Category Archives: Speaking with the Stars

What will your soul harvest?

12 August 2016 – Astro-weather: Tonight is the peak of the Perseid meteor shower (see yesterday’s blog offering for details https://reverseritual.com/glow-worms-hide-in-the-folds-of-my-blood-flashing-hygienic-iron-dust-from-shooting-stars/#comment-445) Today is also known as World Elephant Day, International Youth Day & in the United Kingdom the “Glorious Twelfth“, as it marks the traditional start of the grouse season.

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hive beedream

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

“To truly know the world, look deeply within your own being; to truly know yourself, take real interest in the world.” Rudolf Steiner

30 BC– Deathday of Egyptian queen Cleopatra

william blake then ancient of days

1827 – Deathday of 1827 – William Blake, poet, painter, mystic

1831 – Birthday of Helena Blavatsky

1848 – Deathday of George Stephenson, Renowned as the “Father of Railways”, he was an English civil & mechanical engineer who built the first public inter-city railway line in the world to use steam locomotives- considered a great example of diligent application & thirst for improvement

1851 – Isaac Singer is granted a patent for his sewing machine

Helena Blavatsky

1875 – Helena Blavatsky founded the Theosophical Society in NY

1877 – Thomas Edison invented the phonograph & made the first sound recording

SIL28-276-06, 5/14/08, 4:11 PM, 8C, 5832x6148 (167+927), 100%, Custom, 1/40 s, R18.5, G6.5, B17.9

1883 – The last quagga dies at the Artis Magistra zoo in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

1914 – World War I: The United Kingdom declares war on Austria-Hungary; the countries of the British Empire follow suit

1944 – Nazi German troops end the week-long Wola massacre, during which time at least 40,000 people were killed indiscriminately or in mass executions

1950 – Korean War: Bloody Gulch massacre—American POWs are massacred by North Korean Army.

1952 – The Night of the Murdered Poets: Thirteen prominent Jewish intellectuals are murdered in Moscow, Russia, Soviet Union.

1953 – The Soviet Union secretly tested its first hydrogen bomb

1953 – A 7.2 Ms earthquake shakes the southern Ionian Islands. 800 people were killed

1955 – Deathday of Thomas Mann, a German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, & the 1929 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate. His highly symbolic & ironic epic novels are noted for their insight into the psychology of the artist & the intellectual. His analysis & critique of the European & German soul used modernized German & Biblical stories, as well as the ideas of Goethe, Nietzsche & Schopenhauer

1960 – Echo 1A, NASA’s first successful communications satellite, is launched.

1964 – South Africa is banned from the Olympic Games due to the country’s racist policies

1976 –3,500 Palestinians are killed in the Tel al-Zaatar massacre, one of the bloodiest events of the Lebanese Civil War

1981 – The IBM Personal Computer is released

1992 – Deathday of John Cage

1998 – Swiss banks agreed to pay $1.25 billion as restitution to World War II Holocaust victims

2010 – Deathday of Isaac Bonewits, founder of Ár nDraíocht Féin

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hawk

My POD (Poem Of the Day)

~Open your wings

& fly from the Moon

To the Sun

Carrying the stars

In your fierce talons

~hag

***

lammasSunflower

Having been out & about in adventure-land when August began, striving with Faust to be truly human, I didn’t have a chance to fully immerse myself here at Reverse Ritual in the bounty that August brings. And yet the ‘big wheel keeps on turning’…

The Sun is in Regulus, the heart of the lion , which calls to mind the image of the King of beasts, lazing in the shade of the trees in the hot afternoon sun.

The earth is baking under this late summer sun, battered by the sudden violence of summer storms, & the Perseid meteor showers, as the wheel turns to Lammas, a term used by our ancestors for the start of the harvest season. Although not the longest day of the year, the Lammas season is the hottest part of the year.

During Spring & Summer, the earth was cooler than the sky; now the heat has flowed from the air to penetrate the earth, which is filled — pregnant — with the fire of the Sun, returning this warmth to the sky. The heat of the sun comes to us from above & below, & it feels as if the crops could be baked into ripeness.

