Community Life, Inner Development, Sexuality and the Spiritual Teacher
GA 253
This collection of lectures contains Steiner's strongest statements on the issues of human relationships in a spiritual community such as the Anthroposophical Society. Occasioned by an unfortunate “scandal” involving people influenced by psycho-analysis, these lectures present Steiner's comprehensive assessment of Freud's work and of psychoanalysis as a whole. As Steiner shows, our physical life, including human sexuality, has spiritual roots; looking to sexuality for the explanation of human behavior is therefore looking in the wrong direction.
In emphatic, forceful language, Steiner makes clear that becoming part of a spiritual community entails responsibilities/ indeed, a new way of being. Above all, members must become actively interested and engaged in the concerns of the group, rather than simply wanting to benefit from it. It is essential for members to realize that a spiritual community is not just a club of like-minded people, but a living entity, a being that needs the care and respect of its creators. Throughout these lectures the attentive reader will gain much insight into the nature of the spiritual life and the role of the teacher in that life. This book will be of interest to anyone involved in a spiritual practice or a spiritual community. Translated by Catherine E. Creeger
About This Edition | ||
Introduction | ||
The Goesch-Sprengel Situation - Address I | August 21, 1915 | |
The Goesch-Sprengel Situation - Address II | August 22, 1915 | |
I. | Requirements of Our Life together in the Anthroposophical Society | September 10, 1915 |
II. | The Anthroposophical Society as a Living Being | September 11, 1915 |
III. | Swedenborg: An Example of Difficulties in Entering the Spiritual World | September 12, 1915 |
IV. | Methods and Rational of Freudian Psychoanalysis | September 13, 1915 |
V. | Sexuality and Modern Clairvoyance, Freudian Psychoanalysis and Swedenborg as a Seer | September 14, 1915 |
VI. | The Concept of Love as it Relates to Mysticism | September 15, 1915 |
VII. | The Philosophy of Psychoanalysis as Illuminated by an Anthroposophical Understanding of the Human Being | September 16, 1915 |
The Protagonists | ||
Resolving the Case | ||
Notes |