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BOEHME (or BEHMEN), JAKOB (1575-1624) , See also: German mystical writer, whose surname (of which See also: Fechner gives eight German varieties) appears in See also: English literature as Beem, Behmont, &c., and notably Behmen, was See also: born at Altseidenberg, in Upper See also: Lusatia, a straggling See also: hamlet among the hills, some 10 m
.
S.E. of See also: Gorlitz
.
His See also: father was a well-to-do peasant, and his first employment was that of herd boy on the Landskrone, a See also: hill in the neighbourhood of Gorlitz; the only
See also: education he received was at the See also: town-school of Seidenberg, a mile from his home
.
Seidenberg, to this See also: day, is filled with shoemakers, and to a shoe-maker Jakob was apprenticed in his fourteenth See also: year (1589), being judged not robust enough for husbandry
.
Ten years later (1599) we find him settled at Gorlitz as master-shoemaker, and married to Katharina, daughter of Hans Kuntzschmann, a thriving See also: butcher in the town
.
After industriously pursuing his vocation for ten years, he bought (161o) the substantial See also: house, which still preserves his name, close by the See also: bridge, in the Neiss-Vorstadt
.
Two or three years later he gave up business, and did not resume it as a shoemaker; but for some years before his See also: death he made and sold woollen gloves, regularly visiting See also: Prague See also: fair for this purpose
.
Boehme's authorship began in his 37th year (1612) with a See also: treatise, See also: Aurora, See also: oder die Morgenrote See also: im Aufgang, which though unfinished was surreptitiously copied, and eagerly circulated in MS. by Karl von Ender
.
This raised him at once out of his homely sphere, and made him the centre of a See also: local circle of liberal thinkers, considerably above him in station and culture
.
The See also: charge of See also: heresy was, however, soon directed against him by Gregorius See also: Richter, then pastor primarius of Gorlitz
.
Feeling ran so high after Richter's pulpit denunciations, that, in See also: July 1613, the municipal council, fearing a disturbance of the See also: peace, made a show of examining Boehme, took possession of his fragmentary See also: quarto, and dismissed the writer with an admonition to meddle no more with such matters
.
For five years he obeyed this See also: injunction
.
But in 1618 began a second See also: period of authorship; he poured forth, but did not publish, treatise after treatise, expository and polemical, in the next and the two following years
.
In 1622 he composed nothing but a few See also: short pieces on true repentance, resignation, &c., which, however, devotionally speaking, are the most precious of all his writings
.
They were the only pieces offered to the public in his lifetime and with his permission, a fact which is evidence of the essentially religious and See also: practical character of his mind
.
Their publication at Gorlitz, on New Year's day 1624, under the title of Der Weg zu Christo, was the See also: signal for renewed clerical hostility
.
Boehme had by this See also: time entered on the third and most prolific though the shortest period (1623–1624) of his See also: speculation
.
His labours at the desk were interrupted in May 1624 by a summons to See also: Dresden, where his famous " colloquy " with the Upper Consistorial See also: court was made the occasion of a flattering but transient See also: ovation on the See also: part of a new circle of admirers
.
Richter died in See also: August 1624, and Boehme did not long survive his pertinacious foe
.
Seized with a fever when away from home, he was with difficulty conveyed to Gorlitz
.
His wife was at Dresden on business; and during the first week of his malady he was nursed by a
I I 3
See also: literary friend
.
He died, after receiving the See also: rites of the See also: church, grudgingly administered by the authorities, on
See also: Sunday, the 17th of See also: November
.
Boehme always professed that a See also: direct inward opening or See also: illumination was the only source of his speculative power
.
He pretended to no other See also: revelation
.
Ecstatic raptures we should not expect, for he was essentially a See also: Protestant mystic
.
No " thus saith the See also: Lord " was claimed as his warrant, after the manner of Antoinette See also: Bourignon, or Ludowick See also: Muggleton; no See also: spirits or angels held converse with him as with Swedenborg
.