Even the storms of the season carry fire in their hearts. We have the lightning strokes of thunderstorms- the sudden downpours out of a clear sky. Tropical storms & hurricanes strike with the fury of a lioness enraged.

But…The seeds of darkness have been planted. The days may carry the peak of warmth, & yet the Sun has already begun to fade, & the nights begin to be noticeably shorter.

The cycle of life turns past the peak of growth & into the time of release. The life of the Green God has begun to bleed off into the grain & into the fruits on the trees.

The King is Dead Long Live the King’: Now is also the time of sacrifice, of death in service of life. Some of the first fruits are ready for harvest, but some, too unripe to be eaten, must be plucked anyway. These are culls, killed so they won’t drain the life force from the fruit we wish to keep. If all the fruit were left on the tree, the life force would be diluted, & none of the fruit would grow to maturity. And even worse, too much fruit can weigh down a branch until it breaks, destroying the entire crop, & sometimes killing the tree. So the culls are killed, that the rest of the fruit-& we who depend on the crop for our survival-might live.

John Barleycorn must die…Cut in half & buried, then beaten with sticks, & finally crushed between stones, nevertheless He rises once again. Bread is the perfect sacrifice for Lammas, or “Loaf Mass”, as the Anglo-Saxons called it.

It’s more than just the first fruits of the earth –it also involves the first fruits of human labor. Grain is processed by human craft, & combined with the four elements to make the staff of life.

Lammas marks the point where we leave the Garden, & earn our own way,

“by the sweat of our brow”. It is the time of coming to maturity, of taking responsibility for our own path. We select the seeds we plant, & from that we select the fruits we will eventually harvest.

The harvest season is upon us, a time of judgment – for we are called upon to sift through the things that have grown up during the past half-year, & decide what we will keep & what we will cut down. We must make choices, we must discern, & we must act on our choices. 

lion knott

Lammas is a festival of regrets & farewells, of harvest & preserves.

Regrets: Think of the things you meant to do this summer or this year that are not coming to fruition. You can project your regrets onto natural objects like pine cones & throw them into the fire, releasing them. Or you can write them on dried corn husks or on a piece of paper & burn them.

Farewells: What is passing from your life? What is over? Say good-bye to it. As with regrets, you can find visual symbols & throw them into the fire, the lake or the ocean. You can also bury them in the ground, perhaps in the form of bulbs which will manifest in a new form in spring.

Harvest: What have you harvested this year? What seeds have your planted that are sprouting? Find a visual way to represent these, perhaps creating a decoration in your house which represents the harvest to you. Or you could make a corn dolly or learn to weave wheat which were made by early grain farmers as a resting place for the harvest spirits.

Preserves: This is also a good time for making preserves, either literally or symbolically. As you turn the summer’s fruit into jams, jellies & chutneys for winter, think about the spiritual fruits that you have gathered this year & how you can hold onto them. How can you keep them sweet in the store of your memory?

This kind of contemplation can give us a good opportunity to reflect upon our hopes & dreams that were sown in the dawn of the year, came to life in the springtime, & are now perhaps ready to bear fruit. And on the spiritual level, we can ask ourselves what wisdom we have garnered so far this year: What will your soul harvest? 

Blessings and Peace ~Hazel Archer Ginsberg

A liquid lotus in heat-Streaming electric dew

6 July 2016 – ASTRO-WEATHER Neptune rises shortly before 10:30 p.m. CDT this week & climbs above the southern horizon in Aquarius by the start of morning twilight

mercurysun

Mercury passes behind the Sun from Earth’s perspective at 10 p.m. CDT & remains hidden in our star’s glare. It will return to view in the evening sky by the end of the month

International Kissing Day

Feast Day of the 1st Prophet – Isaiah 7:14 “Therefore the Lord shall give you by itself a sign; Behold, a virgin shall be with child and will bear a son and shall call his name Immanuel”

Feast Day of Saint Romulus of Fiesole. Like the Romulus of ancient Roman legend, the story goes he was also abandoned, suckled by a wolf, & captured, raised & baptized by Saint Peter

1415 – Deathday of Jan Hus, considered the first Church reformer, since he lived before Luther, Calvin & Zwingli. Hus was a key predecessor to Protestantism. He was burned at the stake for heresy on this day.

