
Crops, such as the tomato, potato, maize, pumpkin, chocolate, vanilla, and tobacco, originated in the New World yet radically transformed the Old world. Continue reading
Crops, such as the tomato, potato, maize, pumpkin, chocolate, vanilla, and tobacco, originated in the New World yet radically transformed the Old world. Continue reading
Gornahoor is a blog that explores metaphysics, physics, religion and high culture, connecting Ancient Wisdom to the modern world. The blog covers topics such as the religion of medieval Europe, metaphysics, spiritual knighthood, sophiology and the common task, romantic Christianity, high culture. Continue reading
The seven churches can also be imagined as representing different historical epochs. Each of the churches has a positive and a negative element. These still live in every human being, regardless of the epoch. Our task is to develop the positive elements and overcome the negative elements. Continue reading
What the “mystics have always taught.” Continue reading
It is clear that the world cannot reflect God who, by definition, by necessity, by absoluteness, is invisible, that not removing, however, what is visible, insofar as it is visible, it is also the sign, imprint, mirror, reflection of the invisible, and that the visible breaks itself, shatters itself indefinitely because it cannot contain the invisible. Continue reading
Meditation on God’s blessings and judgment. Continue reading
Night is at its nadir and the moon-scythe’s light gets mocked to dizziness in the drunken sea Continue reading
By penetrating into the depths of the soul, one can recover a sense of the Primordial state and how it was lost. Continue reading
Thy Kingdom Come: The awakened will of the human being calls upon Christ for penance. The stages of the Passion are compensation for human guilt.
Continue reading
The practice of poverty pins down the tendencies of the thief in the human being whose male side tends to seize and female side to keep indefinitely instead of waiting for the free gift or merited fruits of one’s labour. Continue reading