It is needless to dwell, in the way either of acceptance or rejection, on the very few occasions in which his outward See also: life seemed to him to come into contact with the invisible See also: world
.
The apparition of the See also: pail of gold to the herd boy on the Landskrone, the visit of the mysterious stranger to the See also: young apprentice, the fascination of the luminous sheen, reflected from a See also: common See also: pewter dish, which first, in 1600, gave an intuitive turn to his meditations, the heavenly See also: music which filled his ears as he See also: lay dying—none of these matters is connected organically with the secret of his See also: special power
.
The mysteries of which he discoursed were not reported to him: he " beheld " them
.
He saw the See also: root of all mysteries, the Ungrund or Urgrund, whence issue all contrasts and discordant principles, hardness and softness, severity and mildness, sweet and bitter, love and sorrow, heaven and See also: hell
.
These he " saw " in their origin; these he attempted to describe in their issue, and to reconcile in their eternal result
.
He saw into the being of See also: God; whence the See also: birth or going forth of the divine manifestation
.
Nature lay unveiled to him, he was at home in the See also: heart of things
.
" His own See also: book, which he himself was," the See also: microcosm of See also: man, with his threefold life, was patent to his vision
.
Such was his own account of his qualification
.
If he failed it was in expression; he confessed himself a poor mouthpiece, though he saw with a sure spiritual See also: eye
.
It must not be supposed that the See also: form in which Boehme's pneumatic See also: realism worked itself out in detail was shaped entirely from within
.
In his writings we trace the influence of Theophr
.
Bombast von See also: Hohenheim, known as See also: Paracelsus (1493-1541), of Kaspar See also: Schwenkfeld (149o-1561), the first Protestant mystic, and of Valentin Weigel (1533-1588)
.
From the school of Paracelsus came much of his puzzling phraseology,—his Turba and Tinctur and so forth,—a phraseology embarrassing to himself as well as to his readers
.
His See also: friends plied him with See also: foreign terms, which he was delighted to receive, interpreting them by an See also: instinct, and using them often in a corrupted form and always in a sense of his own
.
Thus the word Idea called up before him. the image of " a very fair, heavenly, and chaste virgin." The title Aurora, by which his earliest treatise is best known, was furnished by Dr Balthasar See also: Walther
.
These, however, were false See also: helps, which only serve to obscure a difficult study, like the Flagrat and Lubet, with which his English translator veiled Boehme's own honest Schreck and Lust
.
There is danger lest his crude science and his crude philosophical vocabulary conceal the fertility of Boehme's ideas and the transcendent greatness of his religious insight
.
Few will take the pains to follow him through the interminable account of his seven Quellgeister, which remind us of See also: Gnosticism; or even of his three first properties of eternal nature, in which his disciples find See also: Newton's formulae anticipated, and which certainly bear a marvellous resemblance to the three apxai of Schelling's Theogonische Natur
.
Boehme is always greatest when he breaks away from his fancies and his trammels, and allows speech to the See also: voice of his heart
.
Then he is artless, clear and strong; and no man can help listening to him, whether he dive deep down with the conviction " ohne Gift and See also: Grimm kein Leben," or rise with the belief that " the being of all beings is a See also: wrestling power," or soar with the persuasion that Love " in its height is as high as God." The mystical poet of See also: Silesia, See also: Angelus Silesius, discerned where Boehme's truest power lay when he sang
" Im Wasser lebt der Fisch, die Pflanze in der Erden,
Der Vogel in der Luft, die Sonn' am See also: Firmament,
Der See also: Salamander muss im See also: Feu'r erhaiten See also: werden, Und Gottes Herz ist Jakob Bohme's See also: Element."
The three periods of Boehme's authorship constitute three distinct stages in the development of his philosophy
.
He himself marks a threefold division of his subject-See also: matter:—I
.