1535 – Sir Thomas More is executed for treason against King Henry VIII of England

Marc Chagall 1910s-blue-circusBlue Circus by Marc Chagall

1887 – Birthday of Marc Chagall, Belarusian-French painter & poet

1892 – 3,800 striking steelworkers engage in a day-long battle with Pinkerton agents during the Homestead Strike, leaving ten dead & dozens wounded

1917 – World War I: Arabian troops led by Lawrence of Arabia capture Aqaba from the Ottoman Empire during the Arab Revolt

Dalai-Lama-Crop-

1935 – Birthday of the 14th Dalai Lama

1944 – Jackie Robinson refuses to move to the back of a bus, leading to a court-martial

1944 – The Hartford circus fire, kills approximately 168 people &injures over 700

1947 – The AK-47 goes into production in the Soviet Union.

1957 – John Lennon & Paul McCartney meet for the first time, as teenagers at Woolton Fete, three years before forming the Beatles

1962 – Deathday of William Faulkner, Nobel Prize laureate

1962 – As a part of Operation Plowshare, the Sedan nuclear test takes place

louis armstrong

1971 – Deathday of Louis Armstrong

1988 – The Piper Alpha drilling platform in the North Sea is destroyed by explosions & fires. 167 oil workers are killed

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lightning fisheye

~A lightning bolt…Sudden Glory…

Holding space in space

A liquid lotus in heat

Streaming electric dew

Touching deeply I receive it

Like a hickey on the throat of the sky

~hag

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i think speech gestures

The “School of the Sounds” reverberating still…

The art of speech teaches us to speak consciously in the exhalation process, bringing an artistic dynamic to the breath. The transformative forces of these breath-infused phonemes & rhythms are able to work in a living way directly into our being, right into the health-bestowing ether body.

We express our whole being in the process of expiration” ~Rudolf Steiner Spiritual Relations in the Human Organism

At the top of the in-breath (in the inspiration) there is a stillness, a mini pralaya, an anticipatory hearing of what is about to be spoken – & this is an expression of the astral body.

Interesting to think of the tongue as “the souls’ organ of touch” working into the astral body. Hitting the palate or the teeth, exercises the etheric body. Practicing sounds that work from the lips make vibrant our ‘I’, inclining us toward the outer world. In this process the vowels provide the inner substance which is shaped by the consonants.

Of course the tempo & rhythm is important too. We can direct our intention to have an effect on the blood thru the speaking of quick consonants, or affect breathing & thinking thru slower speech.

The in-breath (I just love that the word inspiration applies here) plays a large role in the ability to remember. The out-breath, in contrast plays the role in lovingly giving ourselves over to the future.

“I think speech

I speak

I have spoken

I seek for myself in the spirit

I feel myself within myself

I am on the way to the spirit

To myself”

~RS

But what about listening?

Marie Steiner-von Sivers says: “We have actually completely lost the ability to understand in hearing, and in everyday life we are willing to still tolerate hearing while understanding. Yet there is an essential difference between understanding in hearing & hearing in understanding.” ~Speech and Drama

So how can we be sensitive to a process of ensouling sound & word to support mobility in listening, & in our thinking? This hearing-feeling -thinking furthers the forces of memory & is helpful in making our remembering more lively & active. Memory bestows light & allows us to develop our personality & our ‘I’ forces.

Light & air surround us, the more harmoniously we are able to embody the sounds we speak, the lighter & more light-bearing we can become within. To be awake to these processes we feel our way to primal, archetypal forces which allow us to understand earth existence between birth & death.

In life after death, it is the forces of memory & of love with which we breathe, in conjuction with spiritual beings – since memory & love work together like breath here on earth.

Let’s see what tomorrow brings

Until soon

Blessings and Peace ~Hazel Archer Ginsberg

We the People…

freemason_burning_heart

“We can rise with the fire of freedom
Truth is the fire that burns our chains
& we can stop the fire of destruction
Healing is the fire running through our veins.”
~Starhawk

Dear Freinds – What opportunities open for us today with a New moon on The 4th of July…?

