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Pietro Archiati

    June 1, 1944 – February 26, 2022
    Pietro Archiati
    An autobiographical lecture
    Giving Judas a Chance
    Money Matters - but So Does Trust!
    Spiritual Science in the Third Millennium
    From Christianity to Christ
    The Great Religions
    • 2016
    • 2015

      Presenting a broad exploration of critical questions, Archiati's exposition works not only as a critique of a specific new edition of Steiner's works, but also as an introduction to key tenets of anthroposophical methodology and thought.

      Spiritual Science in the Third Millennium
    • 1999

      A fresh viewpoint regarding reincarnation and karma that allows the reader to think from a new perspective.

      Giving Judas a Chance
    • 1998

      The Great Religions

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Taking a radical departure from the usual comparative study of religion, Pietro Archiati shows that the various religions represent stages in each individual's path of development. In this sense the Great Religions create an absolute unity―not in what they say or teach, but in their contribution to each of us becoming ever more human. Beginning with the Flood of Atlantis, Archiati places the religions in the context of human evolution, taking us through the development of Buddhism, Zarathustrianism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and onwards to the future of religion based on spiritual reality. For example, Archiati considers how the founders of the various religions are working today. Are the Buddha, Krishna, Moses and Zarathustra doing and telling us the same things now as they were in the past, even though humanity has undergone considerable changes since?

      The Great Religions
    • 1996

      From Christianity to Christ

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      What we traditionally think of as Christianity is only its cultural form, adopted and developed over the last two thousand years. This represents chiefly human thoughts and dogmas, human institutions, churches, and in other words all that human beings have developed as their response to the Christ event. Rudolf Steiner said of Christianity that it "started as a religion but greater than all religions." Taking this as his basis, the author reaches beyond earthly traditions and cultural expressions of Christianity to its true spiritual essence. His survey takes us from the history of actual "all-too-human" Christianity to the history of actual "Christian" Christianity and its future development through a new scientific approach to the spirit. Archiati's warmth of expression and clarity of thought bring to life ideas and concepts that for so long have been the reserve of dry theology.

      From Christianity to Christ