PHILOSOPHIA, i.e. the pursuit of the divine See also: Sophia, a study of God in himself; this was attempted in the Aurora
.
2
.
AsTxo-See also: LOGIA, i.e., in the largest sense, cosmology, the manifestation of the divine in the structure of the world and of man; hereto belong, with others, Die drei Principien gottlichen Wesens; Vom dreifachen Leben der Menschen; Von der Menschwerdung Christi; Von der Geburt and Bezeichnung alter Wesen (known as Signatura Rerum)
.
3
.
THEOLOGIA, i.e., in Scougall's phrase, " the life of God in the soul of man." Of the speculative writings under this See also: head the most important are Von der Gnadenwahl; Mysterium Magnum (a spiritual commentary on See also: Genesis); Von Christi Testamenten (the Sacraments)
.
Although Boehme's philosophy is essentially theological, and his See also: theology essentially philosophical, one would hardly describe him as a philosophical theologian; and, indeed, his position is not one in which either the philosopher or the theologian finds it easy to make himself completely at home
.
The philosopher finds no trace in Boehme of a conception of God which rests its own validity on an See also: accord with the highest canons of reason or of morals; it is in the actual not in the ideal that Boehme seeks God, whom he discovers as the spring of natural See also: powers and forces, rather than as the See also: goal of advancing thought
.
The theologian is staggered by a language which breaks the fixed association of theological phrases, and strangely See also: reversing the usual point of view, characteristically pictures God as underneath rather than above
.
Nature rises out of Him; we sink into Him
.
The Ungrund of the unmanifested Godhead is boldly represented in the English See also: translations of Boehme by the word Abyss, in a sense altogether unexplained by its Biblical use
.
In the Theologia Germanica this tendency to regard God as the substantia, the underlying ground of all things, is accepted as a foundation for piety; the same view, when offered in the colder logic of See also: Spinoza, is sometimes set aside as atheistical
.
The procession of spiritual forces and natural phenomena out of the Ungrund is described by Boehme in terms of a threefold manifestation, commended no doubt by the constitution of the Christian Trinity, but exhibited in a form derived from the school of Paracelsus
.
From Weigel he learned a purely idealistic explanation of the universe, according to which it is not the resultant of material forces, but the expression of spiritual principles . These two explanations were fused in his mind till they issued forth as See also: equivalent forms of one and the same thought
.
Further, Schwenkfeld supplied him with the germs of a transcendental exegesis, whereby the Christian Scriptures and the dogmata of Lutheran orthodoxy were opened up in harmony with his new-found views
.
Thus equipped, Boehme's own See also: genius did the rest
.
A See also: primary effort of Boehme's philosophy is to show how material powers are substantially one with moral forces
.
This is the See also: object with which he draws out the dogmatic scheme which dictates the arrangement of his seven Quellgeister
.
Translating Boehme's thought out of the uncouth dialect of material symbols (as to which one doubts sometimes whether he means them as concrete instances, or as pictorial illustrations, or as a See also: mere memoria technica), we find that Boehme conceives of the correlation of two triads of forces
.
Each triad consists of a thesis, an antithesis and a synthesis; and the two are connected by an important See also: link
.
In the hidden life of the Godhead, which is at once Nichts and Alles, exists the See also: original triad, viz
.
Attraction, Diffusion, and their resultant, the Agony of the unmanifested Godhead
.
The transition is made; by an See also: act of will the divine Spirit comes to See also: Light; and immediately the manifested life appears in the triad of Love, Expression, and their resultant, Visible Variety
.
As the See also: action of contraries and their resultant are explained the relations of soul, See also: body and spirit; of See also: good, evil and See also: free will; of the See also: spheres of the angels, of Lucifer, and of this world
.