As the power of ‘The 4th ’ Reverberates in our Collective Consciousness –
Let’s Imagine Peace – Think Love & Activate Understanding – all the while envisioning that the “bombs bursting in air” are beautiful, gentle fireworks of Realization & Enlightenment, going off like light bulbs in American minds – Working towards a Global Inter-dependence Independence Day. A mutual dependency upon the independence of every nation & its people – Imagine everyone celebrating our differences with great admiration & respect…

Betsy-Ross sewing

Every July 4th I think of Betsy Ross; remember her?
I admire this enterprising woman, who led a very interesting life. She was actually disowned as a Quaker because she married an Episcopalian, who was later ironically killed while guarding a munitions dump.

So here she was this young widow, telling George Washington that she thought the 5 pointed-star would look much better on the flag then his idea of having 6- pointed stars – true story. I can just picture her sitting in the back room of the small upholstery business she ran by herself, with this mighty symbol, that she helped design, laid out on her sweet lap, sewing away.

Now I’m not much for nationalism with all its borders & power over others kind of patriotism, but I will admit that I love to see a well-made flag flapping in the breeze. All flags are cool – family crests with their ancient symbols, & especially those colorful banners you see on porches, shaped like butterflies or autumn leaves. I’m just a sucker for a glyph in the wind, but that doesn’t mean I don’t enjoy a good flag burning – now don’t get me wrong I love America – I just think fire rituals are very powerful & impacting.

As a matter of fact, at the BBQ I went to on The 4th a few years ago, the wind blew the table cloth decorated with American flags into a candle where it caught fire & I was the 1st (& only one) to shout, Woo-hoo!  Yeah, burn the flag, burn the flag…I don’t think the Ginsberg’s totally get my sense of the dramatic…but I digress…

We all know what we’re talking about when we say ‘The 4th’ right – But when was the last time you stopped to think about what ‘The 4th’ is really all about. When I looked it up on the internet it gave me hit after hit on picnic ideas, & recipes for apple pie, hints on BBQ techniques, free patriotic screen savers, many downloadable versions of the “rockets’ red glare” with animated fireworks displays; & yet somehow they forgot to mention the fact that fireworks were a Chinese invention, an ancient art form that we took & made into gun powder. I’m serious, is baseball & burnt weiners all there is?

Does anyone want to give us some history here, or a brief overview of the meaning of Independence Day? I was never much good with all the details, the dates & names & such, exoteric history isn’t my strong point, but I’m always able to get the big picture, & it seems to me that The 4th is about freedom from oppression – ‘No taxation without representation’ & all that – The center point being the Declaration of Independence. When was the last time you read this important document of our countries origin? You can print it off the net.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all people are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are, Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness…”

Now before we all jump up & start pledging allegiance here, let’s remember that these ‘founding fathers’ with all their Masonic symbolism & righteousness, denied women the right to vote, & considered the Native American people to be “savages”. There is a direct reference to them as such in the document itself, & they felt justified in the systematic genocide of these highly spiritual people in the name of gentrifying the frontier. And of course most of these men were slave owners, participating in the unjustifiable atrocity of buying & selling human beings, virtually destroying the royal kingdom of the African people, employing many hideous human rights violations, enslaving them, raping, beating or working them to death. Can these sickening offences ever truly be rectified? Such a bitter legacy to add to our melting pot.

The rest of the document goes on to give a laundry list of the crimes against the colonists by the king of Great Britain, whose name happens to be George the 3rd…! Who says history doesn’t repeat itself, many of these same crimes were perpetrated not so long ago by George Bush & his dynasty.

Have we gained independence from one tyranny all those years ago, only to allow it to happen again on a world scale? Having come through so much pain in the birth of our nation, it is now time to let go of the nationalism, so we can come to true Freedom…We must open our eyes to read the fine print of our birthright as human beings, reclaiming our rights to go forward as a united community of world people, in peaceful justice, in equity, with common sense & reason, with compassion…We need to, not just declare our independence, but our Inter-dependence.

