the undersigned to take steps to give expression to this.
259. The Fateful Year of 1923: Meeting of the Circle of Thirty 08 Feb 1923, Stuttgart

It has led to the Anthroposophical Society being so terribly run down. Gossip prevails over seriousness. Triviality prevails over what should be in this direction, in the direction of reverence.
The Anthroposophical Society is full of Ahrimanic holes. Ernst Uehli: The Society has sinned through the threefold social order movement.
This body then became the executive council of the “Anthroposophical Society in Germany”.
257. Awakening to Community: Lecture III 06 Feb 1923, Stuttgart
Translated by Marjorie Spock

In view of the deliberations that have been going on here with reorganization of the Anthroposophical Society as their object, I would like to shape today's lecture in a way that may help my hearers form independent judgments in these decisive days.
During this first phase, the Anthroposophical Society led an embryonic existence within the Theosophical Society. It grew, as I say, within the Theosophical Society, but developed nevertheless as the Anthroposophical Society.
As I said in Dornach on January 6th last, the Anthroposophical Society is good; it is capable of listening receptively to even the sharpest parts of my characterization.
Planetary Spheres and Their Influence on Mans Life on Earth and in the Spiritual Worlds: Introduction
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams

The six lectures collected in this volume were given by Rudolf Steiner to members of the Anthroposophical Society during his visits to England in the year 1922. He came three times, giving altogether about thirty lectures on educational, social and general anthroposophical subjects.
The different local groups which had been working side by side throughout the war were joining forces to create what afterwards became the ‘Anthroposophical Society in Great Britain.’ In the autumn of 1921 a small library-office and the use of a lecture-hall had been rented at Grosvenor Street from the Royal Asiatic Society, and it was here then that Dr.
All through the later years of his life he was lecturing frequently to the members of the Anthroposophical Society, at Dornach and wherever else he traveled, no special subject being indicated, as a rule, beforehand, except for conferences and other such occasions.
332b. Current Social and Economic Issues: Discussion on Questions of Threefolding I 25 Jan 1919, Dornach

January 25, 1919, in the afternoon, at Hansi's house Roman Boos begins by reporting on the socio-political commission of the “Federation of Intellectual Workers” in Stuttgart and the draft of the “memorandum”, and Emil Molt on the previous socialization efforts in Württemberg and the fact that belonging to the Anthroposophical Society has been perceived as compromising. Rudolf Steiner: The most important thing is foreign policy.
Rudolf Steiner: There should already be a backing. Emil Molt: The Anthroposophical Society is not suitable for this; it is not supposed to deal with politics. Rudolf Steiner: Why?
Rudolf Steiner: But these are from 1911 and were long ago wiped out by the war. The Anthroposophical Society can certainly deal with politics. I always talk about politics too. The three of them: Dr.
217a. The Task of Today's Youth: What I Have to Say to Younger Members on This Matter 16 Mar 1924,

In the letter which the committee of the General Anthroposophical Society sent to the members of the Society in response to my announcement of a youth section, there is a reference to the fact that I consider “being young to be so important that it can become the subject of a spiritual scientific discipline in its own right”.
The announcement of the Executive Council of the Anthroposophical Society was made in such an attitude. In such an attitude, the Council would like to unite young anthroposophists in a youth section to work towards a life of true humanity.
For Anthroposophy should have no age; it lives in the eternal that brings all people together. Let the young find in the Anthroposophical Society a field in which they can be young. But the “old”, if they take up Anthroposophy in their whole being, will feel the pull of the young.
257. Awakening to Community: Lecture IX 03 Mar 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marjorie Spock

This something is the same thing that makes fresh, ongoing, living knowledge of the spiritual world possible, namely, anthroposophical spiritual science. I might express it by saying that sermons will always be the windows through which the Movement for Religious Renewal will have to receive what an ongoing, living Anthroposophical Society must give it.
Where it exists and groups of this kind make their appearance in the Anthroposophical Society, there we have in this reversed cultus, as I shall call it, in this polar opposite of the cultus, a most potent community building element.
We have to come to understand what anthroposophy ought to be within the Anthroposophical Society. It should be a path to the spirit. When it becomes that, community building will be the outcome.
270. Esoteric Instructions: First Recapitulation Lesson 06 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by John Riedel

When the impulse for the Christmas Conference manifested itself here in this hall through the spiritual laying of the Foundation Stone of the Anthroposophical Society on Christmas Day, it was then indeed the fact, as I said yesterday, that an esoteric impulse was from then on to flow through the entire Anthroposophical Society, an esoteric impulse which could indeed already be observed in everything that has been undertaken since Christmas in the Anthroposophical Society.
This failure took place at a time when I did not yet personally have the responsibility for the conduct of the Anthroposophical Society and also did not have the task of permitting those who wished to try something to go ahead and try it.
It is a unique aspect of the Christmas Foundation impulse of the Anthroposophical Society that a character of complete openness has impressed itself on this Society. As a result, nothing further is required of one who becomes a member of the Anthroposophical Society than that he receives from the Society what flows within the spiritual movement of anthroposophy.
220. The Intellectual Fall from Grace and Spiritual Ascent of Sins: Second Lecture 06 Jan 1923, Dornach

But it is precisely in this area that the Anthroposophical Society should lead the way and focus its work, so that the prejudices of contemporary civilization are increasingly overcome. If the Anthroposophical Society does its duty in this direction, then one can hope that those inner powers of knowledge will arise even without clairvoyance in those who, for whatever reason, cannot strive for the exact clairvoyance that must be spoken of here; that they can still come to a fully-fledged conviction of the validity of anthroposophical knowledge.
But I believe there is a word that can come from our present mourning, that I can also speak to the oldest members of the Anthroposophical Society, and that is this: That the human being who today truly understands himself as a human being can indeed experience this within the Anthroposophical Society, which in turn must be taken seriously if civilization of humanity is to continue, if the forces of decline are not to gain the upper hand over the forces of ascent.

Results 191 through 200 of 1160

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