Donate books to help fund our work. Learn more→

The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 51 through 60 of 505

˂ 1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 ... 51 ˃
117. Festivals of the Seasons: The Spirit of Christmas 26 Dec 1909, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
We have been endeavouring, as Christmas has drawn near, to enter into that spirit which also from the anthroposophical standpoint may be called the true spirit of Christmas. We have been seeking to realise that there is an interpretation of the Christmas Festival, which in a measure enables us to bring the spirit of Christmas to bear on everything of importance that happens to a man during the year.
We shall see that life becomes filled with a new glory, if each year we allow the anthroposophical Christmas-spirit to enter into our souls; if we, so to speak, allow Anthroposophy to be re-born within us at Christmas-time, as feeling and perception.
143. Festivals of the Seasons: Thoughts of Christmas Eve 24 Dec 1912, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
Thus, for example, we grasp him in his deepest being, when at Christmas Eve the child awaits the coming of the Christmas child or the Christmas angel. How does the child wait at Christmas Eve?
And just as the child feels towards the angel of Christmas who brings it its Christmas presents—it feels itself, in its childlike way, connected with the spiritual—so may we feel ourselves connected with the spiritual gift that we long for on Christmas night as the impulse which can bring us the high ideal for which we strive.
Though they may not be sitting here or there under the Christmas-tree in the way that is customary in this cycle of time, our dear friends are yet sitting under the Christmas-tree.
203. The Two Christmas Annunciations 01 Jan 1921, Stuttgart
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
It is a very beautiful custom, scarcely 150 years old, to have the Christmas Tree as a symbol of the Christmas festival. The custom of having a Christmas Tree came into being only in the 19th century.
Nicholas' arm on the 6th of December, into being our Christmas Tree, we come to realize that this Christmas Tree is also directly connected with the Tree of Paradise.
This is expressed in the gradual disappearance of the real Christmas symbol, of the manger—so sublime a part of the Christmas plays of earlier centuries—and in the appearance of the Christmas Tree which is really the Tree of Paradise.
36. Collected Essays from “Das Goetheanum” 1921–1925: On Popular Christmas Plays 24 Dec 1922,

Rudolf Steiner
A Christmas memory Almost forty years ago, about two or three days before Christmas, my dear teacher and fatherly friend Karl Julius Schröer told me in his small library room on Vienna's Salesianergasse about the Christmas plays that he had attended in Oberufer in western Hungary in the 1850s and published in Vienna in 1862.
And so he spoke at the time about the rural Christmas games. The poor people of Oberufer, who trained as actors every year around Christmas time for their fellow villagers, came to life from his words.
But both the players and the audience brought the warmest Christmas spirit into the house – and this mood is rooted in a genuine, pious devotion to the Christmas truth.
127. Festivals of the Seasons: Christmas: A Festival of Inspiration 21 Dec 1911, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
It may be said: How clearly reasonable and spiritual it appears that out of the dim subconscious work of the Middle Ages, when Christmas plays were performed here or there about Christmas time by people from different places, when the ‘singers’ as they were called gathered for their Christmas plays, that the Paradise Tree should be brought forward. As in the calender ‘Adam and Eve’ appeared before the Christ Birthday Festival, so in the Christmas plays of the Middle Ages, the Tree of Paradise was brought forward by the troupe which took part in the performance of the Christmas plays.
This is something which becomes ever more clearly bound up with the Christmas Festival. For what was it actually of which man reminded himself? From our anthroposophical point of view let us look at what man remembered.
298. Rudolf Steiner in the Waldorf School: Address at the Christmas Assembly 21 Dec 1919, Stuttgart
Tr. Catherine E. Creeger

Rudolf Steiner
And then I said to you, “That is an especially nice Christmas gift for me!” And it is a nice Christmas gift for me. You see, dear children, I have to think about how you have been spending your days since Herr Molt gave us the gift of this Waldorf School.
They get it from the Christ, whom we think about at Christmas. We think about how He came into the world to bring joy to all people, and you gave some beautiful presentations about Him today.
Perhaps you too have been able to feel it in what came to meet you out of this Christmas assembly. And finally, to conclude my Christmas greeting, I would like to appeal to the children whom you have sent here.
298. Dear Children: Address at the Christmas Assembly 21 Dec 1919, Stuttgart
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
And then I said to you, “That is an especially nice Christmas gift for me!” And it is a nice Christmas gift for me. You see, dear children, I have to think about how you have been spending your days since Herr Molt gave us the gift of this Waldorf School.
They get it from the Christ, whom we think about at Christmas. We think about how He came into the world to bring joy to all people, and you gave some beautiful presentations about Him today.
Perhaps you too have been able to feel it in what came to meet you out of this Christmas assembly. And finally, to conclude my Christmas greeting, I would like to appeal to the children whom you have sent here.
125. Yuletide and the Christmas Festival 27 Dec 1910, Stuttgart
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
Certain it is that in the second half of December at the present time, when we go out into the streets of a great city and look at the lights that are intended to be invitations into the houses to celebrate the Christmas Festival, our aesthetic sense must be pained by displays of so-called Christmas goods, while inventions out of keeping with Christmas trees and Christmas symbols whiz past—motor cars, electric tramcars and the like.
But if we want to experience the Christmas Festival in the truly anthroposophical way, we cannot limit ourselves to what the Christmas Festival was once upon a time or is now.
Hence the spectacle of the Christmas symbols should be an incitement to infuse into the Christmas mood the spirit of anthroposophical thinking.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Mystery Wisdom of Egypt
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
Rudolf Seydel has convincingly proved this parallelism in his book, Buddha und Christus. We have only to follow out the two lives in detail in order to see that all objections to the parallelism are futile.
The one who was born in Bethlehem has an eternal character. The Christmas anthem rightly sings of the birth of Jesus as if it took place each Christmas “Christ is born to-day, the Saviour has come into the world to-day, today the angels are singing on earth.”
180. Mysterious Truths and Christmas Impulses: Second Lecture 24 Dec 1917, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Our time should completely dispense with the old phrases of Christmas. The Romans, who had the courage to make a god of war - Janus - only close the Temple of Janus when there was peace.
Let us take strong, courageous, and wisdom-filled Christmas thoughts and imbue ourselves with them for this Christmas, then we will live through it in a dignified way. That is what I would like to convey to your souls as a Christmas greeting today. And I know that this Christmas greeting is in line with the impulse that one may truly and worthily celebrate only under the sign of the Christmas lights.

Results 51 through 60 of 505

˂ 1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 ... 51 ˃