We have a strong voice…this is our world…our sacred space & we can sing any reality we want to! And I don’t know about you, but I’d rather sing ‘America the beautiful’, or even something like, ‘”My Country, ‘Tis of Thee”, then the war worshiping ‘Star Spangled Banner’ any day…

So for our next song, I’ll get off the soap box, & let the power of the united rhythm in our collective heart-beat, be our anthem – to bring healing & forgiveness to the old wounds…& hope for the future…

Blessed Bee…
~hag

Check out these videos on Columbia The Goddess of America:

Let Freedom Ring -Reclaiming the Wisdom of Columbia – Folk Soul of America’.

Reclaiming the Wisdom of America

July 4th, 2016 – “Speaking with the Stars”: New Moon occurs at 10:01 a.m. CDT. At its new phase, the Moon crosses the sky with the Sun & so remains hidden in our star’s glare.

new moon bluewoman!

If you ever thought the Sun’s distance controlled temperatures here on Earth, today should convince you otherwise. Earth reaches aphelion- its most distant point from the Sun at noon CDT. The Northern Hemisphere’s warm temperatures at this time of year arise because the Sun passes nearly overhead at noon; during winter, the Sun hangs low in the sky

Today at 3:49pm CDT, the dwarf planet Pluto comes to opposition– That’s when we on Earth pass more or less between the Sun & Pluto, placing this distant world opposite the Sun in our sky

When Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto in 1930, it was in front of the constellation Gemini. In the 86 years since then, the planet has traveled only a short distance around our sky, to appear in front of the constellation Sagittarius in 2016. Pluto’s entire orbit takes 248 years. Pluto will remain in front of Sagittarius until 2023

Also today: The ‘Juno probe’ is scheduled to enter orbit around Jupiter after a nearly five-year trek through deep space

Rudolf Steiner’s Lectures on this day 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY 

1054 – A supernova, called SN 1054, is seen by Chinese Song dynasty, Arab, & Amerindian observers near the star Zeta Tauri. For several months it remains bright enough to be seen during the day. Its remnants form the Crab Nebula

1744 – The Iroquois are forced to cede lands between the Allegheny Mountains & the Ohio River to the British colonies

We the People

1776 – American Revolution: The United States Declaration of Independence is adopted by the Second Continental Congress

When three presidents died on the Fourth of July, Americans saw the work of  God - Los Angeles Times

1826 – Thomas Jefferson, third president of the United States, dies the same day as John Adams, second president of the United States, on the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the United States Declaration of Independence.

1831 – Deathday of former president James Monroe

1827 – Slavery is abolished in New York State

Library of Congress

1855 – In Brooklyn, New York City, the first edition of Walt Whitman‘s book of poems, Leaves of Grass, is published

1862 – Lewis Carroll tells Alice Liddell a story that would grow into Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

1863 – American Civil War: Siege of Vicksburg: Confederate Army surrenders to Ulysses S. Grant after 47 days of siege

1863 – American Civil War: The Army of Northern Virginia withdraws from the battlefield after losing the Battle of Gettysburg, signaling an end to the Southern invasion of the North

1886 – The people of France offer the Statue of Liberty to the people of the United States

1914 – The funeral of Archduke Franz Ferdinand & his wife Sophie takes place in Vienna, six days after their assassinations in Sarajevo

1918 – Bolsheviks kill Tsar Nicholas II of Russia & his family

1934 – Leo Szilard patents the chain-reaction design for the atomic bomb

1934 – Deathday of Marie Curie, French-Polish physicist & chemist, Nobel Prize laureate

1941 – Nazi troops massacre Polish scientists & writers in the captured Ukrainian city of Lviv

1941 – World War II: The Burning of the Riga synagogues with 300 Jews locked in the basement

1943 – World War II: The Battle of Kursk, the largest full-scale battle in history & the world’s largest tank battle, begins in Prokhorovka village

1950 – Radio Free Europe first broadcasts

1966 – U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Freedom of Information Act

