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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture V 22 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
Thus upon the Moon too we have seven grades of beings who had passed through their human stage when the Moon had finished its evolution. Now in order to understand the ancient Moon fully, we must mention something of importance which took place in the course of the old Moon evolution.
They could look down upon the evolving human being and say, “He is now becoming something which we have already been, something which we can understand; although we passed through the stage under different circumstances.” For this reason they could guide and regulate his evolution from the spiritual world. Let us enumerate how many of these beings there are who are able to look back at the human stage, who are able to under-stand evolving man. Seven from the Saturn evolution, plus seven from the Sun, plus seven from the Moon stage, plus three from the Earth; twenty-four beings in all.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture VI 23 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
There came a period in the earth's evolution when not only the substance, but all beings, underwent a coarsening. For example, the beings who later became man, who at that time were very soft and delicate, underwent a coarsening through taking on horrible instincts.
So also the letter is the body of the spirit, and we must first have and understand it, then we may say that we can find the spirit in it. The letter, the understood letter, must then die so that the spirit may be resurrected from it.
And man walks upon the earth-body, he treads this body underfoot. All can be understood literally if only we are able first of all to comprehend the text in the right way.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture VII 24 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
Humanity will ascend to the point where the understanding dawns of what this event signified, so that for a large part of humanity this Christ impulse becomes the innermost impulse of their being, from which they work in life.
This saying, “Christus verus Luciferus,” was later no longer understood. He alone who rightly understands it learns to know the first teachings of Christianity. We have therefore to comprehend this impulse in this way; we have to see how humanity was prepared for the standpoint it had to attain.
But if you understand such a book as Tolstoi's Concerning Life, you will often find condensed into ten lines what, in these Western European libraries, it takes thirty volumes to say.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture VIII 25 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
Everything which causes a man to strive to lose his “I” and dissolve it into a universal consciousness, is the result of weakness. He alone understands the “I” who knows that after he has gained it in the course of cosmic evolution it cannot be lost; and above all man must strive for the strength (if he understands the mission of the world) to make this “I” more and more inward, more and more divine.
Although at the present day this principle of Manes has had to step very much into the background because there is little understanding for spiritual work, this wonderful and lofty Manichaean principle will win more and more pupils the nearer we approach the understanding of spiritual life.
We must take it up thoroughly, not merely with the understanding; we must take it into our innermost being, just as one takes nourishment into the physical body.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture IX 26 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
We shall now occupy ourselves with what can develop out of man. We shall best understand this if we have the patience again to consider what man has become and what possibilities of development lie within him for the future.
All these ancient names point to important secrets. But when we are aware of this we shall understand that before the visible man appeared on the earth, the latter already contained within it all the forces of this visible man.
We see foreshadowed how men bring with them the fruits of their earth existence. And now we must clearly under-stand that all that was there before reappears in this spiritual condition on the earth, in a higher state of evolution.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture X 27 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
What can man comprehend to-day? That is the point. He can to-day understand only the mineral kingdom. As soon as the comes to the vegetable kingdom he no longer understands it, the mineral kingdom he can understand.
Man will then have risen into the plant kingdom when he understands the plant nature as he now understands the mineral. He will have risen to the animal kingdom when he understands feelings in such a way that he can make a sensitive being through his own spirit-power, just as he now makes as external object.
It is no longer there, man has assumed human shape. We must now understand an important event which then took place when man assumed human form, for without this under-standing one cannot comprehend the Apocalypse of John; it was an event of the greatest importance.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture XI 29 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
This does not exactly agree with the statement that we are actually in the middle.” Underlying this there is a remarkable fact, you may understand it by a comparison. If you comprehend this clearly, you will see that it is an important fact.
For wisdom is contained in it. “Let him who hath understanding consider the number 666.” And now we will read it. We read it in this way, from right to left.
Although to-day you may have to make efforts to understand this passage, you must not forget that it is necessary to make efforts to understand the deepest mysteries.
104. The Apocalypse of St. John: Lecture XII 30 Jun 1908, Nuremberg
Translated by Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
Christ becomes the Earth-spirit more and more, and the true Christian understands the words, “He who eats my bread treads me underfoot”; he considers the body of the earth as the body of Christ.
The death of an ordinary condemned person! It was only possible to understand what took place on Golgotha where the contents of the Mysteries were known. The Initiators could say, You can understand the one whom we have shown you during the three and a half days, whom the prophets announced to you, if you use the means which the Mysteries can give you.
He is to remain until Christ comes; so that those who have a more illuminated consciousness will be able to understand him. He is the great teacher of the true Event of Golgotha. He has given to man the means by which he can really understand the Event of Golgotha.
105. Universe, Earth and Man: Lecture I 04 Aug 1908, Stuttgart
Translated by Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
“Earth” indicates the field of action upon which humanity is now placed, upon which we are to work and live, and the mission of which we ought to understand. Lastly, the word “Man”—a word we here wish to understand in its occult sense indicates that which the mystics of all ages meant when they made use of the expression, “O man, know thyself!”
This memory, presented in sculpture, is the Sphinx. It is only thus that these forms can be understood; we must realize that they are not merely thought-out forms, but realities. Let us now pass from the Egyptian pyramid to the Greek temple. This temple will only be understood by those who are able to feel that there are forces in space. The Greek possessed this feeling.
105. Universe, Earth and Man: Lecture II 05 Aug 1908, Stuttgart
Translated by Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
During this sleep the patient perceived etheric forms in the spiritual world, and the wise priests understood the art of influencing these etheric pictures which passed before the sleeper; they could control and guide them.
In the uplifting of the self to what was spiritual there was, in ancient times, a healing element, and it would be well if man were to learn to understand this again, for he would then understand the great mission of the Anthroposophical movement, which is to lead man up to the spiritual world, so that he may again enter those worlds from which he has descended.
Are there no invalids among them? We must understand that fundamentally the individual can do very little for his health and his sickness. A large proportion of the causes of disease lies outside the individual personality.

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