It is a more difficult problem to account on this philosophy for the introduction of evil . Boehme does not resort to dualism, nor has he the smallest sympathy with a pantheistic repudiation of the fact of sin . That the difficulty presses him is clear from theprogressive changes in his attempted solution of the problem . In the Aurora nothing save good proceeds from the Ungrund, though there is good that abides and good that fall: Christ and Lucifer . In the second stage of his writing the antithesis is directly generated as such; good and its contrary are coincidently given from the one creative source, as factors of life andSee also: movement; while in the third period evil is a direct outcome of the primary principle of divine manifestation—it is the wrath See also: side of God
.
Corresponding to this change we trace a significant variation in the moral end contemplated by Boehme as the object of this world's life and See also: history
.
In the first stage the world is created in remedy of a decline; in the second, for the adjustment of a balance of forces; in the third, to exhibit the eternal victory of good over evil, of love over wrath
.
See also: Editions of Boehme's See also: works were published by H
.
Betke (Amster-See also: dam, 1675); by J
.
G
.
See also: Gichtel (See also: Amsterdam, 1682–1683, to vols.) ; by K
.
W
.
Schiebler ( See also: Leipzig, 1831–1847, 7 vols.)
.
Translations of sundry See also: treatises have been made into Latin (by J
.
A
.
Werdenhagen, 1632), Dutch (See also: complete, by W. v
.
Bayerland, 1634–1641), and French (by See also: Jean Macle, c
.
164o, and L
.
C. de See also: Saint-See also: Martin, 1800-180 )
.
Between 1644 and 1662 all Boehme's works were translated by
See also: John Ellistone (d
.
1652) and John Sparrow, assisted by
See also: Durand Hotham and Humphrey Blunden, who paid for the undertaking
.
At that time See also: regular See also: societies of Behmenists, embracing not only the cultivated but the vulgar, existed in See also: England and in See also: Holland, They merged into the Quaker movement, holding already in common with Friends that salvation is nothing short of the very presence and life of Christ in the believer, and only kept apart by an
See also: objective See also: doctrine of the sacraments which exposed them to the polemic of See also: Quakers (e.g
.
J
.
Anderdon)
.
Muggleton led an anthropomorphic reaction against them, and between the two currents they were swept away . The Philadelphian Society at the beginning of the 18th century consisted of cultured mystics, JaneSee also: Lead, Pordage, See also: Francis See also: Lee, Bromley, &c., who fed upon Boehme
.
See also: William
See also: Law (1686–1761) somewhat later recurred to the same spring, with the result, however, in those dry times of bringing his own good sense into question rather than of reviving the See also: credit of his author
.
After Law's death the old English See also: translation was in See also: great part re-edited (4 vols., 1762–1784) as a tribute to his memory, by See also: George See also: Ward and
See also: Thomas Langcake, with plates from the designs of D
.
A
.
Freher (Brit
.
See also: Mus
.
Add
.
See also: MSS
.
5767–5794)
.
This forms what is commonly called Law's translation; to complete it a 5th vol
.
(12mo, See also: Dublin, 182o) is needed
.
See also J . Hamberger, Die Lehre See also: des deutschen Philosophen J
.
Boehmes (1844) ; See also: Alba Peip, J
.
Boehme der deutsche Philosoph (186o) ; von See also: Harless, J
.
Boehme and die Alchimisten (1870, 2nd ed
.
1882)
.
For Boehme's life see the See also: Memoirs by Abraham von See also: Frankenberg (d
.
1652) and others, trans. by F
.
Okely (187o) ; La Motte See also: Fouque, J
.
See also: Boehm, ern biographischer Denkstein (1831); H
.
A
.
Fechner, J
.
Boehme, sein Leben and See also: seine Schriften (1857); H
.
L
.
See also: Martensen, J
.
Boehme, Theosophiske Studier (See also: Copenhagen, 1881; English trans
.
1885) ; Claassen, J
.
Boehme, sein Leben and seine theosophische Werke See also: Gutersloh, 1885) ; P
.
Deussen, J
.
Boehme, caber sein Leben and seine Philosophie (See also: Kiel, 1897)
.
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