~Mine is
A heart of ruby-red –
A Crimson hot
dark as murder on a Holy Day
pulsing sense organ.
Mine is a fist of emerald & gold –
the gnarled roots
of a rosewood burstingwith thorns
& bright blossoms
in the Sun…
~hag

 

 

 

I Am a Thought Made manifest

25 June 2016 – ASTRO WEATHER: Look high in the northwest after darkness falls & you’ll be greeted by the familiar sight of the Big Dipper. It forms the body & tail of Ursa Major the Great Bear. Use the Pointers, the two stars at the end of the Dipper’s bowl, to find Polaris, which lies due north. Polaris marks the end of the Little Dipper’s handle. On June evenings, the relatively faint stars of this dipper arc directly above Polaris.

big dipper june

1767 – Mexican Indians riot sending the Jesuit priests home

1767 – Deathday of Georg Philipp Telemann, a German Baroque composer & multi-instrumentalist. Almost completely self-taught in music, he became a composer against his family’s wishes. Telemann one of the most prolific in history, was considered by his contemporaries to be one of the leading German composers of the time—he was compared favorably both to his friend Johann Sebastian Bach, who made Telemann the godfather & namesake of his son & to George Frideric Handel. Telemann made an important link between the late Baroque & early Classical styles.

1822 – Deathday of E. T. A. Hoffmann, a Prussian Romantic author of fantasy & horror, a jurist, composer, music critic, draftsman & caricaturist. His stories form the basis of Jacques Offenbach’s famous opera The Tales of Hoffmann. He is also the author The Nutcracker of which the famous ballet is based.

1876 – Battle of the Little Bighorn & the death of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer.

1900 – The Taoist monk Wang Yuanlu discovers the Dunhuang manuscripts, a cache of ancient texts that are of great historical & religious significance.

1910 – Igor Stravinsky’s ballet The Firebird is premiered in Paris

1924 – Beginning of the Curative Pedagogical Course by Rudolf Steiner in Dornach

1940 –France officially surrenders to Germany

1947 –The Diary of Anne Frank is published

1950 – The Korean War begins with the invasion of South Korea by North Korea

1978 – The rainbow flag representing gay pride is flown for the first time during the San Francisco Gay Freedom Day Parade

1991 – Croatia & Slovenia declare independence from Yugoslavia

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weaving-garlands carl herpferCarl Herpfer

~Weaving garlands of wort & hibiscus,

I am a thought made manifest

~hag

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john-the-baptist fore

Who is this John the Baptist?

Studying Rudolf Steiner’s work on the Gospels, we gain profound insights that have the power to touch deep truths buried in the unconscious regions of our soul, regarding one of the most powerful personalities in the history of humankind. In the Gospel of St. John the Evangelist, right after the mighty description of the evolution of the cosmos, we read: “There came a man, send from God, his name was John.” (John 1.6.)

In the original Greek, Johannes, is made up of the vowels “E – O – Ah“, three very powerful Eurythmy gestures. The “E” represents the upright human being – one arm pointing toward heaven, the other grounding toward the earth; an admonition to be here now. The “O” is a round gesture of “inwardness”, an embracing of the soul. The “Ah” is an opening to heavenly revelation; both arms raised in a V, becoming a vessel that opens to heaven, a gesture of “vision”.

The Gospel of St. Luke describes the birth of John; how an angel appeared to the priest Zechariah, telling him, “your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, & you shall  call him John.” (Luke 1.13.) The angel also foretells the task of this being John: “… even from his mother’s womb will he be filled with the Holy Spirit. And he will turn many sons of Israel to the Lord their God again. He will be his forerunner and will pave his way, bearing within him the spirit and power of Elijah, to change men’s hearts so that fathers shall rediscover the meaning of childhood, and those who have become alienated from God shall find the meaning of Good again. So shall he make a well-prepared people ready for the Lord “(Luke 1.15-17.)

The birth of John takes place just after the height of Summer, on June 24th, framed by the births of the two Jesus children. On the one hand, the birth of the Matthew Jesus child on January 6th, with the visitation of the ‘three wise men from the East’, taking place in Bethlehem. And months later, we hear of the other birth, of the Luke Jesus child, on December 24th, with the heavenly revelation to the shepherds.

