Meditation by Rudolph Steiner

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Meditation by Rudolph Steiner

There is no mystery about meditation. Before you begin, you must select a meditation theme or practicesomething that interests you, the layers of whose meaning you wish to explore. This may be a verse or line of Rudolf Steiner or of any spiritual or mystical literature from the Upanishads to an alchemical text. Or, it may be an image or symbol like the Rose Cross, the Caduceus, or Ouroboros or a cosmological diagram from some old alchemical book. Or, again, it may be some natural or fabricated object (a pebble or a pin), or even a symbolic gesture like the sign of the Cross, holding the palms together, or outstretching the arms. It may even be a question that has come to you, or that you have formulated. Once you have decidedlet us say that you have chosen the theme Wisdom lives in the Lightyou are ready to begin. It is best to choose a peaceful time of the day. Find a quiet place where you will not be disturbed. Pick a comfortable chair, one that feels good to you, that you feel at home in, and where your back can be reasonably straight and your feet rest easily on the floor. Place a pen and notebook beside you. If you wish, and are used to it, you may sit on a cushion on the floor. There are no rules. The attitude is experimental. See what works. Find out what happens. Once you are seated, take a few deep breaths to relax. Relax your face, your neck and shoulders, your chest area, your stomach, your legs and feet. Let your hands rest lightly on your thighs or in your lap. Again, whatever feels comfortable. Settle in. Feel at home, at peace with yourself and the world. Think to yourself: Now I am going to begin my meditation. Relax your mouth into a half-smile, breathe lightly and easily, and allow the thoughts and memories of the day to dissipate slowly. Fill yourself with a mood of reverence or devotion by orienting yourself momentarily to the higher worldsto God, or the angels, or whatever is highest for you. Now, carefully place the chosen phrase in the center of your consciousness. Think around it, taking each word in turn, as well as the sentence as a whole, pondering, associating, and amplifying until you feel you have, for the moment, exhausted the possibilities. Now, collapse the sentence into one of its words. For instance, collapse Wisdom lives in the Light into the word Light. Then concentrate all that you have associated, pondered, and amplified into a single beam of attention and focus it on the whole sentence condensed into the word Light. Keep your attention as focused as possible. If you are distracted or wander off, simply return to the theme and refocus. Do this for as long as feels comfortable (or you sense your attention tiring). Then, when it feels right, release the sentence so that your mind is empty. Try to keep it empty as long as possible. See what happens, what comes down. If images occur, follow them and let them unfold. After a short period, at a certain moment in this process, you will feel a natural closure occurring. You will feel that the meditation is ending. Let it end. Sit quietly. At an appropriate moment, say to yourself, Now the meditation is over. Reach for your notebook, and write down whatever seemed noteworthy to you about what just happened. As for distractions, they are to be expected. If your mind wanders off, as it will, do not be discouraged (even if this happens repeatedly and continuously), simply return to the theme of your meditation.

Meditational Reading by Rudolph Steiner

There is the monastic practice of lectio divina, or sacred, slow, contemplative reading. The reading and learning by heart of sacred texts lay at the heart of Christian spiritual practice from earliest times. Lectio is slow, reflective, thorough reading and re-reading, word by word, sentence by sentence, sometimes only completing one or two in the allotted time. You read as if God were speaking to you. You read with your heart. You listen over and over again to the words, straining to hear what is being said, what God means and wants from you. Entering the stage of meditation, you begin to ruminate, ponder, associate, and think around Gods word, as if it were addressed directly and only to you, questioning your own life. The second example comes from the Hermetic, alchemical lineage of those whom Steiner calls the old philosophers. This Rosicrucian tradition was also text-based, similar in many ways to lectio divina. In this case, the texts are esoteric, dense, symbolic, occult, paradoxical allegories, containing the most profound understanding of creation and nature expressed in radically non-dual language. Anyone who has ever tried to read an alchemical text knows how difficult it is to penetrate and understand even the first glimmers of the wisdom it contains. There is only one way. Lege, lege, ora, et lege: Read, read, pray, and read again. By readingwhat Steiner in his description of the Rosicrucian path calls studyis meant something very close to the kind of meditation underlying Steiners teaching. Here we should not forget that, for Steiner, as for the monks and the old alchemical philosophers of nature, everything is text. The cosmos is a vast, polysemous, multileveled book. It is to be read, as everything else is to be read: stars, faces, hands, flowers, rocks. St. Anthony, when asked by some visitors, Sir philosopher, what do you do, deprived as you are of books to be read in your desert retreat? answered: I read the Book of Nature. Reading in the book of nature, which is not an activity different in kind from the reading of a sacred text, lies at the center of Steiners vision of a renewal of cosmic intelligence in our time. Reading, when Steiner speaks of it, should never be taken in the narrow sense of referring to books alone, but as human cognitive activity engaged in active, redeeming perception of the world. Such meditation should be done regularly and persistently. Working with the same meditation repeatedly deepens the experience, which is always new (never the same). One never exhausts a meditation; and there is no telling how long one must persevere before a satisfactory, though always provisional, result is reached. It is important to realize, too, that, although a meditation is formally restricted to its fifteen minutes, after which we return to our unimpeded daily tasks, informally, once a meditation is begun, its questioning continues to live spiritually through the days and months, and we never know when an insight will come.

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