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Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by GA number (GA0153)
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    Query was: joy
  

Here are the matching lines in their respective documents. Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below to jump to that point in the document.

  • Title: Inner Nature of Man: Lecture 1: The Four Spheres of the Inner Life
    Matching lines:
    • feeling, what possibilities in the way of joy and sorrow are within
  • Title: Inner Nature of Man: Lecture 4: Wisdom in the Spiritual World
    Matching lines:
    • truth gives us no satisfaction, no joy, no pleasure; it torments us.
  • Title: Inner Nature of Man: Lecture 5: Between Death and the 'Cosmic Midnight Hour'
    Matching lines:
    • enjoy and suffer, we live in our passions and we develop impulses of
    • we may die in very old age, we still could have enjoyed more,
  • Title: Inner Nature of Man: Lecture 6: Pleasures and Sufferings in the Life Beyond
    Matching lines:
    • back upon what we have received from, and enjoyed in worldly
    • with particular intensity. We have enjoyed certain things and this is
    • shown us by spiritual vision; we have had certain joys and sorrows in
    • life. We can survey these joys and sorrows, but we see what we have
    • We look back upon some enjoyment, some satisfaction we have had at
    • is past; the time when we enjoyed it does indeed lie behind us, but
    • it. When we have experienced some enjoyment, some satisfaction, in
    • past enjoyment, this past inward satisfaction into a capacity, so
    • that through the past enjoyment thou art able to develop a certain
    • the enjoyment, I shall be satisfied with it, I shall take it into my
    • soul and refresh myself through this past enjoyment.’ When we
    • do this with much of what we have enjoyed and has given us pleasure,
    • we can learn in the spiritual world, that through enjoyment, through
    • enjoyments, if we do not decide at the right time to create
    • conscience, that he must not give himself up to certain enjoyment,
    • pleasure or joy for its own sake, but he must fill this joy with a
    • every enjoyment he becomes a debtor to the universe. We arrive most
    • transformation of those enjoyments and pleasures which are of a
    • spiritual nature. Enjoyments and pleasures which can only be
    • we have enjoyments and pleasures on the physical plane in which our
    • Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.



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