In another mystery, we see the spiritual body or angel of Gautama Buddha, which appears in the etheric-astral realm, first, in the meeting between Elizabeth, (just before John the Baptist is born), with Mary, the mother of Jesus (Luke 1.39-56.) & then also at the revelation to the shepherds (Luke 11.8-15.).

Rudolf Steiner tells us that the Gospel of St. Luke brings us a new form of Christ-centered Buddhism, expressing the kind of love & compassion, that can be understood by even the simplest souls. The connection of the Buddha to JB & his mysterious influence on Christianity can be seen throughout the life of John the Baptist.

After his life as an ascetic, JB begins publicly preaching & baptizing. In the 5th Gospel, Steiner describes how JB was close to the community of the Essenes, as well as with his young cousin, Jesus of Nazareth. John the Baptist’s sermon at the river Jordan shows how the teachings of Buddha come forward in a new form. – Just like the Buddha declared certain truths & warnings in his famous sermon at Benares some five hundred years before, so too did JB speak in a similar way. Buddha says: “Do not think, because you are a Brahman, you are able to advance …“, John changes this admonition to fit his time, saying: “Do not think, because you are children of Abraham …” Buddha gave the teaching of love & compassion – JB gave the parable of the man who has two coats, how we must share with those that have none. And just as the monks came to Buddha with questions, now the tax collectors & soldiers come to John the Baptist.

Yep there’s more tomorrow

Until soon

Blessings and Peace ~Hazel Archer Ginsberg

***

veil fantasie in f minor mozart

Join our community gathering:

Sunday June 26th, 2pm -4pm at the Rudolf Steiner Branch of the Anthroposophical Society 4249 N. Lincoln Ave, Chicago IL. 60618. MAP

He Must Increase but I Must Decrease–  Exploring the Mysteries of Midsummer 

with special guest Robert Karp, Co-Director of the Biodynamic Association.

How do we stand wakefully within the sublime mysteries of summer and St. John’s tide? Who is the mysterious archangel of Midsummer described by Rudolf Steiner and what is his relationship to John the Baptist? Can we trace his influence in modern culture, in modern America? What transformation does he seek to bring into our souls and into our communities?

These are some of the questions we will explore in this talk and, in a series of social-artistic exercises that will be incorporated into the talk.

***PLEASE BRING YOUR JOURNAL if you have one***

Hammer Dulcimer  by Dr. Elaine Wagner

Rudolf Steiner’s Summer Mantra, Read by Elisabeth Swisher

Labyrinth Walk with ~hag

For more info. Contact Hazel ReverseRitual@gmail.com

Mid-Summers Eve

19 June 2016 – Happy Father’s Day

fathers day

On June 19, 1910, the governor of Washington proclaimed the nation’s first “Father’s Day.” However, it was not until 1972, 58 years after President Woodrow Wilson made Mother’s Day official, that the day became a nationwide holiday in the United States.

The “Mother’s Day” we celebrate today has its origins in the peace-and-reconciliation campaigns of the post-Civil War era.

The campaign to celebrate the nation’s fathers did not meet with the same enthusiasm. On July 5, 1908, a West Virginia church sponsored the nation’s first event explicitly in honor of fathers, a Sunday sermon in memory of the 362 men who had died in the previous December’s explosions at the Fairmont Coal Company mines. Slowly, the holiday spread.

However, many men continued to disdain the day. So struggling retailers & advertisers redoubled their efforts to make Father’s Day a “second Christmas” for men, promoting goods such as neckties, hats, socks, pipes & tobacco, golf clubs & other sporting goods, & greeting cards. When World War II began, advertisers began to argue that celebrating Father’s Day was a way to honor American troops & support the war effort. By the end of the war, Father’s Day may not have been a federal holiday, but it was a national institution.

In 1972, in the middle of a hard-fought presidential re-election campaign, Richard Nixon signed a proclamation making Father’s Day a federal holiday at last. Today, economists estimate that Americans spend more than $1 billion each year on Father’s Day gifts.

May all Father’s be like a beneficent protector king, compassionate, helpful & wise.

