4,99 €
As levels of stress increase in modern life, many people are turning to the practise of meditation as a way of finding harmony, tranquility of soul, and of awakening dormant powers of spiritual potential. In this concise and practical book - based on the path of meditative knowledge developed by Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) - Jorgen Smit removes the mystique surrounding meditation. He shows how medative images can be formed, and how we can gain control over our thoughts and our will by various simple exercises. Working with the guidelines presented, we can come to experience the powers of our higher self, and can be prepared for an encounter ultimately with the spiritual presence of the higher self of all humanity, the Christ.
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MEDITATION
Transforming our lives for the encounter with Christ
Jörgen Smit
Translated by Anna R. Meuss and Johanna Collis
Sophia Books
Sophia Books Hillside House, The Square Forest Row, E. Sussex RH18 5ES
www.rudolfsteinerpress.com
Published by Rudolf Steiner Press 2012
First English edition by Rudolf Sterner Press 1991 Revised second edition 1996 Reprinted 2007
Originally published in German under the title Meditation und Christus-Erfahrung. Wege zur Verwandlung des eigenen Lebens by Verlag Freies Geistesleben, Stuttgart, in 1990
© Verlag Freies Geistesleben 1990 This revised translation © Rudolf Sterner Press 1996
The moral right of the author has been asserted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 1 85584 351 6
Cover by Andrew Morgan Typeset by DP Photosettmg, Aylesbury, Bucks.
Contents
First Steps
The Rose Cross Meditation
Thought Control
Meditation on Personal Biography
Practical Aspects
Will Control
The Path to the Higher Self
Positivity Exercise
Acquired Idealism
The Encounter with Christ
First Steps
There is a general tendency today, among those who look to meditation as a way of broadening consciousness, to turn away from the ideas and opinions of our modern age—ideas that are largely determined by the way in which scientists see the world—and seek to achieve quite different levels of consciousness, which frequently have no connection with the scientific way of thinking.
In anthroposophy, on the other hand, the meditative path to knowledge firmly takes everyday consciousness as its starting point and first of all sets out to explore its boundaries. It is not a matter of simply giving up the old for something new, but rather of broadening the conscious experience that we have gained in an age when science largely determines our views. This is not done by speculation and theory, but by developing new faculties, faculties that we already have, but which are dormant.
The point is, then, to make use of a potential for growth and development that already exists, and not fill the mind with alien notions or seek to dress it up in foreign garb. We must learn to see where such potential lies, for the seeds are already there and can be made to grow well beyond the boundaries of our present conscious experience.
The potential we have for opening up consciousness is anything but small; in fact it is vast. We have to start small, however.
The following analogy will give a clearer picture of the steps that can be taken to broaden our consciousness.
In the middle is our everyday consciousness. Below it is the level of consciousness we have in sleep (the level of dream consciousness is ignored for present purposes). Sleep here means deep, dreamless sleep, with consciousness reduced to a point where it has no content. Sleep-walkers will of course be active even at this level, but they are unconscious of this. This is a level where we have profound and total darkness.
We need to go to this level of consciousness night after night for the health of our waking daytime consciousness, but we are of course unable to do any of the things in deep sleep that we are able to do when awake.
Above the waking level is a higher level of consciousness. It is exactly as far above the waking level as the deep sleep level is below it. Just as we are able to look down from waking consciousness to the level of sleep consciousness, where we know nothing of what we are doing or what goes on around us, so we are able to look down from the level of higher consciousness—once we have fully achieved it—to our everyday consciousness. This everyday level does not lose significance when we achieve higher consciousness, just as our sleep consciousness does not lose significance because we also have waking consciousness.
When we look down from higher consciousness to our waking consciousness, everything we do at that level will appear to us the way sleep-walking does when seen from the waking state.