be true as time

somebody coming in blackness
like a star
and the world be a great bush
on his head
and his eyes be fire
in the city
and his mouth be true as time

he be calling the people brother
even in the prison
even in the jail

i’m just only a baptist preacher
somebody bigger than me coming
in blackness like a star

—Lucille Clifton, "john"


Featured Titles

Barefoot Through Burning Lava
On Sicily, the Island of Cain: An Esoteric Travelogue
T.H. Meyer

Drawn by the mysterious Mount Etna, Meyer sets off on a quest to discover the secrets of the Mediterranean islands of Sicily and Stromboli. The Sicilian region is not only famous for the drama of its live volcanoes, but also for its associations with numerous cultural figures, ranging from Cain, Empedocles, Klingsor, and the much-maligned Cagliostro, through to Goethe and Rudolf Steiner.
READ MORE

Touching the Horizon
A Woman’s Pilgrimage across Europe to the Castle by the Golden City
Karin Jarman

As a child, Karin Jarman loved to gaze into the distance, longing to reach the horizon. She had an urge to travel—the very word seeming to have an enchanting effect. This, along with a deep connection to fairy tales, inspired her to embark on her own magical journey to discover a mysterious castle by a far-off Golden City. This is a rare and gripping narrative of possibility, realization, and metamorphosis.
READ MORE

Your Spiritual Journey
A Travel Guide: Anthroposophical Aspects of Changing Human Consciousness
Henk van Oort

In a series of short studies enlivened by color illustrations, van Oort takes the reader on a spiritual journey through a variety of topics that relate to everyday experience. With chapters as diverse as “The Human Will,” “Quantum Physics,” and “Good and Evil,” the common theme is the dynamic nature of human consciousness. 

READ MORE


Summer Reading for Children


From the Collected Works of Rudolf Steiner

The World of the Senses and the World of the Spirit
6 lectures, Hanover, December 27, 1911–January 1, 1912 (CW 134)
READ MORE

We do have to form judgments, but through wisely educating ourselves, we should ensure that in all our judging we practice caution in the matter of considering our judgments to be true. We should constantly endeavor to keep watch on ourselves and realize that wherever we apply our discernment we are in fact feeling our way in the dark, so that there is always a possibility of being mistaken.

This is very difficult for those cocksure individuals who imagine that they cannot make any progress at all while being expected to doubt whether any judgment they might form about anything is in fact appropriate. . . you will see that for many the most important thing is to say any situation: I believe this, I believe that; or when they see something, they say: I don’t approve of this, I do approve of that, and so on . . . these are the habits one must break if one wants to approach reality in one’s life of soul.

The important thing, then, is to develop an attitude of mind which might be characterized thus: Well, since I have to live my life I also have to form judgments; I will make use of judgments in matters of life’s practicalities but not in matters of discovering the truth. In so far as I want to discern the truth I will always keep a careful watch on myself and apply a degree of scepticism with regard to any judgment I might form.

But how can we reach the truth about any kind of thought if we are not supposed to form judgments?
. . .

Rudolf Steiner, lecture of December 28, 1911, in
The World of the Senses and the World of the Spirit (CW 134)