325 – 1st Council of Nicea concludes & promulgates the Nicene Creed

1566 – Birthday of James VI of Scotland & I of England, son of Mary, Queen of Scots; inspirer of William Shakespeare, Jacob Boehme, & Jacob Balde & the “Golden Age” of Elizabethan literature & drama. He sponsored the translation of the Bible that was named after him: the Authorised King James Version

1623 – Birthday of Blaise Pascal, French mathematician, physicist, inventor, philosopher & child prodigy.

1844 – Deathday of Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, defender of Goethean science, a French naturalist who established the principle of “unity of composition”. His scientific views had a transcendental flavor.

1862 – The U.S. Congress prohibits slavery in United States territories, nullifying Dred Scott v. Sandford.

1867 – Deathday of Maximillian I. Seeking to legitimize French rule in the Americas, Napoleon III invited Maximilian to establish a new Mexican monarchy for him. Many foreign governments refused to recognize Maximilian’s claim or regime. His self-declared empire collapsed, & he was executed by the Mexican government.

1917 – The solar eclipse of June 19, 1917

1936 – The solar eclipse of June 19, 1936

1953 – Julius & Ethel Rosenberg are executed at Sing Sing, in New York

1964 – The Civil Rights Act of 1964 is approved after surviving an 83-day filibuster in the United States Senate

2012 – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange requests asylum in London’s Ecuadorian Embassy for fear of extradition to the US after publication of previously classified documents including footage of civilian killings by the US army

~   ~   ~

veil natureDoris Dumphy

Calendar of the Soul Thirteenth Week [June 19, 2016 – June 25, 2016]

And when I live in senses’ heights,

  There flames up deep within my soul

  Out of the spirit’s fiery worlds

  The gods’ own word of truth:

  In spirit sources seek expectantly

  To find your spirit kinship.

 

~   ~  ~

summerscience

Tomorrow 20 June 2016, is the Summer Solstice, exact 5:34pm CDT.

Astrologically the Summer Solstice, the height of the Sun, corresponds to the entry of the Sun into the sign of Cancer, which is interestingly a water sign governed by the moon. And this year, on Summer Solstice we will also experience the Full Moon! So tonight is the eve of what is traditionally called the Honey Moon or Strawberry Moon.

Cancer symbolizes the moving waters of our inner life, our moods & cycles, our instincts & intuition – our juiciness! It holds the force & power of our imagination, our emotions, our roots. A reflective, passive, cyclic force, this sign marks the intimate inner world of our personal & family bonds, as well as our larger collective family.

The Festival of Summer Solstice is sometimes called Midsummer’s Eve & it is celebrated like other ‘holy days’ on the Eve, starting at twilight, when the power is most concentrated.

Midsummer’s Eve is a magical time to communicate with the plant & fairy spirits, as it is the time of the herb harvest. All plants gathered this night are considered exceptionally potent for healing & ritual purposes.

St. John’s Wort & other healing herbs are placed around the home for protection as they dry. Since it is a solar herb, it is used to bring the power of the sun to people who suffer from depression. They are also thrown into the Midsummer bonfire, & when the coals have cooled down the ashes are mixed with water & sprinkled on the fields, the 4 corners of the home, & the on the head or feet of the children.

Royal fern seeds gathered at midnight on the eve are said to make you invisible; rub the blossoms on your eyelids to see the wee folk, which will also make you wealthy & wise, but be sure to carry a bit of rue in your pocket or you might be ‘pixie-led’. Can’t find the rue, then turn your jacket inside out & follow the old ‘Ley-Lines’, which will keep you from getting lost in fairy land.

Divination on matters of love are especially powerful on Midsummer’s Eve. Young women place yarrow or other herbs & flowers native to their part of the world peaking at this time, under their pillows, to dream of their future mates.

The ancient Druids celebrated the Summer Solstice as the Wedding of Heaven & Earth. The Goddess manifests as Mother Earth & the God as the Sun King.

summer marriage of sun & earth'

More lore tomorrow

Until soon

Blessings and Peace ~Hazel Archer Ginsberg