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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Commentary on the Gospel of John,
By
This review is from: The Gospel of St. John (Hardcover)
In an era when 'evangelical' and 'fundamentalist' adherence to wildly inaccurate materialistic interpretations of the Bible dominates theological discourse, Rudolf Steiner's series of lectures on the Gospels given in the waning years of Pax Europa, before the outbreak of World War I, are ever the more relevant and important. If truth is holy - then the better part of Steiner's work (to which these lectures make an integral contribution)demands to be treated as such.
For various reasons, not the least of which is the darkening reign of materialist thought in every area of life (greviously, including religion), Steiner is today abjured my most thinkers with any sort of public audience and read by few. Only in education, through the Waldorf schools, is Steiner's influence directly felt on a somewhat widespread more popular level. Yet, Steiner's thought is too powerful to fade or to die. Despite the concerns of those who feel that Steiner's extensive descriptions of the human spiritual anatomy and history could easily be no more than mere speculation, insufficiently justified by material fact, and thinly argued at best, there is an undeniable consistency to the logic of his claims and the reasons he gives for their acceptance within the context of our experience. Within the limits currently alotted for these reviews, I can only justify my view with the briefest of explanations drawn from the text: "Let us ask: - What then is essential for love? What is essential in order that one person love another? It is this - that he be in posssession of his full self-conscousness, that he be wholly independent. No one can love another in the full sense of the word if this love be not a free gift of one person to another. My hand does not love my organism. Only one who is independent, one who is not bound to the other person, can love him." This idea - which stands at the heart of the increasing individualization of the human spirit, ushered in and fostered through the Mission of Christ and the present evolutionary course of humanity, is analyzed with a depth and eloquence in this work that no earnest student of the Gospels should miss.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Seeing with new eyes.,
By Bible readers often comment on John having a completely different tone from the other Gospels. Steiner's solution to the mystery is radical, but coherent. Don't miss this book! |
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The Gospel of St. John by Rudolf Steiner (Paperback - May 1, 1962)
$19.95
In Stock | ||